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Reply #30 posted 02/23/21 12:49pm

SquirrelMeat

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TrivialPursuit said:

funkbabyandthebabysitters said:

has anyone ever made an edit of this album and D&P without the raps?

not including the flow, ofc. as that would be hard to do lol


Yes, I have, as noted. "The Flow" was sorta hard, but I just cut his verse out, and it seems to work. Although you still hear Prince say, "Tony, kick that piece of ...." then nothing. But whatever.

I took him out of 98% of that album and prince and it's grand, if I say so myself.

So yeah, my edits should be circulating. It's just those songs, not the whole albums.



They are great!

.
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Reply #31 posted 02/23/21 1:12pm

TrivialPursuit

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Margot said:

This is not my strength...but something you said had me wondering: Didn't living w/Andre in No. Minnie in his teens (musically informative?) expose him to an environment conducive to rapping?

Of course, No. Minnie was not Compton...


What environment is conducive to rapping?

"eye don’t really care so much what people say about me because it is a reflection of who they r."
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Reply #32 posted 02/23/21 6:29pm

RJOrion

TrivialPursuit said:



Margot said:



This is not my strength...but something you said had me wondering: Didn't living w/Andre in No. Minnie in his teens (musically informative?) expose him to an environment conducive to rapping?


Of course, No. Minnie was not Compton...




What environment is conducive to rapping?



an environment where rap and hiphop actually exist.. there was no rap music yet when prince lived with andre...
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Reply #33 posted 02/24/21 2:51am

Vannormal

lustmealways said:

Is it possible there are demos of the album WITH MORE Tony m???

-

YES YES YES YES !

-

"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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Reply #34 posted 02/24/21 7:32am

MickyDolenz

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RJOrion said:

the problem was, Prince would always put him on songs that DIDNT NEED OR FIT HAVING RAPPING ON IT...Prince wasnt making any hiphop beats or instrumentals conducive to rhyming...that wasnt his strength or forte, being he was never really exposed to that environment during his musically informative years...by the 90s he was playing catchup and he was forcing tony to rhyme over sugary r&b/pop productions...it just didnt fit.

But on 99% of early hip hop records, MCs were rapping over R&B, disco, & funk tracks. Such as the stuff on Sugarhill Records. Or it was over Kraftwerk style electronic dance music like Planet Rock, which beacme known as electrofunk. Scorpio by Grandmaster Flash & The Furious Five is another example. There were songs by pop acts like Queen Of The Rapping Scene by Modern Romance & Rapture by Blondie. Wham!'s debut single was Wham! Rap. They also had Young Guns. Many of the early songs were long. Rapper's Delight was 15 minutes & The Adventures of Super Rhymes by Jimmy Spicer was close to it. Even the shorter songs were around 7 minutes. That's why early rap singles were only released on 12" maxi singles.

Even in the late 1980s to early 1990s there was dance rap like Falco, C+C Music Factory, Betty Boo, Gerardo, MC Hammer, Technotronic, Snap!, Marky Mark, 2 Live Crew, L'Trimm, etc. DJ Magic Mike did the Miami Bass sound. Freedom Williams from C+C even sounded similar to Ice-T. Rap didn't have just one sound, just like country music didn't. Rappers like Tone Loc & Young MC got a lot of Top 40 airplay.

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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Reply #35 posted 02/24/21 8:34am

BartVanHemelen

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OperatingThetan said:


He does and his style and delivery fits the time period perfectly. The criticism is mostly in retrospect

.

Pur-lease. He was considered a joke at the time by those of us who had listened to rap.

.


and I think predominantly emanates from those who were displeased at Prince incorporating rap into his music

.

It was him incorporating shitty rappers. It was one of the first times where I saw him desperately chasing trends, and of course he did it incompetently, because he was so arrogant to think that his version was a better version. Instead of learning from the masters and collaborating with pros, he instead searched for some local "talent" that would follow his directions. Hence Tony M., hence T.C. Ellis, hence Robin Power, etc.

© 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
your use. All rights reserved.
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Reply #36 posted 02/24/21 10:09am

RJOrion

MickyDolenz said:



RJOrion said:


the problem was, Prince would always put him on songs that DIDNT NEED OR FIT HAVING RAPPING ON IT...Prince wasnt making any hiphop beats or instrumentals conducive to rhyming...that wasnt his strength or forte, being he was never really exposed to that environment during his musically informative years...by the 90s he was playing catchup and he was forcing tony to rhyme over sugary r&b/pop productions...it just didnt fit.

