These interviews are pure gold to someone who misses the magic of music and true musicianship.
@Roundtablewithdrew9 ай бұрын
💜
@jsteed109 ай бұрын
Salute to your purity🫡
@synthWizkid9 ай бұрын
❤️ 💕🥰
@sayjay269 ай бұрын
Exact-A-Mundo that's why anything released by Prince's estate is not something they can say is "Prince". First anything found in his vault are things who worked in and shelved for reasons only known to him, Prince. Second, since Prince will have only written the music from his vault that means he has not produced arranged or anything else that makes Prince's music PRINCE. Which is why I haven't listened to anything that has been released by his Estate, its not Prince. Prince shelved "Welcome to America" for a reason so his estate releasing it did NOT give me FOMO. It made me sad and extremely mad, when it was released. I guess the accountants who were jumping with glee with thoughts of how much money they would make selling his songs didn't realize we the true people who understand and listen to Prince aren't buying it, Disgusting!!!,
@Drumn4Him19 ай бұрын
What I would have given to have been able to work at this studio when artists like Prince and so many others were there creating and recording. Granted, I probably would have been on the janitorial staff and obviously not allowed in the studio but maybe to come in contact with the mojo floating around the atmosphere!!
@fingrati9 ай бұрын
I love how Dr. Susan Rogers explains the neuroscience behind the nature of hyper-creative geniuses, such as Prince.
@RJ-go3sn9 ай бұрын
Love learning more about the beloved and always treasured Prince! He will forever be in our ears and hearts.
@wisdomseeker33629 ай бұрын
If Susan Rogers is interesting to anyone here...go and take a listen to her on Ted . She is an absolute genius. I know why Prince valued her and loved her so much. 🎉 I truly needed someone in my life as an early teen...a type of mentor. Someone just like Susan Rogers. My mother and father never let me do anything! I wanted to dance at a young age . I started singing at fifteen years old . I sm older now and have been an artist (drawing/painting) for quite some time. I respect Susan as a teacher so much !
@bigkeezo9 ай бұрын
I feel where you're coming from
@wisdomseeker33629 ай бұрын
@@bigkeezo thank you so much.
@Dwell_In_Magic_3698 ай бұрын
Thanks for the heads up on her Ted Talk!
@Danny-sd5vm4 ай бұрын
@@wisdomseeker3362keep on singing and keep on drawing. Be you and don't change.
@lavenderbee36113 ай бұрын
Parents were often concerned about their children "making a living in the arts" and discouraged it.
@khismet8 ай бұрын
This made tear up.. she knew him so well, having spent so much time with him She painted a perfect picture of him💜
@jppagetoo9 ай бұрын
So much of what Prince created is trapped in the vault. I understand what Susan is saying, I as a musician would love to listen to the arc of his work. A piece of every day as he created his universe. That is how you understand a hypercreative, you need to bigger picture to see it develop and change.
@itsme_knb8 ай бұрын
I love Dr. Susan! The way she explains things is so clear and relatable. And the word picture she painted of Prince at the end is stunning! Armed with this explaination, I wonder even more how much Prince's childhood seisures contributed to his gift?
@eriklund7849 ай бұрын
I know what she's talking about even though it's just in my tiny world where fame will never and should never come to me, I'm not that good. The times where you're lost in creating something. Haiving someone there talking doesn't work for me. Have to be left alone, no phones, no people. And please, I'm no Prince, no no no. I'm just me and I feel like that making things. This is why it's really hard for me to jive with people sometimes. Their phone, their day, their brother, Mother, Father, work, car, house, phone again, phone again.... Having been blessed with finding music at a very young age I can immerse myself in music, and some other things when my mind is turned on. Nothing Earth shattering obviously but those things are mine. Love this clip!!!
