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Thread started 02/12/04 7:19am

booyah

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Feb. 12th in 1986...

... 94 East's Minneapolis Genius was released:



Tracklisting:
1. If You Feel Like Dancin'
2. Lovin' Cup
3. Games
4. Just Another Sucker
5. Dance To The Music Of The World
6. One Man Jam

A mix of six tracks from, according to DMSR, December 1975 - February 17, 1979 (i.e. after For You was both recorded and released).

Does anyone still listen to this album? How does it sound now? Has Prince ever commented on it? I got rid of my copy ages ago, but I did then pick up the 2CD set Symbollic Beginnings, which has these tracks (in rawer form, I believe) and many others.

BTW, I'm taking the release date from Uptown's Days Of Wild, if anyone is interested. I've seen different dates from different sources, but I trust DOW.
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Reply #1 posted 02/12/04 7:20am

Handclapsfinga
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i used to have a copy of that on tape but i gave it to cheapo...lol it was pretty bleh.
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Reply #2 posted 02/12/04 7:22am

LittlePill

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I still got mine. Oddly enough I found a copy of it on cassette back in Jan. of 97 in a bin full of obscure cassette tapes. What made me look through every single one of them I have no idea, but I found 94 East in the process!
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prince Proud member of Prince's cult for 20 years! prince
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Reply #3 posted 02/12/04 11:56am

booyah

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Just listening to these tracks now. If You Feel Like Dancin' has some great Prince guitar - and, much like Prince later did with many of his best guitar solos, it's low in the mix (like Alphabet St.). The guitar itself is across between I'm Yours from For You and Bambi from Prince, though, which makes sense since it was recorded on Feb 17th, 1979 - between the two albums.
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Reply #4 posted 02/12/04 11:58am

the3rddoctor

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I still have that on LP.
I've reversed the polarity of the neutron flow... Now to find a way to exterminate Melody Cool and Rosie Gaines... blowupshoot3sperm

http://artists.primetones...e_master68
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Reply #5 posted 02/12/04 12:02pm

booyah

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Prince's guitar, keyboard and drums on Lovin' Cup from 1978, meanwhile, aren't enough to save the track from sounding like a bland Donald Fagen hotel lobby muzak track.

hammer Just can't edit enough, of your lovin' cup
[This message was edited Thu Feb 12 12:08:01 PST 2004 by booyah]
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Reply #6 posted 02/12/04 12:07pm

booyah

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Games, from the earliest Prince sessions to be released, from December 1975 - January 1976, has some more killer guitar riffs hidden away.

Don't ask why I'm giving a track-by-track review of Prince's involvement in 94 East - just a slow day, I guess.
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Reply #7 posted 02/12/04 12:07pm

the3rddoctor

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I liked "Just Another Sucker" and "Dance to the Music of the World" the best.
I've reversed the polarity of the neutron flow... Now to find a way to exterminate Melody Cool and Rosie Gaines... blowupshoot3sperm

http://artists.primetones...e_master68
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Reply #8 posted 02/12/04 12:12pm

booyah

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the3rddoctor said:

I liked "Just Another Sucker" and "Dance to the Music of the World" the best.


I'm listening to Just Another Sucker now. It's the only track he co-wrote, with Pepe Willie. From 1978, he also plays guitar, drums and keyboard - and that must be his voice too. Of all 94 East tracks, this is the most Princely, and if it had remained an outtake, fans would have wanted it like We Can Work It Out or Make It Through The Storm. I like those tracks more than this one, though...
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Reply #9 posted 02/12/04 12:15pm

booyah

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Yeah, Dance To The Music Of The World, from 1978, is probably my favorite of the tracks. Guitar, drums and keyboards by Prince. Early Prince instrumental funk, even if he didn't write it.
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Reply #10 posted 02/12/04 12:21pm

the3rddoctor

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booyah said:

Yeah, Dance To The Music Of The World, from 1978, is probably my favorite of the tracks. Guitar, drums and keyboards by Prince. Early Prince instrumental funk, even if he didn't write it.


That version with vocals could be scrapped, though.
I've reversed the polarity of the neutron flow... Now to find a way to exterminate Melody Cool and Rosie Gaines... blowupshoot3sperm

http://artists.primetones...e_master68
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Reply #11 posted 02/12/04 12:23pm

booyah

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One Man Jam, recorded on Feb. 17th 1979, with Andre on bass and Prince on everything else (overdubbed synths were added later by Pepe), is dull - just not interesting.

Forgivable, though, since it was recorded on the same day as I Feel For You.
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