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Warner Bros. treated Prince extremely well
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So, here's the deal: -- Prince didn't have many complaints about the early part of his career/time with Warner Bros. His issues stemmed from what went on with them in the late 80's, and even more so in the early 90's. "New Power slide...." | |
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Didn't he need to meet a sales "quota" per album for that $100 million contract to be in play? It seems Prince really could not have met that criteria using past album sales as a benchmark.
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I agree,Warners were very supportive and generous to Prince.When he signed the 1992 contract,they pumped a ton of money into Paisley Park Records even though,by that point,none of the releases on that label were successful.They gave him everything he wanted...even a vice president position! | |
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Prince's personality refused to accept the 'No's.' that Warner Bros. continously told him in his career. Yes, they did seem to bend over backwards to please him in some cases, but WB refusing to let him release the music he wanted and when he wanted is what hit Prince the hardest. Remember- he stated many times that his songs were his children and for WB to let those children not be free to play with people (fans) was very hurtful to him. So, WB gives him a $100 million contract, turns around and doesn't do much promotion for the albums under said contract which results in the nullification of contract? To me, this is another example of the 'man' taking advantage of their client and trying to keep him in line. Both parties got a ton of publicity when this deal was announced. WB knew that Prince wouldn't be able to sell the album quotas (and they made sure that it didn't happen) and the exec's in the board room were probably laughing at him as soon as the ink dried on the contract. | |
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I'd love someone to make a documentary about this, interview some folk from Warner Bros. and perhaps get a different point of view from the sympathetic 'poor exploited musician' angle that we're so used to hearing from Prince's camp.
. [Edited 9/5/19 16:04pm] Toejam @ Peach & Black Podcast: http://peachandblack.podbean.com
Toejam's band "Cheap Fakes": http://cheapfakes.com.au, http://www.facebook.com/cheapfakes Toejam the solo artist: http://www.youtube.com/scottbignell | |
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Very much so. | |
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. Hi Lurker. You raise a lot of good points here. | |
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kingricefan said: Prince's personality refused to accept the 'No's.' that Warner Bros. continously told him in his career. Yes, they did seem to bend over backwards to please him in some cases, but WB refusing to let him release the music he wanted and when he wanted is what hit Prince the hardest. Remember- he stated many times that his songs were his children and for WB to let those children not be free to play with people (fans) was very hurtful to him. So, WB gives him a $100 million contract, turns around and doesn't do much promotion for the albums under said contract which results in the nullification of contract? To me, this is another example of the 'man' taking advantage of their client and trying to keep him in line. Both parties got a ton of publicity when this deal was announced. WB knew that Prince wouldn't be able to sell the album quotas (and they made sure that it didn't happen) and the exec's in the board room were probably laughing at him as soon as the ink dried on the contract. Warners allowed Prince to release one album a year and let’s be honest....the record-buying public could barely keep up with *those* albums.I can understand their viewpoint.Prince wanted to flood the market but doing so creates poor sales.It’s simply not good business sense to release too much music. | |
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The second contract had already been signed when he opened for the Rolling Stones on Oct 9, 1981. His fourth album (Controversy) was released on Oct 14, 1981 (five days later).
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I don't think he had stage fright on American Bandstand; he was being cheeky per Dez. D. His aloof manner was pre-planned. He had stage-fright or awkwardness at the Capri theater earlier and the label wanted him to get more seasoned before touring. | |
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here is a thought.
The deal with WB was more than a record conctract. Think bigger.
Hello God, within this loveletter Special Thanks 2 Paisley Park and The DownLoad Society | |
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I look at this from the perspective that Prince was able to produce a massive amount of releases under WB. | |
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ha, exactly. Prince lived his life as if every day was opposite day. If WB told him to "speed it up" instead of "slow it down" in '92 he would have probably spread releases out 2-3 years apart like they wanted him to. [Edited 9/6/19 1:54am] | |
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. https://musicfans.stackex...m/a/89/129
© Bart Van Hemelen
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. Yeah, sure, the dude wanted the biggest contract in recording history and even put out a press release soon after the 1992 deal was signed. One of his chefs said that he still was obsessing over that in the late 2000s when Madonna did her 360 deal. . Oh, and there's the repeated "number one at the bank" statements. . Even the recent New Yorker piece points out his obsession with "getting paid". .
. Dude, the label poured MILLIONS into PPR. They paid $1 million for TBA despite that deal becoming a clusterfuck: https://musicfans.stackex...a/3719/129 . They paid him millions to get out of the way of The Hits/The B-Sides. They allowed him to leave while he still owed them three records and only delivered two fairly rubbish ones: https://musicfans.stackex...a/2171/129 . They allowed him to veto tracks on later compilations. . [Edited 9/6/19 4:39am] © Bart Van Hemelen
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. Hi Bart. . You make good points, but I think you've misunderstood me. I didn't say that Prince didn't care about being a rich celeb. I said his first passion was making music. ie, that was his first priority. The guy woke up, ate breakfast, made music, repeatidly, for days on end, and sotred more than he could release in 3 lifetimes. Madonna doesn't do that. . That's why he wanted to give Undertaker away on the front of a magazine, or release Come and the Gold Experience within months of eachother.
