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Thread started 07/20/20 9:12pm

inovio

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What's your opinion on "Screams of passion"?

One of the most erotic and tantalizing songs with double entendres for lyrics
[Edited 7/21/20 14:41pm]
Eye wanna make Love to U,
2 times maybe 3,
If u want to go 4 or 5,
Baby that's alright with me,
eye will be your little baby,
eye can be your big strong man....
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Reply #1 posted 07/20/20 9:14pm

Phase3

Love it
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Reply #2 posted 07/20/20 9:47pm

TrivialPursuit

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I don't think it's that great of a song like people seem to think it is, to me. I think "Nothing Compares 2 U" and "Desire" are stronger songs, as is "Mutiny" and "High Fashion."

The lyrics are spicy, but the production is just meh.

In fact, while The Family was a great set in general, I think the two instrumentals sorta dial it back, compared to Jill's album which is solid front to back.

"eye don’t really care so much what people say about me because it is a reflection of who they r."
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Reply #3 posted 07/20/20 10:19pm

onlyforaminute

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I love its pacing(?), it makes it fun. Just mention it and it gets stuck in my head.
Time keeps on slipping into the future...


This moment is all there is...
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Reply #4 posted 07/20/20 11:08pm

whodknee

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Great song. Cool video. The song is very catchy and The Family performed it perfectly.

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Reply #5 posted 07/21/20 12:33am

Phase3

Also,the beginning of it reminds me of "Need you tonight" by INXS.Anyone hear this?
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Reply #6 posted 07/21/20 5:14am

sulls

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LOVED it since I first heard it. The strings at the beginning of the 12" always reminded me of the soundtracks to one of those old 1950s-1960s educational films we were shown in elementary school and always reminded me of Autumn. So glad Prince's vocal version has finally leaked and hopefully it will find its way onto an Estate release.

"I like to watch."
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Reply #7 posted 07/21/20 6:15am

OldFriends4Sal
e

TrivialPursuit said:

I don't think it's that great of a song like people seem to think it is, to me. I think "Nothing Compares 2 U" and "Desire" are stronger songs, as is "Mutiny" and "High Fashion."

The lyrics are spicy, but the production is just meh.

In fact, while The Family was a great set in general, I think the two instrumentals sorta dial it back, compared to Jill's album which is solid front to back.

Can you explain why the comparison of this album with Jill Jones album?

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Reply #8 posted 07/21/20 6:53am

Se7en

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This is one of those songs that no matter how hard I try, I can't seem to memorize the lyrics!

Which, for a Prince song is rare for me.

Outstanding song. I have Prince's version too and I like his a little better.

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Reply #9 posted 07/21/20 7:27am

OldFriends4Sal
e

This is one of those songs, that informed me Prince was on a whole different level.
This like I Don't Want 2 Leave U(the Time) and Dear Michaelangelo(Romance 1600) just a few to name, the Screams of Passion, when I first heard it I could not discern what I was hearing it was so colorful. It flowed like a water color painting. The Clare Fischer strings is the thing that takes this song from hot to spicy

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Reply #10 posted 07/21/20 7:32am

mediumdry

OldFriends4Sale said:

Can you explain why the comparison of this album with Jill Jones album?

.

I can't speak for Trivialpursuit, but to me, the Family album and the Jill Jones album are somewhat the bookends to the Parade album. It is where the Clare Fischer orchestration is most prominent and part of the album, as opposed to some songs.

.

In that regard, I understand how they are compared, or why comparisons between them come up easily.

.

Regardless, it's a great trio of albums. (although all have their flaws) The screams of passion, to me, is not one of the stronger tracks on the Family album. Together with River Run Dry, it's the least noteworthy, imo.

Paisley Park is in your heart - Love Is Here!
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Reply #11 posted 07/21/20 7:54am

sulls

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I really like the rehearsal version of it on the Feline soundcheck boot. That's some good stuff, right there!