But on 99% of early hip hop records, MCs were rapping over R&B, disco, & funk tracks. Such as the stuff on Sugarhill Records. Or it was over Kraftwerk style electronic dance music like Planet Rock, which beacme known as electrofunk. Scorpio by Grandmaster Flash & The Furious Five is another example. There were songs by pop acts like Queen Of The Rapping Scene by Modern Romance & Rapture by Blondie. Wham!'s debut single was Wham! Rap. They also had Young Guns. Many of the early songs were long. Rapper's Delight was 15 minutes & The Adventures of Super Rhymes by Jimmy Spicer was close to it. Even the shorter songs were around 7 minutes. That's why early rap singles were only released on 12" maxi singles.

Even in the late 1980s to early 1990s there was dance rap like Falco, C+C Music Factory, Betty Boo, Gerardo, MC Hammer, Technotronic, Snap!, Marky Mark, 2 Live Crew, L'Trimm, etc. DJ Magic Mike did the Miami Bass sound. Freedom Williams from C+C even sounded similar to Ice-T. Rap didn't have just one sound, just like country music didn't. Rappers like Tone Loc & Young MC got a lot of Top 40 airplay.




you missed the whole point, in your usual desire to name drop and list a bunch of records you know or like...the bottom line, and everyone from minneapolis knows this...there was no hip hop scene in or around Minnesota during Prince's informative years...even during the early ages of hiphop or rap... i know that may be hard for people outside of the culture to understand...but if there is no hiphop scene around or near him, how is he supposed to become versed and experienced and develop an ear for said culture?...as Prince, Jimmy & Terry, Pepe Willie, andre cymone and EVERYONE else who has been interviewed has said in detail, they didnt even have black radio (R&B) after 600pm..so how and where was Prince was Prince supposed to become indoctrinated into, and experience this then Urban New York (east coast) street culture???... and rapping to the instrumentals to songs like Rappers Delight is in no way comparable to rapping over Love 2 the 9s or Sexy MF...those early songs you name are from a totally different era in rap and music in general...by the time P tried to incorporate rap, authentic hiphop beats and production had moved in a totally different direction,(using ASR 12 or MPCs or digital formats) ...successful hiphop acts werent recording rhymes over R&B/Pop beats...im not referring to pop songs with a few rhymes in them...im talking about genuine hiphop
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Reply #37 posted 02/24/21 10:18am

RJOrion

Growing up in Minnesota, the man was not exposed to hiphop...then when he was exposed to it, he didnt respect it... then when he tried to catch up, he didnt know how to successfully incorporate it into what he was already doing...im not sure why that easy concept is so hard to follow or understand? or why its even up for debate...Prince and his ex bandmates and co-workers have discussed this ad nauseum in various interviews and podcasts and books
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Reply #38 posted 02/24/21 10:43am

MickyDolenz

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RJOrion said:

...successful hiphop acts werent recording rhymes over R&B/Pop beats...im not referring to pop songs with a few rhymes in them...im talking about genuine hiphop

Puff Daddy was doing that in the 1990s and was successful.

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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Reply #39 posted 02/24/21 10:47am

Genesia

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OperatingThetan said:

FunkJam said:

What IS wrong with it?

I think he sounds just fine on "Willling and Able" and "Live 4 Love".

He does and his style and delivery fits the time period perfectly. The criticism is mostly in retrospect and I think predominantly emanates from those who were displeased at Prince incorporating rap into his music and generally dislike it as a form. I first became a fan when I was 14 in 1991 and there was nothing out-of-place about Tony M at that time, hence the commercial success.


That is exactly my problem with it - and with much of Prince's 90s catalog, in general. It sounds "of its time" - which is not something he concerned himself with prior to that.

We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves.
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Reply #40 posted 02/24/21 10:58am

RJOrion

MickyDolenz said:



RJOrion said:


...successful hiphop acts werent recording rhymes over R&B/Pop beats...im not referring to pop songs with a few rhymes in them...im talking about genuine hiphop

Puff Daddy was doing that in the 1990s and was successful.



so what?... is Prince and Puffy the same person?...did Prince grow up and live in Harlem?.. and Puffy didnt make any beats or songs...the producers on his label imprint did...experienced hiphop producers like Steveie J and Easy Mo B, who knew how to flip a pop or R&B sample or Loop and make a marketable song or album around it...now who did Prince have in his camp with that type of experience or pedigree??...no one...nor did he try, or care...look, if some of you are gonna try to discuss or debate hiphop, you might wanna have a better understanding of the culture, because some of yall think everuthing you hear on the radio witb rhymes in it, is hiphop music...and that clearly aint true...bless your hearts
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Reply #41 posted 02/24/21 11:15am

MickyDolenz

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RJOrion said:

did Prince grow up and live in Harlem?.