@ImCuzokie3 ай бұрын
You can become famous if you want man
@FriendM20109 ай бұрын
In 1985 the local SoCal beach scene had some of the best cover bands. All had Prince in their set list. I was 27yo and it was some of the best times of my life. Friday nights we would close the bars and then drive a mile up the road to Manhattan Beach and have breakfast at “the Kettle” I’d get home around 3:30am. Sleep late, get up, play some tennis or hit the beach and do it all over again Saturday night. Good times! 🤓🥳🤘🏌️
@Dwell_In_Magic_3698 ай бұрын
Sounds like a blast! Funny that Susan said in the extended interview that Prince specifically didn’t like his music being covered, and that was partial reason for him intensely layering songs unlike any other artist.
@VibeAlchemy9 ай бұрын
Awesome interview and amazing artist Prince
@deepinsidethemusic9 ай бұрын
THIS IS DEEP. MIND BLOWN!
@MattSanders-j9b15 күн бұрын
Touch and hold a clip to pin it. Unpinned clips will be deleted 1 hour.
@WayneMorrison10699 ай бұрын
Yay! Susan. 🤩😍
@SH-jv5uf9 ай бұрын
Prince once said that it was a burden to be able to play everything you hear. I better understand his plight listening to this interview.
@QueenBDreamwalker9 ай бұрын
Yes he couldn't shut it off....only occasionally quiet its impact 🎶💜
@Ston2472 күн бұрын
When your options are limitless it's difficult to make up your mind.
@ROCKNROLLFAN9 ай бұрын
A one in a BILLION super-talented MAGNET. No one can touch him.🙏🕊
@worldcitizen92029 ай бұрын
Many
@17purpledays739 ай бұрын
True! No one!
@shane_zen2 ай бұрын
There are 8 billion people on Earth. Prince is once in a lifetime at best, if not once in a millennium. One in a billion is short changing him.
@steveboris62869 ай бұрын
This is great stuff. The term Hypercreative is a fairly new concept to me. I would like to throw my 2 cents in. I have been a graphic/logo designer for almost 45 years. I don't believe you are born with Hypercreativity but you create your level of creativity and with each creation you receive a chemical release in the brain that becomes addicting. I think there is more and I would venture that Prince had a touch of Autism. I don't mean to compare my level of creativity with Prince but there are some similarities. Growing up I always knew I was different, I was never terribly successful in the academic arena but in solitude things would happen. I am pretty sure Prince spent a lot of time alone and only interacted with people when necessary. When Covid hit I had turned 64. This period affected our design business and without the projects to keep me immersed I started to regress into introspection and mild depression. As I was seeing a therapist he recommended I take a test that revealed that I was indeed Autistic. Other people may have been upset with this diagnosis but to me it was a relief. My life finally made sense. But I am glad I didn't know when I was young and starting life as I may have not done what I did thinking I was not capable.
@tamarawatkins70289 ай бұрын
This is so insightful. I think you may have struck upon something. Great comment.
@TommyPleasure9 ай бұрын
Hate to bust ya Bubble bro, but it’s almost entirely natural. It’s the one thing that I can say that I’ve seen people be born with. I’m like that myself, I play six instruments and i could write tunes on them before I could even really play them well. I developed this skill at a very young age..
@TheRealDEELProductions9 ай бұрын
We don't really refer to the condition of neurological divergence as "autism" much any more. At least I do not. As I have explored more of my own experiences and other's; I have come to the conclusion that divergence is more appropriate for me. Although I did test out on the Scale once some time ago. I was never satisfied with the label "autistic".
@QueenBDreamwalker9 ай бұрын
Gratitude for sharing this perspective & insight! Prince was on a mission had a constant flow thru him with the ability to translate it ~ what was in his mind was fully formed to be brought forth! An exceptional Gift he shared with the World 👑🎶💜🌎
@robertparlevliet4939 ай бұрын
Sometimes I wanna die and come back, as Susan Rogers....
@Twobarpsi9 ай бұрын
Excellent interview!
@dbroche9 ай бұрын
Great video. The more I learn about Prince the more I learn about my own creativity. Thank you!
@amrproductions9 ай бұрын
Susan IS Amazing!
