Just a note. You can delete all your previous edits. Time keeps on slipping into the future...
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eyewishuheaven said:
Nope...none of those tracks is guitar heavy...it would have been a masterpiece psychedelic funk album. The problem was that ATWIAD IS the anti-Purple Rain...you need peak arrogance and self-indulgence to practically disown your most celebrated work with your follow up album. [Edited 1/13/22 8:01am] | |
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. Not until En Vogue and/or TLC get in first! If we're talking "mainstream", TLC would definitely go first. | |
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No. Rap/Hip-Hop is a Genre of music that focuses on lyrics a capella style. | |
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Good luck with that. Those groups don't have Beyoncé in it. Beyoncé has been on the cover of Rolling Stone several times, but neither En Vogue or TLC has a cover. If the Hall was interested in them, they've been eligible for several years now. Also with TLC, they were kinda a female version of Bell Biv DeVoe and New Edition has never even received a nomination. Bobby Brown has the biggest selling New Jack Swing album. Without NE, there would be no New Kids On The Block (literally) and the other such groups after them. The only reason the New Kids exist is because NE left Maurice Starr and he decided to create a white New Edition. Their first album didn't do much, but their second Hangin Tough' blew up and was more successful than any New Edition record. I remember NKOTB had lamps, bedsheets, dolls, a 1-900 number and all kinds of things that NE didn't get. The popularity of NKOTB led to other male vocal/dancing groups in the 1990s and also Marky Mark. The Marky Mark And The Funky Bunch debut album was originally Donnie Wahlberg's solo album. The Funky Bunch was Donnie's group. Donnie removed his vocals and gave the album to his brother. 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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That sounds more like Bobby McFerrin or Manhattan Transfer or Naturally 7 than hip hop 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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Buttox said: eyewishuheaven said:
Nope...none of those tracks is guitar heavy...it would have been a masterpiece psychedelic funk album. The problem was that ATWIAD IS the anti-Purple Rain...you need peak arrogance and self-indulgence to practically disown your most celebrated work with your follow up album. [Edited 1/13/22 8:01am] Haha - Extralovable, SAIMH, Moonbeam Levels, and Dance Electric are all guitar heavy songs with solos. Especially SAIMH. | |
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MickyDolenz said:
Good luck with that. Those groups don't have Beyoncé in it. Beyoncé has been on the cover of Rolling Stone several times, but neither En Vogue or TLC has a cover. If the Hall was interested in them, they've been eligible for several years now. Also with TLC, they were kinda a female version of Bell Biv DeVoe and New Edition has never even received a nomination. Bobby Brown has the biggest selling New Jack Swing album. Without NE, there would be no New Kids On The Block (literally) and the other such groups after them. The only reason the New Kids exist is because NE left Maurice Starr and he decided to create a white New Edition. Their first album didn't do much, but their second Hangin Tough' blew up and was more successful than any New Edition record. I remember NKOTB had lamps, bedsheets, dolls, a 1-900 number and all kinds of things that NE didn't get. The popularity of NKOTB led to other male vocal/dancing groups in the 1990s and also Marky Mark. The Marky Mark And The Funky Bunch debut album was originally Donnie Wahlberg's solo album. The Funky Bunch was Donnie's group. Donnie removed his vocals and gave the album to his brother. Marky Mark and The Funky Bunch got a video game instantly on Sega-CD back in 1992. Together with C+C Music Factory. Horrible and laughable. [Edited 1/15/22 11:08am] | |
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eyewishuheaven said:
I agree with you on both points and the original point! It would be weird to hear an official album that wasn't ATWIAD as we know it but there were obviously more Purple Rainish songs in the can by then. | |
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I see it as one of his most respectable and audacious creative decisions. If it had been otherwise and he'd just made repeated rehashes of Purple Rain simply because it was popular, the internet would be awash with people arguing that he had sold out from that point on. It was entirely the right decision, and the equal of Purple Rain in many ways. The highlights on ATWIAD are among my favourite things in his whole oeuvre. | |
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Me neither. The only track that I could live without is The Ladder. I seem to be in the minority who consider Temptation a highlight as well... its like Prince was channeling Tim Curry in the Rocky Horror Picture Show, completely over-the-top. | |
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Rap music didn't fuck Prince's career, Prince did. Formerly TheDigitalGardener etc. | |
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Yes, I know what you mean, it kind of deflates in the 2nd half. I feel the same way about "We Can Fuck" from PR Deluxe - the first part is an absolute masterpiece, but it reaches a climax and then meanders around a bit aimlessly. I guess that he was echoing the movement of libidinal energy, climax and eventual peace, but it ends up undermining the impact of the first half in some cases.
