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Thread started 04/24/04 9:58pm

AnnieB603

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New York Magazine Review of Musicology!!!

Great review in the new issue of New York magazine. Also available online. Here's the link, peeps!!!

http://www.newyorkmetro.c...ws/n_0206/

I sure hope this gets y'all there.....my first time trying this....if it fails, pick up the latest issue of New York. or visit www.newyorkmetro.com, click on entertainment, and then music. I love Prince!!!!!


Peace, love, and, remember, the Yankees still suck!!

Annie,
Proud Member
Red Sox Nation

Pop Music Review
A New Reign
Prince has been disappointing for a decade. But just when expectations could hardly scrape any lower, he has made a great record.

By Ethan Brown

Pure Prince: On his new record, the Purple One does not digress.
Prince is pop’s great polymath, but for too long he’s allowed his more expansive instincts to nearly swallow him whole. Prince’s fans, naturally, have stayed with him, eagerly downloading his online-only projects and snapping up his second-rate output, while everyone else has grown impatient with records that, since the underrated dark funk of 1994’s Come, have been too experimental, too packed with ideas, or simply too long. Even individual songs choked on their own ambition: “Joint 2 Joint,” from 1996’s Emancipation, was a nearly eight-minute-long muddle of hip-hop breaks, P-Funk-style harmonies, and a recording of Prince eating Cap’n Crunch. His 1999 boxed set, Crystal Ball, was so amateurishly put together that it made the Talking Heads’ recent, overblown retrospective seem essential. Prince’s tours, meanwhile, have been built around unsatisfying medleys of his eighties hits that have come to sound dated and almost Vegas-y.

All of which makes the sudden surge of good feeling for Prince—an induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, the sold-out shows at the Garden in July—a little strange. His past is certainly worth celebrating, but is there anything about Prince’s current work that warrants attention?

For the first time in a decade, that question can be answered in the affirmative, thanks to Musicology, his latest album and his first on a major label since 1999. Despite its off-putting title, which promises the sort of pedagogical funk that Prince has been schoolmarmishly peddling with Sly and the Family Stone bassist Larry Graham over the past few years, Musicology is a thrilling, electric statement by an artist who just might be building toward another creative peak.

“Prince returns to what he’s so masterfully good at: songcraft and groove.”

His digressive impulses held in check, Prince returns to what he’s so masterfully good at: songcraft and groove. Both the title track and “Illusion, Coma, Pimp & Circumstance” riff on the mechanized funk of early-seventies James Brown, but with some radical left turns: skeletal guitars, spooked-out synths, and even a sample of his own hits. “Illusion,” in particular, is wonderfully weird: Prince sings in an off-kilter, nasal screech that reminds us of the vocal risks he used to take, like when he assumed the feminine voice (which he dubbed “Camille”) on “If I Was Your Girlfriend,” from his double-album masterpiece, 1987’s Sign ‘O’ the Times.

But it’s the ballads and love songs that make Musicology matter. On recent albums, Prince’s slower tunes were either covers (Bonnie Raitt’s “I Can’t Make You Love Me,” the Stylistics’ “Betcha By Golly Wow”) or torrents of overemotiveness (“The Greatest Romance Ever Sold”). But like his earliest material—such as the honest, direct “When You Were Mine”—the sentiments on Musicology are simple and much more powerful. Listeners can feel the romantic longing of “If Eye Was the Man in Ur Life” and “A Million Days”; Prince, for the first time in a long time, isn’t overdoing it with pointless and obtuse metaphors. And the music behind it—all hard-charging piano and soaring guitars—is as inspired as his lyrical ideas.

Musicology is a brave departure for an artist who has rested comfortably on nostalgia for albums (Purple Rain in particular) he knows weren’t as great as some of his fans remember, while often trying to present himself as a helpless victim of the record industry (he used to describe himself as a slave).

