independent and unofficial
Prince fan community
Welcome! Sign up or enter username and password to remember me
Forum jump
Forums > Prince: Music and More > When did "Parade" become so loved?
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Page 2 of 3 <123>
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
Reply #30 posted 01/24/21 11:49am

OperatingTheta
n

endiadj said:

lavendardrummachine said:

Girls and Boys, Mountains, Sometimes it snows, New Position, Anotherlover.... they've been fan favorites since released, and the first 3 are considered some of his best.

It was a #3 record in the US charts and got named album of the year various places.


And KISS!


'Kiss' is terribly over-played and overrated, but the rest of the album is excellent.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #31 posted 01/24/21 12:33pm

funkaholic1972

avatar

williamb610 said:

I loved it since I heard it...it'x a mindf*uck! The banging and echo of the drums of Christopher Tracy and Prince's "Haowh!" scream. The way it is all segued like one dream with the first several tracks all running/segueing into each other. New Position...bang bang...steel drums...Prince..."Hooohoo!" The way he's singing. The weird guitar note slow funk, flute, echo drum of I Wonder U sung by Wendy and Lisa. Into Under the Cherry Moon...slow...kick, kick, heavy drum, weird keyboard and piano soulful singing. This is Prince's DRUM album, with a lot of drum craziness. Girls and Boys, funky. Drum craziness and loudness and flutes of Life Can Be So Nice, Prince is singing so weird and cool. Echoes at the of Life Can lead to piano majesty of Venus De Milo.

Side One done...

Side Two...

Bass drum...electronic drum echo...guitar...Mountains...Prince singing different. Horns. Dramatic as all hell. Into...da da dum...da..."When I Lie..."...Do U Lie...Prince singing different. "Dooooo!" Then Kiss. Funky. Then...Another Lover...funky and soulfully sung. Then the sadness of Sometimes.

Shit! Like I said in another thread, Prince is different. Not boring. We found that out with Purple Rain and Around the World album. So...I just took that album as a fan and played it. He put out albums every year back then. Even if I didn't like Parade as a fan, all you had to do was wait till next year's magnum opus...Sign O' the Times.

Ha!

I am with you all the way, Parade is fantastic!

RIP Prince: thank U 4 a funky Time...
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #32 posted 01/24/21 12:38pm

Mackopolis44

I listened to it yesterday. Still a marvellous piece of work. Where else would Kiss follow a song like Do you Lie? Visionary brilliance 😎✌❤
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #33 posted 01/24/21 12:39pm

Poplife88

avatar

I do remember it wasn't a huge hit as an album at the time in the US. Kiss of course was but it faded after that. The movie certainly didn't help. I am pretty sure I remember reading that Prince wasnt too happy with it at the time, and some of the Revolution mentioning Girls & Boys should've been the 2nd single...not Mountains. Agree with that one. Mountains is awesome, but G&B I think would've been a hit.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #34 posted 01/24/21 9:17pm

Phase3

Poplife88 said:

I do remember it wasn't a huge hit as an album at the time in the US. Kiss of course was but it faded after that. The movie certainly didn't help. I am pretty sure I remember reading that Prince wasnt too happy with it at the time, and some of the Revolution mentioning Girls & Boys should've been the 2nd single...not Mountains. Agree with that one. Mountains is awesome, but G&B I think would've been a hit.



Mountains? Eh,its a great song.But I always felt like "Anotherloverholenyohead" should have been the second single.In my opinion it is the strongest track on the Parade album
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #35 posted 01/24/21 11:39pm

MIInsane

It ended up in the cut-out bins pretty quickly.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #36 posted 01/25/21 3:44am

Bluedell

MIInsane said:

It ended up in the cut-out bins pretty quickly.

Not in the UK. It was in the charts for 26 weeks, and was generally loved at the time.

[Edited 1/25/21 3:45am]

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #37 posted 01/25/21 8:13am

RJOrion

ive gone back & forth with my feelings about this lp over the years...it can be a great listen at times, but it has no obvious real stand out songs. especially since i never liked Kiss
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #38 posted 01/25/21 8:16am

Genesia

avatar

Ummm ... the day it was released? (For me, anyway.) It's my favorite Prince album.

