Thanks Prince

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for a terrible concert. thanks for taking money from over 2000 people. thanks for only being on stage for half the show. thanks for all the instrumentals. yeahyou sang in a large room with no light. wow. i had been waiting 20+ years to see you and you put on one of the worst shows i have ever seen. @$**
 
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im sober and recovered and still mad. dude started playing before people were even inside. we got in. dude had been going for like 15 minutes. everyhing heplayed was mellow.

he started complaining about how he saw an alicia keys show there and the sound was terrible and the venue wasnt worthy of her performance. yet he decided toplay there.

played none of his most popular songs. took random breaks and walked off for like 5 minutes at a time.

when he finished people were standing around like !@@. never seen so many confused faces in my life. best part is i go to the prince message boards and all theprince homers are talking about how great it was.
 
Damn, then LA Times review was dead on

[h1]Live review: Prince's three shows at L.A. Live[/h1]
11:36 AM PT, Mar 29 2009

Prince's three-in-one concert experience Saturday at downtown's L.A. Live nightlife complex often felt like a date with a special someone that wasn't going quite as expected. You know how such evenings can be: Your beloved insists on making all the decisions; he (or she) directs the conversation toward unfamiliar topics; he makes you wait, but when he's finally fully present, announces he can't stay too long. Such a night can frustrate, but then it turns around completely on the strength of just one perfect, loving gesture. Despite many challenges, Prince still managed just that kind of metaphorical final kiss.
The circumstances were less than perfect. Expert at improvised set lists, Prince loves to stretch out, but this jaunt through the Nokia Theatre, the Conga Room and Club Nokia required a tighter song selection, which felt truncated compared with last year's Coachella set and other recent high-profile gigs.

He also struggled with the sound system, notably during the opening Nokia Theatre show. A bad buzz afflicted his vocal microphone and the mix was weak in the middle. Later, a long line to get into the final show at Club Nokia left some fans frustrated, after they missed that ending set's first few songs.

Throughout the obstacle course, Prince noted the problems, but vowed to soldier on. Showing pique would have just wasted time; he had a concept to execute. With a new website, LotusFlow3r.com, just launched, and three albums hitting Target stores today, Prince was staging both a celebration and a marketing pitch.

None of the performances featured much new material, but each represented the mood of one of the new releases, already available for download on Prince's website for a $77 subscription fee. The first show reflected the "old school" approach on "MPLSoUND"; the second, the guitar adventures of "LOtUSFLOW3r," and the third focused on the smooth sensuality found on "Elixer," even though that album's main singer, Bria Valente, never took the stage.
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The Nokia Theatre show was a crowd-pleaser despite atrocious sound. It featured hits such as "Kiss" and "1999" alongside coversincluding Wild Cherry's "Play That Funky Music" (sung by a gangly audience member) and "Hollywood Swinging" by Kool & the Gang. Thestage looked like an unexplored planet populated by jellyfish and pyramids; Prince wore a black and white ensemble that somehow seemed colorful. But technicalproblems really stopped this set from being as dynamic as it might have been.

Song selections included cuts that Prince performed at Coachella last year and others featured at his recent Oscar party at the Avalon."You ever get the feeling that you just have too many hits?" he said before heading into yet another one; he didn't pull too many surprises outof his silk pocket. Percussionist and former Prince protégé Sheila E. made a guest appearance, as she had at Coachella last year. The band, a streamlinedversion of Prince's most frequently employed ensemble, never locked into a real groove.

The Conga Room show quickly made up for the glitches at the big theater. Bassist Sonny Thompson and drummer Michael Bland raised a powerful blues-rockruckus; Prince was playing guitar with his teeth within minutes of taking the stage. As he settled into full guitar hero mode, ably backed by his oldMinneapolis cronies (and harmonica player Frederic Yonnet, who took a flashy turn near the show's end), Prince relaxed here was a set with excellent newtunes, cool obscurities, and strong, often nearly ecstatic playing.

Having traded in chic loungewear and elaborate props for flashy but practical working clothes, Prince and his players built a sound steeped in the blues andpsychedelic funk. They reworked "All Shook Up," a signature Elvis Presley song, in ways that would have made Sly Stone proud. They paid homage toJimi Hendrix with a version of his "Spanish Castle Magic," and traced a through line within Prince's own repertoire, from the playful "WhenU Were Mine" to the heavy new "Dreamer," that brought it all back to some cosmic juke joint.

After the high of the Conga Room, the set at Club Nokia came as something of a surprise. It shouldn't have; following on the path of the new albums, itwas time for something sexy and down-tempo. Fans hoping Prince might feed the fire he'd just ignited next door - or others, just arriving, who wished foranother bunch of hits - had to adjust when a jazzy quiet storm descended.

In a blazer reminiscent of a disco ball, fronting a group anchored by the Brazilian keyboard artist Renato Neto, Prince presented himself as the master ofthe chill-out room. He let the band stretch out, with Neto dominating but bassist Rhonda Smith and drummer John Blackwell also finding room to solo. Hedeparted the stage for long periods, or stood at the side, enjoying his collaborators' jams.

There were few familiar songs, and though Prince's falsetto was lethal when deployed, he mostly chose to lay back and let the lush music envelop thecrowd. Obscurities like "In a Large Room With No Light" clearly thrilled the knowledgeable few, but the band served little familiar fare to thepartygoers sipping the purple cocktails the club was selling for the occasion.