"I like to watch."
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Reply #12 posted 07/21/20 9:25am

LoveGalore

I always dug it the most on the album and then I heard his version and was blown away. One of the best songs of the era, imo. It strikes the perfect balance between his 84 sound and the encroaching Euro-vibe of Parade. One of those songs where he was clearly trying to convey a specific imagery. I'm a bit surprised he didn't keep it for himself as it's as Princey as it gets.
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Reply #13 posted 07/21/20 10:13am

rnb

This song cemented my perception that Prince was a genius! The lyrics were vivid, sensual and imaginative. The production was funky and sophisticated and the execution was laser beamed accurate! Had any other artists wrote and produced this gem they would have kept it for themselves. This only shows that a genius music Svengali such as Prince can be selfless and generous when it comes down to the music that he birthed/created!
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Reply #14 posted 07/21/20 10:47am

looby

Prince was a tiny man, but his hormones sure wasn't lol.....the man was all about sex, sex, sex! Seems like he had sex on the brain 24/7, in which is why most of his songs and song titles have something to do with sex.

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Reply #15 posted 07/21/20 1:05pm

OldFriends4Sal
e

mediumdry said:

OldFriends4Sale said:

Can you explain why the comparison of this album with Jill Jones album?

.

I can't speak for Trivialpursuit, but to me, the Family album and the Jill Jones album are somewhat the bookends to the Parade album. It is where the Clare Fischer orchestration is most prominent and part of the album, as opposed to some songs.

.

In that regard, I understand how they are compared, or why comparisons between them come up easily.

.

Regardless, it's a great trio of albums. (although all have their flaws) The screams of passion, to me, is not one of the stronger tracks on the Family album. Together with River Run Dry, it's the least noteworthy, imo.

I actually never thought of Jill Jones albums in the same connection with Parade, that's a new connection for me

.

I sorta thought of it more in connection with SOTT but not even that, because it's an album of material that spans from For You or Prince to 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 (outtakes) and a couple 1987 current pieces. I never thought it felt anythink like Parade or the Family album.

.

LOL I always thought it was one of the strong tracks, getting the vibe and direction he was attempting, I think it's a very strong album. I love Jazz too so that kicks in along with I see this album almost as audibly more related to Madhouse for some reason.

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Reply #16 posted 07/21/20 1:17pm

motherfunka

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I love it! That and A Love Bizarre are two of my favorite protege songs. The lyrics are so sensual. Prince maturing from the in your face sexual approach.

TRUE BLUE
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Reply #17 posted 07/21/20 2:13pm

SoulAlive

Love it music

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Reply #18 posted 07/21/20 2:38pm

inovio

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I read that P did not like that song, so he gave it to The family. Truthfully, the song is not P's style. I don't see where it would fit in his discography. Irregardless, it's a sensual, romantic, full length interlude of vibrations and sensuality. Overwhelming. It's an eargasm.
[Edited 7/21/20 14:39pm]
Eye wanna make Love to U,
2 times maybe 3,
If u want to go 4 or 5,
Baby that's alright with me,
eye will be your little baby,
eye can be your big strong man....
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Reply #19 posted 07/21/20 2:46pm

LoveGalore

inovio said:

I read that P did not like that song, so he gave it to The family. Truthfully, the song is not P's style. I don't see where it would fit in his discography. Irregardless, it's a sensual, romantic, full length interlude of vibrations and sensuality. Overwhelming. It's an eargasm.
[Edited 7/21/20 14:39pm]


I think it could absolutely have fit on either ATWIAD or Parade, tbh.
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Reply #20 posted 07/21/20 3:06pm

OldFriends4Sal
e

And hearing the Screams of Passion piece with Prince & the Revolution is heaven. I want to see video of that. For me hearing this doesn't take away from the Family album song version either.

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Reply #21 posted 07/22/20 4:00am

cfluid

Screams of Passion is one of my favorite songs. When I first heard it back in the day, I thought that it was amazing & still do. The only thing better would be Prince's version, I have heard his rehearsal version and its awesome.

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Reply #22 posted 07/22/20 8:37am

GaryMF

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Screams and Violet Blue from Jill's album almost seem like someone else wrote the lyrics or collaborated with him on them. They are way more poetic and lyrical than most of his output.

rainbow
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Reply #23 posted 07/22/20 10:53am

TrivialPursuit

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OldFriends4Sale said:

TrivialPursuit said:

I don't think it's that great of a song like people seem to think it is, to me. I think "Nothing Compares 2 U" and "Desire" are stronger songs, as is "Mutiny" and "High Fashion."