. With regards to Hits / B-Sides, that's kind of my point. They paid him to stay clear of his Greatest Hits project. They paid him for an album that he didn't really want to release. They put Gold on a year long hiatus. It's a far cry from 'Sure, go make a movie. We'll bank roll it'. They seemed to dick him around a lot in the early 90s and showed him leniency when it came to getting rid of him.
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. They didn't, Prince did. Note that Warners wanted to release NPG's Exodus in Summer 1995, but requested that Prince refrained from dispariging comments in interviews. Of course, Prince badmouthed them pretty soon... . TGE was part of the TBA deal originally (see my link above) but of course Prince broke that. Then further negotiations about TGE were delayed due to the numerous changes in Warners management. . See also https://prince.org/msg/7/106445 for a timeline: .
. © Bart Van Hemelen
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My face is red, I stand corrected | |
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There's more @ https://princevswarners.b...-gold.html WRT the timeline, including: .
. © Bart Van Hemelen
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PeggyO said:
Didn't he need to meet a sales "quota" per album for that $100 million contract to be in play? It seems Prince really could not have met that criteria using past album sales as a benchmark.
Yes, he needed to meet a quota for sales for each album issued under the contract. He was also upset he couldn't use what was in the vault/past recordings. Most of all, he was upset that WB would not give him the masters to past, present, or future recordings. Those, along with wanting to release more music every year was the crux of the dispute. The kind of love that takes over your body, mind, & soul | |
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Prince could be a difficult person to work with There was nothing wrong with that deal.He should have accepted it.
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Like I stated many times, after the commercial success of D&P which to date sold over 7 million, and at the time of the new contract D&P sold over 5 million... D&P commercial success was largely due to the calculated promotion by the new WB PR department and the suggestion that they hire MJ's former manager, Frank Dileo.
It worked very well because it became his second biggest selling album behind Purple Rain. As WB saw the sales figures for D&P selling strong in a year and generation shift where the most popular music was the rise of gangster rap, new jack swing and grundge, Prince still was relevant for that time, especially with sales over 5 million.
The problem is WB was expecting that to be a constant with Prince, the calculated marketing, promotion etc... Low and behold, when he promoted the Love Symbol album in 1992 he went back to his old ways, firing Frank Dileo when Frank and Prince had a disagreement on how the first single should be 7 but he wanted My Name Is Prince instead, Prince started promoting the Love Symbol album "HIS WAY" once again, many Paisley Park specials, and besides the Arsenio Hall performances which was mainstream at the time, his promotion did little to nothing for that album, it didn't surpass the 5 million that WB had required, it sold 2 million world wide, and with that sealed the deal that the contract was no longer practical or logisictal for Prince to maintain those sales of 5 million per album. | |
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He did seem awkward but it seemed he had a couple of rudimentary come-backs like making What-his-name wait for the answer to "how many instruments do you play?" and his kind of slightly annoyed look when"Of all places, you live in Minnesota? was mentioned. I just see him trying to start to control the narrative but in an unpolished way. He was likely nervous but a little cocky (IMO). I feel Pepe wanted him to be friendlier and more conciliatory.
[Edited 9/7/19 21:51pm] | |
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lurker316 said:
You act as if Prince was a charity case...Pleeze. WB made tons of $ off his music and crazy productivity/work ethic. And his self contained production style was so innovative as a business model that it helped move the industry from big bands to producer driven acts (more profitable). WB shud’ve treated one of their historic premiere talents well. They will continue to reap profits from his catalog FOREVER. | |
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WB made tons of $ off his music and crazy productivity/work ethic. . They made really great money from one album, great money from a couple of others, and the rest were so-so to negligable. But that took a fuckload of work. Whereas a single Madonna album would reap immediate rewards for not just weeks but years. And her vanity label actually produced massive sales for several of its acts, whereas PPR was a moneypit. . WB shud’ve treated one of their historic premiere talents well. . They did. He spent his entire three-album advance on his first album and they still gave him studio time and renewed his contract and gave him opportunities WRT The Time, Vanity 6, Sheila E.,... They gave him a movie, and then another one, and then allowed him to go outside of WB for the SOTT movie. They withdrew an album that was being shipped to stores, an album that was supposed to be a secret release. . They will continue to reap profits from his catalog FOREVER. . Except for the soundtrack albums they'll lose everything else to Sony/Legacy in 2021. (Though I wouldn't be surprised if they've gotten another deal in return, e.g. WRT first refusal rights for upcoming Vault releases). © Bart Van Hemelen
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