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Reply #30 posted 01/27/21 4:42pm

Margot

I wonder if Prince could have benefitted from the insight of an artistic, respected producer?

I don't get the sense he worked w/enough peers.

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Reply #31 posted 01/27/21 4:47pm

ufoclub

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A well designed album cover and marketing can go a long way too...

That any the payola for radio plays to get the song ingrained.

But he seemed like he didn't take the time to really produce carefully and with a bit of healthy insecurity except for the odd gem here and there.

I wonder how "High" would have done on the teen pop market. I know it's not popular here, but it is well produced and catchy, and without his Princely messaging or overtones.

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Reply #32 posted 01/27/21 4:53pm

Margot

Santana pulled off a hit album late in the game. His hit, "Smooth" w/ Rob Thomas was phenomenal.

I think Prince needed more 'fresh eyes' from peers, not proteges.

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Reply #33 posted 01/27/21 5:47pm

kewlschool

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RJOrion said:

a "hit" isnt made by the artist alone...a "hit" record is a collaborative coordinated effort by artist, label, management, distribution, and media... Prince spent alot of years distancing himself from that process, and in turn burning those historical industry bridges...he paid dearly for it ... you cant draw SLAVE on your face and publicly bash the industry that has invested MILLIONS of dollars in you, and made you one of their poster boys and Golden Child...he bit the hand that fed him... that never works...thats why the hits stopped coming...it had little to do with the actual music...LOL at thinking good music alone will get you a "hit record"... you have to play the game...and its a VERY dirty game

^^^THIS.

99.9% of everything I say is strictly for my own entertainment
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Reply #34 posted 01/27/21 6:56pm

OperatingTheta
n

'Becha by Golly Wow!'reached number 11 on the UK chart and 'The Holy River' peaked at number 19, so Prince was still having hits in 96 in the UK and other parts of Europe. And lest we forget, his sole UK number one single was only two years prior in 94 with 'TMBGITW'.

I think the issue from 1998 onwards was simply a lack of industry promotion, support and radio play, along with Prince's general resistance to perform singles on tv/produce promo videos before their release, in addition to some of the single choices themselves not being the most obvious commercial contenders on the respective albums.

'Black Sweat' is the one great puzzlement to me and certainly deserved commercial success, but if it had been selected as the lead single, rather than 'Te Amo Corazon' it may have had more impact. Likewise, 'So Far, So Pleased' was the obvious choice for lead single for the 'Rave' album.
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Reply #35 posted 01/27/21 6:57pm

WhisperingDand
elions

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sambluedolphin said:

Musicology the album was massive at the time, top 5 most counties.

Wasn't this directly due to bundling sales for the album / adding the album to the ticket purchase?
.
The tour was massive, not the album, certainly not the single or any singles from the album (poll a 100 non-Prince fans if they know any Musicology "hits"...).

.

And the tour was massive only because the public promo emphasis on pre-1995 hits (& didn't he add "for the last time"?)...

.

Fair amount of concert goers were giving away those bundled copies of Musicology before they hit the 2004 arena exit...

[Edited 1/27/21 19:00pm]

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Reply #36 posted 01/27/21 8:25pm

kewlschool

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OperatingThetan said:

'Becha by Golly Wow!'reached number 11 on the UK chart and 'The Holy River' peaked at number 19, so Prince was still having hits in 96 in the UK and other parts of Europe. And lest we forget, his sole UK number one single was only two years prior in 94 with 'TMBGITW'. I think the issue from 1998 onwards was simply a lack of industry promotion, support and radio play, along with Prince's general resistance to perform singles on tv/produce promo videos before their release, in addition to some of the single choices themselves not being the most obvious commercial contenders on the respective albums. 'Black Sweat' is the one great puzzlement to me and certainly deserved commercial success, but if it had been selected as the lead single, rather than 'Te Amo Corazon' it may have had more impact. Likewise, 'So Far, So Pleased' was the obvious choice for lead single for the 'Rave' album.

The record companies from the duet partners blocked the duets as single releases from the Rave album. Part of the payback from highlighting the corruption of the music industry.

99.9% of everything I say is strictly for my own entertainment
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Reply #37 posted 01/27/21 11:04pm

BartVanHemelen

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emesem said:

he really didnt care anymore

.

LOL. Dude cared tons about this.

