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What are your thoughts on the Diamond And Pearls era? Were you of legal age when D&P was released and promoted? I'm asking because I first became aware of the D&P album a few years after its release - in 1994/95, actually, and I was six/ seven year old at the time. I also got a slight look at the LoveSymbol album then but I was guarded from it because I was just a kid.
Did you believe D&P held up to Prince's commercial and artistic standards? I like some of the songs on the album and the era was prettily packaged. Sure, it was the 90s and a new decade for Prince, and he was incredibly innovative and experimental, so he wouldn't be stuck repeating 80s hooks. However, after a listen to "Willing And Able" or "Strollin'", I walk away feeling somewhat disappointed that there wasn't more.
I also felt that the music videos like "Diamonds And Pearls" and "Insatiable" - while beautifully filmed - I was left with a slight empty, unsatisfied feeling, that perhaps Prince was ambitious but couldn't put together a good story/ theme. The "Parade" album/ UTCM movie era was less confusing.
That said, I still like the D&P era for what it delivered. In fact, I'm going to buy the D&P DVD online as a gift to myself. :]
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I like the music and the videos Ohh purple joy oh purple bliss oh purple rapture! REAL MUSIC by REAL MUSICIANS - Prince "I kind of wish there was a reason for Prince to make the site crash more" ~~ Ben |
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I love the title track and several others on the album. I was not of legal age when the album was released and I could not bring Prince's albums into the house. I first heard it in my late twenties, though I remember hearing D&Ps on the radio back then and loving it. I also love the DVD and I think the video for D&Ps is one of his most beautiful. | |
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I was 5 years old at the time of the release, but I remember well this era. At the time, music videos of the top 50 each week were an event for me. It was like a Michael Jackson or a Lionel Richie album in term of popularity from my side of view way back then. . I was really amazed when I discovered a decade later D&P hadn't reach the 20 millions mark and that Money Don t Matter 2Night wasn't like #1 worldwide, because the song was a huge success on radio. . This is surely my favourite Prince album. Very Accessible and very good. I was even more amazed when I discovered the hate with Tony M on the org. I think it's flow, rythm and lyrics are excellent. . His long rap on LIVE4Love is fucking great, legendary. Overall, his interaction with Prince was perfect. | |
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I don't think any artist could have pulled a equally timeless look as Prince in the same 90's era with THAT perfect hair and THAT perfect beard. Remember this was 1991. A year some people say is the period when the 80's was trying to die but was in a respirator. The clothes on artists were awful, the hairdos were all over the place and horrible most of the time. However ä, Prince stayed cohesive and pulled both with style and grace which is a big feat. | |
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Visuals are ageing, except for the small miracle of the hologram sleeve. 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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He created a lot of excitement for this album, but I remember that I wasn't very excited when I first heard it. I kept hoping, maybe the next track will be great, but no. It wasn't even because of Tony M (Willing and Able is one of the better tracks), there just wasn't anything that was as fantastic as it was in the past. Most reviews said the same: good album, but not as great or as surprising as it used to be. But, he still had hits and his reputation as a live performer was good enough to do another sold out tour. [Edited 12/27/18 2:18am] | |
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Oh, and "Live 4 Love" studio version, 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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It's funny how a weak ass album like D&P gets a pass from so many Prince fans and yet Rave, which is a much stronger album imo, gets slack because it didn't succeed commercially. If commercial popularity was based on the quality of the songwriting alone, then Rave would've been a smash and D&P would've tanked. Just goes to show how important marketing and good timing is in the industry. [Edited 12/27/18 3:27am] | |
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No amount of good promotion could have saved Rave from itself. [Edited 12/27/18 5:17am] | |
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His worst era to me. I did not like the live shows. I hated the lame attempt to incorporate rap into his work. But, there were some gems from that era. | |
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debated to death...BUT...a genius career move that gave him a much needed comeback after Graffitti Bridge's failure. Screw what fellow hardcore fams think - he did what he needed to do & followed trends [shock horror!] whilst keeping the purple freakery. New look, new sound, mega tour, great videos, chart success = job done! | |
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Apart from Cream, Get Off and Live 4 love I don´t listen to this album. I liked the cover and the looks but I hated the tittle song so much (so cheesy) that I guess it ruined it for me. | |
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Diamond & Pearls proved Prince(r.i.p.) could still come up with a hit multi platinum, visually stimulating, album with the right promotion and people behind it like his late brief manager Frank Dileo. The videos of the title track,"Cream". & the sexy orgy driven maxi video/single"Gett off" were MTV ready. Then lead to his most provocative live performance of his career with Prince's(r.i.p.) peek-a-boo yellow ensemble outfit.
