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Thread started 11/05/03 10:40am

rdhull

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An apology to Supafunky/the Lovesexy faithful--"someone saved my life tonight"

An apology to Supafunky/the Lovesexy faithful:

Let me explain…

SupafunkyOrgangrinderSexy has always said Lovesexy saved his life. For good reason that he has explained…Lovesexy was there for him through sexuality, drama, etc…life issues. He said he found a way to live because of the inspiration Lovesexy gave to him...this is a well known statement. I remember in my momma amp days folks clowned the “lovesexy saved me life” statements form some etc. Hell even I was thought it was kind of odd...kind of. Especially since I never appreciated Lovesexy for what it was until a decade later. Well here it comes up again on Org v2.0 and in a thread… I called Lovesexy fake and Supa said “you say fake, I say Salvation!”..I was like “whaaa? LOL!”…

others have also haile d lovesexy as someting that got them through troubled times

Well here I sit in my lonely room...lookin’ for my sunshine

The recent 1999 birthday..1999 is legal now..21 ya know…had me thinking (yeah it hurt): I know erry note like my dick knows the palm of my hand…I can’t say enough about the album, the innovation, the inspiration etc. I even went as far as simply copying and pasting my old comments because I’ve spent my whole damn net life praising –hailing it (hi Nu lol) and can’t come up with hardly anymore to say about it. My love has been professed more than enough… I gave it a 4 million dollar diamond ring and it wasn’t because I fucked another cd in Colorado either.

Seems like some found in Lovesexy, what I had found a few years earlier in 1999. Supa and others said they found salvation so to speak in Lovesexy...I found a lot or just as much in 1999 as well...and never knew it…well I did but I never consciously said it to myself...I’ve thought it yes.. 1999 was my coming out in music so to speak. It is what got me into music almost...sure I had Monster Mash on 45’ and others etc but 1999 brought me into the record stores and appreciating other thangs. It also caused me my low attention span on the radio by becoming a radio dial flipper...flipping channels to find any station playing Prince since 1999 was the one that made him grand and ubiquitous..dang u 1999! Hehe

It also made me compare..I was like ..DD isn’t like Prince...uh uh…O’bryan is sort of like it but aint it…oh this new Stones is the jam but it aint 1999 or Prince etc...but it got me into listening to other music ..I mean actually “listening” and giving me a focus so to speak...a focus, a hobby, inspiration, joy, hope etc…all the things Supa said Lovesexy brought to him...just in different ways and for different reasons but ultimately the same funkay thang in the end…

So I apologize to Supa and others for laughing at his/their …”faith”..in Lovesexy...I still have my qualms with Lovesexy but so what. We all get in where we can fit in and some cd’s fuck you better than others...it all depends on the music and the person. There is no one size fits all condom. 1999 popped my cherry (even though I had been taken with the Controversy 45 and I Wanna be Your Lover ). And I married 1999 so we can bareback or missionary or whatever with no qualms..and others can to Lovesexy because they married Lovesexy..he said salvation..1999 was mine in retrospect..so I officially apologize to Supa and to Lovesexy for not realizing each person has their own religion and faith. All n all an apology to those who hail Lovesexy. Prince did this.
"Climb in my fur."
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Reply #1 posted 11/05/03 10:44am

TRON

You know that 1999's a guy right? And Lovesexy's a girl.

Y'all have some serious sexual confusion going on.

lol
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Reply #2 posted 11/05/03 10:44am

Number23

Can I have a biscuit?
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Reply #3 posted 11/05/03 10:49am

madartista

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great thread. nice words, Rdhull.
let me come over it's a beautiful day to play with you in the dark
http://elmadartista.tumblr.com/
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Reply #4 posted 11/05/03 10:51am

madartista

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TRON said:

You know that 1999's a guy right? And Lovesexy's a girl.


