| |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Yet he makes up what Judith told police. Not taking many pains at all. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
| |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
JudasLChrist said:
.... There is no place in the police transcript where Prince says this. Do org folks trash Prince? Now, I would like to know how Prince got his marriage to Mayte annulled, and Neal does need to provide an explanation. Just feeling it's about right doesn't cut it. [Edited 10/11/20 4:34am] | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
I think you´re being unfair toward most orgers who have a problem with what and how Neal Karlen writes. I for one have zero problems if a writer or former bandmember comes up with facts about Prince that may be unpleasant. On the contrary, I love reading biographies that show us the darker aspects of an artist, too, and I used to see Neal Karlen as someone whose opinion on Prince matters based on his Rolling Stone interviews, but those were decades ago. He used to be one of the more important Prince interviewers, right up there with Jon Bream and Hilburn and those other wellknown people who knew what they were writing about. My main gripe with him is that I don´t think his version of Prince, or rather, his armchair psychology attempts regarding Prince are based on facts but rather on hearsay, old impressions he gathered decades ago and snippets from other people´s interviews or interactions with Prince that he is reinterpreting to fit his narrative. . It´s not even about the money for me. If I knew that his book is based on facts and if he didn´t come across as a very creepy guy I´d gladly buy his book because we all spend money on much more superflous things, so spending 20 or 30 dollars on an interesting book is no big deal but I don´t want to support a guy like him if he´s not telling the truth. And so far I´ve noticed many things that are questionable, and many orgers have pointed these things out already so I won´t repeat them here. I´ve read Kim Berry´s joke of a "book" and if Neal Karlen praises her book then that´s another reason for me to remain doubtful. I´d love to buy Karlen´s book and be proven wrong but the excerpts I´ve read so far were more about him than about Prince, and they reminded me of Kim Berry´s book in a very negative way, as if he took snippets of info here and there and kind of reconstructed those snippets and formed a new version just to support his narrative. I liked his writing style when he did the Prince interviews for Rolling Stone magazine but the excerpts that I´ve read so far just make me shake my head. Some orgers who´ve defended Karlen´s book here on this thread are people whose writing skills I love and admire, Genesia and Number 23 for example, or even Jon Bream, so I think there must be something good about Karlen´s book but so far the inaccuracies and negative impression by far outweigh my curiosity to buy his book, and that has very little to do with him mentioning unpleasant aspects of Prince´s personality. . I´m surprised to see so many old school orgers whose opinions I respect supporting Neal Karlen. I remember a similar situation here on the org when Alex Hahn´s first book came out, and while Hahn´s book did also contain a few factual errors and was a bit biased due to the fact that he was also Uptown magazine´s lawyer against Prince´s camp, I never had the impression that Hahn´s research was sloppy. In fact, I enjoyed reading it despite disagreeing with the title and some of the contents, but I can´t say the same about Neal Karlen and what I´ve seen and read so far. I´d love to be proven wrong but the more I read about it, the less I want to find out for myself. - PS: Could it be that one reason for the uproar among the fans is that Karlen uses old info and old impressions in a non-linear, non-chronological way and uses these examples for his portrayal of Prince in his later stage of life? For example the alleged dislike for MJ, Miles Davis and Spike Lee? I could imagine Prince saying something negative in the mid to late 80s, or even up until the mid 90s when he was on speaking terms with Karlen but I have have zero reason to believe this was still valid for his later years based on what I´ve personally seen or witnessed or heard from people who knew Prince. It all comes across as the work of someone who´s trying to milk his former connection with Prince for whatever reasons, and I´m not even implying financial reasons because I know this book won´t make him rich.
" I´d rather be a stank ass hoe because I´m not stupid. Oh my goodness! I got more drugs! I´m always funny dude...I´m hilarious! Are we gonna smoke?" | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
JudasLChrist said:
Are you related to Neal Karlen? You're wound tight over anyone who hold Karlen over inconsistencies and assumptions Karlen made about Prince. [Edited 10/11/20 7:05am] 3121 #1 THIS YEAR | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
bashraka said: JudasLChrist said:
Are you related to Neal Karlen? You're wound tight over anyone who hold Karlen over inconsistencies and assumptions Karlen made about Prince. [Edited 10/11/20 7:05am] it's funny, they can criticize prince 24/7 but lo and behold if you say anything against his associates. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
He has the recording of the Rollingstone interview. I do not believe he has or has ever had the other recordings that he claims were destroyed in the fire. He doesn't back a single revelation with recorded evidence. I actually don't think he had much contact with Prince after the 90s - he can't even pronounce Mani's name correctly. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Honest people generally don't try so hard to convince you they aren't lying. As I said in an earlier review, it's a case of "the lady doth protest too much' He's telling of the truth reminds me of the Coen borthers' opening to Fargo. 'This is a true story. The events depicted in this film took place in Minnesota in 1987. At the request of the survivors, the names have been changed. Out of respect for the dead, the rest has been told exactly as it occurred.'
