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Do you consider Prince an elite music producer? of course he's never won Producer of the year like Quincy Jones, Jam & Lewis,Babyface and Pharell the elite, but do u consider him as a great producer or average? | |
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absolutely! | |
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Troll | |
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yo mama a troll this a serious question | |
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Quincy Jones Prince Timbaland Alan Parsons Ye (The Artist Formerly Known as Kanye West) | |
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funkman88 said: of course he's never won Producer of the year like Quincy Jones, Jam & Lewis,Babyface and Pharell the elite, but do u consider him as a great producer or average? Omg way beyond anyone | |
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He was by a very long way, the best producer for Prince. RIP | |
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It depends what you are looking for. If you wanted the undeniable and reconizable Prince sound...he was great at that. -
Prince was very good at injecting various artists with his Minneapolis sound. He was good at making less talented folks level up to where he was at. It was like a purple pixie dust he sprinkled on those he produced. Like, Mavis Staples was sounding all (love)sexy whilst singing "God is alive!"
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He wasn't a producer who allowed others to find their voice or flourish without him. Everyone came out sounding like Prince, for better or worse.
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Lastly, Kanye West is not an elite producer. Do some research into it and you'll see an army of co-producers that hold him up and support and breathe life into his creative efforts.
[Edited 11/22/21 10:41am] "New Power slide...." | |
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I agree. Although, what he sometimes did for his own side projects certainly was pretty low in production imho ; (someone's gonna bash me for this list) - Bria valente - Carmen Electra - Andy Allo (Superconductor) - TC Ellis - Judith Hill - Liv Warfield (The Unexpected) - Larry Grahm - Mayte (CHild Of The Sun) - But most others were absolutely fantastic; - The Family - Eric Leeds - The Time - Madhouse - Jill Jones - Sheila E - Vanity & Apollonia 6 - and songs for Madonna, Mavis, Patti, Brownmark, Sheena, Paula, etc. "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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What does an "Elite Music Producer" do? "Whatever skin we're in
we all need 2 b friends" | |
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He was elite unto himself. WHen he produced others, they sound like him. Nelson George said it best that when you work with Prince, you get a Prince production. He could write songs in other people's styles, but it was always a Prince song. Even legends like Larry Graham or Chaka Khan still sounded like they were on a Prince record. Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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I mean, you went to him for a Prince sound, he wasn't getting hired as an engineer or to sort out someone else's creative needs he was more of a song creator than producer and by all accounts he was about the music more than the production. It was about Prince's creativity. | |
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Not really in my opinion, he excelled at songwriting , but far too impatient and pushing himself into too many directions to really focus on a project and polish it to be even better. The product still ended up sounding superior to 90% of what other artists were releasing. I think the point was made in the Alex Hahn book by someone in his fold that Purple Rain the album was enhanced by the fact Prince's movie tie-in allowed him to spend more time enhancing the music as it was one big project, it shows, and I would argue this is his best produced work. merf | |
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I agree as well. Still, for a guy working THIS FAST, he did an extreme good job, basically always. Like you say, he was undoubtly a great sound producer, and a strict on others as he was with himself. As mentioned here by most, his oh so recognisable 'sound' stood out in his production. The Prince touch. Still i would give him credit for being amongst the greats concerning elite producers if you like. There are other elite producers who also must've worked with predictable limits (record company presure, studio availability, limits of the artists/band, technical, etc). So for that, Prince was basically never limited, he just rushed through every project. He was even a wizzard on simple gear - take for instance the linn drum device.
"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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they should rename the linn to the Prince drum machine | |
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I agree with some comments here. I consider Prince a great producer, versatile, full of ideas and did great production work in some albums/songs. But, he was a great producer for himself. He made everyone sound like him. It´s different from a guy like Rick Rubin, who could produce Red Hot Chili Peppers and Black Sabbath. Or Brian Eno. [Edited 11/23/21 9:17am] | |
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. Agree, While, in one hand, it´s great that he worked so fast and gave us many songs, I never bought the ´Prince was a perfectionist´ completely because of that. I believe he had high standards most of the time, but the kind of perfectionist that spends a week on a single song, no. | |
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make hits duh | |
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"...Prince. This producer's producer." - Brian Eno in 2001 when asked to name his favourite producer. | |
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Most of what he produced sounded just like Prince music, but there were a few exceptions like Ingrid Chavez and Judith Hill. Even though they had Prince contributions, they seemed different. | |
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Yeah he is!
The Vanity 6 song - "Nasty Girl"(1982) is still played on the radio in most R&B stations! And "Manic Monday"(1986)sung by the Bangles, etc. Denise was a Capricorn. [Edited 11/23/21 13:40pm] | |
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