I've frequently seen Temptation in lists of Prince's worst songs and it surprises me. [Edited 1/16/22 17:18pm] | |
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eyewishuheaven said:
Yeah I didn't discount the best tracks in ATWiAD which includes CotA in my book. I guess youre right....its not the guitar sound but the rock sensibilities that I was referring to and even those tracks on PR have them: Take me With You (rockpop), Baby I'm A Star (funk rock). Even the Beautiful Ones with all screaming is a rock ballad. Raspberry Beret sounds similar to Take Me With You (he often played both together) so sre you saying that shouldn't have been on ATWIAD either? I suspect 95% of people and Prince fans would agree that She's Always in My Hair is far superior to Tambourine. It's not even close. Sure its more PR but it's a much better song and Tambourine should have been a b side instead. This is precisely my point. If Prince had focused on making the best melodic and rhythmic songs he could in all his albums he would have approached the Beatles in his ability to experiment and stay at his commercial peak. Instead he reacted against his own success and overindulged and overstuffed his albums with subpar fare. ATWIAD is when it really starts. | |
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Buttox said: eyewishuheaven said:
Yeah I didn't discount the best tracks in ATWiAD which includes CotA in my book. I guess youre right....its not the guitar sound but the rock sensibilities that I was referring to and even those tracks on PR have them: Take me With You (rockpop), Baby I'm A Star (funk rock). Even the Beautiful Ones with all screaming is a rock ballad. Raspberry Beret sounds similar to Take Me With You (he often played both together) so sre you saying that shouldn't have been on ATWIAD either? I suspect 95% of people and Prince fans would agree that She's Always in My Hair is far superior to Tambourine. It's not even close. Sure its more PR but it's a much better song and Tambourine should have been a b side instead. This is precisely my point. If Prince had focused on making the best melodic and rhythmic songs he could in all his albums he would have approached the Beatles in his ability to experiment and stay at his commercial peak. Instead he reacted against his own success and overindulged and overstuffed his albums with subpar fare. ATWIAD is when it really starts. Prince had an artistic point of view that may differ from how you see it 40 years later. And he also had his reasons for why he did or didn't release a song on any given project. It was likely intentional that SAIMH was a b side and Tamborine was not. :) Btw, I love both equally. Tamborine is a thing he hadn't really done to that point. He'd done several SAIMH type songs though. | |
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LoveGalore said: Buttox said: Yeah I didn't discount the best tracks in ATWiAD which includes CotA in my book. I guess youre right....its not the guitar sound but the rock sensibilities that I was referring to and even those tracks on PR have them: Take me With You (rockpop), Baby I'm A Star (funk rock). Even the Beautiful Ones with all screaming is a rock ballad. Raspberry Beret sounds similar to Take Me With You (he often played both together) so sre you saying that shouldn't have been on ATWIAD either? I suspect 95% of people and Prince fans would agree that She's Always in My Hair is far superior to Tambourine. It's not even close. Sure its more PR but it's a much better song and Tambourine should have been a b side instead. This is precisely my point. If Prince had focused on making the best melodic and rhythmic songs he could in all his albums he would have approached the Beatles in his ability to experiment and stay at his commercial peak. Instead he reacted against his own success and overindulged and overstuffed his albums with subpar fare. ATWIAD is when it really starts. Prince had an artistic point of view that may differ from how you see it 40 years later. And he also had his reasons for why he did or didn't release a song on any given project. It was likely intentional that SAIMH was a b side and Tamborine was not. Btw, I love both equally. Tamborine is a thing he hadn't really done to that point. He'd done several SAIMH type songs though. That's pretty much a given but there are 3 things that impacted negatively on the accessibility of Prince's music: 1. In the brilliant Toure podcast Morris Day reveals that Prince fancied himself a lyricist before anything else. And you can hear it. Many songs especially in later years Sacrifice rhythm and hook so that he can say what he wants. 2. He admired his Father's idiosyncratic playing too much. This is a hunch but you can see Prince overcomplicating songs to give them more complex jazz sensibilities again at the expense of rhythm and melody. 3. He didn't nurture and maintain creative partnerships nor have the patience to hone and refine his songs. He was so obsessed with control, volume of output ( as confirmed by his sister) and power that he sacrificed the challenge, creativity and polish that would have elevated all his work to another level. Like I said, after 1999 and PR Prince could have evolved into a 1 man modern Beatles...avant garde experimentation with unprecedented commercial success. I believe these 3 things stopped him from doing so. [Edited 1/17/22 17:22pm] | |
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Please take this in the spirit of good natured conversation, but I couldn’t disagree more. For me, as someone who has always appreciated his weirder stuff more than his pop, it was his desire to stay on top commercially that undermined his status in the 90s. That’s what the move toward Hip-Hop was all about, wasn’t it? As the 90s wore on the general consensus was that Prince had run out of ideas (rather than marketable tunes) and was now chasing trends. I mean, The Most Beautiful Girl In The World was Prince's first no.1 in the UK and stayed at the top of the charts for what felt like ages, but it did his reputation no favours among the serious music lovers in my peer group (I was a teenager at the time), who saw it as saccharine and middle-of-the-road. From a creative perspective, riding the natural ebb and flow of success with humility and focusing on experimentation would have been precisely the right move imo. Culture would have circled back to him eventually. Not that I think his career was in any way “destroyed”, just that his judgement wasn’t as sound as it might have been for an artist of his stature. If he had been more self-indulgent, that is, less concerned with how it would play on the radio or be received by the young, then the work may have aged much better. I'm nowhere near as big a fan of Bowie as I am Prince, but I think that Outside stands up better than TGE in retrospect, for example.
