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Wolfie87 said: thebanishedone said: At least you got my point.I love Prince but on facebook,org and utub i have seen unrealistic adoration coming from fans .under the comment section of 1977 Instrumental Jazz Funk recording of Prince somebody wrote :i wonder how Prince would sound playing with Herbie Hancock.on the org there was a thread "The night Prince changed world of guitar" implaying that Prince changed the world of rock guitar solo with his playing on While My Guitar Gently Weeps.So all those Prince is amazing on the instruments he plays.He was very good ,maybe amazing at the way he presented himself but was he amazing on any instrument ? Now you record and produce on your own, now you dance like a god in High Heels, now you use your voice from low to high only matched by Mariah Carey, now you pull out a blistering guitar solo while spinning, now you record Sign "O" The Times on your own, now you Lay down harmonies on Adore, now you move music forward without following trends, now you dip into any genre fearless. I can move on. What is your problem? Bait click topic and Troll topic at the same time. [Edited 4/4/21 16:51pm] | |
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Let me put it this way Prince didn't have music vocabulary for some of the genres he tried to play like fusion jazz,jazz,classical.Yet some people think Prince as a musician can do it sll. | |
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It's too early to judge. One of his bandmates from the 80s said they'd recorded stuff far more in the vein of jazz than what was commercially released. Maybe it was Madhouse 24, but it was around that time. The world's problems like climate change can only be solved through strategic long-term thinking, not expediency. In other words all the govts. need sacking!
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Plenty of Jazz Greats loved Prince...Herbie, Miles, George Bensen. They know how difficult it is to do what Prince does...genius songcraft.
From Article...Madhouse has become celebrated among jazz players. “Roy Hargrove told me he loved that [first] album. Branford Marsalis was a big Prince fan and got into my shit because of Madhouse. When Kenny Garrett was in Miles’ band, he had a cassette of his group playing Madhouse songs.
https://jazztimes.com/fea...adhouse-8/
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I have found Orgers to be the most knowlegeable and objective fans of Prince which is why I shy away from other sites. There is nothing worse than fans over-idealizing him which prevents objective conversation. I do seem to remember, though, that you thought that Prince's rendition of 'While MyGuitar...' was very good.
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Margot said:
I have found Orgers to be the most knowlegeable and objective fans of Prince which is why I shy away from other sites. There is nothing worse than fans over-idealizing him which prevents objective conversation. I do seem to remember, though, that you thought that Prince's rendition of 'While MyGuitar...' was very good.
Do you have a point to make? I can’t find it. | |
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. Prince's limitations in making music are pretty obvious. He was however a pop musician, his works outside of this field can be counted on the fingers of one hand. I don't even think he was a virtuoso on any particular instrument. Its main advantage was its effectiveness: beyond the quality it could have in a single instrument, it was extremely effective in the overall work and in the arrangement. | |
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It is interesting...it is the mystery he set up that has everyone confused. It really is silly to compare him to the greatest musicians. He is not Herbie or Chick Corea on piano. He is not Stevie Vai or Eddie Van Halen on guitar...he wasn't Victor Wooten on bass....but what he was was far more then all those parts together....he could play at an incredible level but he could write absolutely unparalleled songs. He competes with the greatest songwriters. I remember Burt Bacharach emotionally talking of Prince's passing. A songwriter world renown talking of Prince as a peer. He was on top of this arguably one of the greatest performers ever....one of the greatest vocalists ever...and one of the most defiant musical adventurers ever. On top of that, he was bold as hell. He floored the greats. When you have Clapton and Vai praising his guitar playing...Victor Wooten talking about how great his basslines were...you can not help but realize, he was the ultimate musical package and it will be generations before we see this happen again | |
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RighteousOne said: Margot said:
I have found Orgers to be the most knowlegeable and objective fans of Prince which is why I shy away from other sites. There is nothing worse than fans over-idealizing him which prevents objective conversation. I do seem to remember, though, that you thought that Prince's rendition of 'While MyGuitar...' was very good.