It's a good book, but Neal reveals several times that he's making some shit up for a better story. He just does so in a very clever way that leaves the reader scratching their head. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
simm0061 said:
He has the recording of the Rollingstone interview. I do not believe he has or has ever had the other recordings that he claims were destroyed in the fire. He doesn't back a single revelation with recorded evidence. I actually don't think he had much contact with Prince after the 90s - he can't even pronounce Mani's name correctly. I have some concerns about the recordings I have heard but yes there is no other physical evidence that what he said he had actually had and it was authentic. I could let the mispronountion slide except he misquoted the title to Mayte's book which is inexcusable and he keeps harping on that they, P and Mayte, got an annulment which is only something P said in an interview, there's been no legal documentation to support that. It's his professionalism that's supposed to be his stamp of approval otherwise his just some random orger writing about stuff he's overheard over the years. Time keeps on slipping into the future...
This moment is all there is... | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
We’re supposed to believe Prince called this motherfucker up while watching The Sopranos and brought up his dead son? He is an excellent writer— too heavy handed though and little scattered — but how is anyone taking his word as truth? The dude contradicts himself every other page, he can’t even decide his own feelings on Prince so (as stated by others above) he dramatizes other narratives. The result is entertaining and there’s some deep sections that’ll elicit emotion in you. But I cannot imagine trusting this guy and his whole story, he says some laughable shit in here. Prince told this man more about “suicide”, his son and insecurities than anyone ever apparently. Another thing I disliked was his ignorance to the culture Prince was raised and lived in. Calling someone a motherfucker once (as many races do in a casual manner) behind their back doesn’t mean there’s a deep hatred, Karlen. Yeah I’m sure Prince called you a week before he died. Probably brought up his kid again too? Maybe do, just not like did before | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Exactly. I agree with everything you wrote. And "motherfucker" can also be used as a term of endearment. Keep in mind that Miles once called Prince into a room where he was standing butt-naked, so maybe Prince was a bit upset or irritated, hence his remark. I´ve never heard of him badmouthing Miles seriously, and he´s often praised him and had nothing but kind words when he spoke of Miles Davis. He also mentioned him during the 2002 celebration a couple of times and mentioned a belt that Miles gave him as a gift. But he DID say that he found the belt ugly. " I´d rather be a stank ass hoe because I´m not stupid. Oh my goodness! I got more drugs! I´m always funny dude...I´m hilarious! Are we gonna smoke?" | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
KoolEaze said:
Exactly. I agree with everything you wrote. And "motherfucker" can also be used as a term of endearment. Keep in mind that Miles once called Prince into a room where he was standing butt-naked, so maybe Prince was a bit upset or irritated, hence his remark. I´ve never heard of him badmouthing Miles seriously, and he´s often praised him and had nothing but kind words when he spoke of Miles Davis. He also mentioned him during the 2002 celebration a couple of times and mentioned a belt that Miles gave him as a gift. But he DID say that he found the belt ugly. Right, there was way too many “Prince DESPISED, DETESTED ___” with very poor evidence to back up the claims. Even if P hated Miles (like you said, it’s debatable) he is a legend and I don’t see him disrespecting him to this bozo. [Edited 10/11/20 9:28am] Maybe do, just not like did before | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
What books would you suggest for taking all the words as truth? For not questioning any words? I'm genuinely curious. In addition to this book, I also recently read Morris Day's book. I really enjoyed reading it, and my guess is that I probably really learned something about what it was like to know Prince. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
simm0061 said:
Honest people generally don't try so hard to convince you they aren't lying. As I said in an earlier review, it's a case of "the lady doth protest too much' He's telling of the truth reminds me of the Coen borthers' opening to Fargo. 'This is a true story. The events depicted in this film took place in Minnesota in 1987. At the request of the survivors, the names have been changed. Out of respect for the dead, the rest has been told exactly as it occurred.'