"That mountain top situation is not really what it's all cracked up 2 B when was doing the Purple Rain tour had a lot of people who knew 'll never c again @ the concerts.just screamin n places they thought they was suppose 2 scream." | |
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I was 15 at the time and saw the Gett Off video and was hooked from there. Still love the era now. The Gett Off and D&P video collections felt like a glimpse into his magical weird world and the maxi singles were a great addition to the album. | |
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I was 16 and had been a fan for years at that point. I remember rushing to get it the day it was released! It maybe hasn't aged as well as the classic albums but there are some great songs. After floundering a bit commercially (even Batman seemed like a weird blip amidst Lovesexy and Graffiti Bridge, fueled by the movie's hype) Prince was back and everywhere. The excitement for this new direction and new era was palpable in 1991 and, when I think about that feeling listening to it now, it still seems somehow fresh to me. | |
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i love the majority of Rave though I listen to the ballads from it the most.I think the album has quite a few strong songs. Same with Diamonds and Pearls. | |
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It remains ICONIC in the Prince legacy because of its success. The image, the commercial success, the visibility he had during that year is why the D&P era will always be remembered more than the actual music and sound of that era. | |
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Prince 4Ever. | |
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"Time is space spent with U" | |
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The album is awesome and some of the videos are great. I love the title song and video with Rosie. | |
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MattyJam said: It's funny how a weak ass album like D&P gets a pass from so many Prince fans and yet Rave, which is a much stronger album imo, gets slack because it didn't succeed commercially. If commercial popularity was based on the quality of the songwriting alone, then Rave would've been a smash and D&P would've tanked. Just goes to show how important marketing and good timing is in the industry. [Edited 12/27/18 3:27am] I don't necessarily agree that D&P is weak and Rave is much stronger. This is your opinion. I actually enjoy both albums for different reasons. | |
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Having a new band really brought life back to P's music, even if he was chasing the New Jack Swing trend by 1991. D&P feels really spacious and powerful, but a lot of tracks like Strollin' and Walk Don't Walk feel like filler next to absolute victories like Insatiable and Gett Off. | |
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I was 25 when the album was released. | |
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Rave is a "much stronger album"? Nonsense.
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Shockedelicus said: Having a new band really brought life back to P's music, even if he was chasing the New Jack Swing trend by 1991. D&P feels really spacious and powerful, but a lot of tracks like Strollin' and Walk Don't Walk feel like filler next to absolute victories like Insatiable and Gett Off. Funny, you call two songs that I like filler while you call that bad copy of Do Me, Baby or Scandalous a victory. It was fun to see him in that bed flying over the audience during the tour, but as a song... Unfortunately, for some reason, after that Prince thought every album needed one of those slow jams. Shhh, Satisfied, Mr. Goodnight etcetera etcetera... They all sound the same. | |
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rednblue said: I was 25 when the album was released. Yeah, that's another thing: this was his most male-oriented band ever. Rosie was just a singer, Diamond, Pearl and Mayte were just dancers... No women who played a prominent role like Wendy, Lisa or Sheila... Quite unusual for Prince. Was this another way to connect with the machismo of hiphop? | |
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Whaddayano, first I'm dissing the visuals, [Edited 12/27/18 11:59am] 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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[Edited 12/27/18 12:14pm] 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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