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Reply #30 posted 03/10/19 12:06am

lavendardrumma
chine

The musical side is the least puzzling thing about him.

The geography is real, but he did try NYC and went to LA to record.

The bigger question is how he was able to do it while adopting extreme gender bender style. Also the fact that he was so damn short and not entirely comfortable with it, but nobody seemed to care, at a time when record labels would pass over talent for dumb crap all the time, shows what a force of nature he was. Also, just getting near a synthesizer or drum machine to learn the equipment was a big deal in that period, and he wasn't rolling in cash so connecting with Chris Moon was key. Not to mention Owen Husney didn't do a hell of a lot of star making after Prince, but that was the right guy for the period they were together. The stars were really aligned.

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Reply #31 posted 03/10/19 6:43am

PURPLEIZED3121

From very early on he was a kid witha mission. HIs level of self control & determination to succeed & stay in pole position was almost Zen-like!

Amazing example to anyone who wants to succeed in a career or life...BUT at what cost....

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Reply #32 posted 03/10/19 7:18am

benni

poppys said:

benni said:


You take a kid that's hungry, that starts with nothing, and hears music in everything, and you put him in front of a piano, put a guitar in his hands, a pair of drum sticks, and watch what he does. Prince once said in an interview that he heard music all the time. When you have someone that is that artistic, that in tune with their own art, they won't let anything stop them.


But Prince wasn't put in front of a random piano, he didn't start with nothing musically. The piano was there first. Music was in the family, in the bones. Reading music and taking it to another level are not mutually exclusive.

[Edited 3/9/19 19:28pm]


What I mean poppys, is that Prince wanted to succeed. He never wanted to stand outside of another McDonald's looking in. He had that drive to succeed, and the talent. Yes, the piano was there first, but he said he learned it, I believe, when he was locked up in his room for a couple of weeks. He had nothing else to do really, so he taught himself how to play the piano. And while music was in the family, he said once that his mom didn't want him getting into music, afraid he'd be like his dad, and his dad didn't really take the time to teach him.

When you have someone who starts their life with nothing (he said they were poor and couldn't afford a lot) and they have the access to instruments, the raw talent that Prince had, and they have that drive to succeed, a narrow focus, then they won't let anything stop them.

Prince said in an interview there was nothing else that he wanted to do with his life. He spent every moment in school, that he could, in the band room, learning. After schools were spent practicing. Even the friends he chose at that young age were musicians (Andre).

And I never said reading music and taking it to another level were mutually exclusive??

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Reply #33 posted 03/10/19 11:20am

alandail

poppys said:

Can anyone actually prove definitively that Prince could not read music? This is all speculation.



No, you can’t prove something that isn’t true.
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Reply #34 posted 03/10/19 11:28am

alandail

TheEnglishGent said:

I always took it to mean he couldn't sit in front of a piece of music and play it by sight. I can read music, in as much as I know what all the notes and symbols mean. What I can't do is sit in front of a piano and just bash out something I've never played before just by having the sheet music there in front of me.

It's absolutely inconceivable to me that Prince couldn't point to a stave and tell you which notes go where.



I’m sure he could do that too, play by sight, what he couldn’t do is hear it fro reading the music without playing it.

When Najee joined the one nite alone tour, I went to soundcheck in Cleveland, prince told the story of how he sent Najee the sheet music for his flight, when he landed prince asked him if he wanted to hear the music. Najee said he didn’t have to because he read it. Prince said something to the effect of he wished he could do that. Referring to hearing it while he read it, the same way you can hear words while reading them.
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Reply #35 posted 03/10/19 11:29am

alandail

One more thing. Prince took band in HS. Learning to read sheet music is part of band class.
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Reply #36 posted 03/10/19 3:30pm

poppys

benni said:

poppys said:


But Prince wasn't put in front of a random piano, he didn't start with nothing musically. The piano was there first. Music was in the family, in the bones. Reading music and taking it to another level are not mutually exclusive.

[Edited 3/9/19 19:28pm]


What I mean poppys, is that Prince wanted to succeed. He never wanted to stand outside of another McDonald's looking in. He had that drive to succeed, and the talent. Yes, the piano was there first, but he said he learned it, I believe, when he was locked up in his room for a couple of weeks. He had nothing else to do really, so he taught himself how to play the piano. And while music was in the family, he said once that his mom didn't want him getting into music, afraid he'd be like his dad, and his dad didn't really take the time to teach him.