Musicology’s strength should have implications far beyond the record stores: It should give Prince the confidence to avoid the shameless audience-pleasing rituals he often practices on tour (the nadir came at Madison Square Garden a few years back, when, instead of engaging in the joyous call-and-response he’s famous for, he repeatedly asked the audience if it loved him) and to delve deep into unexplored songs like “Ballad of Dorothy Parker” that offer far greater interpretive space than his standards. Perhaps the surprisingly great Musicology will at last allow Prince to free himself, not from music-industry subservience but from a museum-like reverence for funk and soul and a back catalogue of hits that dog him like overeager fans.
"our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter"
--martin luther king jr
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Reply #1 posted 04/25/04 1:16am

ELBOOGY

AnnieB603 said:

Great review in the new issue of New York magazine. Also available online. Here's the link, peeps!!!

http://www.newyorkmetro.c...ws/n_0206/

I sure hope this gets y'all there.....my first time trying this....if it fails, pick up the latest issue of New York. or visit www.newyorkmetro.com, click on entertainment, and then music. I love Prince!!!!!


Peace, love, and, remember, the Yankees still suck!!

Annie,
Proud Member
Red Sox Nation

Pop Music Review
A New Reign
Prince has been disappointing for a decade. But just when expectations could hardly scrape any lower, he has made a great record.

By Ethan Brown

Pure Prince: On his new record, the Purple One does not digress.
Prince is pop’s great polymath, but for too long he’s allowed his more expansive instincts to nearly swallow him whole. Prince’s fans, naturally, have stayed with him, eagerly downloading his online-only projects and snapping up his second-rate output, while everyone else has grown impatient with records that, since the underrated dark funk of 1994’s Come, have been too experimental, too packed with ideas, or simply too long. Even individual songs choked on their own ambition: “Joint 2 Joint,” from 1996’s Emancipation, was a nearly eight-minute-long muddle of hip-hop breaks, P-Funk-style harmonies, and a recording of Prince eating Cap’n Crunch. His 1999 boxed set, Crystal Ball, was so amateurishly put together that it made the Talking Heads’ recent, overblown retrospective seem essential. Prince’s tours, meanwhile, have been built around unsatisfying medleys of his eighties hits that have come to sound dated and almost Vegas-y.

All of which makes the sudden surge of good feeling for Prince—an induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, the sold-out shows at the Garden in July—a little strange. His past is certainly worth celebrating, but is there anything about Prince’s current work that warrants attention?

For the first time in a decade, that question can be answered in the affirmative, thanks to Musicology, his latest album and his first on a major label since 1999. Despite its off-putting title, which promises the sort of pedagogical funk that Prince has been schoolmarmishly peddling with Sly and the Family Stone bassist Larry Graham over the past few years, Musicology is a thrilling, electric statement by an artist who just might be building toward another creative peak.

“Prince returns to what he’s so masterfully good at: songcraft and groove.”

His digressive impulses held in check, Prince returns to what he’s so masterfully good at: songcraft and groove. Both the title track and “Illusion, Coma, Pimp & Circumstance” riff on the mechanized funk of early-seventies James Brown, but with some radical left turns: skeletal guitars, spooked-out synths, and even a sample of his own hits. “Illusion,” in particular, is wonderfully weird: Prince sings in an off-kilter, nasal screech that reminds us of the vocal risks he used to take, like when he assumed the feminine voice (which he dubbed “Camille”) on “If I Was Your Girlfriend,” from his double-album masterpiece, 1987’s Sign ‘O’ the Times.

But it’s the ballads and love songs that make Musicology matter. On recent albums, Prince’s slower tunes were either covers (Bonnie Raitt’s “I Can’t Make You Love Me,” the Stylistics’ “Betcha By Golly Wow”) or torrents of overemotiveness (“The Greatest Romance Ever Sold”). But like his earliest material—such as the honest, direct “When You Were Mine”—the sentiments on Musicology are simple and much more powerful. Listeners can feel the romantic longing of “If Eye Was the Man in Ur Life” and “A Million Days”; Prince, for the first time in a long time, isn’t overdoing it with pointless and obtuse metaphors. And the music behind it—all hard-charging piano and soaring guitars—is as inspired as his lyrical ideas.

Musicology is a brave departure for an artist who has rested comfortably on nostalgia for albums (Purple Rain in particular) he knows weren’t as great as some of his fans remember, while often trying to present himself as a helpless victim of the record industry (he used to describe himself as a slave).