@murphdrag21005 ай бұрын
Susan is the coolest ever 💜💜💜
@rogerbranton17524 ай бұрын
I'm so glad this got posted - incredible!
@sdanis9 ай бұрын
Love this!!
@damonsiegiel78553 ай бұрын
Absolutely Devine thank you. 🙏
@barryallenflash19 ай бұрын
This world lost a LEGEND when he died. I wonder how many songs have not been released that are on a reel at Sunset Studios. Hmmm....As an avid Prince fan that would be something worth knowing.
@eriklund7849 ай бұрын
I live in Mn and went to the coroners in Ramsey Mn where they held his body the day he died and just sat there. It was surreal. Such an incredible shame.
@wisdomseeker33629 ай бұрын
Ooh yes...a .... _LEGEND_ ! ❤
@barryallenflash19 ай бұрын
@@eriklund784 Wow! I can't even begin to know how you feel/felt. It must have been unimaginable to think-"is this REALLY Prince? Is he really DEAD?" He was on my bucket list of celebs to meet....
@chepad19 ай бұрын
“The Vault”
@barryallenflash19 ай бұрын
@@chepad1 Yes, I have the cd and have listened to it MANY times. I'm talking about the "other" thousands of recordings he made.
@likwidguns9 ай бұрын
Wow! I would love to work with her some day
@Jenny-m6k2f8 ай бұрын
I still do and will always miss Prince I am so happy to have lived in the same time line as him and got to see him perform and grow up with him. ❤❤A genius❤
@keithbell93489 ай бұрын
Ok. So you take this kid, This hyper creative imaginative genius. Sign him to a record contract. Invest heavily into his multi- talents. Give him the creative freedom to have access to every instrument, assign him to as much studio time as he needed. Pretty much unlimited access to anything and everything that his heart desired, doing what he enjoyed as much as life itself. Unbeknownst to Warner Bros back in 1976, they have just unleashed a Frankenstein's Monster onto the world. Minneapolis would never be the same!
@Cormac-jd2kx9 ай бұрын
Excellent post!
@lavenderbee36113 ай бұрын
I give a lot of credit to Warner Bros for nurturing his talent. This kind of care and respect is completely absent from record companies today.
@keithbell93483 ай бұрын
@@lavenderbee3611 Frank Zappa once said that Warner had the good sense to stay out of Prince's way and let the man do what he does best.
@gatorshd9 ай бұрын
Its exactly what I expected
@corywilliams4589 ай бұрын
Nice!...Great Story!
@pennyinaz9 ай бұрын
This gave me goosebumps. Can't wait to meet him in Paradise. 💞
@brewdooview9 ай бұрын
Thx so much for This epiphany !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!😍😍😍😍😍🖖🖖
@keithmorgan7429 ай бұрын
WOW!!! Just WOW!!!
@Brolo2149 ай бұрын
This is me. Once I pick up a guitar five hours or more of my life is gone. Haha. The ideas never stop. Sometimes it hurts that my life isn’t set up to realize all these ideas. I just can’t stay up until 5am writing a song and go into work like I used to. If I didn’t have to pay bills doing other stuff I would be making music all day long.
@charmcitytoe3 ай бұрын
Thank you Dr. Rogers, for your insight into the mind of the man. (And a small bit of validation for those of us who can't turn it off). LOL
@bigkeezo9 ай бұрын
Here I was born and raised in Los Angeles and my musical idol was doing his thing in my city. Geez back then I just thought Prince made his music in a cold warehouse in Minneapolis! Thank you Susan and Sunset Sound
@lobsterblacc94789 ай бұрын
She’s always great unlike some weirdo bitter engineers that were around him for a couple of albums. Talking madness. At least she always keeps it real. No bs just details and pure memory. No bitterness either
@dee13809 ай бұрын
I think I'm hyper creative, or can be. Not a hyper creative genius, but a hyper creative person in general.. A billion thoughts run thru my head at once, while I'm workin on 1 thang, I get half way thru it, and a brand new idea suddenly pops in my head jus as good or betta than what I'm already doin.. And I get xtremely anxious about gettin to the nex thang. I can be versatile or a multi task.. And yes, it is a gift, but also a burden all in one. Because u have to have very strong discipline & self control, if not, u will have piles of incomplete ideas all over the place.. like I do..lol. It's very difficult to stick to one thang til it's complete.. Prince had to have very early on in his age learned self discipline & self control..