When you have someone who starts their life with nothing (he said they were poor and couldn't afford a lot) and they have the access to instruments, the raw talent that Prince had, and they have that drive to succeed, a narrow focus, then they won't let anything stop them.

Prince said in an interview there was nothing else that he wanted to do with his life. He spent every moment in school, that he could, in the band room, learning. After schools were spent practicing. Even the friends he chose at that young age were musicians (Andre).

And I never said reading music and taking it to another level were mutually exclusive??


Okay. Do you thnk Prince could read music? That's the part of the OP I can't swallow.

"if you can't clap on the one, then don't clap at all"
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Reply #37 posted 03/10/19 6:09pm

benni

poppys said:

benni said:


What I mean poppys, is that Prince wanted to succeed. He never wanted to stand outside of another McDonald's looking in. He had that drive to succeed, and the talent. Yes, the piano was there first, but he said he learned it, I believe, when he was locked up in his room for a couple of weeks. He had nothing else to do really, so he taught himself how to play the piano. And while music was in the family, he said once that his mom didn't want him getting into music, afraid he'd be like his dad, and his dad didn't really take the time to teach him.

When you have someone who starts their life with nothing (he said they were poor and couldn't afford a lot) and they have the access to instruments, the raw talent that Prince had, and they have that drive to succeed, a narrow focus, then they won't let anything stop them.

Prince said in an interview there was nothing else that he wanted to do with his life. He spent every moment in school, that he could, in the band room, learning. After schools were spent practicing. Even the friends he chose at that young age were musicians (Andre).

And I never said reading music and taking it to another level were mutually exclusive??


Okay. Do you thnk Prince could read music? That's the part of the OP I can't swallow.



[2003.10.22] Channel 9 Today

with the NPG, before the Melbourne performance.


At the 2'30" mark -


Interviewer:
You don't read music?


Prince: No

Interviewer: Just instinctive?

Prince: Ah, yeah, I would say so - I have a good ...

Maceo Parker (interjecting): Genius, like I said.

Prince: ... I have a good ear

(laughing and turning to Maceo): The pay's the same Maceo.

(credit to langebleu)


http://prince.org/msg/7/446672

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Reply #38 posted 03/10/19 6:16pm

benni

His music teacher from middle school said:


Hamilton says Prince was mostly “self-taught,” so the two focused on music theory and learning fun, contemporary songs.

“He was an easy student, he was so eager to learn and it came naturally to him. He could play any instrument, but the song we worked on the most was ‘Stairway to Heaven’ on the piano,” says Hamilton with a laugh. “He loved that one!”


https://people.com/celebr...a-student/

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Reply #39 posted 03/11/19 6:06am

poppys

benni said:

His music teacher from middle school said:


Hamilton says Prince was mostly “self-taught,” so the two focused on music theory and learning fun, contemporary songs.

“He was an easy student, he was so eager to learn and it came naturally to him. He could play any instrument, but the song we worked on the most was ‘Stairway to Heaven’ on the piano,” says Hamilton with a laugh. “He loved that one!”


https://people.com/celebr...a-student/


So your answer is no? I think he could.

His father certainly could, being an accomplished musican and bandleader. Maybe his mother too. She was a singer. Again, probably a music/band teacher or family member would know or have known. Wide range of random comments that are not definitive. Reading music is not difficult, even I can do it. I'm not buying that mystique. Doesn't make him less of a phenom to me anyway.

"if you can't clap on the one, then don't clap at all"
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Reply #40 posted 03/11/19 8:35am

delirious

I know a few people that have worked with Prince and even arranged music with him. He would use chord charts to convey the high-level arrangement and then work with people in the band that were more classically trained to notate all the notes in the arrangement (Wendy & Lisa are examples).

There is a huge difference between reading sheet music etc. and understanding chords and structure on a chord chart. So he knew all the chords and knew how to solo in just about any key but never really had to learn how to read sheet music.

So the answer to the question was always i nthe phrasing of the question - "do you read music" Prince equated to "Do you read sheet music" which he does not but he can communicate with musicians because he understands chords, structure, tempo, etc.

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Reply #41 posted 03/11/19 9:09am

steakfinger

He had a lot of help and he wouldn't have been who he ended up without Owen Hussney and the others. Also, LOOKS, talent, and the willpower to work hard. The Beatles said it was easy. If you wanted to "make it" you just have to tirelessly work at it non-stop for years. No time off, no partying, little socializing.

