If Prince wanted a hit, all he had to do is get DJ Khaled to say "We da best music!" or "Another one" on a track. That's automatic constant radio play and hundreds of millions of views on Youtube. Paul McCartney got a Top 10 hit a few years ago by doing a collabo with Rihanna & Kanye West. FourFiveSeconds was Paul's first Top 10 in the USA since the early 1980s. Paul was in his 70s. Tony Bennett had a popular album with Lady Gaga. You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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MickyDolenz said:
If Prince wanted a hit, all he had to do is get DJ Khaled to say "We da best music!" or "Another one" on a track. That's automatic constant radio play and hundreds of millions of views on Youtube. Paul McCartney got a Top 10 hit a few years ago by doing a collabo with Rihanna & Kanye West. FourFiveSeconds was Paul's first Top 10 in the USA since the early 1980s. Paul was in his 70s. Tony Bennett had a popular album with Lady Gaga. Prince always craved for charts and sales, no matter what fams could say here. His whole carreer prove it. His limit was that he wouldn't collaborate on a disc with a big name, unless he was a great musician. He wouldn't let another big name, such as Jay Z, Daft Punk... Produce a shitty track. He would rather produce a shitty track himself 😃 He could have had easily hits and radio play, if he put a rap of Jay Z or Eminem on Chocolate Box or Black Sweat, or replace Tamar with Rihanna or Beyonce On Loved and Blessed. | |
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Prince also wrote Shhhh... For Tevin Campbell in 1993. It peaked at #45 in the hot 100 and at #8 in rnb charts. | |
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Okay, Hall & Oates didn't make the top ten in the 90s. They peaked one spot outside of it at #11. Not exactly "gone forever after 1989". Also, "Shhh" didn't peak at #45 on the Hot 100. It peaked at #45 on the airplay chart. It was never released as a commercial single so it never charted on the Hot 100. | |
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Prince probably didn't want to pay the big money for a Jay-Z. Morris Day said that Prince didn't want to pay him, and Prince was the one who requested The Time to perform at one of his concerts. Tamar was cheaper than Rihanna or Eminem. Tamar was in the early version of Destiny's Child called Girls Tyme, so she was in a group with Beyoncé. They even appeared on Star Search. Prince chose to work with Doug E. Fresh who hadn't been relevant since 1985. Doug E. Fresh never really crossed over either like Run-DMC, Fat Boys, Beastie Boys, LL Cool J, DJ Jazzy Jeff & The Fresh Prince, or Tone Loc. You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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renfield said:
Okay, Hall & Oates didn't make the top ten in the 90s. They peaked one spot outside of it at #11. Not exactly "gone forever after 1989". Also, "Shhh" didn't peak at #45 on the Hot 100. It peaked at #45 on the airplay chart. It was never released as a commercial single so it never charted on the Hot 100. Well, you know what I meant. Hall and Oates had several #1s and top ten for each album they released in the 80's. And it is to be noted their success was limited to the US, not even in the UK. Same thing could be said of Tears for fears, although they had success overseas. Prince had numerous top ten hits, gold singles and number ones in the 90's, and worldwide. | |
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ForbiddenFruit said:
Yes, that s obvious. | |
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You're fooling yourself if you think that people think of So Close or Don't Hold Back Your Love when they think of Hall & Oates. | |
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Most critics blame the symbol and how he would call himself a Slave. All you others say Hell Yea!! | |
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Those songs came out after they signed to Arista. Daryl said in an interview once that they had conflicts with Clive Davis. Hall & Oates did have a big Adult Contemporary hit with A Promise Is Not Enough in the late 1990s. They had left Arista by then. You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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I never said those are the songs people think of? Rod said those acts were "gone forever" after 1989. I was just pointing out they still had some chart traction into the early 90s. Obviously they were bigger in the 80s. | |
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I think this description is a winner as an explanation for why Prince was unable to have a hit after 1995! All of this right here-- What say everybody?
