. I think that it was more a mental mode for Prince to work in. Allegedly, it was a somewhat dark time for him with many doubts, both professionally, on the heels of the "failure" of Under The Cherry Moon, and personally, with Brownmark and Wendy&Lisa quitting and coming back before Prince pulled the plug on the Revolution himself, to not even mention his troubled relationship with Susannah. So, he may have needed/wanted a concept around which to build the album, to take the pressure off as thinking about it as a Prince or Prince & the Revolution album. Meaning, he could just be free to imagine it as whatever it grew into being without preconceived notions of what it should be. Once a form had taken shape, it could then move to marketed with whatever label Prince decided on in the end. The big question then becomes wether Prince actually kept the "working title" (for lack of a better name) or make it into a "regular" Prince album. . It's impossible to know, but I think there's a good chance that it would have been Prince in the end, regardless (or even Prince & the Revolution even), if WB marketing and Prince could come together, which I think they still could, at the time. Case in point being the SOTT album, which is basically a subset of the Camille Crystal Ball album, but presented as a Prince album. . Of course, that's just speculation and with Prince you never knew. Paisley Park is in your heart - Love Is Here! | |
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databank said:
Oh yeah I had completely forgotten this Flesh DF situation. . What I don't really understand is what P was trying to achieve by releasing DF as The Flesh or CB as Camille. We know he was indeed keen on releasing material under pseudonyms or by giving away credits (the songs or whole album he'd write/produce for others) to see how the material would perform by itself. I kind of understand the underlying concept of TBA (release an anonymous, dark, underground record without any promotion and see how people react when they find it and realize it's P) and I'd assume the Camille album concept was relatively similar (except that it would have been credited to Camille instead of anynymous), but I fail to see how this would have been possible with a double album like DF, let alone a triple like CB. . Was the plan to release them "anonymously" and without much promo like Camille and TBA? Would WB have played ball with this concept beyond a single LP? Or would these records clearly have been promoted and identified as Prince records from the beginning, as in The Flesh is the new name of Prince And The Revolution (with the new, expanded Counter-Revolution line-up as a justification for the name change), or as in Camille is Prince's new name like would later be, only he'd be back to Prince the next year? While I think the single Camille LP had a strong concept with all songs featuring the Camille voice and a particularly dark orientation for the material, while I think TBA was also a strong concept with its overtly provocative lyrical content and infectious dance grooves, I don't see anything in DF or CB that justifies the name change concept, and I don't see either how WB could have released a double or triple album with Prince's "normal" vocals all over it without promoting it as the new Prince album. Indeed, a new Prince album in 1987 was much more of an event as, say, a new Prince album in 2001, and even more if it was a double or triple LP. It would have been hard to conceal its author when P was one of the biggest stars in the world as well as one of the most critically acclaimed, and it would have been even harder given how strong the material on either project. . DF may or may not have been welcomed as enthusastically as SOTT, but it's likely it would have been well received no matter what it would have been in the end. And despite the lack of a consensus as to whether CB would have been acclaimed as one of the greatest albums of all time as I think it would have, or labeled as Prince indulging himself with too long a record, I think the strength of the material would have attracted attention. The title track alone, while released in the world's indifference in 1998, would certainly have brought P a lot of praise in 1987 for its conceptual originality. So what was supposed to happen? Critics were supposed to say, "Oh, here's the new Prince album, and it's a 3 LP extravanganza, except you ain't supposed to say it's Prince, because now Prince's name is Camille"? Was WB supposed to send press releases claiming this was the first album by some new dude named Camille, at the risk of being ridiculed? What sense would this have made? I just don't see how this Flesh/Camille thing could possibly have served the records in any way, the material was too evidently Prince and the concept of the alter-ego was not strongly enough suggested by the music for it to make any bloody sense. . Hopefully, Duane will address this in the new book, and P's plans will be exposed in more details. I really can't wait for this book to be released Probably simply to escape the pressure & expectation that came with releasing an album as “Prince” after Purple Rain. Anything less than Purple Rain became a failure. He saw that the game had him checkmated & tried to make moves to get around it. [Edited 6/22/20 14:54pm] | |
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And he would address this a few years later in "Don't Play Me". "Keep on shilling for Big Pharm!" | |
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. well whadda ya know.. it's superdeluxe! Paisley Park is in your heart - Love Is Here! | |
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. | |
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I always felt the deliberate ambiguity of the Cat photo's played into the Camille pseudonym Prince was keen on, so I always imagined Crystal Ball looking something like this. . | |
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hah.. great idea. I think Cat came in after Crystal Ball was already over, as a concept, but it could be right...