Do you have a point to make? I can’t find it. I'm sorry cause i ruined your day .how could i even dare to write something i did | |
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. Well, Miles Davis enjoyed Prince’s instrumental music. That should say something. . As for me personally, Madhouse 8 is one of my favourite records. Is it “jazz”? Who knows... it’s music. For context: I have a college degree in (jazz) music. . Not to repeat the longtime ongoing discussions here, but even many of the iconic jazz musicians were no virtuosos in the typical sense. But their playing was fantastic and in some cases innovative. Check Grant Green, Monk, Ike Quebec, to name a few. . To be honest, I really don’t like much of that 70’s and 80’s high energy and over the top fusion music. Especially not the “white” variants. Not much soul, but a lot of ego and macho going on. It’s “men’s music”. Play some of these records for a woman and check the response... . | |
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thebanishedone said:[quote] ufoclub said: For example Prince is amazing at present certain vibes coming out of his guitar.His technique on guitar was much better and more interesting than Eric Clapton for example but Eric had more nuances in his tone,more refined.Prince was a great rock guitar player but not as good as some other people who choose to spend more time with the instrument.I'm not saying Prince sucks but i wanna say that we did overrate him as a musician.He didn't bring nothing new as a guitar and keyboard player.Yes he played better than most of people who were presenting themself as multi instrumentalists(George Michael,Lenny Kravitz,Paul Mccartney) but what he played was constricred by the rules of popular music. Yeah,no. Prince was not better than Paul Mccartney, or Clapton. Not by a long shot. On guitar or piano. Not by a very long shot. He was good, but not one of the best. | |
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Tecknically there are better players, of course. But I am not into players that play hundred notes per second. Prince is highly respected as a guitar player, not only in his fanbase. A great guitar solo moves the listener. A good example is the ending solo of "Comfortably numb". Moving, not tecnically advanced. Prince had ability to play like that, he had soul in his playing, thats enough for me. I believe that sex is a beautiful thing between two people. Between five, it's fantastic. | |
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- By all means he was and still remains unique. By far more interesting then 90% of most pop and rock artists ever (so far). - And I agree, no he was not the best on everything he did. - Overall, he was more than avarage with whatever he did or invented. reason is simply because he 'did it', no matter what was told, thought or not accepted, or well received by the industry or cosumers. As a musician, he literally did it basically every time of the day and night. In that alone, he is the only one. The. Only. One. I know (so far). Yes he made mistakes in whatever kind of choices he made. But he chose to do it, as if there was no other way. It was in fact a drive that he had to live with, and was in no way able to share it. So he had to do it basically alone. If he would've been a one instrument player only, he probably would've been the best on a few instruments of choice. imho of course - "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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Listen to REAL Jazz Musicians talk about Prince's unique genius...instead of fratboy anaylsis
https://www.allaboutjazz....?width=768
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U cannot compare genres!!!!! Stevie Marvin PRINCE
All GENIUSes but not jazz musicians (even though they all dabbled in Jazz and were influenced by Jazz elements)
Miles, Brandon Marsalis, Keith Jarrett, Jazz Guitarist Lionel Loueke, George Benson, Herbie Hancock, Marcus Miller have all talked of Prince's brilliance. They realize he's not trained in Jazz harmonics and improvisation. They cud not do Prince's music like Prince. | |
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This is click bait and here we all are...
I hear the likes of Eric Clapton and Miles Davis, much less the countless other musicians and fans worldwide who all have ears and can form their own opinions. They ALL are in agreement that he was an extraordinary musician. There is no debate.
As for you being a thread starter...well that is just showing what kind of an idiot you likely are. Enjoy your thread. Pheromone make a ni**a go crazy
Fuckin' around make a ni**a wanna die | |
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😂 😂 😂 | |
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The most mentioned people in the Miles Davis Autobiography https://www.reddit.com/r/...les_davis/ . Prince is 24th. I don't know what it means, but it certainly means something. | |
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Think of it this way...Miles has made revolutionary music with Coltrane, Bird, Gil Evans, Mingus. And he has compared Prince to Duke Ellington. Enough Said. | |
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We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves. | |
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Bighead said: thebanishedone said: ufoclub said:Yeah,no. Prince was not better than Paul Mccartney, or Clapton. Not by a long shot. On guitar or piano. Not by a very long shot. He was good, but not one of the best.