@Biozene9 ай бұрын
Ditto. I might be hyper creative, but certainly above average, except with ADD. Not a good mix
@lavenderbee36116 ай бұрын
I remember hearing someplace that Prince's dad taught him to finish what he started, he seemed to take that to heart and wouldn't leave until the song was finished.
@leepd19 ай бұрын
I’d put Frank Zappa in that class of hyper creatives.. a relentless amount of incredibly deep and complicated ideas.. an ability that you have to be born with.
@jppagetoo9 ай бұрын
Absolutely. and Frank was open to all forms of expression not just music on tape. Now if we could just pry Ahmet away from control and allow more of it to be heard. So many artists create (especially hyper-creatives) in a way that perfection wasn't the goal, it was to get it all out as fast as possible as best quality as time allowed to make room for the new things that keep coming. You can't impose production polish on that and hope to get any reasonable amount of it out. Live with what is there, let it go. It will be accepted even if it has blemishes.
@leepd19 ай бұрын
@@jppagetoo And yet.. Frank managed an incredible attention to detail as well as prodigious output.. beyond his musical ideas, his awareness for the right tonal qualities set his arrangements apart, knowing where instruments should be in the frequency range.. what a mind.
@jppagetoo9 ай бұрын
@@leepd1 Yes. And when an artist like Prince or Frank set out to make finished products they do put the production polish on the work. I didn't intend to imply that the artist didn't care about the quality. They did. I meant to say they didn't obsess over some details when it came to the purely creative part of the process. They wanted to get it out and in a form that could be worked on later if that is what they wanted to put out as their art.
@leepd19 ай бұрын
@@jppagetoo I get what you're saying, but im thinking we need to get some perspective here, cos we're talking 2 very uniquely talented people that mere mortals couldn't remotely hope to emulate.. the standard was so high that they didn't need to obsess endlessly over the work, with the original idea being of such a high standard.. but yes, they were endlessly creating, and that process wouldn't allow them to sit in the one place.. apparently Frank (according to one of the guys that played with him..) would present the written music to the band, rehearse the shit out of it for 8-10 hours, then come in the next day and change it all and evolve it into something else, and that process never stopped..
@jeromejamies36419 ай бұрын
Zappa, Prince and Stevie Wonder
@songlove77772 күн бұрын
Very insightive person.
@phildixon85869 ай бұрын
Mind blowing!?;:'"*. ...
@jonnuanez71839 ай бұрын
I'm going to be a contrarian here: I'm not doubting the high amount of creativity going on in his head. But I can hear when things are rushed and I wish he wouldn't have rushed so much of his output. I remember him telling Oprah that his goal is to write a song a day and thinking "why?". I'm as much a Prince fan as anybody. But this is maybe why things weren't allowed to marinate, let the ingredients blend together. I know he had his vault and this might be the "marinating" place for his output. It's true that he came back to lots of things later. Just speaking for me, I'd rather have a full color movie than a black and white rough draft. Black and white full movies are fine; Dolce Vita and Breathless are but 2 countless examples of that. Sgt. Pepper wasn't created out of a mad creative output. DSOTM; Rumours; how many countless others, same. Release the criticism, folks. I know it's coming because people just blanket love Prince. I love him and always will. But he sure as F wasn't perfect which is how he's being posthumously shaped.
@georgeroberts74629 ай бұрын
U guys are looking at her like she's crazy, but I think she's onto something, as a musician, I think she's onto something
@jesusislukeskywalker42949 ай бұрын
👍🏻 great insight
@JORGESANCHEZFULL5 ай бұрын
I would love to whatch a video of Susan mixing in a tutorial mode to show how she got that sounds
@KarolynKarsay9 ай бұрын
He was & Still is the BEST? The Angel of All Angles! I wish I could have met him!