I think u've got a point there. Hmm...
let me come over it's a beautiful day to play with you in the dark
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Reply #5 posted 11/05/03 10:54am

stymie

Lovesexy made me feel as if there was another person in the universe who felt the way I did, and I didn't feel alone anymore. If that makes me some Prince geek or fam or deluded soul, then so be it. I totally feel you on 1999, RD. I found my soulmate with that album.
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Reply #6 posted 11/05/03 11:03am

FunkMistress

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stymie said:

Lovesexy made me feel as if there was another person in the universe who felt the way I did, and I didn't feel alone anymore. If that makes me some Prince geek or fam or deluded soul, then so be it. I totally feel you on 1999, RD. I found my soulmate with that album.


It put my name upon my thigh
It make me dance, it make me cry
And when I touch it race cars burn rubber in my pants
This feelin's so good in every single way
I want it morning, noon and night of every day
CHICKENS ARE NOT SUPPOSED TO DO COCAINE, SILKY HEN.
The Normal Whores Club
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Reply #7 posted 11/05/03 11:07am

stymie

FunkMistress said:

stymie said:

Lovesexy made me feel as if there was another person in the universe who felt the way I did, and I didn't feel alone anymore. If that makes me some Prince geek or fam or deluded soul, then so be it. I totally feel you on 1999, RD. I found my soulmate with that album.


It put my name upon my thigh
It make me dance, it make me cry
And when I touch it race cars burn rubber in my pants
This feelin's so good in every single way
I want it morning, noon and night of every day
Baby, you make racecars burn rubber in my pants. mushy
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Reply #8 posted 11/05/03 11:07am

madartista

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FunkMistress said:

stymie said:

Lovesexy made me feel as if there was another person in the universe who felt the way I did, and I didn't feel alone anymore. If that makes me some Prince geek or fam or deluded soul, then so be it. I totally feel you on 1999, RD. I found my soulmate with that album.


It put my name upon my thigh
It make me dance, it make me cry
And when I touch it race cars burn rubber in my pants
This feelin's so good in every single way
I want it morning, noon and night of every day


worshipworshipworshipworshipworship
let me come over it's a beautiful day to play with you in the dark
http://elmadartista.tumblr.com/
http://twitter.com/madartista
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Reply #9 posted 11/05/03 11:14am

TRON

Lovesexy is the one til my day is done.

--Prince's most inspired work--
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Reply #10 posted 11/05/03 11:16am

FunkMistress

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Hundalasiliah!
CHICKENS ARE NOT SUPPOSED TO DO COCAINE, SILKY HEN.
The Normal Whores Club
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Reply #11 posted 11/05/03 11:18am

Handclapsfinga
snapz

touched...beautiful. but i still don't get how any album can 'save one's life'. it can make one's day brighter, sure, but not save your life. someone please explain.

hmm
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Reply #12 posted 11/05/03 11:19am

Moonbeam

Thread of the org. I'm serious. Both 1999 and Lovesexy are everything to me. EVERYTHING.
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Reply #13 posted 11/05/03 11:23am

Moonbeam

Handclapsfingasnapz said:

touched...beautiful. but i still don't get how any album can 'save one's life'. it can make one's day brighter, sure, but not save your life. someone please explain.

hmm


In my case, "1999" and "Lovesexy" didn't SAVE my life per se, but they definitely made the meaning of my life a lot clearer. I understand myself MUCH better because of those 2 albums.
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Reply #14 posted 11/05/03 11:24am

rdhull

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Handclapsfingasnapz said:

touched...beautiful. but i still don't get how any album can 'save one's life'. it can make one's day brighter, sure, but not save your life. someone please explain.

hmm

... it can give one strength by the joy they get out of the music to let them go on and continue when before life would have that much less joy in it, to it. It can awaken you making you feel as if before you were ina cacoon etc...it can give u that place to go to that makes you fel good ..not that u go there ocnsciously but it can be a comfort that is esential to all human beings..in essence saving...