It's a good book, but Neal reveals several times that he's making some shit up for a better story. He just does so in a very clever way that leaves the reader scratching their head. It wasn’t to convince people he wasn’t lying. It was to be clear that he was understood. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
I can tell by the way some of you are freaking out that a nerve has been touched. Most feel Neal took liberties, Jon Bream and myself included, but there is an underlying thread of truth in this book that registered immediately with me (and others) Most authors have shied away from really discussing Prince for fear of his or his fan's wrath. "Thou shalt not...ever go there" Like it or not, a door has been opened. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
I'd like to place a bet...I bet at least 75% of you groaners have not read the book.
| |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
| |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
I totally agree. Btw, the recordings on this audiobook are recordings made with Prince well aware he was beign recorded. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
I'd like to wager even one more bet. It seems to me that most of the "defenders" likely have not read the book AND are also the guys who discovered Prince at an impressionable/imprintable age. I have noticed many of the overly'faithful' discovered him @13-18 (mostly guys) and Prince offered exciting stuff, something for everyone...sexiness, rule-breaking, gender fluidity etc. This was powerful. I've read about in the forums many times. Somehow, discussing Prince on a deeper level by anyone (not just Karlen) is OFF limits. Many orgers have been punished as well. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
No they weren't. Neal even said Prince didn't know he was being recorded. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Every single audio clip presented in the audio version of the book were recorded in June of 1985 when Neal interviewed Prince for Rollingstone. He spent the better part of two days with Prince. Which clip are you referring to where Neal says that P doesn't know he was being recorded? I don't recall this. Prince knew he was being recorded and it is actually the last interview where he allowed a recording.
THis is also why I don't believe Neal when he talks about later recordings or the recording of P belitting his dad in front of Neal. That incident might have happened but there is no way it happened during that 1985 interview and def not while being recorded.
Many of the stories presented are true, while at the same time, not true. That is what makes it so clever and intriguing. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
One of the premises of the book is about looking into the persona, how it was structured and why. I'm afraid that many fans cannot handle this news. The other is about sharing some of the 'real' Prince
Though Prince was young, early mid-twenties, he was still about 10 years older than many of his eventual hard-core fans. I'm certain he was sincere in many of his lyrics but he had a strong marketing mind as well and was in the business of crossing over (with help from Howard Bloom) and speaking to some who were socially disenfranchised, others struggling with sexual identity, still others who related to the rule-breaking, strong sexuality etc. Some of this approach was to grow a following. To this day, few really know who he was and therefore many can project what they need him to be or what he sold. As mature people we need to be able to look at him more objectively as he was an iconic artist who will be evaluated by writers. Just get ready. [Edited 10/11/20 11:55am] | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
IMO, it's worthy of discussion as to what, if any, sound or video recordings of Prince are reasonable to release now that he is gone. Anna Fantastic said she wanted to give people a chance to experience a side of Prince with the recordings she released. Many people objected. She said she thought fans who loved Prince would value the experience of hearing the recordings and treat it with respect. Many differed and said that releasing such material was simply wrong. [Edited 10/11/20 11:40am] | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Margot said: I'd like to wager even one more bet. It seems to me that most of the "defenders" likely have not read the book AND are also the guys who discovered Prince at an impressionable/imprintable age. I have noticed many of the overly'faithful' discovered him @13-18 (mostly guys) and Prince offered exciting stuff, something for everyone...sexiness, rule-breaking, gender fluidity etc. This was powerful. I've read about in the forums many times. Somehow, discussing Prince on a deeper level by anyone (not just Karlen) is OFF limits. Many orgers have been punished as well. I love a bit of psychoanalysis. You got me...I'm male and discovered P at 15. . I can only speak for myself but the only issue I have with the book is what you call 'the peripherals' (lies or fiction to me). . No doubt he's a great writer and if he put a disclaimer in confirming what the Star Tribune stated; it was part fact part fiction it would be more accepted. . As it stands it looks like 'the last phone call' and the Sonny Liston stories are just 2 examples of complete fabrication. To me, that damages his credibility towards the rest of it. . Surely that skewers the reader then. Into questioning how much of this part or this story is actually true. Regardless of the content or depiction of the subject. [Edited 10/11/20 13:06pm] | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Have you read the book? You may get a sense of the deeper message.
| |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
| |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Regarding Kayfabe, I believe it was Mick Jagger, who said that Prince wasn't so much a person, but a persona. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
| |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
[Edited 10/12/20 7:29am] | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |