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Harmonically which are prince's most complex songs? Obviously not peach but which of his songs have the most chords or unusual strange voicings and movements? I'm just like everybody else I need love.....and water. | |
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Adore. | |
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Others Here With Us Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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I Spend My Time Loving You | |
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Forever In My Life? For all time I am with you, you are with me. | |
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None of the above. Power Fantastic is great, but I think those chords are based on a thing Lisa wrote. There is nothing harmonically rich about Adore. The person who recommended that might have thought you were talking about vocal harmonies, but that's not what harmonically rich means. Harmonically rich mean unexpected chord progressions. Melody is, well, melody. Harmony mean the chords you use under the melody. | |
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I don't know about a specific song, but the Lovesexy/Batman era is pretty rich harmonically. We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves. | |
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Alexa De Paris 3 Chains O Gold | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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The Grand Progression. Not necessarily complex, but harmonically very rich.
18 (R U Legal Yet?). He plays some mean jazz piano on this one. That bit around 2:05 always gets me.
A Couple Of Miles. P. (w/ Eric Leeds) was really pushing the boundaries of his own sound on most of the 1985 material. That groove exudes coolness, freedom, joy. I've listened to it a hundred times and it still sounds fresh & exciting.
Pretty much the whole Lovesexy album. The music is unbelievably dissonant, I personally love it but I'm aware of how unacessible it might sound to the untrained (impatient?) ear. Just listen to the horn line at 4:25 on Alphabet Street, I can't think of anything remotely similar as far as 80s "pop" music goes. [Edited 6/28/18 5:08am] | |
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Sometimes It Snows In April [Edited 6/28/18 5:21am] I got two sides... and they're both friends. | |
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I would add "In A Large Room With No Light". Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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Scandalous sounds pretty complex to me, both regarding harmonic structure as well as regarding the use of dissonant colors | |
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Defing harmonically rich might be a good place to start. I was defining it as someone musically educated would define it. It has nothing to do with the human voice or guitar pedals. Production techniques do not create harmonic richness. I think there's a semantic wall hindering clear communication. Atmosphere is not harmonic richness by my definition. No beef. I just think we're talking about two different things.
I was saying that since Lisa wrote it that it doesn't qualify as one of Prince's harmonically rich pieces of work. Since it's not his piece of work and all. Lisa is awesome. She is capable of great harmonic richness.
As far as I can remember, There's Others Here With Us is built on one chord.
Musically speaking, being harmonically rich in musical terms is about the way a melody is harmonized. It isn't related to the sounds and special effects of a recording. The instruments or vocies that spell out the harmony aren't important, either. If you take a simple jazz standard and write the chords and melody on a piece of paper you can "see" the harmony. It being rich or not depends on how your personal tastes and musical diet. If you take the same jazz standard but write out the chords and melody the way someone like Bill Evans would play it then you can see a large difference in the "richness" of the harmony. The chords (harmony) would be very different and there would be lots more of it.
To someone with a jazz education something like Pop Life isn't necessarily harminically rich. To a metalhead just starting to wake up to the greater musical world Pop Life might blow his/her mind even though it's only four chords looping. Bmaj7 - D#minor - Emaj - G7 | |
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Grand Progression definitely qualifies by any defintion! | |
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Check out "Te Amo Corazon" sometime. [Edited 6/29/18 10:45am] | |
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"Love 2 The 9's" | |
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A lot of his "jazz phase" material like The Rainbow Children have some pretty hip stuff there harmonically speaking | |
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Actually, in the Prince catalogue, there are far fewer examples of harmonic complexity than you might think. Whether it's in terms of unusual chord progressions, number of chords and/or key centers in a song, chord extensions and alterations, inner voice movement, etc...there isn't very much of that. Not even in his "jazzier" songs, really. Someone like Stevie Wonder, for instance, has a much larger harmonic vocabulary.
[Edited 7/1/18 9:10am] | |
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"God"....(U.K. 12" B-side version)... | |
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100% agree | |
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Also, of course, some of the Parade stuff, like "I Wonder U" and "Life Can Be So Nice". | |
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