Eric Clapton & The Rolling Stones did not grow up in Memphis or even the USA, yet they made blues songs. There's country singers & jazz bands in Japan. Frank Sinatra put out a bossa nova album. What does growing up around something has to do with someone doing it or having success with it? Vanilla Ice's 1st album sold 10 million in the US and he's not from NYC. Hollywood made a movie with him in it and he also did the theme song to the Ninja Turtles movie.

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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Reply #42 posted 02/24/21 11:50am

RJOrion

MickyDolenz said:



RJOrion said:


did Prince grow up and live in Harlem?.

Eric Clapton & The Rolling Stones did not grow up in Memphis or even the USA, yet they made blues songs. There's country singers & jazz bands in Japan. Frank Sinatra put out a bossa nova album. What does growing up around something has to do with someone doing it or having success with it? Vanilla Ice's 1st album sold 10 million in the US and he's not from NYC. Hollywood made a movie with him in it and he also did the theme song to the Ninja Turtles movie.



wow you are lost...you cant compare those art forms to hiphop...Puffy grew up in and around hiphop of course he was familiar with its nuances... blues and country music werent created out of urban ny culture in the late 70s and early 80s. HipHop music and culture contain completely different elements that influence the music than any other music genre (specific dances/ cutting/scratching/dress code/slang/persona/demeanor etc) ...you cant compare capturing the nuances of blues/rock/jazz to assimilating the essence of hiphop...youre comparing apples and oranges and talking about shit that has nothing to do with anything...thats what happens when people who dont know or experience the true essence of a culture, try to be experts at it...just like Prince...LOL...youre indirectly proving that pointp..now im sure youll single out another small part of my comment and try to pick it apart with no success...but go ahead and try, i may or may not respond to the incessant mockery
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Reply #43 posted 02/25/21 12:14am

Dazza

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funkbabyandthebabysitters said:

has anyone ever made an edit of this album and D&P without the raps?


not including the flow, ofc. as that would be hard to do lol



I just made my own edits. Daddy pop, Push and My name is Prince are soooo much better

Happy to share. Send me a note
Green virgin teenager, or filthy rich yuppy. Pussy cat pussy cat, where for out thou puppy
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Reply #44 posted 02/25/21 12:58am

TrivialPursuit

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Dazza said:


I just made my own edits. Daddy pop, Push and My name is Prince are soooo much better Happy to share. Send me a note


Are those the edits where the whole section is cut out, like the chorus of "The Max" and it just goes verse to verse or whatever?

I sent them my edits, where I used instrumental parts over Tony's parts to just literally erase him from the songs (mostly, depends on the tune).

"eye don’t really care so much what people say about me because it is a reflection of who they r."
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Reply #45 posted 02/25/21 8:11am

LoveGalore

TrivialPursuit said:

Wolfie87 said:


I think it works on "Love 2 The 9's" speaking part with Mayte, honestly. The song has such a great dynamic when it comes back to Prince's breakdown at the end. One of the shining moments of the 90's.


Isn't that Carmen?

Close. It's Mayte on L2T9s and Carmen on The Continental.

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Reply #46 posted 02/25/21 8:32am

Margot

RJOrion said:

Margot said:

This is not my strength...but something you said had me wondering: Didn't living w/Andre in No. Minnie in his teens (musically informative?) expose him to an environment conducive to rapping?

Of course, No. Minnie was not Compton...

hiphop (as we know it), wasnt invented yet while Prince was living with Andre...HipHop is/was an East Coast(NY/NJ/Penn) subculture until the mid to late 80s..by then, Prince was an established artist who first belittled rap as a passing fad

Thanks, appreciate it.

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Reply #47 posted 02/25/21 9:16am

AMERICA1ST

I believe the true issue that many original Prince fans have with Tony M is that fact that he was the vehicle to bring rap to Prince's work.

Up until then, Prince did not yield to trends - he set them. This was the first time that we saw him do what so many other black artists were doing: sticking rap into the music to keep up with the hip hop craze. Even legends like Earth, Wind and Fire were doing this.

I recall being disappointed that Diamond and Pearls marked the first time that I felt Prince was a follower. I didn't hate what Tony M added but I didn't love it. It just seemed unnecessary.

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Reply #48 posted 02/25/21 9:18am

AMERICA1ST

RJOrion said:

Growing up in Minnesota, the man was not exposed to hiphop...then when he was exposed to it, he didnt respect it... then when he tried to catch up, he didnt know how to successfully incorporate it into what he was already doing...im not sure why that easy concept is so hard to follow or understand? or why its even up for debate...Prince and his ex bandmates and co-workers have discussed this ad nauseum in various interviews and podcasts and books

Hip hop did not exist when Prince was growing up.