@MEDWink9 ай бұрын
❤🔥❤🔥❤🔥❤🔥❤🔥
@sayjay269 ай бұрын
I understand completely, I am a creative exactly like this, my craft comes in storytelling and stained glass artwork. My mind looks at a glass jar, vase, cup and other glass mediums and say "what can I do to make this beyond just glass". There is "Shock G" from the Hip-Hop Group "Digital Underground" who worked with Prince on "Love Sign" from "Crystal Ball". Shock G worked exactly just like as you are saying the only thing is Shock G used drugs to try and stop the music, the sound and most likely the voices he heard in his head. Prince used the constant thoughts he had coming through creatively(from a very young age) by writing them down and putting them to music. Prince could visualize sounds(Elephants & Flowers). That's why anything new that his estate releases would not sound or feel like anything Prince would put out because he's not producing arranging and everything else that makes his music, his craft his art form, its not Prince. Peace Love and Blessings ✌💜🙏💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜
@RW-ob4en9 ай бұрын
I’ll risk a remark here. When we were HS kids Prince and I attended the same summer music camp. We were not from the same towns nor were we friends until then. He was going by the name Skipper so the Prince thing didn’t stick with me and I made no connection as he rose to fame. He was very much a loner. For some reason he deemed me ‘safe’ enough to hang out with. That environment was not particularly accommodating to his predilection. The emphasis assumed basic musical literacy (being able to read music) & some conventional technical skills. He occupied a spot in the percussion section for the concert band setting and drum set for the jazz ensemble. I assume due to the situation he did not present as virtuosic by any means. Probably more akin to fish out of water. He was very eager and curious and didn’t appear to be put off be the impatience of those around him, students and teachers alike. On our down time there he would seek me out privately and confide about the musical stuff he said was in his head. I too was interested in the creative side so we kinda fit. One memory I have is of the afternoon I was sitting alone just noodling at the piano…no real chops at all, just letting one sound lead to another. I became aware of a quiet presence in the room with me and turned to see Skipper standing there watching/listening intently. “How are you coming up with the sounds you’re making?” he asked. My response was probably no more profound that stated here above. But this did result in ensuing and on-going dialogue occupying this other space - the world of tapping in to one’s own mind and expressing these conjurings musically. Skipper confessed he was not familiar with traditional/formal music pedagogy (didn’t use that word…good thing, I’d not have known it). He did say he felt accomplished on guitar and seemed to have no end to sounds in his head that he could express thusly. To me he seemed a dreamer. As in the kind virtually detached from reality as his fantasy ideas seemed more real than the physical/social world he occupied. I recall feeling sorry that he didn’t fit in better. There’s more but that’s the gist as it may relate to this interesting post.
@Ston2472 күн бұрын
A lot of creative people and comedians had very rough childhoods. Richard Pryor, Jimi Hendrix, Prince are a few. Reality became so harsh that their minds folded in on themselves.
@WatchTheThrown9 ай бұрын
why did they edit the part out where she clarifies the Neuroscience right after dudebro asserts that he also has this extremely rare condition?
@onesong20019 ай бұрын
Because nobody wants to hear about him perhaps?
@dynamicalan5 ай бұрын
Hello Dr. Rogers, If a musician hears a song and that continues to play constantly; do you know what causes that? Thank You, Alan
@xiaoxia59 ай бұрын
i actually find the stories about Prince more fascinating than his music at times.
@Fastvoice9 ай бұрын
What about this image/light flickering in this video?
