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If CAMILLE was released as a stand alone album in early ‘87.... It would rightfully be considered to be perhaps “Prince’s” greatest album ever. It’s a god-smacking masterpiece, from the first second. The perfect summary of his genius and uniqueness and playfulness and mirth and mystery. All killer, no filler. | |
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His greatest album ever? Umm no but a great display of his studio creativity, yes. [Edited 7/3/20 10:16am] | |
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LOL no. It would have been considered a wierd, self-indulgent, semi-interesting EP. I've often think the Camille songs should be rereleased within normal voice. | |
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It wouldn't unseat Purple Rain but I agree with the general idea that it was a solid record that would been everything fans and critics wanted from Prince. It's missing like...one song maybe...and people are going to argue that not putting out SOTT would have ended the world. | |
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One of my all time favs. Can’t wait to get ROTF in excellent quality(the version I have is pretty close to excellent). However a lot of my friends who aren’t prince fans think his speed up voice is a little chipmunkish - my usual response, Whatever! | |
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It would be highly-regarded/rated but would have sold poorly. No hit singles. I'm glad he didn't release it. He did the right thing releasing "SOTT". WB was right to limit it to a double album too. | |
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I consider the ‘Camille’ album to be top tier and a personal favourite of mine, and even I have to respectfully disagree. It’s incredibly funky, versatile, and has a lot of energy about it, but it doesn't have the grandeur of a ‘Purple Rain’, ‘1999’ or even a ‘Gold Experience’.
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...do you also think he should've just ca$hed out with Purple Rain II in '85? Eh, maybe give it a couple years first, let the public properly digest the first one for 3-4 years? | |
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Camille is what people want the Black Album to be - quirky, funky, weird, sexy, alluring. It succeeds in all the ways Black Album horribly fails. | |
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Not even close to his great album. You think Camille would be Controversy, 1999, or Purple Rain? Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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Swap out "Good Love" and maybe one other song for "Crystal Ball", and I honestly think it would have rivaled SOTT as we know it as a single-disc/LP release | |
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LoveGalore said: Camille is what people want the Black Album to be - quirky, funky, weird, sexy, alluring. It succeeds in all the ways Black Album horribly fails. I agree. | |
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TrivialPursuit said: Not even close to his great album. You think Camille would be Controversy, 1999, or Purple Rain? I'm very surprised Superfunky didn't end up on SOTT. Smack dab in the middle of the sessions, around the time he is disbanding the Rev and itching to get back to something more akin to his grimier days, and yet it gets passed up for stuff like Starfish and Coffee | |
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I tend to think that if he'd have gone through on Camille as a concept, he'd have placed something like "U Got the Look" on it as an opener or lead single just to prop it up. I know he hadn't recorded "U Got The Look" by the time he'd scraped the Camille album, but my guess is he would have done something like that. | |
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Camille has arguably the greatest Prince song ever, iiwyg. Not a commercial success, but a fan favorite. Speculating, he might have promoted it better, possible video, who knows. I think if released, Housequake could have been the lead single. Strange Relationship could have been a single. A few options for singles actually.
[Edited 7/3/20 18:57pm] | |
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As with any Prince project, the problem was never an issue of quality, it was an issue of artistic commitment to promote. . | |
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So basically your main concern regarding P's career is how much money he and WB made? How, exactly, did you benefit from P's record sales in 1987? . [Edited 7/3/20 21:00pm] A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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A good symptom of what you say the the totally odd choice of Shockadelica as Camille's leas single, while typically Good Love was the obvious choice, or Housequake, or Strange Relationship, Feel U Up indeed, or basically pretty much anything on the album before Shockadelica (not that I dislike the song, it's just not very commercial, therefore illustrating P's need for commercial self-sabotage in the name of reinvention). . To get back to the OP's question, I's say the question is more whether it would even have been marketed, and considered by critics, as Prince's official 1987 album or if it would have been labeled as some kind of side-project à la Madhouse, with a proper "Prince" canon album to follow a little bit later in 1987 (and, knowing Prince, this would have been likely to happen)? The way I see it, Camille was more of a pre-Black Album concept (dark, funky and anonymous), not to be perceived as a canon Prince record. It's possible it would today be praised as an awesome Prince album, or that it would be completely forgotten, stuck as it would have been between Parade and the "proper" 1987 Prince album. . Of note is that the OP was talking about critical acclaim and legacy only, never even addressing sales. But for some really sad reason, everyone brings it back to the mundane matter of sales, as if sales has anything to do with great art, and vice versa. I don't think Bill Laswell fans ever address the matter of sales when discussing his records, just sayin'. . This is the result of mass media brainwashing, and the way they managed to make the average person believe great artists are multimillion sellers while indie artists are unintersting and boring. This really is the morbid triumph of cheap capitalist entertainment over arts and culture A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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. Prince is a pop artist. © Bart Van Hemelen
This posting is provided AS IS with no warranties, and confers no rights. It is not authorized by Prince or the NPG Music Club. You assume all risk for your use. All rights reserved. | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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Yet he ain't Britney Spears or Kylie Minogue, is he? A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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Besides, define "pop". What is "pop"? Popular? How is a form of art's nature purely characterized by its popularity? And more interestingly when you begin looking into "art" or "avant-garde" or "experimental" music you do realize that past the few groundbreaking artists they are just as formulaic as pop, and that what was defined as "pop" at some point would have been (and often was) defined as "experimental" and "avant-garde" a decade or 2 later. Not to want to sound ridiculously postmodernist or relativist, but this separation between "popular" art vs. "serious" art has been dismissed long ago.