© Bart Van Hemelen
This posting is provided AS IS with no warranties, and confers no rights.
It is not authorized by Prince or the NPG Music Club. You assume all risk for
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Reply #38 posted 01/27/21 11:13pm

zobilamouche

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kewlschool said:

OperatingThetan said:

'Becha by Golly Wow!'reached number 11 on the UK chart and 'The Holy River' peaked at number 19, so Prince was still having hits in 96 in the UK and other parts of Europe. And lest we forget, his sole UK number one single was only two years prior in 94 with 'TMBGITW'. I think the issue from 1998 onwards was simply a lack of industry promotion, support and radio play, along with Prince's general resistance to perform singles on tv/produce promo videos before their release, in addition to some of the single choices themselves not being the most obvious commercial contenders on the respective albums. 'Black Sweat' is the one great puzzlement to me and certainly deserved commercial success, but if it had been selected as the lead single, rather than 'Te Amo Corazon' it may have had more impact. Likewise, 'So Far, So Pleased' was the obvious choice for lead single for the 'Rave' album.

The record companies from the duet partners blocked the duets as single releases from the Rave album. Part of the payback from highlighting the corruption of the music industry.

Or rather; you couldn't tell they were duets unless you read the tracklist at the back. The only duet that worked was with Angie Stone. But the Rave "duets" basically camouflaged any aspect of the other artist ever taking part in making these songs. THAT was the problem.

The HQ-er formerly known as krokostimpy.
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Reply #39 posted 01/27/21 11:29pm

zobilamouche

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skywalker said:

It had little to do with Prince's music and more to do with the promotion/selling of his music. Prince wasn't really "working" with WB anymore in this regard. He uncoupled himself from the machine. Thus, he didn't get all the perks that go with being one of WB darlings. Record companies didn't invest enormous amounts of $$$$$ into him like they used to, thus....no "hits". Prince stopped playing the game by the rules and so he wasn't rewarded accordingly.

Well, if you first sign a x-million dollar contract, boast about it and then in no time change your mind... then proceed to publicly vilify the company that offered him that contract, again; which he willingly signed, you position yourself as untrustworthy and a loose canon. Even with all that talent, nobody is going to be eager to offer him another contract or even work with him.

He won his case but it meant that form now on he was on his own and I'm sure he vastly underestimated the logistics around doing it all himself.

The HQ-er formerly known as krokostimpy.
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Reply #40 posted 01/27/21 11:44pm

RODSERLING

sambluedolphin said:

Musicology the album was massive at the time, top 5 most counties. Also Cinnimon girl was top twenty.



Top 20 where ?
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Reply #41 posted 01/27/21 11:50pm

Phase3

RODSERLING said:

sambluedolphin said:

Musicology the album was massive at the time, top 5 most counties. Also Cinnimon girl was top twenty.



Top 20 where ?

I remember seeing "cinnamon girl" on either a "NOW" cd or a "best of the grammys nominations" cd in 2004.I just remember how weird it was seeing prince mixed with artists like black eyed peas and Pink
Also,prince was still winning awards in those years.He won a award for "call my name"
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Reply #42 posted 01/28/21 2:10am

jdcxc

RJOrion said:

a "hit" isnt made by the artist alone...a "hit" record is a collaborative coordinated effort by artist, label, management, distribution, and media... Prince spent alot of years distancing himself from that process, and in turn burning those historical industry bridges...he paid dearly for it ... you cant draw SLAVE on your face and publicly bash the industry that has invested MILLIONS of dollars in you, and made you one of their poster boys and Golden Child...he bit the hand that fed him... that never works...thats why the hits stopped coming...it had little to do with the actual music...LOL at thinking good music alone will get you a "hit record"... you have to play the game...and its a VERY dirty game

Yes. And a game that is dependent on trends and youth culture. In the history of Pop Music, How many artists have had major hits 17 years after their debut. A handful. A Prince did have multiple Top 5 Album releases after age 45...impressive.

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Reply #43 posted 01/28/21 2:23am

jaawwnn

Margot said:

Santana pulled off a hit album late in the game. His hit, "Smooth" w/ Rob Thomas was phenomenal.

I think Prince needed more 'fresh eyes' from peers, not proteges.

Songs written and produced by other people, when was Prince ever going to allow this?


SantanaMaitreya said:

He had a hit with Musicology, didn't he?

Technically no, but I do agree that if anything was a hit after 1995 it was Musicology. It hasn't really stuck around though, which is a pity.