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Reply #42 posted 03/11/19 9:54am

alandail

I still say the distinction is being able to hear the music when you look at hte notes on sheet music the way you hear the words when you read them. It's impossible to believe that Prince couldn't look at sheet music and play the note or chord represented on the page. It's trivially easy to learn do that.

He possibly couldn't take sheet music and play the part perfectly the first time they way he likely could if he heard the part. But it's really impossible to think he couldn't look at notes on a page and figure out what to play in what order and after spending some time with it have it sound like it's supposed to.

[Edited 3/11/19 9:55am]

[Edited 3/11/19 9:56am]

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Reply #43 posted 03/11/19 10:00am

alandail

Also, to add, to me it's far more impressive to be able to hear something then play it back than it is to read it on sheet music and play it back. How do you hear all of the notes and get them all right? Or to hear a song, then sit down and add a part that the writer didn't know was missing, like he did with Stand Back. Prince was able hear never before recorded muisc in his head, sit down in the studio and turn it into a new song track by track.

[Edited 3/11/19 10:01am]

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Reply #44 posted 03/11/19 2:30pm

benni

poppys said:

benni said:

His music teacher from middle school said:


Hamilton says Prince was mostly “self-taught,” so the two focused on music theory and learning fun, contemporary songs.

“He was an easy student, he was so eager to learn and it came naturally to him. He could play any instrument, but the song we worked on the most was ‘Stairway to Heaven’ on the piano,” says Hamilton with a laugh. “He loved that one!”


https://people.com/celebr...a-student/


So your answer is no? I think he could.

His father certainly could, being an accomplished musican and bandleader. Maybe his mother too. She was a singer. Again, probably a music/band teacher or family member would know or have known. Wide range of random comments that are not definitive. Reading music is not difficult, even I can do it. I'm not buying that mystique. Doesn't make him less of a phenom to me anyway.


I don't think he could. He'd have no reason to lie about it, nor would anyone in his camp. His music teacher didn't mention reading music. And his father ccould, but remember his father was gone working all day, then at night he was out at the clubs. He wouldn't have taken the time to teach Prince, and by the time Prince was 12, he was out of that home and living with Andre and his mom. They would not have taught reading music (except for the basics) in elementary school.

In middle school, the teacher doesn't specify that he was actually in band, just that he was his music teacher, and said that Prince was self-taught, so they mostly focused on music theory and learning contemporary music.

There are a lot of music teachers that don't teach students anything but the basics in middle school, unless they are in one of the major band classes learning an instrument. Prince would spend all his time in the music/band room, but that doesn't mean he was necessarily enrolled to learn an instrument.

Even upon his passing, all the pictures that were released of Paisley Park, what was inside, I don't remember once seeing a music sheet anywhere. There was little comments "C Major" or whatever, but no music sheets. You would think if he could read music, and wanted to learn how to cover a song, there'd be some kind of music books around, written music, and there just weren't.

Also, just want to add, there are a lot of rock stars that do not know how to read music. They play by ear, by feel.




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Reply #45 posted 03/11/19 2:45pm

purplefam99

benni said:



poppys said:




benni said:


His music teacher from middle school said:



Hamilton says Prince was mostly “self-taught,” so the two focused on music theory and learning fun, contemporary songs.


“He was an easy student, he was so eager to learn and it came naturally to him. He could play any instrument, but the song we worked on the most was ‘Stairway to Heaven’ on the piano,” says Hamilton with a laugh. “He loved that one!”


https://people.com/celebr...a-student/




So your answer is no? I think he could.

His father certainly could, being an accomplished musican and bandleader. Maybe his mother too. She was a singer. Again, probably a music/band teacher or family member would know or have known. Wide range of random comments that are not definitive. Reading music is not difficult, even I can do it. I'm not buying that mystique. Doesn't make him less of a phenom to me anyway.




I don't think he could. He'd have no reason to lie about it, nor would anyone in his camp. His music teacher didn't mention reading music. And his father ccould, but remember his father was gone working all day, then at night he was out at the clubs. He wouldn't have taken the time to teach Prince, and by the time Prince was 12, he was out of that home and living with Andre and his mom. They would not have taught reading music (except for the basics) in elementary school.