Someone Saved My Life Tonight


When I think of those East End lights, muggy nights
The curtains drawn in the little room downstairs
Prima Donna lord you really should have been there
Sitting like a princess perched in her electric chair
And it's one more beer and I don't hear you anymore
We've all gone crazy lately
My friends out there rolling round the basement floor

And someone saved my life tonight sugar bear
You almost had your hooks in me didn't you dear
You nearly had me roped and tied
Altar-bound, hypnotized
Sweet freedom whispered in my ear
You're a butterfly
And butterflies are free to fly
Fly away, high away, bye bye


I never realised the passing hours of evening showers
A slip noose hanging in my darkest dreams
I'm strangled by your haunted social scene
Just a pawn out-played by a dominating queen
It's four o'clock in the morning
Damn it listen to me good
I'm sleeping with myself tonight
Saved in time, thank God my music's still alive


And I would have walked head on into the deep end of the river
Clinging to your stocks and bonds
Paying your H.P. demands forever
They're coming in the morning with a truck to take me home
Someone saved my life tonight, someone saved my life tonight
Someone saved my life tonight, someone saved my life tonight
Someone saved my life tonight
So save your strength and run the field you play alone
"Climb in my fur."
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Reply #15 posted 11/05/03 11:25am

Handclapsfinga
snapz

Moonbeam said:

Handclapsfingasnapz said:

touched...beautiful. but i still don't get how any album can 'save one's life'. it can make one's day brighter, sure, but not save your life. someone please explain.

hmm


In my case, "1999" and "Lovesexy" didn't SAVE my life per se, but they definitely made the meaning of my life a lot clearer. I understand myself MUCH better because of those 2 albums.

ahhh, o-tay...kinna-sorta what dm has been to me, in a sense. biggrin
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Reply #16 posted 11/05/03 11:26am

SupaFunkyOrgan
grinderSexy

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rdhull said:

some cd’s fuck you better than others...


Not only did Lovesexy fuck the hell out of me but it loved me in the process. You can't get a better lay than that love

Wow, I love the way you articulated your point. No appology was necessary cuz I knew you just had your own thing and I never took it personally. I am however really glad that you did realize the importance of this album for some of us.

I mean I cannot honestly begin to truly explain how alone and how far down I was as a teen. Prince's music, not just Lovesexy but all those 80s albums, saved my life. They gave me hope and joy when otherwise I had none. Lovesexy just happened to be that final step that put me on top. It was the album that came at the exact time I needed it. Seriously, my outlook on life and myself were drastically shaped by that album and the openness in which Prince was operating. It was inspirational to infinite degrees.

I suspect this will never stop being my favorite album worship
2010: Healing the Wounds of the Past.... http://prince.org/msg/8/325740
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Reply #17 posted 11/05/03 11:27am

rdhull

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Moonbeam said:

Handclapsfingasnapz said:

touched...beautiful. but i still don't get how any album can 'save one's life'. it can make one's day brighter, sure, but not save your life. someone please explain.

hmm


In my case, "1999" and "Lovesexy" didn't SAVE my life per se, but they definitely made the meaning of my life a lot clearer. I understand myself MUCH better because of those 2 albums.

nod

thats what Ive always wanted to say..1999 gave me purpose..I forgot to add that. Damn. Im done.

1999 gave me purpose
"Climb in my fur."
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Reply #18 posted 11/05/03 11:36am

Handclapsfinga
snapz

rdhull said:

... it can give one strength by the joy they get out of the music to let them go on and continue when before life would have that much less joy in it, to it. It can awaken you making you feel as if before you were ina cacoon etc...it can give u that place to go to that makes you fel good ..not that u go there ocnsciously but it can be a comfort that is esential to all human beings..in essence saving...

for me and dm that wasn't really the case--i've pretty much had a joyful existence, save for when my mom passed away and the few years preceding that i was extremely bitter. the thing that saved my life after that episode was art, i never really cared that much for music then. that might be why i'm askin what i'm askin, i suppose...dirty mind just set/sets the notion in stone that it's okay to be out of the norm. that's what i see/seen in it, anyway.

nod
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Reply #19 posted 11/05/03 11:39am

SupaFunkyOrgan
grinderSexy

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Here is the post that made it into Anji's "Hall of Fame" thread...