Finally, the long date was over - and Prince pulled out the nectar. The 2 a.m. curfew had past, but out came the great vocalist Chaka Khan, delighting thecrowd with her soul classic, "Sweet Thing." The man of the hour then proceeded with a string of his most luscious ballads, the best of which was aversion of "The Beautiful Ones" that was far more triumphant than heartbroken. Right then, Prince seemed to know he'd won the race: He was thelover of the hour, after another endless night.

-Ann Powers
 
Originally Posted by PJ and Bompton

Was this the Club Nokia show? Heard it was terrible...

yep. worst concert i have ever been to. ill never spend money to see the guy again. i dont care if i got to pre-select the songlist. never again

and to the person that asked it was about 100 a ticket. so 200 for me and my girlfriend

and that review is heavily biased. it makes it sound like he set some awesome mood. no one paid 100 a seat to watch his band play jazz instrumentals. peoplewere PISSED.
 
I know i didn't go to the show so I don't know how horrible it was (even tho I have heard from 5 people it was pretty bad you're the most mad tho
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) but I wouldn't say I never pay money to see Prince again if you're a fan. Cause come on how many concerts has this man done? And this is his 1stbad review. It was just dumb of him to do 3 shows in a day. Shows (especially with Prince) are intimate experiences (pause & no romo). So I say if you geta chance see duke again.
 
Originally Posted by ScottHallWithAPick

I know i didn't go to the show so I don't know how horrible it was (even tho I have heard from 5 people it was pretty bad you're the most mad tho
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) but I wouldn't say I never pay money to see Prince again if you're a fan. Cause come on how many concerts has this man done? And this is his 1st bad review. It was just dumb of him to do 3 shows in a day. Shows (especially with Prince) are intimate experiences (pause & no romo). So I say if you get a chance see duke again.
yeah i know. im sure i wont be pissed when dude goes on tour but last night was a bad experience. i wasnt even waiting in line either. people wereout there for like 4 hours waiting to get in. i was just drinking at yardhouse before the show so i can imagine how they feel.

the problem was dude played 3 shows like it was one big set. cool if i had 600 dollars and the patience to watch 3 shows in one night but i dont and mostpeople dont either. im sure some people liked it. the people who have seen him 36 times in their life and havent heard these obscure songs live before.

i mean the dude was so mad he was calling out the names of some of the AEG executives during a song. talking about how bad the place is set up. thats when iknew it was gonna be a #@!*++ performance.
 
Sorry to hear about your experience man. Unless you are a Prince FAN (not just a fan, but a FAN), some of his decisions in his playlist may fustrate you. Butfrom the sound of it, even his biggest supporters may have been baffled from this concert too.

I saw him @ Phillips Arena a few years back, and it was the best 3 hours I spent listening to music! The ultimate musician...
 
love to hear what "in a large room w/ no light" sounds like nowadays. he needs to stop playing and "officially" release his"real" outtakes, and not those contract-killin' filler tracks.
i still gotta see this man live before it's all said and done.
 
For some reason I always here bad reviews from Prince never anything good.

I wonder why he still continues to sell out arenas.
 
I'm not what you'd call a prince fan, but an old friend took me to a Prince show.

Best concert I've ever been to.


I'm sorry your experience was so bad. It sounds like he was really just trying to do to much.
 
dam that sucks.

If you really like him you would pay to see him again though. Thats what I would say.
 
Originally Posted by babyface34

love to hear what "in a large room w/ no light" sounds like nowadays. he needs to stop playing and "officially" release his "real" outtakes, and not those contract-killin' filler tracks.
i still gotta see this man live before it's all said and done.

sounded good. no horns though.
 
Originally Posted by bjw1983

Sorry to hear about your experience man. Unless you are a Prince FAN (not just a fan, but a FAN), some of his decisions in his playlist may fustrate you. But from the sound of it, even his biggest supporters may have been baffled from this concert too.

I saw him @ Phillips Arena a few years back, and it was the best 3 hours I spent listening to music! The ultimate musician...

people that love him blindly probably loved it. i would have been happy if he kept it obscure but at least put a show on. dude didnt even play guitar for likehalf the show. to me it looked like he phoned it in. i didnt pay 200 bucks to watch renato neto solo for half the show and watch prince gaze at him inadmiration from the side of the stage. a prince homer would never admit that though and thats probably why some people said they liked it. i have no problemadmitting i got ripped off.

and yeah i probably will see him again, but its going to be at a big venue only. something like staples for a national tour where he wont pull this kind of%%%%
 
Originally Posted by In Yo Nostril

people that love him blindly probably loved it. i would have been happy if he kept it obscure but at least put a show on. dude didnt even play guitar for like half the show. to me it looked like he phoned it in. i didnt pay 200 bucks to watch renato neto solo for half the show and watch prince gaze at him in admiration from the side of the stage. a prince homer would never admit that though and thats probably why some people said they liked it. i have no problem admitting i got ripped off.

and yeah i probably will see him again, but its going to be at a big venue only. something like staples for a national tour where he wont pull this kind of %%%%
Yeah, you gotta see him in a big concert to get what you REALLY want. If you go to those other type of shows (Hit n Run shows, after concert jamsessions, or what you went to) you're gonna get him doing other stuff and winging it or experimenting. Usually those shows are where he"challenges" the audiences listening taste.
 
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