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Reply #180 posted 10/31/23 9:18am

Vannormal

antonb said:

My main criticism, is you don’t need the same show on audio and blue ray. Release the full blown show on audio from the tour. Seems a waste to me. You can rip the audio from the blueray at if you want it

True, it could've been another disc filled with outtakes or rehearsals.

"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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Reply #181 posted 10/31/23 1:23pm

Landonfunkmonk
ey

RJOrion said:

"Letter 4 Miles" is a MASTERPIECE

maybe Prince's best jazz effort ever


This is really growing on me.

Probably my favourite run of tracks on the vault discs is on disc 3 from Trouble to I Pledge Allegiance To Your Love
Something BIG Is Coming.
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Reply #182 posted 10/31/23 4:20pm

funkbabyandthe
babysitters

Its decent, for sure. Could have done with some refining. With the instrumentals on this set, you notice the unfinishedness more.
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Reply #183 posted 11/01/23 2:15am

Whiskas31

RJOrion said:

"Open Book" is a MASTERPIECE

Yeah, both Open Book and Get Blue have always been two of my favourite Prince bootleg songs. So nice to hear them with decent audio now.

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Reply #184 posted 11/01/23 2:30am

Whiskas31

Ndorphinmachina said:

Whiskas31 said:

I knew Prince was trying to play catch up with New Jack Swing sounds of the 90's, but listening to the vault tracks it seems he had completely lost confidence in his own abilities.

Songs like 'Don't Say You Love Me' and 'Spirit' are just complete generic rip offs of better NJS songs, while some real gems like 'Open Book', 'Pain', 'Something Funky This Way Comes' and 'Get Blue' to name a few were completely passed over to cater for NJS lite stuff such as Jughead and Daddy Pop.

I think this is the only time in Prince's career where he was trying to copy rather than innovate, and some of the more soulful and funky vault stuff would have complemented the better D&P tracks (i.e. the funk soul and blues ones) than the ones trying to follow modern trends. Kind of glad they got this era out the way, as hopefully we can finally get a Parade Deluxe edition.

I'm curious if you feel the same way about Purple Rain? Do you feel he was he ripping off other rock bands/artists? Copying them rather than innovating? I love PR but is it a particularly innovative album? Or ripping off house DJs when he added house music into his styles? Surely every (pop) musician is influenced by what came before them and what's going on at the time. It might be odd if BB King decided to ditch the blues for dubstep. But Prince never subscribed to one style or genre. What is it that defines which styles/genres he could/should play and which he shouldn't?


You make a very good point. I think around the Purple Rain era, Prince was confidently running along side many genres, putting his own spin on them and in some cases, such as When Doves Cry, he was innovating. Some of the production techniques he used on Controversy, 1999 and Purple Rain essentially created the Minneapolis Sound, which was copied by many other artists throughout the 80's and are still used today. You might think that Purple Rain isn't innovative, but that's only because those techniques are commonplace these days.

When it came to the D&P era, he was on the backfoot. NJS was the new big dominant R&B sound. After the relative commercial and critical failure of Graffiti Bridge, Prince wasn't at the forefront anymore. He went the rap route, which is a genre he originally disliked, and pretty much copied the NJS sound without adding to it or innovating on it. That whole awful plastic "Gangsta" persona he created for D&P's was cringeworth at best, as were the songs associated with that persona.

The outtakes pretty much highlight that the NJS and rap inspired songs were the weakest. They were clearly done as a means of Prince staying relevant, when before he was at the forefront. I hope that explains my original point a bit better.


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Reply #185 posted 11/01/23 3:49am

themanfromnept
une

A silly quesion: anybody knows if there is an original "Do Your Dance" version? In SDE there is the KC's Remix we all know, but I never heard of the original mix.

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Reply #186 posted 11/01/23 7:33am

funkbabyandthe
babysitters

Whiskas31 said:



Ndorphinmachina said:


Whiskas31 said:

I knew Prince was trying to play catch up with New Jack Swing sounds of the 90's, but listening to the vault tracks it seems he had completely lost confidence in his own abilities.

Songs like 'Don't Say You Love Me' and 'Spirit' are just complete generic rip offs of better NJS songs, while some real gems like 'Open Book', 'Pain', 'Something Funky This Way Comes' and 'Get Blue' to name a few were completely passed over to cater for NJS lite stuff such as Jughead and Daddy Pop.

I think this is the only time in Prince's career where he was trying to copy rather than innovate, and some of the more soulful and funky vault stuff would have complemented the better D&P tracks (i.e. the funk soul and blues ones) than the ones trying to follow modern trends. Kind of glad they got this era out the way, as hopefully we can finally get a Parade Deluxe edition.