I think many of us who have been fans since the beginning tend to base our opinions on how good a Prince album is, especially one from the 80s, on how much it affected us in our lives at that time. I was 18 when Lovesexy came out and I was just dealing with admitting I was gay. I drew on the spiritual strength of that album to help me get through the rejection I faced from family and friends. I listened to it with a searching soul and I found answers. Some of the answers lie in the album itself, but other answers I discovered within my own self as I listened over and over. Seeing Prince on the cover naked and bare gave me the strength and courage to face my own newfound “nakedness”. Having to face society’s anger and hate was a tough choice but I thought if Prince could be THAT honest and open, so could I. I always saw the cover as one of God’s creatures simply existing in a state of truth. I always knew the cover wasn’t supposed to be a nasty thing, rather Prince exposed and bare and having no shame about basking in the glorious knowledge he found in the midst of despair.

For personal reasons I happen to believe that this album IS a masterpiece. But I also believe this from a musical standpoint. IMO, Lovesexy still sounds fresh. If you took that album and compared it to any and everything around it at the time it was released, it totally stands alone. The only argument about the sound being dated is the use of the Linn drum, other than that, you can’t say this has an 80s sound to it. You really can’t even compare it to the music that Prince made before and after. It is so unique. I agree that this album personified Prince the best.

I love the lyrics. Even the “silly” ones. One of the things that is the most fun about Prince’s music is trying to figure out what all the metaphorical wording means. It brings out the creativity in us all when we discuss lyrics that make absolutely no sense on the surface. Usually we come to amazing conclusions and for that, the lyrics will never bother me. Besides there are many other lyrics that stand out, probably the best being “In every man’s life there will be a hang-up, a whirlwind designed to slow you down. It cuts like a knife, it tries to get in you…this spooky electric sound. Give up if you want to and all is lost, Spooky Electric will be your boss………….Don’t kiss the beast, be superior at least”. I STILL to this day rely on this album to help me achieve the right frame of mind when I think I’m down for the count. It puts me on my feet every time.

Love God, Love Life, Lovesexy!!


Perhaps it's the coming out process that made this such a powerful album for me. The majority of you out there will never have to face something as hard as coming out of the closet and dealing with all the issues that come with it. There is incredible fear, there is incredible pain, there is incredible isolation when you are rejected.

Having this album by my side during this process really helped me to deal with myself first and foremost and it made me realize that my spiritual journey wasn't ruined because I admited that I was gay, rather that it was just beginning. Any album that can conjur up those kinds of revelations is an album that deserves to hold the title of "life-saving".

.
[This message was edited Wed Nov 5 11:42:45 PST 2003 by SupaFunkyOrgangrinderSexy]
2010: Healing the Wounds of the Past.... http://prince.org/msg/8/325740
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Reply #20 posted 11/05/03 11:40am

SupaFunkyOrgan
grinderSexy

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Handclapsfingasnapz said:

rdhull said:

... it can give one strength by the joy they get out of the music to let them go on and continue when before life would have that much less joy in it, to it. It can awaken you making you feel as if before you were ina cacoon etc...it can give u that place to go to that makes you fel good ..not that u go there ocnsciously but it can be a comfort that is esential to all human beings..in essence saving...

for me and dm that wasn't really the case--i've pretty much had a joyful existence, save for when my mom passed away and the few years preceding that i was extremely bitter. the thing that saved my life after that episode was art, i never really cared that much for music then. that might be why i'm askin what i'm askin, i suppose...dirty mind just set/sets the notion in stone that it's okay to be out of the norm. that's what i see/seen in it, anyway.

nod


And you know, that is exactly what Lovesexy did for me. It said, be who you are, express yourself, Love God Love Life Lovesexy.
2010: Healing the Wounds of the Past.... http://prince.org/msg/8/325740
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Reply #21 posted 11/05/03 11:40am

stymie

Handclapsfingasnapz said:

touched...beautiful. but i still don't get how any album can 'save one's life'. it can make one's day brighter, sure, but not save your life. someone please explain.