@ChandraKSC9 ай бұрын
Yes, really interesting- at first I thought it was a “grainy” type of film treatment that’s used sometimes, but I looked at other Sunset S videos and I didn’t see any in those videos ( except for one or two in the Apollonia interview) . 🙂
@Roundtablewithdrew9 ай бұрын
Spirits and ghosts in here
@Fastvoice9 ай бұрын
@@Roundtablewithdrew You mean sparks of creativity? 😄✨🎇
@ChandraKSC9 ай бұрын
I believe it! @@Roundtablewithdrew
@helenmachelen42009 ай бұрын
Prince didn't like to say Good Morning
@Great-Documentaries9 ай бұрын
You'll notice that when Susan says that Prince played all the instruments, she specifically mentioned keyboards, drums, bass guitar and vocals. *I keep telling anyone who will listen those are the ONLY instruments Prince EVER played on his records or in concert. Period.* He did not play 24 or 32 instruments, he played four or five depending on your view of vocals. That's ALL he needed to play in order to make pop music. Anything else was played by someone else, usually wind instruments by Eric Leeds or others and orchestral instruments by Clare Fischer's orchestra (after orchestration by Fischer, not Prince).
@tombutler40759 ай бұрын
Not to argue, but as a musician, I consider Prince as being proficient on tambourine, finger cymbals, timbales, congas, triangles, synths, piano, organ, acoustic guitar, electric guitar, bass guitar, and drum kit at least. I'm sure there's more if you count things like the PurpleAxe or other percussions like say maracas and clave. Sure, you can make sound come from any instrument without skill, but proficiency is another thing entirely. I wasn't in the studio with him, but by all accounts, Prince could play a lot of that stuff well enough to get over. I don't know if it's 24 instruments, but I think it's technically and realistically more than 5 instruments.
@jsj31313jj6 ай бұрын
God made us in a way that we can only think one thought at a time, and if we are thinking what is right, we can not be thinking what is wrong...
@xxcelr8rs6 сағат бұрын
When in the studio I always write new songs. I kinda wish they'd go away. But they are often better.
@Mr2Shredded9 күн бұрын
.. she was very young working with him I imagine. She’s not old now .
@Ducerobot9 ай бұрын
Yep .
@fishypictures9 ай бұрын
I am hyper creative but I keep getting interrupted by family, friends,work and lack of money.
@Captain-Palsy3 ай бұрын
Same
@duroxkilo8 ай бұрын
we romanticize a little bit the geniuses, as we probably should :)... we can certainly benefit from their efforts and work but i'm not sure we spend enough time realizing what it means to live w/ that level of intensity... our minds and bodies are not meant to work that way and we often hear references to the inability to rest. both stress and excitement can keep us up all night and we'd prefer the latter but it doesn't take too many nights of no sleep to be unable to differentiate between the two...
@Roundtablewithdrew8 ай бұрын
No great art was created from a well balanced person
@o.b.v.i.u.s9 ай бұрын
*_Tommy who?_*
@StellaMayfair79 ай бұрын
I think she's referring to Tommy Jordan, who was part of the band Geggy Tah that she mentions at 03:21. They were a couple for a while, but I don't know if they still are. Maybe at the time of this interview they were simply friends. Just a guess.
@o.b.v.i.u.s9 ай бұрын
@@StellaMayfair7 thx!
@David_SalzbergАй бұрын
You can be creativ and produce a lot of music etc. but it also has to have the respond. there are a lot of things and music produced, but it needs to be sold, so it has to be good.
@harryjohnson86059 ай бұрын
I wonder if prince left her anything before he passed .
@Essobee9 ай бұрын
what is with the noise filter on the video? As if the content wasn't compelling enough to stand on it's own. It is. Pls drop the "extra"
@edwinstovall33346 ай бұрын
... And just like that, it becomes clear. In my own language, the term hyper-creativity describes what I would call "Reed Richards/Peter Parker" syndrome and what most people think of when they think of absent-minded professors and the like. The ideas just won't stop, and you'll never execute even the top 1 percent. I can only imagine it as a hell of its own, or perhaps as a part of his own personal cross to bear.
@melissaealy9 ай бұрын
When I was younger my most favorite song of all time was “ When Doves Cry”!
@youtellmegod9 ай бұрын
Thanks for the interesting video. The declaration of the title is arguable. Turn down the hype dial please.