My art book: http://www.lulu.com/spotl...ecomicskid
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Guys it's not a click bait.it's not nothing like that.Prince is and will always be oe of my favourite guitar players in top 5 for me. Prince was amazing and a Legend with big L with lots of balls and testosterone in what he did but when i read stuff like "Wonder what Prince would sound with Herbie Hancock or threads ,clips saying that Prince is the most underrated guitar player,that he was amazing at jazz fusion,that he changed the world of guitar during the rnr hall of ceremony i just don't feel honest to comfirm that. And that article of course jazz musicians ain't gonna go harsh on Prince,but i've read in some of those articles one jazz guy saying that Prince was an intimidating figure in the world of music but not intimidating as a musician at all.And you know what i can totally see Prince's appeal to jazz musicians in terms of some of his song melodies being very nice base for jazz improvisations and i do find that some of the songs Prince compose could be reworked and become jazz standards.Strollin,Damn U,She Spoke To Me,Te Amo Corazon,that Madhouse jam i forgot the name ,but he always mixed it with Ballad Of Dorothy Parker. Before i used to think Prince don't need to learn how to read music,Hendrix,Mccartney and bunch of others didn't know but if Prince did learn to read only sky would be the limit for such a creative guy. You know for those of you who think this is a click bait i wanna say that i just wanted an honest disscusion about my observation,and at least something is going on in this thred it's not like i made "I miss Prince " thread . I don't understand people who can't accept what i wrote at least as opinion.Why people see it as a personal attack or anything negative. For those who don't know i always loved Prince and his music,if he didn't exist the world of music would have a big empty spot.He came shocked everybody,popularised a music tool that was supposed to be used just a time keeping machine for excercising instrument at home (Linn Lm1) ,he was 1 of the first to put drums in the center of the mix.One of the first to have ridiculously sparse sounding number 1 hits,he was singing about topics you can't even dare to think about.beside being a complete musician he was also an athlete on stage doing crazy acrobatic moves ,he was a creator of new genre of music a number 1 performer so nobody is disputing or taking any of that from him.Those who bothered to read what i wrote,they understand where i'm coming from. | |
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Prince could not have made classical music without a time machine. The classical period extended from (approximately) 1730 to 1820. We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves. | |
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Stevie was not a jazz musician ,but he could be if he wanted and he was very good in doing jazz,jazz fusion check this out this is a serious fusion composition by Stevie Wonder and it's a jazz fusion on a much higher level than anything Prince ever did in that genre,here it is : https://www.youtube.com/w...&t=74s
or check this 1 from Secret Life Of Plants ,this is some killer jazz here https://www.youtube.com/w...tuNzEinwGg
You also have videos of Stevie Wonder killing it on Giant Steps and a video of him playing with Chic Corea Spain and it's shocking that Stevie was not any worse than Chic on Piano. I'm sorry but noby can touch Stevie in popular music not even Prince | |
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They are both complex geniuses. There are things that Prince can do that Stevie cant and vice/versa. Stevie only dabbled in "Jazz", but that does not take away from his overall musicality and genius. | |
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We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves. | |
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Every few months one of these threads... > I have my own private opinion on the subject, which is most important of course, but I'm glad people are sharing on here. > It's funny how Prince's peers can state point-by-point the ways in which they appricate what is special and unparalleled about his musical approach, and someone will always approach a crowd with the aim to debunk Prince's "excellence myth." > I guess I'll add to this thread that on the whole Prince was no technical perfectionist but brilliant in so many ways on the whole and IMHO could definiteley handle a stage with any popular performer you could mention. | |
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remember Miles was getting older and Prince was the sound of new.I think Miles liked innovation when it comes to Prince.Miles was a fan of 1999 album.I doubt Miles was impressed with Prince as a player of any instrument.yes i know Miles said that Prince plays piano like an average 60s jazz piano player but ever since Miles played on a rock festival and witnessed Sly And The Family Stone and crowd reaction Miles wanted some of that.Jazz crowd at the time was shrinking ,thats why jazz cats started incorporating sounds from the street rock and funk .Chic Corea and his Return To Forever were counting on rock crowd.Miles as well .So Miles wanted to be more hip to the younger music lovers,thats why he was intrigued by Prince,same way he was with Jimi Hendrix after seeing Montrey pop festival 1967 documentary in theatre with John Mclaughlin. thats why last Miles album was a mix of hip hop and jazz,cause Miles was always listening to the sounds of the street. | |
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The world's problems like climate change can only be solved through strategic long-term thinking, not expediency. In other words all the govts. need sacking!
If you can add value to someone's life then why not. Especially if it colors their days... | |
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