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Reply #44 posted 01/28/21 2:35am

jdcxc

Late Era Album Peaks...not bad

3121 #1

Lotus #2

Planet Earth #3

AOA #5

Gold Experience #6

3rd Eye Girl #8

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Reply #45 posted 01/28/21 4:30am

OperatingTheta
n

ufoclub said:

A well designed album cover and marketing can go a long way too...

That any the payola for radio plays to get the song ingrained.

But he seemed like he didn't take the time to really produce carefully and with a bit of healthy insecurity except for the odd gem here and there.

I wonder how "High" would have done on the teen pop market. I know it's not popular here, but it is well produced and catchy, and without his Princely messaging or overtones.



I thought the High album had potential also, if it had been properly released to stores with some marketing and promotion.

One of the issues in my estimation, is that Prince's production changed from 1996 onwards with the departure of people like Tom Tucker and Ricky Peterson, who were adding commercial touches to Prince's music and providing a chart friendly sheen.

Songs on Diamonds and Pearls, Love Symbol, The Gold Experience, even Exodus, sounded like hits. 'Love Sign' for example, sounded chart ready in 1994. But other than a few exceptions on Emancipation, Prince's music, though excellent, never sounded to me as though it had the necessary production to easily chart thereafter. There are a few strong contenders on High, 3121 and Art Official Age, but they would've required decent promotion, radio play and marketing.


*
[Edited 1/28/21 4:32am]
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Reply #46 posted 01/28/21 6:15am

tab32792

MattyJam said:

This has always baffled me. Contrary to what some people say, I actually think he was still writing music which had huge chart potential. Songs like Wherever U Go Whatever U Do, Somebody's Somebody and Dance 4 Me could've been massive. And I don't buy that Prince didn't care about having a hit, when some of his music from 96-16 was very obviously tailor made to fit in with the contemporary music scene of the time. I don't buy that it's an age issue, because it didn't stop his 80s contemporaries. So what was it that stopped him from having another hit when MJ and Janet still managed a few in the 00s and Madonna continued to achieve an abudance of chart hits until the radios stopped playing her a few years back.

Well for starters, music is usually a young mans game. He and Michael Jackson weren't having hits like they used to. But also, he no longer had the machine of a record company behind him or promoting him as WB did. So there's that too. I know it's popular opinion on this "Prince was only good in the 80's" so called fan site that he didn't make good music after 1995 but he did. Just wasn't catching on, promoted well or "cutting edge" anymore as if that is the only litmus test for music being good lol

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Reply #47 posted 01/28/21 6:15am

ChocolateBox31
21

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I NEVER seen a fansite downplay & criticize an artist success as much as this one. It's hard to believe this is a fansite. Usually artist are put on a pedestal when their gone. Not this one.

The thread title alone. disbelief

"That mountain top situation is not really what it's all cracked up 2 B when eye was doing the Purple Rain tour eye had a lot of people who eye knew eye'll never c again @ the concerts.just screamin n places they thought they was suppose 2 scream."prince
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Reply #48 posted 01/28/21 6:16am

tab32792

RJOrion said:

a "hit" isnt made by the artist alone...a "hit" record is a collaborative coordinated effort by artist, label, management, distribution, and media... Prince spent alot of years distancing himself from that process, and in turn burning those historical industry bridges...he paid dearly for it ... you cant draw SLAVE on your face and publicly bash the industry that has invested MILLIONS of dollars in you, and made you one of their poster boys and Golden Child...he bit the hand that fed him... that never works...thats why the hits stopped coming...it had little to do with the actual music...LOL at thinking good music alone will get you a "hit record"... you have to play the game...and its a VERY dirty game

well said good brother!

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Reply #49 posted 01/28/21 6:53am

Milty2

I feel like this question is always moot. We all wanted Prince to be EVERYTHING all the time: a hit maker, the greatest musican of all time, the best singer ever, etc. None of it really matters because Prince probably had the career he always wanted to have.

[Edited 1/28/21 6:56am]

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Reply #50 posted 01/28/21 8:36am

MattyJam

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ChocolateBox3121 said:

I NEVER seen a fansite downplay & criticize an artist success as much as this one. It's hard to believe this is a fansite. Usually artist are put on a pedestal when their gone. Not this one.

The thread title alone. disbelief

What's wrong with the thread title? It's just stating a fact.