In middle school, the teacher doesn't specify that he was actually in band, just that he was his music teacher, and said that Prince was self-taught, so they mostly focused on music theory and learning contemporary music.

There are a lot of music teachers that don't teach students anything but the basics in middle school, unless they are in one of the major band classes learning an instrument. Prince would spend all his time in the music/band room, but that doesn't mean he was necessarily enrolled to learn an instrument.

Even upon his passing, all the pictures that were released of Paisley Park, what was inside, I don't remember once seeing a music sheet anywhere. There was little comments "C Major" or whatever, but no music sheets. You would think if he could read music, and wanted to learn how to cover a song, there'd be some kind of music books around, written music, and there just weren't.

Also, just want to add, there are a lot of rock stars that do not know how to read music. They play by ear, by feel.






I agree I don’t think he read music either. He didn’t have to
He played by ear since he first touched the piano at 7.
Why go back when you already know how to translate it into the instrument.
I’m sure he picked up knowledge along the way, but I doubt he employed
Staunch reading techniques.
I do believe in the sharon Nelson interview that is one of the questions
And iirc she says “no” prince did not read music. And I believe she is answering
The question in the strictest sense.
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Reply #46 posted 03/11/19 6:48pm

onlyforaminute

avatar

purplefam99 said:

benni said:



poppys said:




benni said:


His music teacher from middle school said:



Hamilton says Prince was mostly “self-taught,” so the two focused on music theory and learning fun, contemporary songs.


“He was an easy student, he was so eager to learn and it came naturally to him. He could play any instrument, but the song we worked on the most was ‘Stairway to Heaven’ on the piano,” says Hamilton with a laugh. “He loved that one!”


https://people.com/celebr...a-student/




So your answer is no? I think he could.

His father certainly could, being an accomplished musican and bandleader. Maybe his mother too. She was a singer. Again, probably a music/band teacher or family member would know or have known. Wide range of random comments that are not definitive. Reading music is not difficult, even I can do it. I'm not buying that mystique. Doesn't make him less of a phenom to me anyway.




I don't think he could. He'd have no reason to lie about it, nor would anyone in his camp. His music teacher didn't mention reading music. And his father ccould, but remember his father was gone working all day, then at night he was out at the clubs. He wouldn't have taken the time to teach Prince, and by the time Prince was 12, he was out of that home and living with Andre and his mom. They would not have taught reading music (except for the basics) in elementary school.

In middle school, the teacher doesn't specify that he was actually in band, just that he was his music teacher, and said that Prince was self-taught, so they mostly focused on music theory and learning contemporary music.

There are a lot of music teachers that don't teach students anything but the basics in middle school, unless they are in one of the major band classes learning an instrument. Prince would spend all his time in the music/band room, but that doesn't mean he was necessarily enrolled to learn an instrument.

Even upon his passing, all the pictures that were released of Paisley Park, what was inside, I don't remember once seeing a music sheet anywhere. There was little comments "C Major" or whatever, but no music sheets. You would think if he could read music, and wanted to learn how to cover a song, there'd be some kind of music books around, written music, and there just weren't.

Also, just want to add, there are a lot of rock stars that do not know how to read music. They play by ear, by feel.






I agree I don’t think he read music either. He didn’t have to
He played by ear since he first touched the piano at 7.
Why go back when you already know how to translate it into the instrument.
I’m sure he picked up knowledge along the way, but I doubt he employed
Staunch reading techniques.
I do believe in the sharon Nelson interview that is one of the questions
And iirc she says “no” prince did not read music. And I believe she is answering
The question in the strictest sense.



To butt into the convo, Sharon also said Prince didn't do photography.

I still believe Prince made a choice based on his own reasonings that he has never felt the need to share publicly and maintained that choice throughout his life.
Time keeps on slipping into the future...


This moment is all there is...
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Reply #47 posted 03/11/19 7:47pm

purplefam99

onlyforaminute said:

purplefam99 said:



I agree I don’t think he read music either. He didn’t have to
He played by ear since he first touched the piano at 7.
Why go back when you already know how to translate it into the instrument.
I’m sure he picked up knowledge along the way, but I doubt he employed
Staunch reading techniques.
I do believe in the sharon Nelson interview that is one of the questions
And iirc she says “no” prince did not read music. And I believe she is answering
The question in the strictest sense.



To butt into the convo, Sharon also said Prince didn't do photography.

