PeteSilas said: interesting thing is, once he did have a horn section, the revolution only fell apart a little more, wendy called that an r and b review. The moves to more traditonal black music and even as matt fink said, prince wanted to "hang out with his black buddies" seemed a major component in the frictions in the band. The horns, I thought, were great. The backup dancer thing...not so much. | |
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the horns were great, some of the riffs they would never work with in my opinion, the simple riffs like 1999 didn't do it for me but his use of them on his newer stuff was fine. So, although the synths took the place of the horn section, they were still synths and used in Prince's idiosyncratic way, when doves cry wouldn't sound all that great on horns. However, one of my favorite versions of Little Red Corvette is a marching band version. depends on the tune. | |
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its Oberheim 4 voice.except polymoog and minimoog Prince used oberheim synths from 1979 up to 1985 with one exception When Doves Cry synth riff is yamaha dx7 | |
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I liked the pre-horns sound he had up until 1986 but I also enjoyed the occasional horn parts during the 1984-85 concerts with Eric Leeds or those Eddie M. parts on record and live and of course the Eric Leeds/Atlanta Bliss combination from Parade until the Lovesexy tour but I´m not really a fan of his later use of big horn sections. And the updated Minneapolis sound (see Mutiny on the Arsenio Hall show) with real horns instead of synths wasn´t really my cup of tea either. " I´d rather be a stank ass hoe because I´m not stupid. Oh my goodness! I got more drugs! I´m always funny dude...I´m hilarious! Are we gonna smoke?" | |
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There was nothing 'traditionally black' about anything on the Parade tour. There was nothing 'traditionally black about the music being made in the 1985 or 1986. What Matt said was during his time in the NPG 1989-90. Miko Weaver though had similar problems with the new band members. | |
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Yeah I was watching a performance on Ellen and I noticed how the horns just sounded overbearing.
Eddie M, Eric Leeds, Atlanta Bliss, any of those singular or plural combinations brought me joy. The use of the larger horn sections did not always do it for me. | |
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I´m especially partial to Eric Leeds and Eddie Mininfield. They had that trademark sound that added so much to Prince´s sound and complimented it. As much as I like Maceo and Candy, their sound was not exactly my favorite sax sound when it comes to Prince´s music. Don´t get me wrong, they are both great players and of course Maceo is a living legend but that´s exactly the problem I had with him and Larry. On the one hand they are great musicians and innovators on their instruments but on the other hand I found them way too dominant and too famous in their own right to be playing in Prince´s band. But it was nice to see Maceo finally be a part of the band after all those fake "Maceo!" shout outs in the early 80s. However, Mr. Leeds and Mr. Mininfield had that quintessential Purple sound. " I´d rather be a stank ass hoe because I´m not stupid. Oh my goodness! I got more drugs! I´m always funny dude...I´m hilarious! Are we gonna smoke?" | |
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I remember reading that quote from A Pop Life. That always irked me. And it is quite telling...if he actully said that. "Climb in my fur." | |
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yes, the foundational years of purple music. There is something about if the person was 'established' already it seemed to take away, or not enhance the music.
Eric & Eddie M delivered two different energies of the same sound. And it was perfection. | |
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ya, that split in his fanbase that we still see today was in his own band. Prince was a black man, some of it's his own fault. He wanted the brass ring and he mixed his band and his music for those reasons but even today people have a hard time with him being what he was, and he was black, an idea he got more and more comfortable with all the way up to his death. | |
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The album version of parade was pure Prince and as eclectic as ever but it was funky as hell, so was ATWIAD as he said himself "ATWIAD is a funky album" but he was putting a lot of stuff on top of the funk. At any rate, his first use of horn sections live during the parade era always seemed a step in the direction of the old soul bands, one which became more fleshed out by the SOTT/Lovesexy eras. Some fans like our own vainandy called it "retro" and it was in a lot of ways. Of course later on his horn sections would be no different than any great soul group but that was many years later. I still go back to what Chick said, that he "hated" horns, I still wonder if that was true of if Chick made it up. It just seems logical for a guy to use an easily controlled keyboard and fingers instead of several guys who you have to get together and pay and cajole to do things. Also, I think Leeds has said he's done much of the horn type charts. I doubt if prince arranged the horns on slow love. Those are pure r and b. | |
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what am I "trolling" for?? | |
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IDK what "traditional black" means but certainly the Parade Tour marked a return to R&B that hadn't been seen since the Rick James Tour, if ever. From DM to PR, tours had a more post-punk/new wave sound, more rock guitars, more synthesizers, more electronic drum kits and a post-punk then neo-romantic esthetics when it came to clothes and hairstyles. Now the Parade Tour was certainly not a mere imitation of JB or 70's funk as has sometimes been implied, but it was more in line with classic funk both musically and visually. No debate from me about it being cool, it's one of my favorite tours, and it was smart from Prince to revert back to an organic sound when the whole world was emulating his synthetic sound. [Edited 2/13/19 14:02pm] A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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attention..asking questions with obvious answers "Climb in my fur." | |
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Yeah he had a wider mix of his music on that tour vs the 1999 tour or Purple Rain(even though they did reacher further back) but I've never heard Prince's music as 'traditionally' anything. Prince's live shows since the beginning were always pushing a higher rock in roll energy. To this day, I never mixed purple music with other music lol it's always with music by Prince, maybe some of the associates after they left the camp. Sometimes it continues telling a story.