hmm
I'm gonna pretty much co-sign with pretty much everything Supa said. I felt like a total freak growing up, an outcast. Annastesia and EyeNo were the songs that did it for me. Lovesexy, the album reminded me so much of the rollercoaster my life was. Ups and downs, gay, straight, in-between. I was at a point in my life where I needed to hear that SOMEBODY loved me. My family life was hell and I felt I had nowhere to go but down but this album made me so happy, it made me cry, it got me through.
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Reply #22 posted 11/05/03 11:40am

langebleu

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moderator

For me it was Jughead, words can't express ...
ALT+PLS+RTN: Pure as a pane of ice. It's a gift.
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Reply #23 posted 11/05/03 11:47am

Handclapsfinga
snapz

langebleu said:

For me it was Jughead, words can't express ...

somewhere out there, there's gotta be someone who really does say "jughead" saved their life...lol
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Reply #24 posted 11/05/03 11:55am

sinisterpentat
onic

FunkMistress said:

stymie said:

Lovesexy made me feel as if there was another person in the universe who felt the way I did, and I didn't feel alone anymore. If that makes me some Prince geek or fam or deluded soul, then so be it. I totally feel you on 1999, RD. I found my soulmate with that album.


It put my name upon my thigh
It make me dance, it make me cry
And when I touch it race cars burn rubber in my pants
This feelin's so good in every single way
I want it morning, noon and night of every day


horns
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Reply #25 posted 11/05/03 12:05pm

rdhull

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Handclapsfingasnapz said:

langebleu said:

For me it was Jughead, words can't express ...

somewhere out there, there's gotta be someone who really does say "jughead" saved their life...lol

There is..and her name is Rebecca/Oceana
"Climb in my fur."
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Reply #26 posted 11/05/03 12:10pm

Handclapsfinga
snapz

rdhull said:

Handclapsfingasnapz said:

langebleu said:

For me it was Jughead, words can't express ...

somewhere out there, there's gotta be someone who really does say "jughead" saved their life...lol

There is..and her name is Rebecca/Oceana

you shittin me...?!!
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Reply #27 posted 11/05/03 12:55pm

madartista

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Moonbeam said:

In my case, "1999" and "Lovesexy" didn't SAVE my life per se, but they definitely made the meaning of my life a lot clearer. I understand myself MUCH better because of those 2 albums.


co-sign, in a BIG way!!! right on, right on.
let me come over it's a beautiful day to play with you in the dark
http://elmadartista.tumblr.com/
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Reply #28 posted 11/05/03 1:27pm

bananacologne

TRON said:

You know that 1999's a guy right? And Lovesexy's a girl.

Y'all have some serious sexual confusion going on.

lol


Wow - that means Chaos & Disorder is a felcher then! ill



lol
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Reply #29 posted 11/05/03 3:32pm

Moonbeam

All right. You guys asked for it!

9/20/2003

What else can I do with this, my 1,999th post, other than to dedicate it to my favorite album, "1999!" There has been a lot of discussion recently about this album, whether it defines Prince and whether its unique facets are strengths or weaknesses.

This album and I have had a long history. One of the first Prince songs (if not THE first) that I knew was "1999." It quickly became my favorite song of his. I was probably 10 or so by the time that I gained enough interest to sneak money to my brother (TRON) to buy me the tape outside of the wary guise of my mother, who would have had a conniption upon discovering that I owned an album by PRINCE. Soon thereafter, my brother, being the good brother that he is, exposed me to more of Prince's music. Regardless, "1999" remained my favorite to this day, for its quirkiness and its style.

Why do I hold such a dear place in my heart for "1999?" First, it defines me musically more than any other album. Its undeniably sassy and confident funk flows freely through my insatiable ears. Its synth/new wave also suits me well, as that genre is arguably my favorite. Stylistically then, the combination of funk and synth appeals to me greatly.