I'm curious if you feel the same way about Purple Rain? Do you feel he was he ripping off other rock bands/artists? Copying them rather than innovating? I love PR but is it a particularly innovative album? Or ripping off house DJs when he added house music into his styles? Surely every (pop) musician is influenced by what came before them and what's going on at the time. It might be odd if BB King decided to ditch the blues for dubstep. But Prince never subscribed to one style or genre. What is it that defines which styles/genres he could/should play and which he shouldn't?



You make a very good point. I think around the Purple Rain era, Prince was confidently running along side many genres, putting his own spin on them and in some cases, such as When Doves Cry, he was innovating. Some of the production techniques he used on Controversy, 1999 and Purple Rain essentially created the Minneapolis Sound, which was copied by many other artists throughout the 80's and are still used today. You might think that Purple Rain isn't innovative, but that's only because those techniques are commonplace these days.

When it came to the D&P era, he was on the backfoot. NJS was the new big dominant R&B sound. After the relative commercial and critical failure of Graffiti Bridge, Prince wasn't at the forefront anymore. He went the rap route, which is a genre he originally disliked, and pretty much copied the NJS sound without adding to it or innovating on it. That whole awful plastic "Gangsta" persona he created for D&P's was cringeworth at best, as were the songs associated with that persona.

The outtakes pretty much highlight that the NJS and rap inspired songs were the weakest. They were clearly done as a means of Prince staying relevant, when before he was at the forefront. I hope that explains my original point a bit better.




Agree. Also the difference is that in these vault songs, he is trying to almost essay these styles, to become anonymous, like a backroom writer producer. Which is fine as he was giving these songs to others. But lustening to him sing it, it looks like he wasnt doing his own take on them, he was trying to sound the same as everyone else. Which is impressive in a sense, that he could apply himself like that. But from princes own records, i expect him putting his own spin on things, not trying to fit in (or not quite doing either as that also happened quite a bit).
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Reply #187 posted 11/01/23 9:33am

thesexofit

avatar

funkbabyandthebabysitters said:

Whiskas31 said:


You make a very good point. I think around the Purple Rain era, Prince was confidently running along side many genres, putting his own spin on them and in some cases, such as When Doves Cry, he was innovating. Some of the production techniques he used on Controversy, 1999 and Purple Rain essentially created the Minneapolis Sound, which was copied by many other artists throughout the 80's and are still used today. You might think that Purple Rain isn't innovative, but that's only because those techniques are commonplace these days.

When it came to the D&P era, he was on the backfoot. NJS was the new big dominant R&B sound. After the relative commercial and critical failure of Graffiti Bridge, Prince wasn't at the forefront anymore. He went the rap route, which is a genre he originally disliked, and pretty much copied the NJS sound without adding to it or innovating on it. That whole awful plastic "Gangsta" persona he created for D&P's was cringeworth at best, as were the songs associated with that persona.

The outtakes pretty much highlight that the NJS and rap inspired songs were the weakest. They were clearly done as a means of Prince staying relevant, when before he was at the forefront. I hope that explains my original point a bit better.


Agree. Also the difference is that in these vault songs, he is trying to almost essay these styles, to become anonymous, like a backroom writer producer. Which is fine as he was giving these songs to others. But lustening to him sing it, it looks like he wasnt doing his own take on them, he was trying to sound the same as everyone else. Which is impressive in a sense, that he could apply himself like that. But from princes own records, i expect him putting his own spin on things, not trying to fit in (or not quite doing either as that also happened quite a bit).

But like you already mentioned, the tracks he gave to others are demo's, so obviously he ain't gonna put everything into it like a track for himself. A few sound more "full" than others ("Open book" for example), whilst some are just kinda barren by his standards ("Get blue").

I understand if you had never heard the Martika or EL Debarge track etc...how underwhelming they sound. I already owned the finished tracks by said artists and actually prefer the finished product on a few of them, but thats all they are...demo's for other artists. Never meant for his album.


I must admit I preferred his songs for others back in this era then alot more than his own work. Much lighter and poppy and more fun, but then I love the NJS era in general so Iam biased LOL.

[Edited 11/1/23 9:34am]

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Reply #188 posted 11/01/23 10:49am

Ndorphinmachin
a

Whiskas31 said:




When it came to the D&P era, he was on the backfoot. NJS was the new big dominant R&B sound. After the relative commercial and critical failure of Graffiti Bridge, Prince wasn't at the forefront anymore. He went the rap route, which is a genre he originally disliked, and pretty much copied the NJS sound without adding to it or innovating on it. That whole awful plastic "Gangsta" persona he created for D&P's was cringeworth at best, as were the songs associated with that persona.

