Has anyone heard "When Doves Cry" with a bassline (Prince-related)
phongone
1,652 Posts
http://www.vulture.com/2013/03/questloves-master-class-on-prince.html
This is an interesting article by Toure on Questlove's love (or obsession) with Prince. Questlove describes "When Doves Cry" as the "most radical" song of the 80's because there's no bass:
"I mean, ???When Doves Cry??? is probably the most radical song of the first five years of the eighties, because there???s no bass. I heard the version of ???Doves Cry??? with a bass line???it wouldn???t have grabbed me. Without bass it had a desperate, cold feeling to it. It made you concentrate on his voice. With the bass line, the song was cool. Without it, it was astounding.???
Questlove mentions hearing the version of the song with a bassline -- has anyone heard it and is it readily available?
This is an interesting article by Toure on Questlove's love (or obsession) with Prince. Questlove describes "When Doves Cry" as the "most radical" song of the 80's because there's no bass:
"I mean, ???When Doves Cry??? is probably the most radical song of the first five years of the eighties, because there???s no bass. I heard the version of ???Doves Cry??? with a bass line???it wouldn???t have grabbed me. Without bass it had a desperate, cold feeling to it. It made you concentrate on his voice. With the bass line, the song was cool. Without it, it was astounding.???
Questlove mentions hearing the version of the song with a bassline -- has anyone heard it and is it readily available?
Comments
I never heard of a Bass-Line included version of When Doves Cry.
And its not that Revolutionary. Props for making a Black/Funk/R&B hit w/out a baseline but its not that big of a deal.
Cats have been talmbout that feat for a long minute, but its not some great paradigm shift.
In and of itself, it's mostly just ("just") a really sonically striking song. But looked at in its larger context, leaving out the bassline denies the listener a certain familiar warmth, and makes the song stand as a kind of rejection of What People Required From Black Music. It's angular and demanding (just like my father, too?), and pretty much the antithesis of the ingratiating, accommodating stuff that MJ, for example, had by then been pushing for years, and I think the absence of a bassline, that cushion underneath, has a lot to do with it.
The more common form of musical innovation is to take an established formula and modify its existing elelments and/or add stuff on top (e.g. the grafted rock moves of "Beat It," an important record in its own way, I suppose); fucking with formula by leaving stuff out is comparatively rare, and generally sounds more revolutionary.
Like, hearing the Sugarhill Gang rapping over the fat and friendly "Good Times" was a big deal to me, but hearing Run-DMC however many years later rapping over just some skeletal drum machine fucked my shit all up. Know what I mean?
I understand your fatigue with the critical gassing-up of this one particular aspect, but unless you don't think "When Doves Cry" was a heavily influential landmark record, I don't see how you can say the bassline shit isn't a big deal.
God, those songs sound shit.
'Bout the same time, Masters at Work were simultaneously keeping Gene Perez in bass strings for life and Rescuing Dance Music From The Blahs???.
"Doves" is such an enigmatic record for me. I believe I've had the discussion about "Animals strike curious poses". That line alone has kept me entertained for, oh, decades.
But then there's also "Why do we scream at each other? This is what it sounds like, when doves cry."
Is that, screaming at each other is what lachrymose doves sound like?
Or... and here's the mindf*ck:
Is that "This is what it sounds like, when doves cry :" ?
So doves sound like "beep, beep-beep-beep, ..." when they cry?
I've never made a dove cry so I don't know.
b/w
I've never shoed a horse, but I've told a donkey to f*ck off.
Who else ran with the bassline-less idea? Did it make other artiists reshape their game?
Where are the copycats and influence?
Alot of Rap made after Run Dmc attempted to ape their style. That was a shift.
Sucker Mc was without baselines in Black music before When Doves Cry.
Its not a big deal.
Now, as far as how many other artists aped that sound by actually leaving out the bass, maybe you're right that there weren't that many. But that "bassline-less" feel was undeniably a key compnent of what those artists were after. So I'd say it was a big deal in the same way that it was a big deal in the early- to mid-90s when more radio-rock drummers started playing in a way that made them sound like drum loops: even if the technical particulars of a certain technique (sampling drums, leaving out the bass, etc.) are not being duplicated exactly, that root technique is still exerting a pretty big musical influence.
totally.
i just chalked it up to prince being really mad at his bassist the day he did the final mix because they ate his favorite lefties out of the studio fridge.
How can you be mesmerized by a no bassline song a year after Sucker MC's?
:bizzo:
b/w
I guarantee this is just a setup for Quest finding the "test pressing" or "master reel" (because it's going to be a hell of a lot easier to add a bassline to a song than it is to take something off ... ahem). ? was super competitive about that bells thing.
Nobody even noticed it had no bassline where I was. Or if they did I never heard anyone talk about. The first person I heard talking about it was Nile Rodgers on VH1. He wasn't too surprised it had no bassline, but was surprised a black artist would do a song with no bassline.
Well then your on some Latte Pas shit then.
Now who is tryin' to re-write history.
Massive = Most people didn't hear it. Which one is it?
He hates bassists after that tour he did opening for Rick James
:shh:
b/w
I keed, he believes the one Larry Graham is the fount of all funk. Together they do their door-to-door JoHo ting in disguise, IIRC.
Like, okay, let's say you're right--let's say that "When Doves Cry" doesn't sound all that different, that it's only, like, Level-Four Weird Sound, and coming in a year late and a buck short. I personally think that's bullshit, but okay, sure. The fact is that that song had Level-Four Weird Sound pumping out of pastel Soundesigns in lilly-white teenage-girl bedrooms in fucking Bozeman, Montana or wherever. That represents a far deeper--and far truer--"paradigm shift" than some Level-Ten Weird Sound that's barely rippling beyond the cognoscenti and the fans.
In a discussion like this, I think scale means something, and while "Sucker MCs" might have changed rap, "When Doves Cry" changed pop, rock, and r&b a good couple of years before Run-DMC was having anything close to that kind of global effect.
No late pass here man, I was 14 in 1983 and as a Queens native I was all over Run DMC when Sucker MC's dropped. I was also a Prince fan going back to "I Wanna Be Your Lover" and getting in trouble with Moms because she thought "Dirty Mind" wasn't appropriate for an 11 year old. And don't be disingenuous, you know what I'm talking about...
Massive = When Doves Cry
Influential = Sucker MC's
Again, there were no direct musical changes in any of those genres when its comes to the baseline-less When Doves Cry.
Yes the Minneapolis sound was being cloned by many, but were they taking cues from the baseline-less structure? No.
Janet Jackson's Control comes to mind as a direct influence, but she had FlyteTime who werent biting Prince being co-architects of that sound.
I dont know one R&B, Rock, or Pop song that came out right after(lets say within two years) that had the same formula as Doves.
Sucker MC's (without any "OMG they didnt use a baseline" hype) made Hip Hop take heed and set the seeds for more of the same for the next 3 or 4 years until sampling took over.
I just dont see how something was already being done gets over-praised because it was Prince or it was on Becky's Pop Radio.
Well have to agree to disagree.
Baseline-less song from Prince is a big deal to you. Its not to me.
But yeah, I think we have an agreement.
Yeah, it was a really popular song, but at least 99.99% of the people who were buying this never noticed or cared about the lack of a bass. It didn't spawn any revolution in terms of other musicians/producers copying this approach either.
To suggest that it was some kind of benchmark game-changer is imagined/revisionist history, imo.