I still believe Prince made a choice based on his own reasonings that he has never felt the need to share publicly and maintained that choice throughout his life.


Well I think she was answering in a strict sense again.
He took pictures and dabbled but I am not sure he would consider
Himself a photographer. He was funny as heck too but I don’t think
He thought himself a Chris Rock or Eddie Murphy. Did he read music
No ( per sharon iirc) could he... I am guessing a bit or somewhat.
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Reply #48 posted 03/11/19 7:49pm

purplefam99

Did Stevie Wonder start out with sheet music???
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Reply #49 posted 03/12/19 12:30am

SirPussalot

think this has been covered ... he couldnt sit in front of a piece of music and play it, something totally new to him .. like a session musician ...all that matters was he was proficent enough to realise his imagination . that was the result of innumerable amount of practice of the process of expression.

if he started hearing music in his head early it is pretty likely he would have done everything to protect this gift .. formalising it would have lessened the unique feeling it gave him ... he had no interest in being taught, he knew the stuff already. look i dunno but that is common in highly creative minds

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Reply #50 posted 03/12/19 1:03am

SirPussalot

his creative process was his core, that was him , he may well have started it as a way to ease pain , gain validation or as a long term plan to protect his core , that usually happens in the teen years . after the success of purple rain , which he played a role in (rock god) he had the material means to isolate himself further.

he worked at this daily 24 7 and was self aware enough to know what was happening and the potential of external threat of that level of stardom.....the beast still needs feeding though so you end up staying up late to sate it.

pretty much unique in being able to protect and share ...for a prolonged period

his ability to actualise what his imagination told him ... rare, he had access to many colours, and became confident to the point of colloboration .....to a point

i am hypothesising but i have a similar process/illness/calling .. but without the expressive gift and skill he had ..

dunno

reading music was largely irrelevant to him , his dad could read ,

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Reply #51 posted 03/12/19 5:21am

purplefam99

SirPussalot said:

think this has been covered ... he couldnt sit in front of a piece of music and play it, something totally new to him .. like a session musician ...all that matters was he was proficent enough to realise his imagination . that was the result of innumerable amount of practice of the process of expression.


if he started hearing music in his head early it is pretty likely he would have done everything to protect this gift .. formalising it would have lessened the unique feeling it gave him ... he had no interest in being taught, he knew the stuff already. look i dunno but that is common in highly creative minds




Yes^^^^^ you said that so well. Formalizing it would have
Stiffled the creativity. Likely why he liked to rehearse so
Much cause that was when creative flow would happen for him
And why he captured it all on tape recordings. The recordings
Where his “notes” his sheet music. He just listened to it again
If he needed to recall it. He was an ear guy, that is why we have a vault
Full of tape not sheet music.
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Reply #52 posted 03/12/19 5:35am

purplefam99

Funny feeling I always had about why Prince did not attend the
“We are the world” thing with Quincy. I felt that Prince
Was maybe shy of Q’s more “sheet music” style/technique. Like he would
Pass out a choir book with everyones part, instead of just feeling it.
Just a feeling.
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Reply #53 posted 03/12/19 10:20am

onlyforaminute

avatar

No, he wasn't Quincy Jones, which I guess is what people really are referring to, as far as level is concerned.

Time keeps on slipping into the future...


This moment is all there is...
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Reply #54 posted 03/12/19 11:12am

purplefam99

onlyforaminute said:

No, he wasn't Quincy Jones, which I guess is what people really are referring to, as far as level is concerned.




To me one method isn’t superior to the other.
I think the thinking is or has been established by the “establishment”
That one is superior. Like when classical is put in front of something
All of a sudden it has more credit than something primitive.
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Reply #55 posted 03/12/19 11:44am

onlyforaminute

avatar

purplefam99 said:

onlyforaminute said:

No, he wasn't Quincy Jones, which I guess is what people really are referring to, as far as level is concerned.

To me one method isn’t superior to the other. I think the thinking is or has been established by the “establishment” That one is superior. Like when classical is put in front of something All of a sudden it has more credit than something primitive.



I prefer the word organic. And I think the jury is still out on Prince's classical ability, whether or not it was something he practiced just for himself. Granted practice has to be involved.

Time keeps on slipping into the future...