The outtakes pretty much highlight that the NJS and rap inspired songs were the weakest. They were clearly done as a means of Prince staying relevant, when before he was at the forefront. I hope that explains my original point a bit better.




No doubt D&P was a commercial effort. I don't know what you mean by "he went the rap route". D&P definitely isn't a rap album by any stretch... It wasn't even the first time he experimented with rap. "Irresistible Bitch" is rapped for the most part. Sheila's rap on IGBABN, Cat's rap on Alphabet St, TC on Graffiti Bridge, Morris Day raps most of the lyrics to "Release It" on that album too. So it's certainly not the case that with D&P Prince STARTED to incorporate rap. He'd done that before. How many of the songs on the album actually feature rap by Tony or Prince? 5 out of 13? Less than half. If you take the singles into account you could actually make a case that overall the D&P project as a whole, owes as much to house music as it does rap.

It was rap with a real band though. Perhaps not entirely innovative, but it wasn't the trend at the time. It was also Pop-rap, radio friendly, generally upbeat and positive.

I'm not even sure I agree that Prince disliked rap. A lyric from an album that was shelved and which can be taken in one of two ways doesn't really establish that IMO. I don't believe Prince was wishing death on rappers. So the quote was really how he only liked rappers who in his opinion were "dead on it". There are quotes from 3rd parties, about how he didn't like that rappers of the time weren't creating anything new musically. But again, that's not the same as not liking rap... And it's all moot anyway, because anyone can change their mind about anything at any time.

As for it being a contrivance in order to stay relevant. Gett Off was the only single that could be said of. It was a big hit. So if true, it worked. Although the other singles don't fit that template, and were also commercially successful for the most part. With the Cream and Gett Off mixes owing more to house music than rap. It wasn't really until the next album that he started to present himself as more "gangster", and even then it was done fairly tongue in cheek. On D&P the only reference to anything like that is gangster glam... Which is a house track with a great hook.
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Reply #189 posted 11/01/23 12:02pm

PurpleClouds

Hi all, this is my 1st post on the forum. Longtime Prince fan who lost touch a bit with new Prince music but have had a resurgence of interest the past couple years and didn’t realize how much I was missing!

Anyway, I’ve finally had a chance to listen to the new content on this D&P Super Deluxe set and here are my thoughts on the vault songs.

These three I already had in my collection but glad to get quality upgrades (like all 3)…...

Pain

Open Book

The Voice

These I have added to my regular playlist….

Trouble - nice song. Would have lend itself well to a live version.

Alice Through the Looking Glass


Hey U - classic catchy Prince rif. I would like even better if the phrase “Hey U” wasn’t repeated so often.

I Pledge Allegiance to Your Love - to me this is the cream of the crop! Beautiful blues/soul tune. It’s definitely a “how did this not make it on an album?” song. A+

and this batch I kind of like but are on the fence whether or not I will add them to my regular playlist……

My Tender Heart
Streetwalker
Skip to My You My Darling
Martika’s Kitchen
Spirit
Hold Me
Standing at the Alter
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Reply #190 posted 11/01/23 2:21pm

funkbabyandthe
babysitters

All the allegations of prince trend chasing etc on d+p... they should have listened to the vault tracks! Thats what you call conforming! Lol
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Reply #191 posted 11/01/23 3:17pm

Blondies1973

I am positively surprised by the vault tracks overall.

Clear favourites, going straight to my playlist:

My tender heart
Skip to my you my darling
Martika’s kitchen
Open book
Something funky
Alice
The voice
Letter 4 Miles
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Reply #192 posted 11/01/23 8:39pm

JoeyCococo

It is hard an unfair to compare D&P vault songs to SOTT’s but, there are some real gems. Who else could have shelved these:

Pain, Tender Heart, Open Book, Get Blue, Letter 4 Miles, Standing At the Altar, Pledge Allegience, Yhe Voice, Blood On The Sheets, Last Dance, Martikas Kitchen, and better versions of songs we have Insatiable and interesting takes on songs we know, Horny Pony.

Hey You and Trouble are growing on me. I mention them because I had dismissed them before.

I think that 90s very distinctive New Hack Swing sound is what bothers me but why should it..it was the sound of that time. Don’t Say You Love me is a perfect example….and it is actually good:)
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Reply #193 posted 11/02/23 2:45am

antonb

JoeyCococo said:

It is hard an unfair to compare D&P vault songs to SOTT’s but, there are some real gems. Who else could have shelved these:

Pain, Tender Heart, Open Book, Get Blue, Letter 4 Miles, Standing At the Altar, Pledge Allegience, Yhe Voice, Blood On The Sheets, Last Dance, Martikas Kitchen, and better versions of songs we have Insatiable and interesting takes on songs we know, Horny Pony.

