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Prince and his iconic brand identity (aesthetic, and musical signatures) One of the things I loved about Prince the way that he created his own Prince world, and had so many features that identified his music and aesthetic His use of pseudonyms (Jamie Starr, Joey Coco, Christopher Tracey) that often played off his Gemini duality Minneapolis as his Superman Fortress of Solitude. (Rock and Roll is alive and it lives in Minneapolis, "We don't play that we from Minneapolis, Purple and Gold (his fight song) | |
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Brevity is not one of my gifts when it comes to posting about my main man Prince (as Spike Lee would say) but I wanted to suggest how iconic and distinctive Prince is. Any of the above automatically would associate me with Prince, and his motifs and hallmarks of his aesthetic and music created a Prince universe which as a fan I loved to explore. | |
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This is a really interesting post. I very much agree that Prince, perhaps better than any other popular artist, branded his aesthetic. In these types of discussions an obvious forerunner is Bowie; however, Bowie’s image and sound changed so drastically and quicklly, and without keeping too many underlying themes (other than the recurring Major Tom character and image). Prince would continually modify, refresh, and revise certain root elements of his persona/vision (see the various iterations of the love symbol dating back to Purple Rain that gradually became more prominent in image/work up to the name change, which always suggested to me the name change was far more premeditated and in the works than it seemed at the time). The time period where Prince appeared to me most-off brand, the mid 90s (Emancipation through Rave Un2) era where he heavily resorted to then popular R&B sound, gave MANY interviews to shows and publications, and allowed a lot of his otherworldly mysticism to fall away - seemed to be his lowest ebb of popularity... the general public and many fans seemed most fascinated with Prince at his most otherworldly, and least relatable. Interestingly, in the mid 2000s, again relying on his more storied brand elements (a clearly conscious decision) and also heavily incorporating ‘80s-sounding synths, which had once again become en Vogue, Prince regained a place in the public consciousness, was releasing number 1 albums again and returned to general critical acclaim.
[Edited 8/24/18 4:49am] [Edited 8/24/18 4:51am] | |
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