[Edited 3/13/21 11:55am] | |
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Well banning his music from Youtube, Spotify, & other streaming sites did not help. That's how most people listen to music now. They don't even put CD players in cars anymore as a default. Notice I said that doing a song with DJ Khaled would get him hundreds of millions of views on Youtube. Not being on Youtube hurt his chances of getting a hit in the modern era. Prince was acting like it's still the days of people buying singles on 45s. The charts today are partly based on streaming. All the singles from an album can chart at 1 time from people streaming a new release, which is how Drake got so many hits. In the 45 days, only a song released as a physical single & its B-side could chart on the Hot 100. Not an album track, even if it got radio airplay (ig. Isn't She Lovely by Stevie Wonder). Psy's Gangnam Style & Old Town Road by Lil Nas X & Billy Ray Cyrus has Youtube to thank for helping their popularity, so does BTS. Recently Dreams by Fleetwood Mac & their album Rumours re-entered the charts in the USA because a video on TikTok went viral You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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MickyDolenz said:
If Prince wanted a hit, all he had to do is get DJ Khaled to say "We da best music!" or "Another one" on a track. That's automatic constant radio play and hundreds of millions of views on Youtube. Paul McCartney got a Top 10 hit a few years ago by doing a collabo with Rihanna & Kanye West. FourFiveSeconds was Paul's first Top 10 in the USA since the early 1980s. Paul was in his 70s. Tony Bennett had a popular album with Lady Gaga. He tried that with Rave Un2 the Joy Fantastic: it had Chuck D, Sheryl Crow and other special guests in an obvious attempt to recreate Santana's success with Supernatural. It failed miserably. Maybe it was the first single, The Greatest Romance that didn't have any of those special guests, or maybe the general public just had had enough of Prince by that time. If you take any of this seriously, you're a bigger fool than I am. | |
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2freaky4church1 said: Most critics blame the symbol and how he would call himself a Slave. But he still had a huge hit with The Most Beautiful Girl In the World. Which shows that all of that shit doesn't matter if you write a catchy song that appeals to people. But he tot caught up in that shit too much, people want to hear music they can relate to and nobody can relate to a singer goes on and on about record companies. If you take any of this seriously, you're a bigger fool than I am. | |
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How many young people were listening to Chuck D in 1999? Somebody more popular at the time would have been Beastie Boys, Bone Thugs, Method Man, ODB, Lil Kim, Foxy Brown, or even Fred Durst. Mariah Carey did songs with the right rappers who were current and she got hits doing it. Also, Carlos Santana was not singing on the songs (unless you count the chant on Maria Maria), the guests were singing the entire songs. Kinda like a Quincy Jones album. Stevie Wonder had been using guest acts on his albums since the 1970s, but not in a way that was really noticeable. Such as The O'Jays, Michael Jackson, & Betty Wright singing backgrounds on All I Do. Which is pretty close to what Prince's album is like. You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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MickyDolenz said:
How many young people were listening to Chuck D in 1999? Somebody more popular at the time would have been Beastie Boys, Bone Thugs, Method Man, ODB, Lil Kim, Foxy Brown, or even Fred Durst. Mariah Carey did songs with the right rappers who were current and she got hits doing it. Also, Carlos Santana was not singing on the songs (unless you count the chant on Maria Maria), the guests were singing the entire songs. Kinda like a Quincy Jones album. Stevie Wonder had been using guest acts on his albums since the 1970s, but not in a way that was really noticeable. Such as The O'Jays, Michael Jackson, & Betty Wright singing backgrounds on All I Do. Which is pretty close to what Prince's album is like. You've got a point about Chuck D! But I can't really see Prince working with the people you mentioned, except Foxy Brown maybe. But that shows that this idea of working with artists just because they were popular just wasn't for Prince. Maybe that's why the album flopped. He was better off doing his own thing. [Edited 3/15/21 11:38am] If you take any of this seriously, you're a bigger fool than I am. | |
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SantanaMaitreya said: MickyDolenz said:
If Prince wanted a hit, all he had to do is get DJ Khaled to say "We da best music!" or "Another one" on a track. That's automatic constant radio play and hundreds of millions of views on Youtube. Paul McCartney got a Top 10 hit a few years ago by doing a collabo with Rihanna & Kanye West. FourFiveSeconds was Paul's first Top 10 in the USA since the early 1980s. Paul was in his 70s. Tony Bennett had a popular album with Lady Gaga. He tried that with Rave Un2 the Joy Fantastic: it had Chuck D, Sheryl Crow and other special guests in an obvious attempt to recreate Santana's success with Supernatural. It failed miserably. Maybe it was the first single, The Greatest Romance that didn't have any of those special guests, or maybe the general public just had had enough of Prince by that time. Miserably ? With almost no airplay and music video, and even without his name (!) the album went Gold in the US. Who bought that shit ? He hadn't 500.000 fans at the time. Imagine if he had real good songs or hit in it at the time. | |
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By St. Boogar and all the saints at the backside door of Purgatory! | |
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Burning bridges falling down... Falling down... Falling down... | |
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Other than the guy on Michael Jackson's Black Or White, singers who had rappers on their songs generally used ones that were already releasing records and were popular at the time of the recording. All the way back to Melle Mel on Chaka Khan's I Feel For You. Heavy D was on songs by Janet & Michael Jackson and Naughty By Nature was on one of the remixes for Scream. Madonna did a song with Tupac, but the version that was released didn't have him on it. Madonna also had Big Daddy Kane & Vanilla Ice in her book. Sting did a song with Pras & Puff Daddy. Earth Wind & Fire had a song with MC Hammer & The Boys. Jody Watley had Rakim. Billy Ocean had The Fresh Prince. Nobody knew who Tony M, Carmen Electra, or TC Ellis were and Doug E. Fresh was long out of style by the time Prince worked with him. There were others who rapped themselves like New Edition, Force MDs, Bell Biv DeVoe, Bobby Brown, TLC, Shanice Wilson, etc. But most of them were rapping since the beginning of their careers and came up when hip hop was starting to gain popularity. They didn't just pick it up one day. On New Edition's 1983 debut album Candy Girl, there's one song that is all rap and they did breakdancing/locking moves during their performances. There were a few veteran acts who did rap songs like Johnny Guitar Watson & Millie Jackson. Teena Marie & Stevie Wonder did a few lines on Sqyuare Biz & Do I Do. Stevie also produced the rap song The Crown by Gary Byrd, which came out in 1983. James Brown did a collabo with Afrika Bambaataa around the same time. But James had already been doing a kind of proto-rap on songs like The Payback & King Heroin. You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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I always viewed 3121 was his clean (JW) version of a new Diamonds and Pearls album. Designed to be a pop hit album in the Prince style of course. 99.9% of everything I say is strictly for my own entertainment | |
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3121 was great. I heard from Dr Funkenberry that Prince was really upset that Universal didn't promote 3121 with tv ads during the pop idol performance. Prince wanted it to be a huge hit, but come on : there was a promotionnal agenda in France, published at the time that was really appealing : Performing at awards, talk show... He didn't do anything of that and the album bombed at 30.000 copies sold. | |
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It was Prince last number one album in the top 200 in the USA. [Edited 3/17/21 21:34pm] 99.9% of everything I say is strictly for my own entertainment | |
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kewlschool said:
It was Prince last number one album in the top 200 in the USA. [Edited 3/17/21 21:34pm] It was #1 in the US, but At the time IIRC, Prince broke a sad record : something like the lowest seller at the year end chart for an album being #1 ( it sold " Only" 500.000 copies in 2006). It fell off quickly from the charts. It didn't even reenter the charts after the Superbowl performance. In the UK, the albums stayed only 4 weeks in the charts : 9-22-49-67 Despite Fury being in the top 40 airplay. | |
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kewlschool said:
It was Prince last number one album in the top 200 in the USA. [Edited 3/17/21 21:34pm] And its last #1 was the Very Best Of ! | |
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That's a compilation not a stand alone album! 99.9% of everything I say is strictly for my own entertainment | |
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kewlschool said:
That's a compilation not a stand alone album! It is also to be noted, Lotus Flower/ MPLS was supposed to be #1 in Hits Daily Double forecast, but eventually ended #2, short for a few 3000 copies. Prince suspected a fraud. It sold better in the US than 3121, it s really a shame. | |
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