The lyrics are spicy, but the production is just meh.

In fact, while The Family was a great set in general, I think the two instrumentals sorta dial it back, compared to Jill's album which is solid front to back.

Can you explain why the comparison of this album with Jill Jones album?


I think they're cousins, in many ways. They both have that gritty all-in-one-room type production sound to them, they have Clare's strings. They're both strong protege albums. They're also one-offs, nothing before or after, so they remain unique and singular. I can hear Susannah singing "All Day, All Night," as much as I can hear Jill singing "The Screams of Passion." They sort of book end an era from post-Purple Rain thru the rougher sounding SOTT space. (Lovesexy is more gleaming, bright, treble-y, red-level peaking, whereas SOTT feels muddy sometimes, like it came out of that sweat shop in The Wiz, which isn't a bad thing.)

To me, things like Madhouse equate more with Lovesexy. A more open, brighter sound, new directions (as it were) in music.

If you group ATWIAD, The Family, Parade, SOTT, & Jill, that's a set of music right there.

Then you'd group Lovesexy, 8, 16 as an intermingled playlist. It seems with Batman, he wasn't either muddy or overly crisp in the production. He was back to the middle, evened out.

It's also a time when he wasn't writing hardcore R&B or funk type songs like he did for The Time or new wave stuff for Vanity 6, or however A6's album is classified. It seemed like a new era, a new bolt of fabric to cut new songs from. Listen to "Hello," or "She's Always In My Hair." It's the same grittier production as "All Day, All Night," "My Man."

However, Jill's album does feel more mature, in some ways, more complete. As I stated before, the instrumentals on The Family dials back the album a bit. There had to be other songs that would have fit on that record. Those instrumentals should've been Madhouse B-sides or put somewhere else.

"eye don’t really care so much what people say about me because it is a reflection of who they r."
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Reply #24 posted 07/22/20 10:59am

GaryMF

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TrivialPursuit said:

OldFriends4Sale said:

Can you explain why the comparison of this album with Jill Jones album?


I think they're cousins, in many ways. They both have that gritty all-in-one-room type production sound to them, they have Clare's strings. They're both strong protege albums. They're also one-offs, nothing before or after, so they remain unique and singular. I can hear Susannah singing "All Day, All Night," as much as I can hear Jill singing "The Screams of Passion." They sort of book end an era from post-Purple Rain thru the rougher sounding SOTT space. (Lovesexy is more gleaming, bright, treble-y, red-level peaking, whereas SOTT feels muddy sometimes, like it came out of that sweat shop in The Wiz, which isn't a bad thing.)

To me, things like Madhouse equate more with Lovesexy. A more open, brighter sound, new directions (as it were) in music.

If you group ATWIAD, The Family, Parade, SOTT, & Jill, that's a set of music right there.

Then you'd group Lovesexy, 8, 16 as an intermingled playlist. It seems with Batman, he wasn't either muddy or overly crisp in the production. He was back to the middle, evened out.

It's also a time when he wasn't writing hardcore R&B or funk type songs like he did for The Time or new wave stuff for Vanity 6, or however A6's album is classified. It seemed like a new era, a new bolt of fabric to cut new songs from. Listen to "Hello," or "She's Always In My Hair." It's the same grittier production as "All Day, All Night," "My Man."

However, Jill's album does feel more mature, in some ways, more complete. As I stated before, the instrumentals on The Family dials back the album a bit. There had to be other songs that would have fit on that record. Those instrumentals should've been Madhouse B-sides or put somewhere else.

This is a nice analysis. I would just say that Madhouse 8 at least belongs in the earlier grouping (ATWIAD, Parade, Family etc.) esp given the prominence of Eric Leeds on most (except ATWIAD)

rainbow
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Reply #25 posted 07/22/20 11:53am

TrivialPursuit

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This is a nice analysis. I would just say that Madhouse 8 at least belongs in the earlier grouping (ATWIAD, Parade, Family etc.) esp given the prominence of Eric Leeds on most (except ATWIAD)


I don't disagree with that. But for me, Eric and Atlanta were so prominent from Parade onward, it feels right to settle them into a Madhouse/Lovesexy joint.