We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #39 posted 01/25/21 9:39am

MIRvmn

avatar

misiu said:

...i‘m with prince on this one...not enough strong songs...lot of fillers. Doesnt make a great record (4 classic songs). If it wasnt for kiss, which by the way is a rip off and was produced by an outsider, the record would tank...in the last 30 years i tried to like it, but its nothing i go to listen to...
Anyway the remastered one i would still buy..

Yes there's too many fillers on this album. Half of the album is great (New Position, Girls & Boys, Kiss, Mountains, Anotherloverholenyohead and Sometimes It Snows in April) but I tend to skip the other tracks. SOTT and Lovesexy are much stronger and superior albums.
Welcome 2 The Dawn
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #40 posted 01/26/21 1:10am

mediumdry

Margot said:

I've always wondered why there seem to be some intrinsic differences between European and American preferences as it relates to Prince's work?

.

There were less radio stations and the stations that were there were generally less genre specific. So the radio stations played a slightly more diverse group of songs together. Some german schlager, a french chanson, a rock track, some disco, some soul. No major differences, but it allowed for a few albums that didn't neatly fit the US genres some more space.

.

Maybe.

Paisley Park is in your heart - Love Is Here!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #41 posted 01/26/21 1:49am

LoveGalore

It's certainly one of the weakest efforts of the 80s but it has some instantly memorable classics. The shout that kicks off the album is the stuff Prince became legendary for.

That being said, he left off the best gems of the era inexplicably.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #42 posted 01/26/21 7:05am

tab32792

It's a fantastic record. Definitely my #2 in my top albums for him. It's just not enough guitar on the record for me personal. It's a very lush album

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #43 posted 01/27/21 10:55am

RJOrion

what was always strange to me, is that my favorite song on the album by far, is a 2 minute instrumental, that when i play it, no one even knows who or what it is.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #44 posted 01/27/21 11:18am

TrivialPursuit

avatar

RJOrion said:

what was always strange to me, is that my favorite song on the album by far, is a 2 minute instrumental, that when i play it, no one even knows who or what it is.


I always loved "Venus De Milo" and "Alexa De Paris." He was really kinda going balls to the wall with putting whatever on that record, yet it all worked together. I mean, when "Venus De Milo" and "Life Can B So Nice" is on the same album... WTF. But it works.

"eye don’t really care so much what people say about me because it is a reflection of who they r."
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #45 posted 01/27/21 12:15pm

RJOrion

TrivialPursuit said:



RJOrion said:


what was always strange to me, is that my favorite song on the album by far, is a 2 minute instrumental, that when i play it, no one even knows who or what it is.


I always loved "Venus De Milo" and "Alexa De Paris." He was really kinda going balls to the wall with putting whatever on that record, yet it all worked together. I mean, when "Venus De Milo" and "Life Can B So Nice" is on the same album... WTF. But it works.



Venus DeMilo gives me chills almost everytime...i LOVE it
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #46 posted 01/27/21 12:22pm

BlackCandle

avatar

A work colleague wanted to borrow some of my Prince albums because he hadn't heard much.

He didn't want to borrow Parade (much as I suggested it), but did want to borrow Graffiti Bridge.

There is genuinely no accounting for taste...

"Had to get off the boat so I could walk on water..."
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #47 posted 01/27/21 12:50pm

funkypixie

This is probably going to be an unpopular opinion but I've never been that keen on the way it's sequenced.

Much as I appreciate the creativity and adventure of the opening four tracks I don't always find them that enjoyable to listen to. Its always a bit of a relief when the intro drums to Girls & Boys kick in and you know you're getting a straight up good song rather than sonic experiments that are easy to admire but harder to actually enjoy.

I'd love for him to have held back High Fashion and Mutiny from The Family album and have them kicking off this album in place of the opening four tracks.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #48 posted 01/27/21 5:53pm

kewlschool

avatar

Some hardcore fans (tend to be more vocal about their likes) tend to love the Parade album. What excites most people about the idea of a Superdeluxe Parade is the vault material of that era is great just like the SOTT time period. I certainly prefer Parade over ATWIAD.