I also love the album for what it represents. "1999" is one of the most adventurous albums I have heard. Its 11 songs sprawl across many feelings and emotions with a confident swagger. However, as has been mentioned, this album breaks the format of the traditional 3 to 4 minute pop song. As his first double LP, "1999" is furthermore a bold move as it implies that Prince was important enough to merit double the attention of the general audience. Having not had overwhelming success, this is quite a statement. And the music lives up to the pretensions.

Each song on the album is crafted with a keen sense of style and substance. Even the more mainstream songs carry a deeper meaning under the surface. The title track, for example, not only clamors for a gigantic party (and what a funky party at that!), but carries an undertone of an impending sense of doom and the need to be prepared for the worst. "Little Red Corvette" also proved to be commercial fodder, but its message of the triumph of love over lust indicates that this is a Prince who has matured to some degree. "Delirious" continues the car theme present in LRC and explores the effects of the suffocating beauty of a woman.

The format of the album also is quite intriguing. Craftily placing the smash singles at the beginning of the album, "1999" then meanders into deeper, darker, and more experimental territory. "Let's Pretend We're Married" has been described by some as the dirtiest song on a top 10 album. The juxtaposition of the messages of infidelity and obedience to God is just one paradox in an album filled with many. "DMSR" evolved into a sort of motto for Prince. Its line "I don't care to win awards...all I wanna do is dance, play music sex romance..." is exemplary of Prince's attitude at the time. "Automatic" follows with its sonic ecstasy superimposed over dark messages of bondage and torture. Its 9 minutes are a voyage into seemingly uncharted territory.

What follows may be the best track on the album, "Something in the Water (Does Not Compute)." A turbulent drum line opens the song and sets the stage for the uneasiness that follows with the lyrics. Obviously broken-hearted, Prince struggles to find an explanation for the substandard treatment he receives from the women he loves. Cleverly incorporating alliteration in its scheme, lyrically the song is quite impressive. The song, like its composer, seems to be tearing apart at its seams- at once maintaining the turbulent, robotic synths and drums while the emotion beings to overflow with an almost psychotic zest.

"Free" offers a prelude to what would come in Prince's career with the massive anthemic success of "Purple Rain." "Lady Cab Driver" funks like no other and features Prince exorcising the demons of his insecurities while having intercourse with his female chauffer. At once vulnerable and needy, Prince confides his fears and doubts in her, forming a bond consummated by passionate sex. Although undeniably funky, it is only a precursor to what is perhaps the funkiest song of Prince's career- "All the Critics Love U in New York." Exuding great confidence, Prince realizes that he is the "it" artist of the time and takes the opportunity to take a swipe at his critics and admirers alike. The funk effervesces throughout the entire song, wading into experimental territory. It is undeniably singular in its kind and stands out as one of the most memorable moments on not only the album, but of his career.

The album closes with "International Lover," an appropriate ending track to this voyage through the dark realms of electronic funk. Sassy and strident, the song obviously gave Prince a chance to appeal to his fans who found him sexy. Thus concludes what I believe to be a masterpiece.

This album has never ceased to entertain and surprise me. All the tracks have overwhelmed me at some point and continue to duke it out for the lofty spot of my favorite on the album. This album has taught me a lot about music and my own style. I adore it thoroughly.


10/27/2002

I was going to start a thread about this! Happy 20th birthday to a simply stunning album. I've reviewed it several times, so let me simply add my memories of it.

Back in 1990, I had the cassette single of "1999/Little Red Corvette" and fell in love with "1999" instantly. I believe that I knew and loved it before. In any case, my bro got the album around the fall of 1990. I remember hearing "DMSR," "Delirious" and "Let's Pretend We're Married" back then and being unable to resist. "Delirious" and "DMSR" in particular caught my attention, so I saved up my allowance for about a month so that I could afford the album.

