Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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databank said: NorthC said: Yeah, he liked it so much that he couldn't be bothered to make a video for Letitgo, he didn't put his biggest hit of the year on it and apart from Race (occasionally) and Letitgo, he played none of the songs live on his 1995 tour, when the album was already dead and gone anyway. And he shelved the Gold Experience for so long that everybody, including the man himself, lost interest. And that wasn't because he wanted to make room for Come, it was so that he could blame WB for not allowing him to release The Gold Experience. His only goal in those years was to sabotage his contract even if it meant fucking up his own albums. If nothing else, Prince had too much of an ego to dislike his own work. He played many of those songs live in 93-94,and included several in the TBE film with music videos. As for suggesting he should have included TMBGITW in it, it's absurd as the song was one that, conceptually, couldn't be moved from TGE to Come. However he overplsyed the fact that TGE was held hostage by WB so it's possible that he also allowed Come to be released first so that he could play drama queen and bash WB day in day out, you have a point there. But using the record to sabotage the deal does not mean Prince saw it as a filler. Come was a very personal record and it's assuming a lot than to assume Prince disliked it. I don't think he disliked it, the fact that he kept reworking the songs (and if I don't like the results, that's just me) meant that he took the project seriously. And yes, he played the songs live before the album was out, but not afterwards. Same with The Gold Experience. He had a habit in those days of promoting albums before they were out and losing interest once they were. I really enjoyed hearing songs like Days of Wild and Interactive etc on the radio and on bootleg in 94, it was exciting, but everything was just dragged out to the point that when those albums came out, it was like, why bother. And yes, that meant that his music was becoming less interesting. When we talk about this period, all the drama and confusion are part of it, even if some of the music was still good. In fact, I like his 93-95 music a whole lot better than his 89-92 music. So in a way, this whole quest for artistic freedom was inspiring and confusing at the same time. | |
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For me it was all very inspirational. I was 17 when the radio tapes, the TBE film and Come got released. The way Prince reclaimed his artistic freedom, his status as an underground artist playing weird music in clubs and how that man who had worked so hard to become one of the world's biggest superstar in the D&P era (and ever before) suddenly deconstructed it all to go all Dirty Mind again was fascinating to me. I found the music extremely interesting, still do. The live shows he gave in those clubs, with the reduced NPG, in 94-95 was very avant-garde with all the samples and odd songs: if had been a new, underground act instead of a superstar swimming against his own tide, the world would have been in awe. I certainly was in awe! The studio versions are more polished because of Prince being Prince, but yet if you listen to Race, The Exodus Has Begun, What's My Name or Hide The Bone among others, the music was wild as hell... that shit was insane! Of course when compared to the music from 1980-1986 it sound much less idiosyncratic but while part of it is that Prince was following the trends instead of making them, it could be argued that it was also because was doing things... an artist named Prince had done before! "My only competition is me in the past", he would later sing. People tend to forget that Dirty Mind or Purple Rain were not only making the zeitgeist of the early 80's, it was also following it to some extent: the new wave explosion and second British Invasion, the neo romantic looks... it didn't come off nowhere, the Prince of the early 80's was also following trends to some extent. . One thing remains that in 1994, few artists managed to merge programming, samples and live music on stage with that level of complexity. Maybe some electronic acts like YMO (their 1993 tour comes to mind), but that was an entirely different musical universe: in the world of R&B, no one did that. Few people were aware of what Prince was doing on stage at that time, him playing mostly clubs and all, with few to no live recordings or videos available to the general public from those shows. I don't wanna force my views upon others, maybe some older fans found it all much less interesting than I did, but I really feel privileged to have been a Prince fans in those years even though I missed the "classic" era because I was too young, and I feel like testifying about how cool it was. The name change, the rebellion against the music industry, the clothes... but first and foremost the music. No matter how much I love 80's music, I cannot claim it my own. The 90's was my generation's decade, and God knows I would soon embrace the European electronic music revolution like crazy. But Prince the musician from those years, I'm proud I was there to hear it! . [Edited 6/22/18 17:46pm] A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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For me, I have grown to appreciate Come more over time. When it first came out, I did feel disappointed. It just didn't match the near impossibly high standard of so much of his previous work. I do like most of the songs, especially Dark, Lettigo, Space, and Race. Even if all the other songs on the album were great, Orgasm would spoil the overall greatness of the album. I could get through listening Purple and Gold 5 times (okay maybe just 4) before I would sit through 1 listen to Orgasm. I get that he needed an Orgasm to complete the Come album, but I just wish he would have made a better Orgasm to top things off. I better stop....... | |
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I fail to see how anyone, male or female, straight or gay, could possibly NOT want to hear an orgasm by Vanity, who may have been the sexiest woman to ever walk this earth. God, I wish I had the video, too! A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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A porn movie with Vanity in it? | |
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and true love lives on lollipops and crisps | |
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Maybe it's because I was in my 20s around that time that I feel different. I can claim the 80s as my own, even if I hate a lot of music from that time (Stock, Aitken & Waterman, anyone?) So with Prince in the 90s, it felt like he was beginning to repeat himself. And in the TAFKAP years, I guess Prince himself telt the same way too. And that's why he was trying to break free. And started playing songs from his youth: Sly, GCS, Santana... | |
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. Although she was good looking (if a bit trashy), she wasn't a good actress. And the "orgasm" sounds like acting, overacting at that. It is cringeworthy on many levels. (imo) Paisley Park is in your heart - Love Is Here! | |
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To me,Come is a mediocre album.The songs are OK,but there's nothing really amazing on this album. | |
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Its akin to reading Penthouse Forum section. "Climb in my fur." | |
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As an ALBUM, boy does it suck. Big time. I’ve been informed that my opinion is worth less than those expressed by others here. | |
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. I never thought that something like that would happen to me! Paisley Park is in your heart - Love Is Here! | |
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She was not "good looking". She was the most delicate, hypnotizing, loveliest women. She was mindblowing.