@AcidTechnoMan50009 ай бұрын
So who's in the corner?
@JarvisGandy9 ай бұрын
I will expaned on that Creative thoughts so you can get a little moor understanding how because I am one Made this way. The poster for instance I would want to Take the Real life photo and Mix it With The Fantasy cartoon then With colors but Still overwhelming it With The Real life Photo we mix the Real life with the Fantasy. See that as I explained that statement should be a song Title or cover ( Real life with Fantasy ) I hope you can Understand it A little.
@hollylewis53029 ай бұрын
Eddie was a hypercreative too! Ideas never stopped, as we recently heard Alex attest to. We call them geniuses. I don't think I would want a gate if I had the choice. :)
@cocohow91959 ай бұрын
Eddie Van Halen?
@lajas445 ай бұрын
Who’s the Tommy guy she’s talking about?
@augustusbetucius29315 ай бұрын
People who believe in PhDs and other things that make them something that they are not, are best avoided. There is ego there, that sits over the top of insecurities that you don't want to deal with. It's the people with PhDs and know it's paper are the ones you want to talk to.
@2AChef-n-BBQКүн бұрын
This is just funny to watch. This woman is a crack up. She describes Prince as an object, makeup, scent, clothes, aura all billowing bluster and romanticized fluff, but nothing about what he did, how he worked, just drama. There are many geniuses in music that wrote many more great songs than Prince. Prince was a pop star and played it to the hilt until he OD:d. Just another talented junkie. Nothing more,nothing less.
@RoundtablewithdrewКүн бұрын
Watch the whole intv
@TheNaturalust9 ай бұрын
As a creative musician I believe things like weed and other drugs also help to keep those gates open. They must be used sparingly or else they quit working. I have learned to keep the creative area alive while playing because listening to what is being played sparks so many new ideas. I think this lady is a bit stuck in her thinking here.
@davidmccall47769 ай бұрын
Sly Stone has to be in the hyper-genius category, and Leon Russell likely does as well.
@stubbsmusic5439 ай бұрын
Our standards for what amounts to "genius" have fallen quite far.
@Jesse-cx4si8 ай бұрын
Who’s in the corner???
@christophertracy28076 ай бұрын
This broad has made a career of talking about Prince like she made him
@KenTeel9 ай бұрын
I ain't buyin' it. I think that you will creativity. It is a choice. All humans are creative to one extent of another. we came from the stone age, where creativity, in order to survive, was mandatory. So, we all have it. It's a matter of motivation, as to whether or not people use it, and to what degree they use it. People that gain pleasure out of creativity are going to embrase it. People that have to push themselves to be creative, they'll succeed, but they won't have as much motivation to be creative (their's is literally meeting a problem with creativity.) Plus people have to give themselves permissioin and encouragement to be creative. That's self talk. (PS: The reason that Prince came in with music in his head is because he had to pay for studio time, and people in the studio are depending on you. Being prepared makes sense. They taught that in Boy Scouts.) What do I know about the subject? As a person who has produced two, one man band CDs (One alt contry, one jazz) where I wrote all songs, recorded all parts, played all instruments, did all singing, I've walked in those kind of shoes. I also perform all original music at winery events. That helps in knowing what she's talking about.
@EthanGB688 ай бұрын
Dr. Rogers has literally studied the neuroscience behind what she described on top of having been a studio engineer for Prince among others. But sure you "ain't buying it" 🙄
@TheLookingGlassAU8 ай бұрын
This video is 6mins
@lavenderbee36113 ай бұрын
Elon Musk talked about this, he explained that his brain is "a never ending explosion of ideas". Then he quipped "you wouldn't want to be me". He appears to have hyper creativity coupled with the ability to bring forth these ideas into the world quickly. Musk's early childhood is similar to Prince, they both had violent/abusive fathers and got beat up regularly at school for not fitting in.