My mom, however, was fairly protective of me and I knew that she wouldn't approve of me purchasing the album. Therefore, I clandestinely gave my brother the money to buy the album for me. After that album, I was sold on Prince. "Around the World in a Day" and "Diamonds and Pearls" followed next, and I was a goner.

Thanks to "1999," I am not only a Prince fan, but a music fan as well. Surely, I was majorly into music in 1989/1990 (I would keep a record the top 20 videos of the week ever week from MTV), but my interest lay principally in songs, not albums. At the time I bought "1999," I probably had 30 cassette singles and one full album. "1999" opened the gates for me to not only understand the cohesion and integrity of a full album, but to also understand the growth, development and "voice" of an artist. Prince became the first artist in whom I had full interest as a musician- he wasn't simply an act who released a few songs that I liked.

Other great memories include giving copies of the "1999" cassette away with my brother to drive thru cashiers. My brother and I always have multiple copies of the tape- I know that in my case, I simply can't pass up buying the tape used for $4. I guess it just was my way of paying homage to an album that means so much to me.

1/22/2003

Here is my explanation for 1999.

There is no point arguing why 1999 is my favorite album as taste is entirely suggestive. This is going to be more of a reflection of why I think it is THE greatest album ever.

"1999" was incredibly relevant at the time and its messages loom large today as well. In 1982, the world was in a mess. AIDS was festering in Africa. The Soviet Union and the USA were entrenched in the frigid Cold War. The tension in the Middle East was augmented. The world's economy experienced an enormous crash, rendering several countries in South America and Africa paupers in the world market (many of which have not recovered). Who wasn't worried about the troubled times? "1999" tunes in perfectly to those fears. The title track is a viciously funky premonition of not only the current state of affairs, but things to come. Prince really tapped into his view of the future with this album. The foreboding messages of the title track are echoed in future classics like "Let's Go Crazy" and "Crystal Ball," but none are as timely or as timeless as "1999," which is funny as "1999" is tied to a specific date.

"1999" also reigns supreme due to its paradoxes. Whether it be Prince clamoring, "I'm in love with God, he's the only way" in juxtaposition with "I sincerely want to fuck the taste out of your mouth" in "Let's Pretend We're Married," the dedication of a sexual thrust to "love without sex" in the midst of the passion of "Lady Cab Driver" or the sonic paradox of "Something in the Water (Does Not Compute)," a song literally being torn apart by the opposing forces of order in the form of the computerized synth and turbulence in the passion of Prince's guttural screams and the beat which is systematically chaotic, Prince was clearly functioning on a new level with this album, not just personally, but in music as a whole. Nothing previous to this had been as irreverent as "Let's Pretend We're Married," only to turn a complete 180 and declare love of God. Nothing prior to this had seen a song effortlessly blend the primitive outburst of screaming and the forward-looking sound of "Something in the Water (Does Not Compute)." What was this guy thinking?

"1999" also earns the award because it breaks so many formats. The smash singles are all placed at the beginning of the album, after which it meanders into much darker, experimental territory. The outburst of raging, swaggering funk in "Let's Pretend We're Married," "DMSR," "Automatic," "Lady Cab Driver" and "All the Critics Love U in New York" are stunning not because they are so drawn out (all but "All the Critics" are over 7 minutes in length), but because they still seem concise. Not a beat was misused, not a measure was misplaced. Speaking of "All the Critics Love U in New York," this song stands out not only as the most experimental song in Prince's career, but among the most experimental music of the modern era. Supremely funky, Prince turns a swipe at critics and hippies alike into a nasty, frenetic, rhythmic explosion over seemingly disinterested, lazy half-rapping.

