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Was Dirty Mind Prince's punk album? I've been listening to the old punk band The Adverts and a few of the drum beats caught my attention. When U Were Mine has a classic punk edge to it and Sister is basically what punk rock is all about! Do you think Prince was a fan of the punk movement back in the day? 😎✌❤ | |
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Punk was all about attitude/style...maybe even more so than musicality. So, yes... "New Power slide...." | |
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he was coopting a lot of it, yes, even with the rude boy button. he was trying for the crossover early on. It wasn't so punk musically though, outside of sister maybe. most of it was pretty black sounding. so lyrically and ideologically yes, musically? not really. | |
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I think so. The clothes that he wore. | |
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Sort of? The album has a demo feel to it, the song "Sister" is straight up punk and so is "When You Were Mine" the whole look was punk as well. So yes, it's punk w/Prince attitude and a bit of Newwave in the mix. | |
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ya sort of, prince was however developing further his minneapolis sound with the syth riffs being central in songs like Head and Dirty Mind. The album had a demo feel because they felt it was good enough as it was, i wonder if Springsteens' nebraska had any bearing on that decision. When you were mine had to be for one of the girl groups he was already trying to form, it's a vintage girl group song with more risque lyrics and one of the catchiest things he ever wrote, i wouldn't call it punk, i'd call it ska before i'd call it punk. Punk was known for it's nihilism so, in that way, yes it's punk but musically? got a broken heart again, uptown, partyup were pretty funky, not quite as funky as the stuff he gave the time but then, as I said, he was going for the crossover. I, personally, never saw his histrionics over social stuff as sincere in those years, never, just because black music never grandstanded like white music did over those kinds of issues. they'd use them as topics but I always thought it was what joni mitchel called something "posturing whiteboys" did. It was cool to be antiestablishment in that realm of pop, prince was just trying to crossover, I never got the feeling any of it was sincere. | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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Nebraska was recorded and released in 1982. A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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oh, ok, i wondered about that. thanks. my trivia gets' blurry sometimes. | |
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they rhythms prince used on Dirty mind would be new wave or punk, whichever one you call it I guess. His dancing was far from traditional black dancing at that time so, that part, he looked like a typical headbanger. | |
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I believe André is the one who was a lot into new wave/post punk, and explosed Prince to it. André's solo albums certainly show a strong interest for those movements. I think it would be worth digging into this a little more for the sake of music history: back in 1980 post-punk/new wave was the new hip thing but at this point was mostly a British (and to some extent European) phenomenon, with New York and its no wave scene being kind of the American outpost of the movement. Crossover wasn't a new thing since Hendrix and Funkadelic: Nona Hendryx did a hard rock album in 1977 and other bands such as Breakwater would include some rock into their R&B here and there, but by the late 70's traditional rock was already getting tired and I think Prince was the first (and at the time only) American Black musician to dive into new wave/post-punk. This was a super smart move because it immediately gave him an avant-garde edge, at a time when most Black artists were rehashing the same old funk and disco (funk was clearly in need of new directions at the turn of the decade). It certainly went in the way of Prince getting more mainstream success for a while, but it made sure he had the likes of Andy Warhol in the room when he'd play NY. Prince was incredibly smart to feel that zeitgeist and understand that it was what he had to do if he wanted to be relevent to his time. Those were fascinating times in terms of music, there were many interesting things being done and Prince was only one of many great talents at the time, but I think he managed to secure himself a unique position at the time, by being the first Black new wave artist. A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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Interesting thread, I always considered Plectrumelectrum his punk album. Especially MArz + Fixurlifeup | |
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Mine too, we ain't gettin' any younger A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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Dirty Mind is very funky. Chaos and Disorder is much more of a punk album than Dirty Mind is, in my opinion. Live 4 Love ~ Love is God, God is love, Girls and boys love God above | |
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Surprised nobody is complaining about genre labels like in that "Annie Christian Punk Version" thread from this summer Dirty Mind & Controversy definitely had some punk influences though, for sure. Prince was punk rock, even if it was more in attitude than sound. | |
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Saw him at the Mudd Club in NYC in 1980 with either the Talking Heads or the B52s, can't remember exactly, I went there a lot. So, punk/new wave. Rocakabilly songs are also very short, not just punk songs. [Edited 10/7/18 7:29am] "if you can't clap on the one, then don't clap at all" | |
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