The Parade tour consisted of ATWIAD Christopher Tracy's Parade New Position(which Wendy & Lisa pulled up from the vault) Life Can Be So Nice etc piano medlies Purple Rain When Doves Cry I mean that album and ATWIAD was mainly featured on the Parade tour. I love when they did Soft & Wet and I Wanna Be Your Lover on this tour. I just see it more of the 'stage review' which was borrowed from the Family set, than the actual music. Very eclectic presentation of music for sure.
I think were I wish he didn't try to turn it into a 'jam' was Computer Blue(PR tour) and I Wonder U(Parade tour). Computer Blue they went deep and then he turned into a JB type jam, which I wish it would have gone darker and more electric. I Wonder U, with the song being so sultery and steamy I always wished they went further into extended what was happening musically and letting it build.
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Yes it was, I totally agree. It was pure purple music... a style of his own.
I know he had to use them as much as possible, but I didn't think the horns were good on all the songs. Horn use on the Purple Rain tour and the Nice France show were very 'deviant' I came across as 'new'. Not like any traditional horn use for some reason. lol
Yeah Leeds said Prince would give him songs to work out arrangments. Like with Clare Fischer. | |
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Eric Leeds was def not writing NPG parts tho, correct? [Edited 2/13/19 16:04pm] "if you can't clap on the one, then don't clap at all" | |
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I can't remember who (Eric maybe?) but I'm pretty sure someone from the band once said that Prince just wouldn't let any bandmember being inactive on any song, because he was paying them to play. I totally agree that some songs such as LRC, LGC or WDC suffered from that on the 87-88 tours: certain rock or new wave tracks sound corny if you just stick horns to them for the sake of sticking horns to them. . As for the horns charts, I know that by the late 90's at least, Prince would give some specific instructions and let the horns arranger do the rest as they felt it. I was once told what was P and what was MBN on "Y Should Eye Do That When Eye Can Do" and once told, it was totally obvious. IDK for sure if it was already the case with Eric but it's quite likely Prince gave him some directions, or at least "edited" what Eric offered. Didn't Eric address it in his lenghty Prince podcast interview? I can't remember. A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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I like Eric Leeds playing, but he is soloist. Not a horn section by any means. "if you can't clap on the one, then don't clap at all" | |
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"if you can't clap on the one, then don't clap at all" | |
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soladeo1 said: Fink's synths were Prince's "horns". More like P’s synths | |
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"if you can't clap on the one, then don't clap at all" | |
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But it Fink playing live, so why the rebuttle?
And Fink played studio on synth too on some of the hottest pieces like Get It Up, Dirty Mind, Head etc | |
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Yeah it was different. He was just free styling.
it was Miles soloing on a groove for about 5 min inbetween IGBABN and Chain of Fools
16.It's Gonna Be A Beautiful Night/Six
Now Atlanta Bliss, was pure purple bliss on many Prince tracks
TLM: On New Year’s Eve 1987, you finally got to play on the same stage as Miles, during a Prince benefit event at Paisley Park studios.
Eric Leeds: The anticipation was a lot stronger than the actual event. It was a very fast funk groove that we were doing and it wasn’t anything that Miles was going to do anything other than just basically do his stick. | |
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And it was Tony M that told people in the band Prince wasn't 'black enough' and that he was going to shove black down that ni&&as throat'
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Quite telling in what way? you might be irked about the wrong thing. | |
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I think that is going to deep. A horn section is basically a section of horn players whether it is 2-20 When Eric was in the band it was always 2. Eric & Eddie M / Eric and Atlanta Bliss.
He also didn't just play solos, he played in the songs melodies and rhythms without soloing. | |
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