That said, there are definite overlaps in aesthetic, production, writing styles, etc. ATWAID/The Family, goes into Parade/SOTT, which also gets to SOTT/Jill, then Lovesexy stems from SOTT (esp in band makeup and groove), and couples with Madhouse. Clare is thru out most of those, too. It's a bit two-steps forward, one-step back, to keep the same footprints throughout.

"eye don’t really care so much what people say about me because it is a reflection of who they r."
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Reply #26 posted 07/22/20 11:59am

GaryMF

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TrivialPursuit said:

This is a nice analysis. I would just say that Madhouse 8 at least belongs in the earlier grouping (ATWIAD, Parade, Family etc.) esp given the prominence of Eric Leeds on most (except ATWIAD)


I don't disagree with that. But for me, Eric and Atlanta were so prominent from Parade onward, it feels right to settle them into a Madhouse/Lovesexy joint.

That said, there are definite overlaps in aesthetic, production, writing styles, etc. ATWAID/The Family, goes into Parade/SOTT, which also gets to SOTT/Jill, then Lovesexy stems from SOTT (esp in band makeup and groove), and couples with Madhouse. Clare is thru out most of those, too. It's a bit two-steps forward, one-step back, to keep the same footprints throughout.

For some reason, Lovesexy to me is a totally different sound. I also never listen to it smile so I'm biased.

rainbow
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Reply #27 posted 07/22/20 12:11pm

TrivialPursuit

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GaryMF said:

For some reason, Lovesexy to me is a totally different sound. I also never listen to it smile so I'm biased.


You're not wrong there. Lovesexy is white compared to the peach & black of SOTT. It's weird to get from ATWIAD to Lovesexy. But somehow, those protege albums and Prince albums hook those three years together. 4 Prince albums, and 4 offshoot albums from 1985-1988. Pretty amazing.

"eye don’t really care so much what people say about me because it is a reflection of who they r."
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Reply #28 posted 07/22/20 12:24pm

OldFriends4Sal
e

TrivialPursuit said:

OldFriends4Sale said:

Can you explain why the comparison of this album with Jill Jones album?


I think they're cousins, in many ways. They both have that gritty all-in-one-room type production sound to them, they have Clare's strings. They're both strong protege albums. They're also one-offs, nothing before or after, so they remain unique and singular. I can hear Susannah singing "All Day, All Night," as much as I can hear Jill singing "The Screams of Passion." They sort of book end an era from post-Purple Rain thru the rougher sounding SOTT space. (Lovesexy is more gleaming, bright, treble-y, red-level peaking, whereas SOTT feels muddy sometimes, like it came out of that sweat shop in The Wiz, which isn't a bad thing.)

To me, things like Madhouse equate more with Lovesexy. A more open, brighter sound, new directions (as it were) in music.

If you group ATWIAD, The Family, Parade, SOTT, & Jill, that's a set of music right there.

Then you'd group Lovesexy, 8, 16 as an intermingled playlist. It seems with Batman, he wasn't either muddy or overly crisp in the production. He was back to the middle, evened out.

It's also a time when he wasn't writing hardcore R&B or funk type songs like he did for The Time or new wave stuff for Vanity 6, or however A6's album is classified. It seemed like a new era, a new bolt of fabric to cut new songs from. Listen to "Hello," or "She's Always In My Hair." It's the same grittier production as "All Day, All Night," "My Man."

However, Jill's album does feel more mature, in some ways, more complete. As I stated before, the instrumentals on The Family dials back the album a bit. There had to be other songs that would have fit on that record. Those instrumentals should've been Madhouse B-sides or put somewhere else.

Thanks, I'm always open to hearing who the music especially from that 1980-1989 period interconnects with people


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Reply #29 posted 07/23/20 10:22am

namepeace

whodknee said:

Great song. Cool video. The song is very catchy and The Family performed it perfectly.


Agree.

Good night, sweet Prince | 7 June 1958 - 21 April 2016

Props will be withheld until the showing and proving has commenced. -- Aaron McGruder
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