Hey You and Trouble are growing on me. I mention them because I had dismissed them before.

I think that 90s very distinctive New Hack Swing sound is what bothers me but why should it..it was the sound of that time. Don’t Say You Love me is a perfect example….and it is actually good:)

I agree with you 100 per cent. It was a different time, and he needed a hit under warners at that time. At least they got a hit album and a few singles out of it. Mission accomplished really. Just before it really turned sour!
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Reply #194 posted 11/02/23 6:06am

Whiskas31

JoeyCococo said:

It is hard an unfair to compare D&P vault songs to SOTT’s but, there are some real gems. Who else could have shelved these: Pain, Tender Heart, Open Book, Get Blue, Letter 4 Miles, Standing At the Altar, Pledge Allegience, Yhe Voice, Blood On The Sheets, Last Dance, Martikas Kitchen, and better versions of songs we have Insatiable and interesting takes on songs we know, Horny Pony. Hey You and Trouble are growing on me. I mention them because I had dismissed them before. I think that 90s very distinctive New Hack Swing sound is what bothers me but why should it..it was the sound of that time. Don’t Say You Love me is a perfect example….and it is actually good:)

Standing at the Altar is such a great song, although I think the vault demo sounds a little too sparse. The Margie Cox version on 1-800 New Funk is more complete, and the one I'll always return to.

[Edited 11/2/23 6:06am]

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Reply #195 posted 11/02/23 7:47am

happyshopper

I keep noticing new things every time I listen to the vault tracks...

.

Alice Through The Looking Glass: Prince's "Doop da doo doop" singing from about 20 seconds onwards is a guide for a horn section... and not meant to be there (I'm 99% sure). There's horn parts in Sheila E's live version. Not quite the same, but obviously what was intended to go there.

I wonder if they were ever recorded, or the Estate just didn't notice, or couldn't find the recordings?

[Edited 11/2/23 7:48am]

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Reply #196 posted 11/02/23 8:25am

SpookyPurple

Listened to all of the vault tracks last night. Aside from the tracks I'd had and liked from old bootlegs and a couple of others like Standing At The Altar and Hey U, I don't think there's much I'll be going back to. Not that they're bad tracks, just super generic and - as others have pointed out - very much of that time period - which is not my fav, personally. Prince definitely wasn't blazing any new trails though I think Cream and Gett Off are absolute classics and I'll always have a soft spot for D&P the song. I want more eccentric Prince as Funky mentioned previously. I'm in the camp of people who still wonder why the Estate chose to make a SDE of this album but I'm glad there are others who are loving it.

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Reply #197 posted 11/02/23 2:25pm

luv2tha99s

avatar

Lori Ann sounds like Baltimore a little bit to my ears.
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Reply #198 posted 11/02/23 5:19pm

WhisperingDand
elions

avatar

thesexofit said:

But like you already mentioned, the tracks he gave to others are demo's, so obviously he ain't gonna put everything into it like a track for himself. A few sound more "full" than others ("Open book" for example), whilst some are just kinda barren by his standards ("Get blue").

I understand if you had never heard the Martika or EL Debarge track etc...how underwhelming they sound. I already owned the finished tracks by said artists and actually prefer the finished product on a few of them, but thats all they are...demo's for other artists. Never meant for his album.

I must admit I preferred his songs for others back in this era then alot more than his own work. Much lighter and poppy and more fun, but then I love the NJS era in general so Iam biased LOL.


Yeah, this doesn't get emphasized enough on discussions:

The "Originals" are always rough demos with rough vocal takes, and the released versions he "gave away" decades ago are the "finished" versions with "finished" elements of Prince's entire production process.

A good example is a track missing from this set: "I Hear Your Voice". A bootleg of Prince's demo exists and it's solid, but the final Patti LaBelle version has those cool guitar licks during the hook that take it to the next level.

It's somewhat of a Catch 22, because a large segment of his fanbase refuses to bother with material he doesn't actually sing on himself, but like you point in, in most cases the versions with him singing are fragmented and spare while the versions without him singing are obviously more in-line with his standards.

I also agree with you the stuff he gave away I prefer to D&P. And I'm torn between being happy fans have finally discovered and appreciate the songs more than they were prior to a week ago--yet severly disappointed that a good portion of fans intentionally ignore the finished versions put out by other artists that have been out for decades.

Like is Prince as a singer the only relevant thing to some? He was a pretty damn solid songwriter, too....