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Reply #51 posted 01/28/21 8:58am

jaawwnn

MattyJam said:

ChocolateBox3121 said:

I NEVER seen a fansite downplay & criticize an artist success as much as this one. It's hard to believe this is a fansite. Usually artist are put on a pedestal when their gone. Not this one.

The thread title alone. disbelief

What's wrong with the thread title? It's just stating a fact.

Don't worry, CBOX has just never seen any other fansites. Imagine how dull it would be if we all just posted like it does?

[Edited 1/28/21 8:59am]

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Reply #52 posted 01/28/21 10:33am

Milty2

ChocolateBox3121 said:

I NEVER seen a fansite downplay & criticize an artist success as much as this one. It's hard to believe this is a fansite. Usually artist are put on a pedestal when their gone. Not this one.

The thread title alone. disbelief

Co-sign times a million. Many of us just can't let Prince be. The same question can be said about Stevie Wonder and Michael and Madonna and Paul McCartney and Public Enemy and George Michael and whoever else. The list of artists who timed out on "hits" could be never ending.

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Reply #53 posted 01/28/21 3:18pm

cooldayla

Margot said:

Santana pulled off a hit album late in the game. His hit, "Smooth" w/ Rob Thomas was phenomenal.

I think Prince needed more 'fresh eyes' from peers, not proteges.

He tried that move. He signed with Clive Davis and wanted that magic with the Rave Album.

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Reply #54 posted 01/28/21 3:36pm

Electrostar

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Is commercial success really such a thing to be championed? Expressing yourself in your own unique way IS something to be proud of. I won't remember much of the "radio friendly" commercially focussed crap outputted by so called artists.
As equality grows, violence declines.
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Reply #55 posted 01/28/21 3:52pm

Margot

cooldayla said:

Margot said:

Santana pulled off a hit album late in the game. His hit, "Smooth" w/ Rob Thomas was phenomenal.

I think Prince needed more 'fresh eyes' from peers, not proteges.

He tried that move. He signed with Clive Davis and wanted that magic with the Rave Album.

I don't care for Clive, but he had some insights that Prince ignored.

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Reply #56 posted 01/28/21 4:11pm

Robbajobba

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Margot said:

cooldayla said:

He tried that move. He signed with Clive Davis and wanted that magic with the Rave Album.

I don't care for Clive, but he had some insights that Prince ignored.

And Prince decided to open that attempt to get back in the charts with an 11 year old track which couldn't have sounded more 80s if it had been recorded on a Rubik's Cube. Even when he compromised, he couldn't really bring himself to compromise.

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Reply #57 posted 01/28/21 4:16pm

renfield

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WhisperingDandelions said:

sambluedolphin said:

Musicology the album was massive at the time, top 5 most counties.

Wasn't this directly due to bundling sales for the album / adding the album to the ticket purchase?
.
The tour was massive, not the album, certainly not the single or any singles from the album (poll a 100 non-Prince fans if they know any Musicology "hits"...).

.

And the tour was massive only because the public promo emphasis on pre-1995 hits (& didn't he add "for the last time"?)...

.

Fair amount of concert goers were giving away those bundled copies of Musicology before they hit the 2004 arena exit...

[Edited 1/27/21 19:00pm]

Musicology debuted at number 3 in the US and would have even without the concert bundling. It opened with 191,000 copies in May of 2004, and only 12,600 of those were from the concert (the tour had just started). Even without those 12,600 copies it still would have been #3 that week. It was his first top ten album since The Gold Experience and after that 3121, Planet Earth, Lotusflow3r, Art Official Age, and PlectrumElectrum all debuted in the top 10 with no bundling.

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Reply #58 posted 01/28/21 6:05pm

SoulAlive

The hit parade eventually comes to an end for all artists.But having said that,I do think that there are certain post-1995 songs that could have been big hits with the proper promotion and record company attention: “Sleep Around”,”Wherever U Go,Whatever U Do” and don’t we all kinda agree that “So Far,So Pleased” has “Top 10 hit” written all over it? smile it was a missed opportunity.
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Reply #59 posted 01/28/21 7:27pm

SPYZFAN1

Considering that Gwen Stefani and No Doubt were on top of the world back then, "So Far, So Pleased" probably would have been a big pop radio hit (and a MTV/VH-1 video).....I've read rumors that there was some talk about shooting a video for the song, but No Doubt's management weren't into the idea.

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