Paisley Park is in your heart - Love Is Here! | |
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Damn that really does look like Prince in drag. A certain kind of mellow. | |
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Hee hee, someone was ON topic when chosing that Crystal Ball picture...>> | |
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My art book: http://www.lulu.com/spotl...ecomicskid
VIDEO WORK: http://sharadkantpatel.com MUSIC: https://soundcloud.com/ufoclub1977 | |
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EnDoRpHn said:
Around the World in a Day? A certain kind of mellow. | |
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but if you combine different albums of Prince & the Revolution you get a fever dream that will never be....
Paisley Park is in your heart - Love Is Here! | |
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or, if you will:
Paisley Park is in your heart - Love Is Here! | |
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Hmm, need to remove the live albums from that, All Things Must Pass disc 3 isn't really part of the album as reviewed, it's more seen as a fun afterthught of jams, Metal Box isn't really a pop album in the traditional sense where you can compare it to the others... i'll give you 69 Love Songs, Shaking the Habitual and Have One on Me though. | |
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. Sandinista! [Edited 6/25/20 2:41am] Friends don't let friends clap on 1 and 3.
The Paisley Park Vault spreadsheet: https://goo.gl/zzWHrU | |
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Sandinista! is one of my favourite albums of all time, but a critics favourite it is not! "Mixed to good" is probably the summary of the criticial consensus. [Edited 6/25/20 9:40am] | |
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I do wonder how a triple album by Prince would have sold in 1987. SOTT didn't set the world on fire in that respect, and I doubt an even more expensive set would do any better.
Plus, no U Got The Look. A certain kind of mellow. | |
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. all positives! Paisley Park is in your heart - Love Is Here! | |
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I'd say it all depends on your expectations. SOTT sold maybe 3.5M/4M copies the first year (not counting singles). If he and WB hadn't been so focused on achieving Beatles sales levels, maybe both parties could have been plenty satisfied with selling 1 or 2M. Many an artist signed on a major at the time would have been very happy with these kind of numbers, and so would have the label. I do realize that WB gave Prince a phenomenal amount of leeway and bet a lot of money on him at the beginning, so I understand that maybe they felt they had to draw the line somewhere, but they could have gone with CB you know, they wouldn't have finished the year in bankrupcy. It's easy to point fingers at Prince but when it came down to throwing millions of dollars away, WB weren't last in line. Look at what happened with TC Ellis: on a whim, WB decided to give him a 3 record "play or pay" deal (despite Prince having no interest in putting him on his label in the first place!!), then they released only the first album, did nothing to promote it and just gave TC the rest of the money in cash to do whatever he wanted with!! They didn't seem to be worried much about paying the bills then!! And how many times did this happen with WB artists? How about giving one of their most respected act the chance to release his magnum opus instead? It's all about greed and expectations. If you're Rickie Lee Jones or The B-50's it's fine to sell 500,000 copies, but since Prince is now superstar level, everyone (Prince included) expects Prince to sell as much as Madonna. Prince himself was ridiculous in 1993 when he made a a fuss about WB not selling 5M copies of each record: there was no way he could hit these numbers every year, particularly not with the often risqué and definitely not-so-commercial material he was releasing. Sometimes I think it would have been better off for everyone involved (Prince himself, WB and the fans) if Prince had had a little less success in the mid 80's. You know, enough to keep on recording and releasing music every year, but not so much that the focus would be on hitting the 5M bar instead of just doing the bloody music. A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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Funny how things have changed. The way people perceived P when we were teens, the way they perceive him now and everything that happened in between... It's been quite a ride A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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EnDoRpHn said:
You don’t understand, make m all black ! That’s the thing. "The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves. And wiser people so full of doubts" (Bertrand Russell 1872-1972) | |
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Well...
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