It's just another way for, on one side, elites to dismiss anything that's "below" them (according to the standard in their community) and, on the other side, for major entertainment companies to lead "regular" poeple into dismissing anything that does not conform to the easy listening "popular" norm of the day as being "intellectual" and "boring". This is all total busllshit, and of all people I'm pretty sure you know it as well as I do Either way, Prince's sales never had anything to do with the quality or inventiveness of his music. I'd even go as far as to say that his most succesfully commercial era is a paradox, because what were the odds that someone could produce such weird, crazy shit as he produced in the 80's yet meet mainstream success? Prince, if not for WB's heavy promotional support, should have been an obscure indie artist whose music was too "weird" for the average joe. He's not the only one: by the industry's standard, people like Kraftwerk, Björk or Kate Bush (to name a few) should never have met mass success either, they just happened to be on the right label, in the right place at the right time, and somehow manage to touch the masses with music that the entertainment industry usually tries to dismiss as "weird" and "boring". [Edited 7/4/20 0:29am] A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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ATWIAD is his weakest album of the 80s so yeah maybe. Camille as a album would have been a joke. Except for Erotic City (and maybe Rock Hard) the sped up voice is corny AF. | |
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Eh, if released as is, it would be among the least great of his 80s albums, IMO, though still very good of course. It's still a very fun and fascinating "side project", and I agree with those who say they prefer it to The Black Album. Feel free to join in the Prince Album Poll 2018! Let'a celebrate his legacy by counting down the most beloved Prince albums, as decided by you! | |
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Regarding the discussion of Prince being a pop artist, he certainly was. A lot of his material represented a conscious effort to win over the pop crowd. Of course he was unique, and he fit into the 80s pop landscape in part because he played such a huge part in shaping it, but he had lots of hits for a reason! Take a song like "1999", which is a synth funk song at its core, but is loaded with pop hooks. Its pop appeal helped to make his innovation with the Linn-1 have such a big impact. You can make similar arguments for "Little Red Corvette", "Purple Rain", "Raspberry Beret", "I Would Die 4 U", "Kiss", "U Got the Look", etc. They all had massive pop appeal! That doesn't minimize what Prince did at all, and I agree with databank that the label of "pop" is too often used to divide listeners.
[Edited 7/5/20 4:02am] Feel free to join in the Prince Album Poll 2018! Let'a celebrate his legacy by counting down the most beloved Prince albums, as decided by you! | |
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it would have definitely been one of my favorites. Maybe not as great as Around The World In A Day, but, for me, it's better than any Prince album up to that point, on par with Parade.. Paisley Park is in your heart - Love Is Here! | |
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I certainly don't deny he was a pop artist and sometimes did his best to be. There even often was a conflict between the true artist he wanted to be and the multimillionaire superstar he also wanted to be. But he clearly was more than just a pop artist, unlike other acts who are little less than products. A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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Alright, let's go back in time. Kiss was a hit. The film was a flop, but the tour was a success. And then we have Good Love or Housequake as a first single by Camille. Everybody knew that Prince used aliases and pseudonyms, so everybody would have known it was him. That would have created a buzz. Where's The Revolution? Why is he using this name? Is this his new direction? Lots of media attention! Yeah, I think this album would have been a hit. [Edited 7/5/20 13:14pm] If you take any of this seriously, you're a bigger fool than I am. | |
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