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Prince's production style I'm thinking specifically about the middle of the 80s. " ![]() | |
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TrivialPursuit said: I'm thinking specifically about the middle of the 80s. Yes! This sound is also on Can I Play With U? and Dream Factory sort of feels close to it. It feels almost like it was done on purpose because there are songs, like Dream Factory or Hello, from around that same period that sound really harsh on the ear, have dissonant fidelity, and often have a TON of production going on. | |
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The way Romance 1600, for example, sounds is what draws me into him in the first place. There are lots of people that can make something lush and full sound good. But far fewer people who can make something tinny and sparse hit so hard and well. If it's not loud enough, turn it up. Everything is stark, staccato, and in its place, but it's so finely detailed and mixes so well together that what you're hit with is a tiny bullet of pure love to the heart v.s. a shotgun blast of range and warmth. [Edited 1/31/23 10:47am] | |
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From listening to many interviews with Susan Rogers, it seems like Pince simply wasn't a perfectionist. He wasn't too picky about how stuff sounded. | |
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Honestly most of his 80s production is the way you describe Romance 1600, just to slightly less of a degree. He liked that high treble with the kick drum bass highest in the mix yet the actual basslines themselves lowest. It was "unique". [Edited 1/31/23 12:51pm] | |
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in most of the 80s anyway. Starting Lovesexy he starts to overproduce/clutter. | |
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He could flip the switch when he wanted. We have detailed commentary on the effort and time spent on songs like Baby I'm aA Star, Go, Crystal Ball, and others. | |
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. - Yes. That´s probably the reason. | |
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Yes I agree that Prince wasn't necessarily interested in the finished production, the song/groove always shone through no matter how it waws mixed. If everything sounded as polished as For You, Diamonds & Pearls or the Symbol album, we'd all be bored out of our brains. Graffiti Bridge was an interesting one, he obviously worked harder oon the production side but it also still had some grit. PIPS! Eurgh... | |
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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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Lovesexy--Smooth as silk, baby!
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He heard the imperfections in the recording there, made his assessment of it, and approved of this accidental development in production. And it is one of his classics. I believe that Prince had a wonderful ear. | |
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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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Lovesexy is my favorite album of all time and the fact that there's 50 things going on at every second of every song and still it's a cohesive and proclamatory masterpiece is what makes it my fave. | |
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lustmealways said: Lovesexy is my favorite album of all time and the fact that there's 50 things going on at every second of every song and still it's a cohesive and proclamatory masterpiece is what makes it my fave. Like Prince was zipping around the studio so fast to record all the tracks, one wonders how he didn't trip and give himself a bloody mouth. | |
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I believe they recorded Romance 1600 while on the PR Tour at different places along the way. That's probably why it sounds different. ![]() | |
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The album, originally to be titled Toy Box, was recorded in three sets of sessions during days off from the Purple Rain Tour. Dear Michaelangelo, Bedtime Story, Toy Box, Sister Fate and A Love Bizarre were recorded in early January 1985. Romance 1600 and Yellow were recorded in early February 1985. A first compiling of the album was done at Sunset Sound - Studio 3 in Hollywood, California on 5 February 1985. At this point the album did not yet contain Yellow, which was recorded on 8 February 1985. " ![]() | |
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TrivialPursuit said:
The album, originally to be titled Toy Box, was recorded in three sets of sessions during days off from the Purple Rain Tour. Dear Michaelangelo, Bedtime Story, Toy Box, Sister Fate and A Love Bizarre were recorded in early January 1985. Romance 1600 and Yellow were recorded in early February 1985. A first compiling of the album was done at Sunset Sound - Studio 3 in Hollywood, California on 5 February 1985. At this point the album did not yet contain Yellow, which was recorded on 8 February 1985. To his point, that group of songs before 1600 in the list were all recorded at different places so I could see that making a big difference. But I do agree that there is definitely a lot of oddball production choices in the time between the end of PR and the start of Parade. | |
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The Prince vault comment seems odd. How would they get to Sunset the day after being in TN?
EDIT: apparently they had some days off to fly back to CA I guess. . . I feel like I've read Sheila say they did the R1600 songs at various studios along the way of the tour .Maybe they took those tracks and "compiled them" at Sunset but I think they were laid down in random places around the country. I could be wrong.
EDIT: Yet, PVault also lists this as the studioes for the album:
Studio(s): Master Sound Studios, Atlanta, GA, USA; Cheshire Sound Studios, Atlanta, GA, USA; Sunset Sound, Hollywood, CA, USA; Le Mobile Studios (truck) @ The Summit, Houston, TX, USA; 5th Floor Recording Studio, Cincinnati, OH, USA [Edited 2/8/23 13:37pm] ![]() | |
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