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Prince made the right decision in disbanding the Revolution Outside the sheer musicality of the SOTT/Lovesexy band, which would've smoked the Revolution, Wendy and Lisa wouldn't be able to hang with the direction he was going in. He seemed to want to exploit/expand the sexuality and sensuality in both his music and stage shows and from watching the Parade shows, it was, for the most part, stiff. Great for what it was. But comparatively, he seemed tamed by fame - playing it safe. It took balls to make that decision but he was on the right track. Probably an unpopular opinion, but it's all "IMO". | |
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I like the Revolution,but I agree with you.It was time for a change.The SOTT/Lovesexy Band was incredible! | |
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Considering how prolific Prince was in the '86/'87 time frame I think he knew exactly who musically he needed in order to make that vision happen. The Revolution is great, however they don't neccesarily have the chops to full off some of the more Madhouse-esque moments of that material especially when it comes to the drumming side of it all [Edited 10/31/20 17:47pm] | |
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Everyone knows the 87/88 band were his best. The next band he got were just to make him more comfortable as he knew them all already. | |
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As the great philosopher 2pac Shakur would say: Change, change is good for any of us. | |
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People come and go throughout our lives, we all evolve differently. | |
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Yeah he did the right thing. I've been listening to a lot of his post 2000's shows lately and they are simply amazing. I dont think the Revolution could have taken him there. The Revolution's sound was prety distilled and uniform and there is only so far that could go without getting old fast. . Also he was mixing his personal love life with business, and that's always a sure way to brew a toxic situation, and that's exactly what happened. it was never going last regardless. | |
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It would have been a great decision if he kept them as well. Listening to Revolution rehearsals as they keep leaking over the years has been one of my favorite pastimes. The Rev doesn't get old at all, and they would have evolved and it would have been awesome. They were like a New Wave James Brown band they were incredible! His subsequent band was great, but they were more straight forward in some ways. The Rev was more esoteric and weird. | |
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I think Prince knew he got as much out of the Revolution as he could and their journey was ending. The 87/88 band was beautiful.... probably his best band | |
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AvocadosMax said: I think Prince knew he got as much out of the Revolution as he could and their journey was ending. The 87/88 band was beautiful.... probably his best band The sott band would easily dwarf the 2001 band in a battle of the bands | |
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Without Wendy & Lisa's influence SOTT wouldn't be what it is. Prince did his best work with the gals in his orbit | |
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homesquid said:
Without Wendy & Lisa's influence SOTT wouldn't be what it is. Prince did his best work with the gals in his orbit Stop this mess. They didn't have any thing to do with SOTT and only contribute anything to three songs - most of which are unrecognizable from the session they contributed to. | |
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The Sign/Lovesexy band is his best for sure. But I don’t agree the Parade tour was stiff. | |
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Prince and the Girl Bros. were magic. That doesn't detract from Prince at all. They helped him to be his best self (artistically) and vice-versa. However, he wanted to go in a different direction musically and then with the Susannah drama, disbanding the Revolution was inevitable. Rather than let things completely implode he saw the writing on the wall and had the balls and foresight to make the move when he did. | |
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Poplife88 said: The Sign/Lovesexy band is his best for sure. But I don’t agree the Parade tour was stiff. The Parade Revolution was the best band in the world, the SOTT/Lovesexy band was the best band in all possible worlds. | |
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the parade tour was so incredible.
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I had read Prince regretted having to disband the Revolution, but he felt it had to be done. Lots of lead singers have stepped away from their bandz, at least for a while. | |
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Wendy and Lisa completed some songs and fleshed out others. They wanted more credit for their contributions and were vocal about it (I can't blame them) I saw Prince as evolving into a band leader and less of a collaborator. | |
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Having become a fan at 14 in 1991, I have no particular nostalgia for the Revolution as a live band and have been consistently disappointed when listening to any recordings of their live concert performances. Their rehearsals are superior, but that is only because Prince stretches out and pushes himself, presumably as he's comfortable because there's no audience to witness the Revolution making mistakes if they can't keep up with him.
As I started exploring Prince's back catalogue in 91, I watched the 'Sign 'O' Times' and 'Lovesexy' concert videos before I saw the 'Purple Rain' film or any live performances with the Revolution. When I did, I was very underwhelmed. The Revolution were great for adding colour and psychedelic whimsy to studio recordings, but were quite stiff and inflexible live. * [Edited 11/2/20 3:55am] | |
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definitely the right decision...his best music and his best shows came after their termination | |
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What are you guys talking about? the only incompetent musician in a Prince band was Wendy cause she always was and still is a lousy guitar player.All the other guys were killer musicians.Even Bobby Z a guy who had the best pocket.The Revolution could go from soul funk to jazz to hard rock and punk in the same breathe and they didn't have annoying female screamers like Bonnie Rosie Shelby... | |
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Looks like this "unpopular opinion" is pretty popular. | |
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Sadly the Lovesexy band didn't last. But I knew that in 1987.
But I thought an expanded musical Revolution would have been cool. He lost that W&L connection and tried to duplicate it with Cat & Sheila. But it was a forced thing. Sheila wanted Prince all to herself.
I wish the Revolution encorporated a few more musicians David Suzi and Novi, Juan Sheila and Eddie
see the 80s through ... Prince's New Power Lovesexy wasn't so powerful, Boni ran all the way to Australia, Cat ran to Europe, Atlanta flat out retired | |
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Perhaps but was it worth it? In terms of product on wax, we got some of SOTT and LoveSexy out of it. Plus one european tour, a concern movie and a world tour for LS.
With the core group of Bobby, Lisa and Mark, we got Controversy, 1999. Add Wendy and we got PR, AWIAD and Parade.
I understand why he did it and perhaps it wasnt a mistake but then why did he blow it all up in less than 2 years?
and before anyone gets all crazy.... yes I know ITS ALL PRINCE and that the bandmates are basically hired help most of the time but I'm saying he seemed to have gotten more our of the "Revolution" core than he did with anyone afterwards.
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When it comes to art - which is wholly subjective - no decision can be objectively right or wrong. There are only decisions which serve the artistic vision, whatever that happens to be at the time. We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves. | |
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- Serious? I do not agree. Prince shined and radiated during all those The Revolution concerts. The sparks were leaping off him. And there was so much positive interaction between him and the band, you even felt the friendship. With all his later bands you felt mostly perfection through great craftmanship. He was the star, the others were (just) people he needed to play live. The bar was indeed much higher, but musically on stage it became much more of a show than a concert - which was wonderful, don't get me wrong. Personally, I think there was more soul and connection through the intertwined friendships, and of course the resentment that that entailed. Listen to what Eric Leeds told about his years with Prince, and you'll know what i mean. But you don't have to agree with it. I prefer to feel the music through the connection (or even tension if you will) amongst the members of a band/group. It's the love i want to feel, not the perfection or craftmanship alone. -
"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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Prince wanted Brown Mark to stay as well | |
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You're out of your mind. | |
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Poplife88 said:
You're out of your mind. It’s such a bizarre argument to make. That band completely gelled when Wendy joined. Wendy wasn’t an 80s shredder, her personal guitar hero was Joni Mitchell. Her strengths were that she could funk, and her tendency toward beautiful chord voicings, which is what you hear very upfront in Purple Rain the song. She would also crush WDC and CB every night. So, c’mon kids. This idea that The Revolution was somehow a lesser live band is preposterous. The revolution was the best live band of their time. There wasn’t a hotter show anywhere. They’d blow people’s minds! | |
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