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Piano & A Microphone 1983
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Piano & A Microphone 1983
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MP3 Download, 14 Sep 2018
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Track Listings
| 1 | 17 Days (Piano & A Microphone 1983 Version) |
| 2 | Purple Rain (Piano & A Microphone 1983 Version) |
| 3 | A Case of You (Piano & A Microphone 1983 Version) |
| 4 | Mary Don't You Weep (Piano & A Microphone 1983 Version) |
| 5 | Strange Relationship (Piano & A Microphone 1983 Version) |
| 6 | International Lover (Piano & A Microphone 1983 Version) |
| 7 | Wednesday (Piano & A Microphone 1983 Version) |
| 8 | Cold Coffee & Cocaine (Piano & A Microphone 1983 Version) |
| 9 | Why the Butterflies |
Product description
Piano and a Microphone 1983 is the first posthumous album by Prince, released on CD, vinyl, and digital formats on September 21, 2018. It is the first album released by the Prince estate with material from his archive, the Vault. The album was discovered in Prince's vault at Paisley Park as a single cassette tape
Product details
- Product Dimensions : 14.2 x 12.6 x 0.2 cm; 45.93 Grams
- Manufacturer : Rhino
- Manufacturer reference : 1802
- Original Release Date : 2018
- Label : Rhino
- ASIN : B07DKJGNSF
- Country of origin : USA
- Number of discs : 1
- Best Sellers Rank: 29,486 in CDs & Vinyl (See Top 100 in CDs & Vinyl)
- Customer reviews:
Customer reviews
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonReviewed in the United Kingdom on 16 May 2019
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I've been a huge Prince fan since I first heard his music back in 1983, and since then I've seen him play live countless times, bought everything I could lay my hands on, and still grieve for him today. One thing I didn't do though was seek out unofficial releases, sold at record fairs and the likes, or more recently found online, so I'd never heard this set before, and didn't even know of its existence. For me, this was all new.
As much as I loved his music I felt that since about 1990 he lost much of his spark, which he only regained when he played live. On record he overproduced himself, putting layer upon layer of keyboards on many tracks, buffing out any rough edges, often killing great songs stone dead in the process. When he was on stage though we heard those edges, and the songs came back to life.
I was delighted to hear this recording because it is unpolished. You can hear that roughness, the flaws in the sound, and it's all so intimate. I listened to it the first time on headphones, and it felt like I was there in a room with him, listening to him play on a nearby piano. It feels startlingly real, and natural. I wish he'd released more stuff like this when he was alive.
The album is essentially split into two halves. The first section (forming side 1 of the vinyl) is a medley. Some songs are played almost or in full, and others - noticeably "Purple Rain" - are a fragment, a part of a verse. It's thrilling to hear him move from song to song, not pausing between them, and the styles shift from the poppy stomp of When Doves Cry B-side "17 Days", to the bluesy "Mary Don't You Weep". At the end of the section you hear Prince ask the person recording to turn the tape over, and if you're listening on vinyl you flip the disk. The second half consists of two longer tracks, "Cold Coffee and Cocaine" sounds like a song written for The Time, and Prince sings it in a strangulated voice. It's a fun and amusing track. "Why The Butterflies" is inspired by Jill Jones (she says so in the sleeve notes) and is a long, quiet track with sparse vocals.
If you buy the deluxe edition, the packaging is like a hardback book. Inside you'll find a heavyweight vinyl copy of the album, a large booklet with sleeve notes notably from Lisa Coleman and Jill Jones, a black & white print, and the album on CD. There isn't a download code for an MP3 version.
Should it have been a bonus disk with something else? Should it have been released at all? Would he have wanted the world to hear him like this? We could argue about such questions forever. But for this Prince fan, I absolutely love this record, and it's my favourite Prince album since 1988.
If the rest of his reputed vault of 2,000 songs is as good as this, we are in for such a treat!
Side a is done as a medley and tracks such as purple rain and a case of you are just snippets not making them over 2 mins each. However this is offset with some great tracks that sound brilliant and are so intimately recorded it really is like sitting in the room. If this is an example of the quality that will come out of the Prince estate then bring on more releases.
The cd sounds great, the booklet is informative, overall packaging is beautiful as is the photo quality. BUT the crux of the biscuit - the vinyl - is a catastrophy. The center hole appears to be made manually with a hammer and a nail, is not in the center, has sharp edges (see photo), and causes the vinyl record (especially on side 1) to wow and flutter close to a half note, making it impossible to listen to.
Sad to see such a small lack of detail attention destroy an otherwise great product.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 16 May 2019
The cd sounds great, the booklet is informative, overall packaging is beautiful as is the photo quality. BUT the crux of the biscuit - the vinyl - is a catastrophy. The center hole appears to be made manually with a hammer and a nail, is not in the center, has sharp edges (see photo), and causes the vinyl record (especially on side 1) to wow and flutter close to a half note, making it impossible to listen to.
Sad to see such a small lack of detail attention destroy an otherwise great product.
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