@pittsburghandy9 ай бұрын
Insights like these make it sound like artists like Prince created daily or weekly or at least several times a month, yet the artists put out only so many albums. Like the legend of Eddie Van Halen having a bookcase full of demo cassettes/riffs. I’m curious of the story between the running faucet of unbridled creativity and the eventual output and sharing with the public. Maybe the fact of the matter is 99% of what’s created is considered uncommercial by the artist or producer…while from the fan’s side, I bet quite a bit of the volume of output would be very listenable (like how some “album-filler” unreleased singles become cult fan favorites, like every track on every Van Halen album w/DLR for me, and every single Cars track), if not potential unexpected hits (like some Tom Petty or Billy Joel hits that almost never got put on a given album) that will never see the light of day.
@EthanGB688 ай бұрын
Prince did create almost daily. It's well documented
@michaelcontreras1489 ай бұрын
I’m 67 and I’ve been a musician my whole life. Never heard a Prince song that made me purchase one of his albums unlike other artists like Rick James or Sting
@zoohousenews93599 ай бұрын
Thats relates to YOUR taste in music and what you like as an individual. Not one Rick James song appeals to me. I do love a lot of Sting songs. I love just about every Prince song I've heard.
@shanemcconnell173641 минут бұрын
You know what the five most important minutes of prince would be? Five minutes of silence
@evini73389 ай бұрын
🍊
@MCGguitar6982 ай бұрын
Dr. 😂
@MarcBoubonis9 ай бұрын
Creativity can’t be forced? Guess again! Beatles had to write, practice, and record one album within one month. Because management demanded it.
@elijahchislom46498 ай бұрын
I love Prince too but she definitely gassing it
@kurtstergar10429 ай бұрын
If your not a MD , your not a real Dr. !
@lavenderbee36116 ай бұрын
Of course you are, there are Doctorate degrees in all sorts of subjects. It's not limited to medicine.
@arlingtonhynes11 күн бұрын
I understand people with an EdD being insecure enough to insist on being called “Doctor” - they’ve got a fast-food skillset. The Mickey-mouse degree is all those people have. But it’s really weird and sad to see that kind of cheap, trashy vanity coming from someone who’s actually accomplished.
@arlingtonhynes11 күн бұрын
But then the guy interviewing her says “I’m hyper-creative”. Oh, for God’s sake. The only adjective that applies equally to him and Prince is “biped”. And you can tell she’s thinking the same thing.
@ArthurX-eg8bc31 минут бұрын
Pity a musician who does not have music inside.
@xeropunt57498 ай бұрын
Personally it’s hard to like anything after 1986. Its an unfortunate fact that the groove was lost in favor of “ballad” crap.
@Slotsessions9 ай бұрын
Never liked Prince's music. He was prolific though.
@tdz699 ай бұрын
So basically Prince was ADHD.
@Msbupee9 ай бұрын
Doesn't sound like Prince had any of these ADHD symptoms...Disorganization, problems prioritizing, poor time, management skills, problems focusing on a task, trouble multitasking...he was a musical genius.
@LondonSteveLee9 ай бұрын
@@MsbupeePrince was an excellent musician and songwriter - but he also produced tonnes of dreary shite. Could say the same about David Bowie.
@GarrettWorcester9 ай бұрын
@@LondonSteveLee Fair enough (excellent artist comparison)!
@BillMcGirr9 ай бұрын
I’m sure she’s good at what she does. But her mumbo jumbo would get annoying real fast.🤷♂️
@zoohousenews93599 ай бұрын
Yes, for NON-THINKERS. Mumbo Jumbo? Wow!
@burns468249 ай бұрын
Prince was a great musician, but calling him hyper-creative is a bit laughable. His music career ended after 1986 for me. He was NOT a good songwriter after the mid 80s.
@jacfyavrai24409 ай бұрын
Imo His best work was after the mid 80s. I can't stand the sound of the linndrum machine that he used in many of his earlier songs.
@EthanGB688 ай бұрын
Even though *you* didn't like what he did after 1986, there's no denying that he continued to create at an incredible pace for decades after that. I think given that Dr. Rogers is an expert in this field and she actually worked with Prince, she's in a better position to make that call