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Shortberry Strawcake
Has anyone been able to decipher the 'poem' Prince is singing on this song?
Yesterday I had a dream he came 2 me and he said...
Shortberry Strawcake – 4:46 (Sheila E., Jesse Johnson)
A steamy sexy instrumental . Sheila E. – lead vocals, percussion, director Jesse Johnson – guitars The Starr ★ Company . Shortberry Strawcake was nominated at the 27th annual Grammy Awards (1985) in the category 'Best R&B instrumental performance' (which was won by Sound-System by Herbie Hancock). . .
Initial tracking took place on 9 January 1984 at Sunset Sound, Hollywood, CA, USA (four days after Oliver's House and The Belle Of St. Mark), and the song was originally intended for Apollonia 6 until Prince began to work with Sheila E. in February 1984, at which time he set the song aside for her. Sheila E.'s percussion was recorded in the first few days of April 1984 at Sunset Sound. Some distorted and backmasked vocals by Prince can be heard in the background of the track, marking the earliest Prince-related release to feature backmasked lyrics (released three weeks before Purple Rain, which also contained some). -PrinceVault
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Prince credited Jesse Johnson on this one because he used Jesse's guitar. But Jesse was involved on The Belle of St Mark
According to Susan Rogers, "Prince asked Jesse if it would be ok that he gave Jesse writing credit on one of Sheila's songs. Jesse said, 'ok i guess so. What's the name of the song?' Prince said, 'Shortberry Strawcake. bye bye.' We didn't think anymore about it until the record came out and Jesse heard 'The Belle of St. Mark', which was based on the rhythm track of a song written by Jesse. HE played me the cassette of his song, and he had played it for Prince a long time ago, and Prince remembered the song and wrote a new song based on it for Sheila. Jesse was very offened! Prince would sometimes take a credit away from someone in a legitimate area and apply it in an illegitimate area". | |
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I can understand Jesse being pissed. The Belle of St. Mark was a hit, so he missed out on a lot of money. | |
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backwards it sounds like XXX carousel music | |
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This was recently discussed on the Org. There are some bits that people have been able to decipher from the song, but overall it's almost impossible to figure out. I took the track and EQ'd the fuck out of it and couldn't make out anything. I'd say it is one of the bigger mysteries in Prince music. Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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Still a lot of money in those days, and the album was considered successful if not a hit. Between this and the songs on Ice Cream Castle (also played in the PR film), Jesse probably lost hundreds of thousands if not more. A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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It's sad to witness Prince in these kind of behaviours. Keep in mind this is a guy under 30. [Edited 10/4/18 3:58am] The Colors R brighter, the Bond is much tighter
No Child's a failure Until the Blue Sailboat sails him away from his dreams Don't Ever Lose, Don't Ever Lose Don't Ever Lose Your Dreams | |
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Anyway, I’ve always loved “Shortberry Strawcake”. Interesting that it was nominated for a Grammy and came up against Herbie’s “Sound System”- I didn’t know that. | |
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It's sad but at the same time quite interesting to know that in most cases it was more out of malice than greed. All things considered, as you say, he was just a kid, and it only happened a handful of times, it's not like he made a habit out of it. He also gave away more credits and royalties than he stole. So while none of this makes it right, those rare cases certainly do not define Prince's methods as a songwriter. What it says, at worst, is that he was a competitive little prick who couldn't forget anyone leaving his ship at this early stage of his career. I may love him even more for that [Edited 10/4/18 7:26am] A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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Jesse said he sings background on 1999 and plays some guitar at the end. And he was shocked to not see his name on the credit, but J J which was a play on Jesse Johnson and Jill Jones
For whatever reason he targeted Jesse more than Morris it seems. Maybe Jesse came across as more sensitive (which I think he is) | |
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Yeah Princevault needs to add this A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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I think it was cause Jesse challenged him more than others (i.e. talked shit right back to Prince or called him out on things). "Climb in my fur." | |
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Theorically the multitrack still exists in the vault, so Michael Howe is currently the only person in the world who could isolate it, play it backwards again and tell us.