Musicology’s strength should have implications far beyond the record stores: It should give Prince the confidence to avoid the shameless audience-pleasing rituals he often practices on tour (the nadir came at Madison Square Garden a few years back, when, instead of engaging in the joyous call-and-response he’s famous for, he repeatedly asked the audience if it loved him) and to delve deep into unexplored songs like “Ballad of Dorothy Parker” that offer far greater interpretive space than his standards. Perhaps the surprisingly great Musicology will at last allow Prince to free himself, not from music-industry subservience but from a museum-like reverence for funk and soul and a back catalogue of hits that dog him like overeager fans.
Check it, a strange and good review all in 1. I am glad 2 see MUSICOLOGY getting much luv, but at the same time alot of reviewers dis his 90's output describing it as insignificent. I don't know how D&P's,prince,TGE,EMANCIPATION,could be cosidered throwaways. CRYSTAL BALL was not intended 2 be a traditional cd but more or less put 2gether as a group of bootleg outtakes 4 hardcore fans. I like MUSICOLOGY a lot but i also feel that theO(+> cd is just as energetic and diverse as well as TGE. Hopefully new fans will be able 2 look at P's 90's output with unbiased eyes free from the critics point of view that basically dissed P bcuz of the stance he took against the record industry. So what he wrote slave on his face. Get over it. If u don't own your Masters,then the Masters own u! Schools been in sucka!!!!!
U,ME,WE!....2FUNKY!
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Reply #2 posted 04/25/04 5:27am

Gavroche

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Another hasty review if you ask me...

Anybody who claims that Musicology is a great artistic comeback for Prince just shows a lack of knowledge of his work.

"Prince returns to what he’s so masterfully good at: songcraft and groove.”

What's this guy's talking about ... disbelief
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Reply #3 posted 04/25/04 7:27am

pauldominion

Crystal Ball was certainly not a waste of time, it was meerly an artistic adventure into all that could have been... and what warner wasnt letting him be. I havent got the album yet in the mail (isnt out in Australias till Monday!!) so i ordered it via http://www.cd-w-w.biz ; if its half as good as Crystal Ball im sold! cool

Emancipation was also a great album but the 'Mayte' references in retrospect are dienchanting nowadays ..... and as for him singing his classics, no one will ever get tired of hearing Purple Rain. He said that himself in the Melbourne Concert. smile
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Reply #4 posted 04/25/04 8:53am

ufoclub

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I wonder when a reviewer will review the online album compilations: chocolate invasion, and such.... argghh... my mind is gone, what was the other one?
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Reply #5 posted 04/25/04 9:22am

wyld1

Gavroche said:

Another hasty review if you ask me...

Anybody who claims that Musicology is a great artistic comeback for Prince just shows a lack of knowledge of his work.

"Prince returns to what he’s so masterfully good at: songcraft and groove.”

What's this guy's talking about ... disbelief


It was, strangely, a positive review, but this just goes to show, reading this review and others, this is just an individuals interpretation of reality. I am seeing that people have different perceptions of what Purple Rain was, what his eighties output represented, what his nineties work was, and what Musicology means.

I guess it's true what they say, "There is no reality, only perception".
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Reply #6 posted 04/25/04 10:32am

2freaky4church
1

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What a fucking nutter. TGE, The Truth, Emancipation, NPS, Chaos And Disorder were all wonderful records, and far more eclectic than the normal sounding jams of the new disk. Sure, the new songs are good, but groove wise not as good as TTD or Rahsaan Patterson.
All you others say Hell Yea!! woot!
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Reply #7 posted 04/25/04 2:13pm

ELBOOGY

2freaky4church1 said:

What a fucking nutter. TGE, The Truth, Emancipation, NPS, Chaos And Disorder were all wonderful records, and far more eclectic than the normal sounding jams of the new disk. Sure, the new songs are good, but groove wise not as good as TTD or Rahsaan Patterson.
I like the fact that P kept the grooves minimal so that in concert he can possibly stretch them out into almost a new tune.
U,ME,WE!....2FUNKY!
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Reply #8 posted 04/25/04 5:13pm

Nep2nes

Im really anxious to hear this now. I haven't heard any of it, not even the title track yet. If it's what I think it is-- lean, energetic, and catchy, with a hint of old--then I'm excited.