. BTW, you guys have to stop overusing that adjective, "cringeworthy". It makes you people sound like immature people with emotional issues. No one in their right mind ever really cringes just because of a song. Well, OK maybe every once in a while if you hear something really dreadful and abnormal like, IDK, a Mongolian drinking song, but not 16 times a day, each and every time you hear a song you dislike on the radio. [Edited 6/24/18 2:21am] A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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Way way worse than a magazine. It's more like turning the sound loud on the most over-acted porn movie ever and then not look at the visuals. After several minutes of this, then have a DJ say that this was Prince's song. Does not compute! | |
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It is an amazing collection of songs. I used to have it on cassette tape and listen to it on my walkman on my bus rides to school. But it's tone is so dark and disturbing I don't really listen to it that much. I used to be really worried about Prince back then... | |
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. Well... . . . To me it is perfectly apt. Everytime I hear that vibrator outtake called orgasm I need to do some cognitive dissonance. I mean, I LIKE Prince's music. Even though it is also that... . And I'm assuming you mean Mongolian throat singing (as the Mongolian Drinking Song seems to just be a song by a band called Hanggai), which I quite enjoy from time to time. Nothing for me to cringe at there. But Wedding Feast, Make Your Momma Happy, Grafitti Bridge, Orgasm, the cunnilingus sounds on Come and quite a few other songs... they make me cringe, even though I've lived with this man's music for roughly 35 years now. Paisley Park is in your heart - Love Is Here! | |
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I like the record more now than when it was released - except for the first and last tracks. Yes, they make me cringe. Especially the last track. What waa he thinking?!?! It's a hurtful place, the world, in and of itself. We don't need to add to it. We all need one another. ~ PRN | |
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The roots of industrial music go much further back than NIN of course. Throbbing Gristle are generally considered to be the first to explicitly identify the genre I think (late 70s - early 80s, foreshadowed by Kraftwerk, Lou Reed & The Velvet Underground, Fluxus, Karlheinz Stockhausen etc). You could even trace connections back to Dadaism and the Surrealists in the early 1900s (Artaud’s Pour en finir avec le jugement de Dieu). There’s always a degree of cross-pollution as artists, genres and technologies emerge, so it’s not absurd that someone would hear industrial elements in Prince’s 80s output, since they share some common roots and influences. The original Tick Tick Bang always sounded quite industrial to me (that dark, chugging synth line). I can see what herb4 is saying regarding TBA – not so much its sound, but its spirit is quite dark and abrasive. The moodier side of 80s Prince is one of the things that I missed in his later output.
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Industrial beginnings being before NIN (which I never said wasnt true, I said 1987 was way before it came into popularity 'etc.') still doesnt make TBA Indistrial. You say Herb mens it spirit is dark and abrsive, so now the mood makes it Industrial? And not goth? If anything, TBA has leanings to House Music but Imma let yall cook.
. [Edited 6/28/18 20:12pm] "Climb in my fur." | |
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Yes I quite liked it, mostly because it wasn't an album I expected from him and sits halfway between the NJS and experimental electro-funk he'd been dabbling in. That said, there are obvious reasons why it is divisive; there's a dirty, unpolished, middle-finger quality to it that makes it resonate with me, while the glossy, radio-friendly sounds of an objectively bad album such as raveless, undo joy craptastic seem better heralded. I'm afraid of Americans. I'm afraid of the world. | |
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No, I wouldn’t label the Black Album as Industrial either, if anything the Dirty Mind, Controversy and 1999 eras warrant a more direct comparison (Punk + Electronica etc), but it’s clear enough what herb4 meant – I just don’t like to see people being treated so dismissively. How would you classify Bob George for example? You’re kind of missing my point by equating NIN with Prince’s awareness of “Industrial” music – the fact that a generation of disgruntled American teenagers found a voice in a particular group is neither here nor there – Prince would have been aware of many of the progenitors of the genre long before NIN emerged. Even Miles Davis' approaches this territority in the late 70s (under Stockhausen's influence). These things represent a continuum.
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fen said:
No, I wouldn’t label the Black Album as Industrial either ... "Climb in my fur." | |
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You’re not one for nuance are you. | |
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fen said:
You’re not one for nuance are you. I’m all for nuance tyvm (no ned to be insulting just because I don’t acknowledge attempts of “rationalization”... that ‘ain’t’ nuance). . [Edited 6/29/18 8:29am] "Climb in my fur." | |
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I didn’t intend to insult you, so my apologies, but quoting a line out of context like that just strikes me as a cheap move. All I was arguing was that these categories are fluid and there’s clearly common elements between Prince's 80s work and early industrial music (prior to NIN). Moreover, these threads persist throughout his career (again, what would you label Bob George? Not that it really matters anyway). Just compare his 80-83 sound with Throbbing Gristle for example:
[Edited 6/29/18 13:20pm] | |
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You are right OP; Prince 4Ever. | |
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^ yes u are right in using the word: amazing, + the tone is very dark, is right as well. Prince 4Ever. | |
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Great pic, if this was taken at nightclub Pennylane (short aftershow only 2 or 3 songs played).. Prince 4Ever. | |
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The summer of 1994 was one of those most exciting times in Prince world. With The Beautiful Experience (maxi-single and film), Come, 1-800-NEW-FUNK, hearing both Letitgo and Love Sign on the radio, the shows featuring all Come and Gold material, and their respective bootlegs. "That's when stars collide. When there's space for what u want, and ur heart is open wide." | |
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