99.9% of everything I say is strictly for my own entertainment
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #49 posted 01/27/21 6:40pm

OldFriends4Sal
e

I loved this one from day one, putting the needle down and hearing an explosion of colors

I had Old Friends 4 Sale before this one came out so I was able to add it to my listening experience

Love or Money, Alexa De Paris extended versions
Never stopped loving this one

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #50 posted 01/27/21 6:42pm

OldFriends4Sal
e

Jill Scott: "It’s the clearest definition of creative freedom I have ever heard. I was 16 and went to see the film Under The Cherry Moon and fell in love. The soundtrack went from rock to computerized blues to jazz to pop and classical. I grew up listening to jazz and blues, to Ella Fitzgerald and Hendrix and, sure, I loved Bach and Mozart. But prince came along and amalgamated them all. The writing was so descriptive and colourful. I used to stay up and listen to the album over and over again on headphones. When everyone else was outside playing and running on a Saturday afternoon, I’d be locked in my bedroom or sat on my porch listening to the LP, and I’d be immediately transported away from all the problems in my neighbourhood to the French Riviera, where the film was set.

Prince uses so many different vocal tones and that was a real beginning for me. His voice would change to accommodate the story, the lyrics – something I choose to do with my music. Any poet, singer, writer wants to live in the moment of each and every song and this is the method by which to do it. He switches Anotherloverholenyohead to a song like Do U Lie (sings), ‘When I lie awake at night in my boudoir’ and automatically the sun comes out, the rays shine through the window, the room becomes light. The track Christopher Tracey’s Parade taught me a new sense of rhythm. Using a computer he created a different heart rhythm. You don’t listen to that song, you fall inside it and become it. He added car sounds – I mean, who did that in those days? And he sings like he never planned a thing, like they play the music and he’s not sure how it’s going to go he just opens his mouth and starts to sing. It doesn’t feel rehearsed but fresh, full of life.

It’s a classic album and lyrically an inspiration. He’s capable of being a very personal writer but he’s also very skilled. When you listen to the music the picture is always clear, the imagination is provoked – that’s the kind of writer I want to be. Like Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye, he makes forever music.

The instrumentation is wonderful. He had a computer create the sound but didn’t falsify it by pretending it’s another instrument. He chose to play a computer as itself! His guitar – how he would go from being rock and out there and strong and immediately change the sound to sensitive and loving and soft – that is brilliance. I don’t know if the music was a genuine reflection of a part of his life or a fictional creation, but quite honestly I don’t care because I feel it regardless. I feel blessed just listening to this record."
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #51 posted 01/28/21 10:59am

mediumdry

kewlschool said:

Some hardcore fans (tend to be more vocal about their likes) tend to love the Parade album. What excites most people about the idea of a Superdeluxe Parade is the vault material of that era is great just like the SOTT time period. I certainly prefer Parade over ATWIAD.

.

? ATWIAD is his best album, closely followed by Parade and after that other albums.. Not in order: Come, Old Friends 4 Sale, Rainbow Children, Exodus, Dirty Mind, For You

.

Don't understand how people can rate 1999, Purple Rain or even SOTT higher.

.

Anyhoo.. it's a testament to Prince's creativity that he created stuff that was so different from even itself that people that have a completely different taste in music can still have Prince as their favourite artist.

Paisley Park is in your heart - Love Is Here!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #52 posted 01/28/21 11:34am

funkaholic1972

avatar

OldFriends4Sale said:

Jill Scott: "It’s the clearest definition of creative freedom I have ever heard. I was 16 and went to see the film Under The Cherry Moon and fell in love. The soundtrack went from rock to computerized blues to jazz to pop and classical. I grew up listening to jazz and blues, to Ella Fitzgerald and Hendrix and, sure, I loved Bach and Mozart. But prince came along and amalgamated them all. The writing was so descriptive and colourful. I used to stay up and listen to the album over and over again on headphones. When everyone else was outside playing and running on a Saturday afternoon, I’d be locked in my bedroom or sat on my porch listening to the LP, and I’d be immediately transported away from all the problems in my neighbourhood to the French Riviera, where the film was set.