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Reply #49 posted 02/25/21 10:04am

RJOrion

AMERICA1ST said:



RJOrion said:


Growing up in Minnesota, the man was not exposed to hiphop...then when he was exposed to it, he didnt respect it... then when he tried to catch up, he didnt know how to successfully incorporate it into what he was already doing...im not sure why that easy concept is so hard to follow or understand? or why its even up for debate...Prince and his ex bandmates and co-workers have discussed this ad nauseum in various interviews and podcasts and books

Hip hop did not exist when Prince was growing up.




thats what i have already said... several times in this thread
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Reply #50 posted 02/25/21 10:30am

funkbabyandthe
babysitters

theres no science to this.

lary blackmon didnt 'grow up' with rap either, but he did a better job of working with it on word up for example than prince did.

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Reply #51 posted 02/25/21 10:53am

tab32792

BartVanHemelen said:

OperatingThetan said:

and I think predominantly emanates from those who were displeased at Prince incorporating rap into his music

.

It was him incorporating shitty rappers. It was one of the first times where I saw him desperately chasing trends, and of course he did it incompetently, because he was so arrogant to think that his version was a better version. Instead of learning from the masters and collaborating with pros, he instead searched for some local "talent" that would follow his directions. Hence Tony M., hence T.C. Ellis, hence Robin Power, etc.

Does this guy like Prince at all? lol Every post is literally negative.

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Reply #52 posted 02/25/21 10:56am

tab32792

Genesia said:

OperatingThetan said:

FunkJam said: He does and his style and delivery fits the time period perfectly. The criticism is mostly in retrospect and I think predominantly emanates from those who were displeased at Prince incorporating rap into his music and generally dislike it as a form. I first became a fan when I was 14 in 1991 and there was nothing out-of-place about Tony M at that time, hence the commercial success.


That is exactly my problem with it - and with much of Prince's 90s catalog, in general. It sounds "of its time" - which is not something he concerned himself with prior to that.

You really think When Doves cry doesn't sound 80's? lol None of that stuff sounds "new" and that's ok.

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Reply #53 posted 02/25/21 11:33am

RJOrion

funkbabyandthebabysitters said:

theres no science to this.


lary blackmon didnt 'grow up' with rap either, but he did a better job of working with it on word up for example than prince did.




Word Up is not a hip/hop-rap record ...hes singing not rapping...and other members of Cameo were from Wyandanch(long island), New York...same neighborhood as hiphop pioneer Rakim
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Reply #54 posted 02/25/21 11:34am

RJOrion

some of yall are not even clear on what hiphop/rap is
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Reply #55 posted 02/25/21 11:37am

lustmealways

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you guys can complain about this GREAT music (and great rapper, mr. M)

i'll be over here kicking the flow, as it were

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Reply #56 posted 02/25/21 11:41am

RJOrion

lustmealways said:

you guys can complain about this GREAT music (and great rapper, mr. M)

i'll be over here kicking the flow, as it were



...just like youre supposed. to. do.
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Reply #57 posted 02/25/21 12:10pm

MickyDolenz

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funkbabyandthebabysitters said:

theres no science to this.

lary blackmon didnt 'grow up' with rap either, but he did a better job of working with it on word up for example than prince did.

This isn't really a rap, but the 12" version of She's Strage is. There's others like Johnny Guitar Watson & Millie Jackson who are of an earlier generation from Prince who released rap songs in the early 1980s. Rapping existed long before there was a hip hop genre. You can find songs from the 1920s that have rap cadences, and also in some old movie musicals. Some examples are 1960s songs like The Name Game by Shirley Ellis & Here Comes The Judge by Pigmeat Markham.

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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Reply #58 posted 02/25/21 12:16pm

TrivialPursuit

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LoveGalore said:

TrivialPursuit said:


Isn't that Carmen?

Close. It's Mayte on L2T9s and Carmen on The Continental.


There ya go. I knew they were both somewhere, but couldn't recall it right off.

"eye don’t really care so much what people say about me because it is a reflection of who they r."
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Reply #59 posted 02/25/21 12:39pm

RJOrion

MickyDolenz said:



funkbabyandthebabysitters said:


theres no science to this.


lary blackmon didnt 'grow up' with rap either, but he did a better job of working with it on word up for example than prince did.



This isn't really a rap, but the 12" version of She's Strage is. There's others like Johnny Guitar Watson & Millie Jackson who are of an earlier generation from Prince who released rap songs in the early 1980s. Rapping existed long before there was a hip hop genre. You can find songs from the 1920s that have rap cadences, and also in some old movie musicals. Some examples are 1960s songs like The Name Game by Shirley Ellis & Here Comes The Judge by Pigmeat Markham.



we know all that...we're clearly referring to modern commercial hiphop culture which includes rapping/dancing/dj'ing, which started late 70s in new york...mankind has been rhyming in cadences over beats since the African griots and before... it didnt start in America either
[Edited 2/25/21 12:41pm]
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