If it's another Rave (pandering to current music trends) I'll be disappointed.

Either way, my heart always skips a beat whenever I heard of a new album. Diehard Prince fans really have a fervor that cannot be extinguished no matter how bad it gets. That's why I bought NEWS, was disappointed, and then two seconds later, wondered when his next release would be.

He's very lucky for fans like that. smile
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Reply #9 posted 04/25/04 5:17pm

MendesCity

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Gavroche said:

Another hasty review if you ask me...

Anybody who claims that Musicology is a great artistic comeback for Prince just shows a lack of knowledge of his work.

"Prince returns to what he’s so masterfully good at: songcraft and groove.”

What's this guy's talking about ... disbelief


Plenty of us around here completely agree with that statement.
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Reply #10 posted 04/25/04 5:19pm

hilton02895

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Fierceness always appreciated.
_________________________________________
You'll find the back of my hand displeasing. (Shake)
The bun is in your mind. (Meatwad)
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Reply #11 posted 04/26/04 7:23am

twin663

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2freaky4church1 said:

What a fucking nutter. TGE, The Truth, Emancipation, NPS, Chaos And Disorder were all wonderful records, and far more eclectic than the normal sounding jams of the new disk. Sure, the new songs are good, but groove wise not as good as TTD or Rahsaan Patterson.


Finally! Some1 mentioned Rahsaan Patterson! eye've been a fan of his since 1995!!
all eye can do, is just offer U my love...
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Reply #12 posted 04/26/04 7:26am

GustavoRibas

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Eithan

Brown said:

Musicology is a brave departure for an artist who has rested comfortably on nostalgia for albums (Purple Rain in particular) he knows weren’t as great as some of his fans remember, while often trying to present himself as a helpless victim of the record industry (he used to describe himself as a slave).

- For me, it´´s the power of marketing . Judging for what I heard from Musicology (Musicology, Reflections, What do u want me 2 do and A Million Days) there is NOTHING different on this album. Musically speaking, TRC seemed to be much more adventurous. The ballads on TRC were far from being over-emotional (Muse, Mellow and She loves me 4 me) and not covers too. ´Musicology´ is a rip-off JB cover in the style of ´The Work part 1´. ´Reflections´ sound like an outtake of the High album, with that crappy drumming.
I hope the other tracks are great. But until now, I didnt notice nothing special about Musicology, except that it´s the first time that Prince makes a good promo and a great video.
I hope it sells real well, I want to see Princey selling well. But I dont buy all this hype.
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Reply #13 posted 04/26/04 8:32am

2freaky4church
1

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Yea, I was listening to Love In Stereo, and the grooves were so deep and the melody so complex and soulful, I forgot Prince even exists.
All you others say Hell Yea!! woot!
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Reply #14 posted 04/26/04 9:14am

youngca

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i got the cd saturday and have playe dit two times and its pretty good. unlike
a lot of long time P fans who like to compare previous cd's to each other..i
don't do that BUllshit. i accept each cd (album)on its on terms.

i read the local review in the sun-times by JIM derogatis ( a notorius p basher
from WAY back...he loves P in concert but never does get what P's trying to do. this guy probably thought Purple RAIN was the BEST album P ever did.
and that ATWIAD was a waste of time...)

he gave it 3 stars and said p didn't break any new ground.
that's atrip cuz why does an ARTIST of p's caliber (anybody who's done it a slong as him doesn't alwasy have to DO it totally different...and if he did DO
something DIFFERENT...Like NEWS which JIM derogatis PAnned-the critics wouldn't like it either!

i haven't liked everything he's ever did..cuz nobody hits the mark every time-
but overall his CAREEr speaks for itself.

and i have enough of his life's work to verify he's done a pretty good job over his 27 year career.

best cuts are MUSICology,cinnamon girl...illusion,pimp,circumstances,call my name,what do U want me to do...the marying kind...dear mr. man and
reflection...

cool sax and there from candy d...
overall i'd give an A.

YOUNGCA
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