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Reply #199 posted 11/02/23 5:35pm

dustoff

avatar

WhisperingDandelions said:


I also agree with you the stuff he gave away I prefer to D&P. And I'm torn between being happy fans have finally discovered and appreciate the songs more than they were prior to a week ago--yet severly disappointed that a good portion of fans intentionally ignore the finished versions put out by other artists that have been out for decades.

Like is Prince as a singer the only relevant thing to some? He was a pretty damn solid songwriter, too....


Good points all. But I think I appreciate the "early drafts" from D&P a little more simply because a lot of the "finished" material of that era was, in my opinion, a bit overbaked -- too much production, too many bells and whistles. By contrast, some of these demos -- which indeed may be lacking in intended, additional elements (the horns on "Alice," for example) -- feel refreshingly spare and uncluttered. "Get Blue" is another that I like for its simplicity.

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Reply #200 posted 11/02/23 10:26pm

Farfunknugin

avatar

Blood on the sheets is P on lead guitar right? Prince vault lists Levi.
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Reply #201 posted 11/02/23 11:06pm

Vannormal

I don't understand why "5 Women" is not on this set.

They should'v left of "Martika's Kitchen" or "Thunder Ballet".

"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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Reply #202 posted 11/02/23 11:16pm

Vannormal

Farfunknugin said:

Blood on the sheets is P on lead guitar right? Prince vault lists Levi.

It doesn't say lead guitar, it says guitar, and Prince on all instruments except where noted.

Although I doubt Levi is even on this song...?

Sounds all guitar like Prince to me (but i could be wrong, I wasn't there).

[Edited 11/2/23 23:18pm]

"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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Reply #203 posted 11/03/23 1:58am

JorisE73

Vannormal said:

Farfunknugin said:

Blood on the sheets is P on lead guitar right? Prince vault lists Levi.

It doesn't say lead guitar, it says guitar, and Prince on all instruments except where noted.

Although I doubt Levi is even on this song...?

Sounds all guitar like Prince to me (but i could be wrong, I wasn't there).

[Edited 11/2/23 23:18pm]


I dont know, the intro rhythm doesn't really sound like anything Prince would play. he solo is obviously Prince

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Reply #204 posted 11/03/23 2:19am

LILpoundCAKE

Vannormal said:

I don't understand why "5 Women" is not on this set.

They should'v left of "Martika's Kitchen" or "Thunder Ballet".


I guess because it was released already? Just like "Love..Thy Will Be Done", which is one of the
very best tracks written during this era.

But at least we get to include them in our own playlists since we have them in good quality on
other official releases.

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Reply #205 posted 11/03/23 2:35am

JorisE73

Vannormal said:

I don't understand why "5 Women" is not on this set.

They should'v left of "Martika's Kitchen" or "Thunder Ballet".



probbly same reason as Old Friends 4 Sale and She Spoke 2 me are not on it, I would think The Vault OF4S will be just remastered evntually without extras.
(I love Martika's Kitchen by the way and i'm glad to have it released officially)

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Reply #206 posted 11/03/23 10:36am

TrivialPursuit

avatar

Vannormal said:

I don't understand why "5 Women" is not on this set.

They should'v left of "Martika's Kitchen" or "Thunder Ballet".


The real T is that they could've put another 4-5 songs on any of the disks. Two of the three vault disks are under an hour, the other is just slightly over.

And "5 Women" is already out. Why re-add it here?

[Edited 11/3/23 10:37am]

Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking.
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Reply #207 posted 11/03/23 10:39pm

Vannormal

TrivialPursuit said:

Vannormal said:

I don't understand why "5 Women" is not on this set.

They should'v left of "Martika's Kitchen" or "Thunder Ballet".


The real T is that they could've put another 4-5 songs on any of the disks. Two of the three vault disks are under an hour, the other is just slightly over.

And "5 Women" is already out. Why re-add it here?


another version maybe ... or a live version

"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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Reply #208 posted 11/03/23 11:51pm

themanfromnept
une

Vannormal said:

TrivialPursuit said:


The real T is that they could've put another 4-5 songs on any of the disks. Two of the three vault disks are under an hour, the other is just slightly over.

And "5 Women" is already out. Why re-add it here?


another version maybe ... or a live version

.

Mah. There was no Dream Factory or Camille's released songs on Sign 'O' The Times SDE

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Reply #209 posted 11/04/23 2:59am

funkbabyandthe
babysitters

an alternative version of dream factory should have been on there though.

i mean, if the argument is that already released material wont be on the SDEs, then why include all the single edits, remixes etc? those have already been on the single releases. the fact is that the SDEs purport to be comprehensive, but arent.

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