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How well did his musicianship stand against other popular acts? In the 80s Prince,Michael Jackson, Lionel Riche, Madonna and Springsteen were the biggest names in popular music. But unlike Prince their albums usually had a list of high profile bassists, guitar,drums and keyboards players who were the backbone of what those albums . You had killer funk bassist Louis Johnson, master rhythm guitarists like Paul Jackson jr ,lead players like Steve Lukather and keyboard wizard Greg Phillinganes all playin super tight melodies.hooks,licks. On the other hand you had Prince who played all those instruments by himself on his records. So how did Prince hold against this guys in term of musical content? Did Prince stand a chance in your opinion on bass against Louis Johnson? or on rhythm guitar against Paul Jackson jr or on other instruments?In terms of execution on the records. Cause we all know those guys dedicated their life to 1 instrument and this guy was playing 4 instruments on his records?
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I think most people here don't care much about his technical skills but more about the way he played and his sound. | |
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I think P could have held his own as a studio musician/sideman (if he never had become a performer). He was versatile enough and had a good ear to pick up things. | |
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So you think that what Prince played resonates more because emotional content is stronger than just being a pro session player? | |
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[Edited 9/2/20 7:24am] | |
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Was Oscar Peterson a better musician than Thelonius Monk... . Some people will say yes, others think no. . Would Sgt. Pepper’s have sounded better when the wrecking crew had played the music? . It is just how you define “better”... . | |
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I start this tread to be a comparation not competition based.there are lot of Purple Rain vs.Thriller discussions.Would you say that musicianship displayed on Purple Rain is inferior compared to an all star studio pros? | |
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Prince was responsible for the entire creation of the song. He dreamed it, ate it, breathed it. Each instrument. When you are that much in control, there is a distinct difference in how comfortable a person sounds in the mix. It is way more organic than being pulled in to do a great job on your instrument for someone else's project. | |
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If you want to hear how Prince’s music sounds when played by 80’s LA session musicians, listen to “With You” on Jill Jones’ album. The sterility of the playing makes it the ‘stand-out’ track of the album! Imagine the whole album done this way... or even SOTT... | |
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JorisE73 said:
[Edited 9/2/20 7:24am] The thing with session players is that they're just doing their job. Prince always gave it his best when he was recording. And that makes it more personal. When I think of the music I like, it's usually a one man band like Prince or a singer-songwriter like Bob Dylan or a band like the Rolling Stones... If you take any of this seriously, you're a bigger fool than I am. | |
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SantanaMaitreya said: JorisE73 said:
[Edited 9/2/20 7:24am] The thing with session players is that they're just doing their job. Prince always gave it his best when he was recording. And that makes it more personal. When I think of the music I like, it's usually a one man band like Prince or a singer-songwriter like Bob Dylan or a band like the Rolling Stones... | |
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He would have had his own signature style/sound (like Ray Parker Jr., Luke and Phil Collins when they played on other people's songs). His studio cameo appearances with Stevie Nicks, Common, Stevie Wonder and George Clinton proved that. | |
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quite well. | |
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Well I'd just like to remind y'all that an esteemed fellow orger once seriously claimed Prince needed to take drums lessons So... Maybe not the best place to ask such a question? A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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lavendardrummachine said:
Reason to compare is because many times on this site i heard people downplaying Prince as a musician.yet most of the stuff he did alone unlike other big acts at the time | |
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I prefer her version to the Prince version! | |
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Technicality doesn’t equal better player. The end. He would’ve and could’ve held his own. Easiest example is the purple rain guitar solo. Solo evokes emotions that a technical player never could. Especially now that he’s gone. I love and prefer feel over technicality. | |