"1999" has a distinct sound. The entire album is tied together by a common sound, with instantly recognizable beats, synths and attitude. Despite this bond, the songs are easily distinguishable from each other. Regardless, no song on "1999" can be mistaken for being on any other album. I believe that albums work best that stretch the palate of one sound as far as it can go. "1999" is arguably Prince's most minimalist work, employing few instruments in the mix, yet it propagates a dense fog of funk that sounds both sparse and forebodingly full. Prince pushed himself to his creative limit with this album and the outtakes most associated with it. Prince incorporates inexplicable gurgling sounds, elephant noises, soldier footsteps and city noises into the mix and they perfectly fit the scheme of the music, sounding as if they were recorded for the sole purpose of inclusion on this album. Other albums also are deeply rooted with a single sound, but none, with perhaps the exception of David Bowie's "Low," Prince's "Lovesexy" and Bjork's "Vespertine," involve as much creativity. "1999" is a black beacon of foreboding funk.

"1999" also rules the rest because it was recorded by an incredibly gifted artist on the brink of superstardom. This was the LAST music Prince recorded before becoming a bonafide mega-star. It exhibits all of the hunger, drive and determination of the first four releases, but it adds a confident swagger and a new maturity as well. This was Prince's rite of passage into manhood. Prince KNEW this music was legendary and stood out on its own. It didn't need any gimmicks- it didn't need Prince to grace the cover in some provocative pose. The music spoke for itself. Anything recorded after "1999" was created by someone who was already a household name. "1999" came from a relative unknown, making it all the more surprising.

Lastly, "1999" is so stunning because it is entirely the work of one man. Certainly, studio engineers were involved in the mix. Prince even includes "the Revolution" for the first time on this album. However, Dez Dickerson's influence is nowhere on this record. It's not Matt Fink's vision. This album is 100% Prince himself. Not only does Prince unveil all of his cards in this release, he turns them over in your face, making them impossible to ignore. This album is the culmination of his genius, the pinnacle of an artist whose talent is unrivaled by anyone of the modern era.

I rest my case.

10/27/2003

Happy 21st, 1999! Let me buy you a drink! I owe you one for all that you've done for me!

1999 and I have aged very well together. It was my first Prince album, my first succulent taste of the vibrant and diverse world that is music. I still remember sneaking my brother money to buy me the tape- my Mom would not have approved its presence in her house.

1999 is my blood. That album has taken me everywhere since I was about 10 and it continues to grow on me and I continue to grow with it today. "Something in the Water" has been my lifeline many, many times and "1999," "DMSR," "Delirious," "Automatic," "Lady Cab Driver" and "All the Critics Love U in New York," among others have planted themselves as my roots.

I was just a young, nerdy white kid with lots of passion and bouncing off the wall with endless interests when 1999 entered my consciousness. This will sound cheesy, but for every night I spent upset about being an outcast, being called too skinny, too smart, too effeminate, too nice, too intense and too colorful, for every vote I got for homecoming queen, for the endless jibes I got as a consequence of being me, I needed solace. I found it in 1999. Imagine, a 5'3" ethnic mutt who had gone through everything I had became my champion with this album. That bitterness and anger that echoes in "Lady Cab Driver" was my own as well and to hear someone express it as he did throughout the entire album, coming from his background, and delivering it with a sound that filtered through every fiber and taught me a new way to feel and think, I knew that this album was special. My own yearning to be more than a doormat was echoed in several of the songs, whether it be in the lyrics ("Something in the Water," "Lady Cab Driver," "Let's Pretend We're Married") or the "I'll show you who's a badass now" sonic explosion ("DMSR," "Automatic," "All the Critics Love U in New York," "1999"). A lot of this didn't dawn on me until many years after I first heard it, but my lifelong struggle is voiced perfectly with this album, and as such, it takes on a much deeper impact than would appear on the surface.

Maybe that's why I often buy additional copies of the album even when they aren't needed, or I give it away through the drive thru to cashiers who show interest. Maybe it's because 1999 has become my story too, and I want people to know it. Maybe it's because I want others who feel the same way to have an outlet as well.

One thing is for sure: when that nice remaster finally sees the light of day, it will be like having my life flash before my eyes through a new, much more intensely focused lens. I take pity on the person who has to hear me listen to it all tearful and reflective.

So hats off to you, 1999, my familiar friend and staunch ally. I will defend you to the death as you have done for me! Call me a fam if you wish, but this album just transcends me.
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