[Edited 1/18/22 11:17am] | |
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fen said:
Please take this in the spirit of good natured conversation, but I couldn’t disagree more. For me, as someone who has always appreciated his weirder stuff more than his pop, it was his desire to stay on top commercially that undermined his status in the 90s. That’s what the move toward Hip-Hop was all about, wasn’t it? As the 90s wore on the general consensus was that Prince had run out of ideas (rather than marketable tunes) and was now chasing trends. I mean, The Most Beautiful Girl In The World was Prince's first no.1 in the UK and stayed at the top of the charts for what felt like ages, but it did his reputation no favours among the serious music lovers in my peer group (I was a teenager at the time), who saw it as saccharine and middle-of-the-road. From a creative perspective, riding the natural ebb and flow of success with humility and focusing on experimentation would have been precisely the right move imo. Culture would have circled back to him eventually. Not that I think his career was in any way “destroyed”, just that his judgement wasn’t as sound as it might have been for an artist of his stature. If he had been more self-indulgent, that is, less concerned with how it would play on the radio or be received by the young, then the work may have aged much better. I'm nowhere near as big a fan of Bowie as I am Prince, but I think that Outside stands up better than TGE in retrospect, for example.
[Edited 1/18/22 11:17am] What the flip are you apologising for? Good convo! I think you're both right and wrong. He definitely chased hip hop in the early 90s ruining Love 2 the 9s and giving us Jughead in the process. But there are sooo many songs that could have been huge if he'd spent more time polishing and not tried to be too clever: Clouds, Black Sweat, the greatest romance, love 2 the 9s, last December, rainbow children, Jam of the Yea, Sex I the Summer,Thunder, My Computer, In this Bed I scream, White Mansion, 7, Hide the Bone, RipopGodazippa, Dinner with Dolores, Gold Shy, Lovesign ..I'm getting tired writing this list out. TMBGW was totally the exception, not the rule...and the last time that he really disciplined himself to prove a point to Warners. It may have been syrupy but it had a brilliant hook and he managed that amazing trick again of repeating the same simple melody in verse and chorus yet managed through vocal and instrumental and sound effect arrangements to differentiate them so that the song doesn't sound too repetitive... [Edited 1/18/22 12:12pm] [Edited 1/18/22 12:14pm] | |
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fen said:
I see it as one of his most respectable and audacious creative decisions. If it had been otherwise and he'd just made repeated rehashes of Purple Rain simply because it was popular, the internet would be awash with people arguing that he had sold out from that point on. It was entirely the right decision, and the equal of Purple Rain in many ways. The highlights on ATWIAD are among my favourite things in his whole oeuvre. You can love ATWIAD all you like...more power to you. But neither critiques nor musicians nor the music buying public agree with you. The songs I listed combined with the best of ATWIAD would not have delivered Purple Rain 2. Not even close. But a much stronger and likely classic album. | |
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Really popular acts generally got some kind of merchandising while they were hot. Like Beatle wigs, Donny & Marie dolls, or a Duran Duran board game. Kris Kross had a home video game too and Aerosmith had an arcade game around that time and there was Michael Jackson's Moonwalker. I think the first music based one was Journey Escape from the early 1980s 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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