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when did prince start doing prince throwback songs? relistening to TGE today, im gonna say he started doing it here.
319, apparently dates back to the late 80s, but the diff here i think between this version of 319 and other times when he would revisit older unreleased tracks previously, is that it still sounds very 80s (those drums are totally 88/89). what i mean is when hed update old songs before, he would update them for the era. e.g. ICNTTPOYM (comparing the 87 version to the version on the SDE), he updated it for 87.
also, billy jack bitch. it sounds very like a song he might have done in the early/mid 80s. i think it actually works more as a time song than a prince song, but if you take the horns off, the basic track could be from the 1999 era or thereabouts.
obv later on, prince would start explicitly doing prince throwback songs like on the rave album and songs like 1+1+1=3, but im thinking this might be the first instance of him releasing songs in older styles of his. | |
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Where's your source for "319, apparently dates back to the late 80s."? Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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There was a thread on it here. | |
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Honestly I'm confused as to what you're asking 😂 I would maybe say Rave era when he started using the linn drum again | |
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The irony on the Graffiti Bridge soundtrack, when in the song New Power Generation he sings of "your old fashioned music, your old ideas" . . . when in fact that album is full of old early 80s songs that he dug out of the Vault and redressed for 1990. | |
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You answered your own question right here, even though i totally took it out of your intended context. "Whatever skin we're in
we all need 2 b friends" | |
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"Do Me Baby" on "Controversy" harks back to music from two albums previous. | |
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i think we all know he often overhauled old songs of his for new releases/albums
what i meant was that to my ears at least, billy jack bitch sounded like old early 80s jamie starr-ish prince, which was an odd thing to be doing in 93/94 for someone who at that time was still talking about looking into the future and changing his name etc and playing only new material (then again, at the same time, he was playing plenty of old covers from other artists)
and 319, while i dont have proof its rooted in the late 80s, it def SOUNDS like its from that period. makes me think of electric chair, and other songs like that. | |
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actually, no,
michael jackson for example did not release songs on dangerous that sounded like thriller. madonna was not making music on bedtime stories that sounded like like a virgin.
i am talking production-wise.
so prince sounding like 89 or 83 in 95 was a somewhat unusual thing.
and lets work and do me baby dont sound like they were recorded in any year other than 81, even if do me baby was writtten earlier. throughout the 80s you couldnt really say anything he released sounded like it was from an earlier album, except maybe the controversy/1999 era, but i mean, they were only a year apart so thats normal.
next youre gonna say there was nothing unusual about the lin drum songs on the rave album, as that was just what he always did, when he hadnt used that sound in years by that point.
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I think your premisee it wrong. Production-wise, the songs you listed don't sound like '80s songs. Not even close. | |
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IMHO the first Prince album where Prince is pretending to be Prince instead create new music is Rave un2 The Joy Fantastic and - after - the Musicology/20ten era. | |
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Actually, yes. [Edited 4/29/23 14:50pm] | |
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I think he always took older songs and 'revived' them, look at all the songs he gave away for instance. But to me it was always quite hidden and 'we' didn't generally know they we older songs re-hashed - I think when he remade The Dance, I thought that was a bit strange and then Extra Loveable and If I Could Get Ur Attention later on. He seemed to have finally decided it was ok to look back and revisit songs from the past - when previoulsy he had (on the whole) been against it and always wanted to look forward - I guess Crystal Ball was a massive step in that direction. [Edited 4/28/23 14:46pm] | |
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[Edited 4/29/23 14:52pm] | |
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Perhaps i should have worded it more basically.
This is not about prince reupholstering old material. That is a separate topic. It is about sounds. 319 sounds very 80s with its gated drums and faster tempo. Also that choppy rhythm guitar. BJB also sounds very 80s with its drum sounds (almost more like zapp than prince hinself actually, but maybe he was listening to some g funk at the time, idk). The type of thing he was doing in the early/mid 80s. Not in the 90s. Yeah i know it has that fishbone sample which obv makes it a product of the 90s but thats a relatively minor or background part of the song. For an album supposedly about TAFKAP, not prince(esta murto), that was also surprising. That is all. [Edited 5/1/23 0:22am] | |
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when you cite actual facts, rather than simply throwing out wooly, broad (and extremely long) generalisations, let me know. i wrote it as a question as im not laying it down as fact, im posting it as an idea.
the fact gated 80s production DID go out of favour, and then prince chose to use it again, in 95, indicates that it was out of step with popular trends in the era it was released.
prince redoing old songs over is not the same as taking old material and making it current for the era it was being released. prince would obv take old styles like rnr or rockabilly and make them modern with new technology (eg delirious), but looking back to reference his own past, i dont think he was doing that in earnest until the rave album, but im just arguing that he was doing it a bit, a few years earlier. which for someone who wasnt really looking back at his past for nearly all the warner years, makes it unusual. [Edited 5/2/23 2:20am] | |
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Fact: Prince was never popular because he only did styles that were on trend and strictly in step with that year's top 40. Indeed he was known for doing the very opposite. Rather than being like MJ and just making bad and dangerous albums in failed attempts to find the thrill that he had lost, Prince released ATWIAD and Parade as the follow ups to 1999 and Purple Rain. It is simply not true that it was rare for Prince's WB albums to not have one or more sound, instrument, style, song that was a throwback to one of his previous styles or the style of an influence on him. It is wrong to say that these songs are unusual. [Edited 5/2/23 16:53pm] | |
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You could make mention of MPLSound and 20Ten, which seemed to use his trademark Linn sound, seemingly as an attempt to recapture his "trademark" sound. | |
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youd make a terrible historian
just imagining you working at the vault, youd be like 'well its all just one and the same, its all connected, who cares about chronology, or any differences in periods, there are similarities in every era', every SDE would have songs from every era in it cos you wouldnt be able to note any differences looooooooool
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how many times have i defended my point?! if i defend it, you then tell me i should include some sort of disclaimer that it is MY PERSONAL OPINION rather than a question, as if that is not immediately obvious! the question is rhetorical. but i framed it as a question so as to invite DEBATE. which in case you were not aware, means that i have my view, you have yours, we can go back and forth, and the result is that we are DEBATING. not sure why this is so hard to accept. it is actually what many historians of all backgrounds do regularly. the reason you would make a bad historian is that you are unable to identify specifics. instead you are resorting to broadstrokes about how all artists make music that is in conversation with their past all the time, year in year out, etc etc. i mean, duh, artists are people, and their personality will be present in their work. i think this boils down to a difference in approach. you choose to see where there is repetition. i choose to see where there is difference. and on that note, i am increasingly finding your replies on this thread quite unedifying, so i will leave you to enjoy your ol skool company/DMSR segues and so on. have fun! | |
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