Prince uses so many different vocal tones and that was a real beginning for me. His voice would change to accommodate the story, the lyrics – something I choose to do with my music. Any poet, singer, writer wants to live in the moment of each and every song and this is the method by which to do it. He switches Anotherloverholenyohead to a song like Do U Lie (sings), ‘When I lie awake at night in my boudoir’ and automatically the sun comes out, the rays shine through the window, the room becomes light. The track Christopher Tracey’s Parade taught me a new sense of rhythm. Using a computer he created a different heart rhythm. You don’t listen to that song, you fall inside it and become it. He added car sounds – I mean, who did that in those days? And he sings like he never planned a thing, like they play the music and he’s not sure how it’s going to go he just opens his mouth and starts to sing. It doesn’t feel rehearsed but fresh, full of life.

It’s a classic album and lyrically an inspiration. He’s capable of being a very personal writer but he’s also very skilled. When you listen to the music the picture is always clear, the imagination is provoked – that’s the kind of writer I want to be. Like Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye, he makes forever music.

The instrumentation is wonderful. He had a computer create the sound but didn’t falsify it by pretending it’s another instrument. He chose to play a computer as itself! His guitar – how he would go from being rock and out there and strong and immediately change the sound to sensitive and loving and soft – that is brilliance. I don’t know if the music was a genuine reflection of a part of his life or a fictional creation, but quite honestly I don’t care because I feel it regardless. I feel blessed just listening to this record."


Beautifully put, by a great singer! I love me some Jill.

RIP Prince: thank U 4 a funky Time...
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #53 posted 01/28/21 12:45pm

sulls

avatar

What’s not to love? I danced with my granny to Venus de Milo at my weddding.
"I like to watch."
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #54 posted 01/28/21 1:01pm

Genesia

avatar

sulls said:

What’s not to love? I danced with my granny to Venus de Milo at my weddding.


Awww … heart

We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #55 posted 01/28/21 2:07pm

SoulAlive

funkypixie said:

This is probably going to be an unpopular opinion but I've never been that keen on the way it's sequenced.



Much as I appreciate the creativity and adventure of the opening four tracks I don't always find them that enjoyable to listen to. Its always a bit of a relief when the intro drums to Girls & Boys kick in and you know you're getting a straight up good song rather than sonic experiments that are easy to admire but harder to actually enjoy.



I'd love for him to have held back High Fashion and Mutiny from The Family album and have them kicking off this album in place of the opening four tracks.




I totally agree with this.

The first four songs don’t sound completely finished,imo.”New Position” has a great groove,but it all ends too soon.These songs are too brief.

I also agree that “High Fadhion” would have been perfect for this album and movie.Prince definitely should have held onto to that song for himself.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #56 posted 01/28/21 4:23pm

TrivialPursuit

avatar

sulls said:

What’s not to love? I danced with my granny to Venus de Milo at my weddding.


I always thought it'd be a great prelude to a wedding, or something to play at the end when the officiate announces the couple, and the wedding party walks out.

"eye don’t really care so much what people say about me because it is a reflection of who they r."
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #57 posted 01/28/21 10:45pm

CAL3

JayCrawford said:

I loved it since the beginning.



yeahthat
I’ve been informed that my opinion is worth less than those expressed by others here.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #58 posted 01/29/21 11:24pm

kewlschool

avatar

mediumdry said:

kewlschool said:

Some hardcore fans (tend to be more vocal about their likes) tend to love the Parade album. What excites most people about the idea of a Superdeluxe Parade is the vault material of that era is great just like the SOTT time period. I certainly prefer Parade over ATWIAD.

.

? ATWIAD is his best album, closely followed by Parade and after that other albums.. Not in order: Come, Old Friends 4 Sale, Rainbow Children, Exodus, Dirty Mind, For You

.

Don't understand how people can rate 1999, Purple Rain or even SOTT higher.

.

Anyhoo.. it's a testament to Prince's creativity that he created stuff that was so different from even itself that people that have a completely different taste in music can still have Prince as their favourite artist.

1999, Purple Rain, and SOTT are rated the highest of his career for most critics and fans. That doesn't make ATWIAD a bad album. I enjoy the album, yet the beatles did it (psychedelic) slightly better (although Prince was more funky).

99.9% of everything I say is strictly for my own entertainment
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #59 posted 01/30/21 11:02am

IAdoreWeronika

avatar

1986
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Page 2 of 3 <123>
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Forums > Prince: Music and More > When did "Parade" become so loved?