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Eye Records 4 CD Label : “Eye” Records Catalogue : #245-248 4Disc Length : 71:53/71:09/70:26/70:18 Source : Audience Recordings Date/Venue : January 16/17/18/19, 2013 11:00pm, Dakota Jazz Club & Restaurant, Minneapolis, Minnesota Sound Quality : VG+ Year Of Release : 2013 |
Comments
Fink's
Comments (rates this release 4.5/5.0)
Prince
sent his hometown into a frenzy earlier this year when a series of shows at the
intimate Dakota Jazz Club & Restaurant were hastily announced. Taking place over
three nights, January 16-18, with two shows scheduled per night, it was a rare
opportunity for those in Minnesota to see their own musical legend in such a
tiny venue. And with so many new musicians incorporated into an ever growing
roster of backing bands, the shows had fans across the globe excited that
something historical was going to go down in Minneapolis. The only question was,
would fans not lucky enough to score the expensive, in demand tickets get to
hear these shows?
Prince tried his best to avoid this from happening with a strict no cell phone
policy, but if he really thought that alone was going to stop these shows from
being recorded, he was rather naive. As we've now learned, a number of those
willing to 'Do The Work' were in attendance and all six shows, as well as a
short DJ set Prince attended on January 19th, are now in circulation amongst the
collecting community.
The first recordings to be publicly released are on this massive eight disc set
from Eye Records. It is fantastic to have the entire run of shows available
between the two volumes, so credit to Eye for making this happen. Recordings
from different sources of some of these shows have since started to come out of
the woodwork, obviously delayed due to Eye's habit of ripping free releases,
pressing them, then selling them as their own. I'll get to the other sourced
releases at a later date but want to focus on the Eye set to start with.
The good here is that you get everything amongst the eight discs. All six
concerts and the DJ set which contains some new, as yet unreleased, studio
material. The recordings are decent, certainly highly listenable considering the
tight security and high risk involved with taping these shows. The vocals are
clear throughout, you never have an issue hearing what is being said or sung.
But the music can certainly be muddy at times, especially during the last two
nights.
My biggest gripe about the set is the inexcusable inclusion of some of the new
material Prince is currently selling on his 3rdeyegirl.com website. It is not
like these are songs no longer available from an old site, they have just gone
up for sale in the first couple months of the year and to include them here is a
new low for Eye. I do not have an issue with the inclusion of tracks streamed
for free on YouTube, I am only pointing the finger at the inclusion of songs you
can pay a meager 88 cents for to buy directly from the artist. I'm also not fond
of the way Eye have broken these shows out between the sets. There is Dakota
Diaries One which contains the early shows from each of the three nights. Then
Dakota Diaries Two which has the late shows from each night. The best way to
listen to these is obviously chronologically so you can hear the progression and
differences in each set as they happened and it would have been wiser to lay
them out that way on the discs too.
As for the shows themselves, Night One was billed as 'Soundcheck' and also
advertised as a new drummer audition. Although speculation was that new drummer
would be Hannah Ford, to the surprise of many it instead was Ronald Bruner Jr.,
or RBJ, making his first public appearance in Prince's band. As expected, the
first night was more of a loose jam, a lot of jazz instrumentals and
opportunities for individual band members to solo and share the spotlight.
Highlights of the early show include an instrumental version of "Muse 2 The
Pharoah" featuring some funky guitar work from Prince, and an instrumental take
on Andy Allo's "When Stars Collide". The late show had a similar setlist, but
RBJ gets a number of solos, at one point causing someone in the crowd to shout
'You're hired!' loudly. "Stratus" features Prince on guitar for the first
portion, but then he gives way to allow Andrew Gouche on bass, Cassandra O'Neal
on keyboards and members of his horn section to do their thing. The funniest
part of the night is when Prince plays the first few notes of "When You Were
Mine" on guitar, before saying 'Psyche!' and moving on to a long instrumental
jam. It was a night for stretching out musically and improvising around basic
structures of songs and makes for an interesting listen for sure.
Night Two was billed as a 'Jam' and featured the same backing band as the first
night, with the addition of his three female backing singers and Ida Nielsen on
guitar and bass. Prince makes it clear right away that this night will be
different as he announces 'Dancing is allowed' at the start of the early show
before opening with "Act Of God". The band is certainly tight and there are many
funky moments to be had, especially during a mostly instrumental "Housequake",
but my biggest problem with this set and the later show on this night is one
that has plagued Prince's live show for awhile now. Way too many covers, way too
much emphasis on his female backing singers and way too much of a Vegas Revue
element to the arrangements. It's hard to get excited over such a watered down
version of "Days Of Wild" from the late show, especially when his trio of female
singers is turning it into a Broadway number with their 'These are the days of
wiiiiiiiiild' three part harmony shtick. The new, seemingly improvised "Chapter
& Verse" is of interest, especially once Prince rips into a guitar solo.
Overall, I prefer the late show from this night, but it is another example of
how much Prince coasts with so many other band members onstage to hide behind.
He is turning into George Clinton before our very eyes.
Night Three is the one that held the most promise as it was billed as 'Surprise'
and carried with it the highest ticket prices of the three night stand. As
anticipated, it marked the debut of Prince's new all female backing band 3rd Eye
Girl, Donna Grantis on guitar, Ida Nielsen on bass and Hannah Ford on drums. I
will say this for these shows, the band is a bit sloppy, they obviously need
more time to gel together, but I will take sets like these any day over the
previous nights. Prince is back front and center, where we want him to be, he is
handling all the vocals, he is playing lead guitar, the music is stripped down
and raw and actually has some excitement to it. Both shows are filled with songs
that are a thrill to hear live again, including "Endorphinmachine", "Beautiful
Strange", "I Like It There" and "Bambi", which has a killer breakdown. The new
single "Screwdriver" is also a welcome addition to the set. These are by far my
favorite of the shows, certainly far from flawless, but much more interesting
given the setlists and Prince's prominent role.
The most interesting part about the recording of the DJ set from January 19th is
the inclusion of three new studio songs played over the PA. "Down" seems to have
all the makings of a classic Prince ballad, although like most of Prince's
recent work the lyrics are sketchy. "Ain't Gon' Miss U" is pretty funky to my
ears and "2 Young 2 Dare" has promise as well. None are played in full, just a
couple minute teases of each, so hopefully these will go up for sale sooner
rather than later on the 3rdeyegirl.com website. The rest of the night is filled
up with one of Prince's sampler sets and tracks spun by DJ Rashida.
Obviously as a document of a historical three night run of concerts in his
hometown, this is an essential set to own. It seems better quality recordings of
some of the sets are starting to surface and I will touch on those individually
in future reviews. But as a one stop shop for all six sets, Dakota Diaries One &
Two serve their purpose well. Just remember, in this day and age there is no
need to pay for a bootleg. Ever. Even pressed sets can easily be found in
lossless quality with a little hunting.