This moment is all there is...
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Reply #56 posted 03/12/19 3:10pm

laytonian

purplefam99 said:

Funny feeling I always had about why Prince did not attend the
“We are the world” thing with Quincy. I felt that Prince
Was maybe shy of Q’s more “sheet music” style/technique. Like he would
Pass out a choir book with everyones part, instead of just feeling it.
Just a feeling.


I think it's much simpler.
He didn't want to be surrounded by all those taller people.
They had it charted so he'd stand next to Jackson.
Welcome to "the org", laytonian… come bathe with me.
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Reply #57 posted 03/13/19 8:26pm

littlerockjams

Throwing my .02 in aa a music instructor, so take that for what you will...


The interview quoted above is on video, I’ve seen it myself. So to continue to say that Prince could read music, when he said he couldn’t, is simply saying he was lying for whatever reason. Or, you could imply that you have insider information, which I don’t think the case is either.


With that said, there are two types of reading music, basic reading comprehension like Every Good Boy Does Fine, Good Boys Do Fine Always, etc., where you can sus out what the notes are. Then there is the ability to sight read, where your reading chops are so good, you could look at a piece of music and know it/play it as easily as you’re reading this paragraph. That is the reading I think he was referring to as not being able to do, not the basic reading skills (which he did likely pick up in his HS music class).


Someone asked a side question about “who wrote down the music then?” I’m guessing for scores, music collections, etc. I’d bet dollars to donuts that absolutely wasn’t Prince. That’s too mundane a task for someone with his level of creativity. Stuff like that falls to people like me. I transcribe songs and notate them daily for students and my own practice. It’s not hard to do, once you’ve developed the skills to do so.
Like a G flat major with an E in the Bass
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Reply #58 posted 03/13/19 8:39pm

purplefam99

littlerockjams said:

Throwing my .02 in aa a music instructor, so take that for what you will...


The interview quoted above is on video, I’ve seen it myself. So to continue to say that Prince could read music, when he said he couldn’t, is simply saying he was lying for whatever reason. Or, you could imply that you have insider information, which I don’t think the case is either.


With that said, there are two types of reading music, basic reading comprehension like Every Good Boy Does Fine, Good Boys Do Fine Always, etc., where you can sus out what the notes are. Then there is the ability to sight read, where your reading chops are so good, you could look at a piece of music and know it/play it as easily as you’re reading this paragraph. That is the reading I think he was referring to as not being able to do, not the basic reading skills (which he did likely pick up in his HS music class).


Someone asked a side question about “who wrote down the music then?” I’m guessing for scores, music collections, etc. I’d bet dollars to donuts that absolutely wasn’t Prince. That’s too mundane a task for someone with his level of creativity. Stuff like that falls to people like me. I transcribe songs and notate them daily for students and my own practice. It’s not hard to do, once you’ve developed the skills to do so.



Agree, well said.
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Reply #59 posted 03/13/19 9:14pm

onlyforaminute

avatar

littlerockjams said:

Throwing my .02 in aa a music instructor, so take that for what you will...


The interview quoted above is on video, I’ve seen it myself. So to continue to say that Prince could read music, when he said he couldn’t, is simply saying he was lying for whatever reason. Or, you could imply that you have insider information, which I don’t think the case is either.


With that said, there are two types of reading music, basic reading comprehension like Every Good Boy Does Fine, Good Boys Do Fine Always, etc., where you can sus out what the notes are. Then there is the ability to sight read, where your reading chops are so good, you could look at a piece of music and know it/play it as easily as you’re reading this paragraph. That is the reading I think he was referring to as not being able to do, not the basic reading skills (which he did likely pick up in his HS music class).


Someone asked a side question about “who wrote down the music then?” I’m guessing for scores, music collections, etc. I’d bet dollars to donuts that absolutely wasn’t Prince. That’s too mundane a task for someone with his level of creativity. Stuff like that falls to people like me. I transcribe songs and notate them daily for students and my own practice. It’s not hard to do, once you’ve developed the skills to do so.


I'll just leave it at semantics. We are talking about one of the most cryptic individuals known, one or 2 word answers really aren't answers from such a person. He answered exactly what he was asked no more, no less, leaving interpetation up to the listener. Until I hear (or read) him say specifically I can't read music, I believe there's more behind his simple no answer.

As far as the scene, i personally found it interesting that was the part of the pitch that got Prince's full attention. The father hiding his music sheets.
Time keeps on slipping into the future...


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