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Lol these topics are stupid. Prince was an extremely talented individual. If he wanted to be a session musician, he would and would be great at it on rhythm, lead or bass guitar, even piano if it was his dedicated instrument. He had a great ear, great internal time, strong hands and great feel. He basically was a session musician, just for himself. And he could be super technical or super loose whenever he wanted. I lol when I see some people questioning his ability to play the bass. He could make any sound he wanted to on that thing. Don't forget P is one of the funkiest. | |
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I think what I always found lacking in Prince's 80's catalog that was fairly abundant in other records was the quality of sonics and the mastering crispiness (Dirty Mind and Controversy would be exceptions since they're essentially minimalistic). Otherwise, I think his basslines, melodies and synth ideas were very creative, catchy, innovative and unique. | |
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Is the question whether Prince would have been a good session musician? I think he would have been amazing at whatever he set his mind to. Paisley Park is in your heart
#PrinceForever 💜 | |
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Technical skills does not equal musicality. Listen to over-rehearsed mechanical kids doing grade 8 exams, compared to a pianist who may not be as technically mechanical but plays with feeling. If you do not really 'feel' the music you are playing as it is not yours, then the effect is not so pleasing emotionally. Great technical players can play with feeling, but you can always feel what is missing. That is why they stay as session musos | |
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I put it this way... some were better than he was at any given instrument... but put them all together, then add: producing, composing, lyrics, preforming, and productivity... add style and one of the best given names in rock... he is hard to beat... "Keep on shilling for Big Pharm!" | |
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Prince reminds me of Duke Ellington, in the sense that he treated his instruments like characters as opposed to eminent objects. There's a human element to them, sometimes even a conversational quality to the way he played. Duke came at a time when piano virtuosos such as Willie 'The Lion' Smith, Fats Waller, Art Tatum & James P Johnson were his contempraries, they ecplised him technically and had more vocabulary in their playing than he ever did, but he dug within his imagination and brought something infinite from his own limitations that resonated with listeners globally. Prince couldn't play the guitar like Eddie Hazel, or bass like Bootsy Collins, or drums like his own drummer John Blackwell, or the keyboards like Bernie Worrell or Herbie Hancock, but what he lacked in their techincal skills, he drew many worlds with his imagination that made everyone of them tip their hats to him. Composionally, his music could range from simple to somewhat complex/abstract, moreso the former which to me is what made listeners resonate with his music. | |
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Well, Swedens most respected contempary journalist, who moved to NY in 1978 and witnessed the rise of Hip-Hop on front row, Mats Nileskär, said after the news on Prince's death; "He was the Innovator, the greatest musician of the past half century" And this guy has interviewed them all (except Prince, which almost happened, and MJ). He finally made his Aretha Franklin interview two years ago. He is one of the few who got the chance to interview Tupac Shakur back in 1994. So yeah, Prince is obviously a monumental deal to him. That speaks volumes. | |
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Hamad said: Prince reminds me of Duke Ellington, in the sense that he treated his instruments like characters as opposed to eminent objects. There's a human element to them, sometimes even a conversational quality to the way he played. Duke came at a time when piano virtuosos such as Willie 'The Lion' Smith, Fats Waller, Art Tatum & James P Johnson were his contempraries, they ecplised him technically and had more vocabulary in their playing than he ever did, but he dug within his imagination and brought something infinite from his own limitations that resonated with listeners globally. Prince couldn't play the guitar like Eddie Hazel, or bass like Bootsy Collins, or drums like his own drummer John Blackwell, or the keyboards like Bernie Worrell or Herbie Hancock, but what he lacked in their techincal skills, he drew many worlds with his imagination that made everyone of them tip their hats to him. Composionally, his music could range from simple to somewhat complex/abstract, moreso the former which to me is what made listeners resonate with his music. Yes, all the musicians you mention may have been better on their instruments than Prince, but... John Blackwell didn't play guitar. Bernie Worrell didn't drum. Bootst Collins didn't dance. Herbie Hancock wasn't a songwriter. The great thing about Prince is that he was all of those things. And just like Duke Ellington or Sly Stone or George Clinton, sometimes I think that the "instrument" that he played the best was his band. If you take any of this seriously, you're a bigger fool than I am. | |
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