A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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TrivialPursuit said: This was recently discussed on the Org. There are some bits that people have been able to decipher from the song, but overall it's almost impossible to figure out. I took the track and EQ'd the fuck out of it and couldn't make out anything. I'd say it is one of the bigger mysteries in Prince music. It was #5 in the Dutch top 40. I'd call that a hit. For whatever reason, Sheila E was the most succesful of Prince's side projects over here. | |
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Surrounding ourselves with sycophants and yes-men is never a good idea. | |
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databank said:
It's sad but at the same time quite interesting to know that in most cases it was more out of malice than greed. All things considered, as you say, he was just a kid, and it only happened a handful of times, it's not like he made a habit out of it. He also gave away more credits and royalties than he stole. So while none of this makes it right, those rare cases certainly do not define Prince's methods as a songwriter. What it says, at worst, is that he was a competitive little prick who couldn't forget anyone leaving his ship at this early stage of his career. I may love him even more for that [Edited 10/4/18 7:26am] It's got nothing to do with his age (at 25 you're not a kid anymore) and everything with his ego. As Quentin Tarantino said: "Great artists steal. They don't do hommages." | |
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We're kids up until around 30 in this day and age. Prince was a kid in 1984. I'm not aware of Prince ever doing it again after 1990 or so, so I think he definitely matured when it comes to messing up with people's credits and royalties. A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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[Edited 10/4/18 11:50am] The Colors R brighter, the Bond is much tighter
No Child's a failure Until the Blue Sailboat sails him away from his dreams Don't Ever Lose, Don't Ever Lose Don't Ever Lose Your Dreams | |
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The Colors R brighter, the Bond is much tighter
No Child's a failure Until the Blue Sailboat sails him away from his dreams Don't Ever Lose, Don't Ever Lose Don't Ever Lose Your Dreams | |
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Rosie Gaines fell out with Prince as a result too
I thought something similar happened with Morris Hayes | |
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I thought a lot of them back then did, the Time and his band
That's probably why that 1980-1986 period was so productive too
Maybe the battle of the colors Pink vs Purple, Prince focused on Jesse in that way | |
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[Edited 10/4/18 13:12pm] The Colors R brighter, the Bond is much tighter
No Child's a failure Until the Blue Sailboat sails him away from his dreams Don't Ever Lose, Don't Ever Lose Don't Ever Lose Your Dreams | |
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Good God, how did a discussion on one of Prince's funkiest tracks ever turn into a discussion about Prince robbing others? The guitar is BLAZING on this cut, and I'm pissed he actually gave Jesse credit, when it was Prince. . Also, when a dude says he sung some background and played a little guitar at the end of a song, that doesn't mean those tracks got used, even if he did cut some tracks. What guitar at the end of 1999 is he referring to? Shit, how many people even know that Prince was playing all instruments on most everything on The Time's albums, yet credit was given to the members of The Time? "He's a musician's musician..." | |
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Yet it was Prince who owned all the songwriting credits (and thus all the money) and the names "The Time" and "The Family". That's why those guys had to name themselves "The Original 7" or "FdeLuxe". So much for databank's claim that Prince became more "mature" about giving credit from the 90s onwards... [Edited 10/4/18 13:17pm] | |
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NorthC said: Yet it was Prince who owned all the songwriting credits (and thus all the money) and the names "The Time" and "The Family". That's why those guys had to name themselves "The Original 7" or "FdeLuxe". So much for databank's claim that Prince became more "mature" about giving credit from the 90s onwards... [Edited 10/4/18 13:17pm] You're confusing everything. Prince didn't take all the songwriting credits (most were given when due) and bandnames have nothing to do with songwriting credits anyway. A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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OldFriends4Sale said:
Rosie Gaines fell out with Prince as a result too
I thought something similar happened with Morris Hayes You need 2 be more specific here. A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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are there prince vocal versions of all sheila albums? | |
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Of all the songs he wrote, yes. A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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It's a morphar of can happen in your own life | |
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If we are to say that Prince did the switch-a-roo of the credits because he thought Shortberry Strawcake wasn't gonna be nothing and then it was nominated for a Grammy, then damn, P played himself. And immediately, I think of the interview where P states that nobody can play him. Of course, it makes sense that if anyone did play P, that it would be himself. And, of course, us mortals play ourselves all of the time through our own stupidity. But this motherfucker right here - Prince? P even played himself with Style. Who plays themselves and ends up with a Grammy nomination? [Edited 10/5/18 22:06pm] | |
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