Difference between revisions of "The Time"
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During the 1983’s [[1999 Tour]], The Time were playing as [[Vanity 6]]’s backing band from behind a curtain, before doing their own hour-long set with only a small pay increase. [[Jimmy Jam]] and [[Terry Lewis]], who had begun writing songs and production work of their own (working with [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SOLAR_Records SOLAR] to produce [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klymaxx Klymaxx] and with Tabu Records to produce [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_S.O.S._Band The S.O.S. Band]), were stranded in Atlanta by a blizzard and failed to make it to a Time concert in San Antonio. As result Jerome had to mime playing bass guitar on stage while [[Prince]] played Lewis' part off stage, and Lisa stood in for Jimmy Jam. Subsequently, the duo were fined and then fired after the tour finished.<br> | During the 1983’s [[1999 Tour]], The Time were playing as [[Vanity 6]]’s backing band from behind a curtain, before doing their own hour-long set with only a small pay increase. [[Jimmy Jam]] and [[Terry Lewis]], who had begun writing songs and production work of their own (working with [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SOLAR_Records SOLAR] to produce [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klymaxx Klymaxx] and with Tabu Records to produce [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_S.O.S._Band The S.O.S. Band]), were stranded in Atlanta by a blizzard and failed to make it to a Time concert in San Antonio. As result Jerome had to mime playing bass guitar on stage while [[Prince]] played Lewis' part off stage, and Lisa stood in for Jimmy Jam. Subsequently, the duo were fined and then fired after the tour finished.<br> | ||
− | Although [[Prince]] would state in a 1990 Rolling Stone interview that he "didn’t fire [[Jimmy Jam|Jam]] and [[Terry Lewis|Lewis]]. [[Morris Day|Morris]] asked [him] what [he] would do in his situation. Remember, it was [Morris'] band." Whether their firing was due to the incident or to their increasing independence has never been cleared up. [[Monte Moir]] felt his loyalty was with [[Jimmy Jam|Jam]] and [[Terry Lewis|Lewis]]more than with [[Prince]] and also left. The three were replaced with [[Mark Cardenas]] and [[Paul Peterson]] on keyboards and [[Rocky Harris]] on bass. [[Rocky Harris|Harris]] only remained the bass-player for a few weeks as he was fired when he failed to show up on time one day filming a scene for [[Film: Purple Rain|Purple Rain]]. He was quickly replaced by [[Jerry Hubbard]]. This new line up was featured in [[Prince]]’s [[Film: Purple Rain|Purple Rain]] film. The Time rode the wave of popularity created by the movie and hit singles "[[Jungle Love]]" and "[[The Bird]]" and were household names in 1984. Unfortunately, the band was not to reap the benefits.<br> | + | Although [[Prince]] would state in a 1990 Rolling Stone interview that he "didn’t fire [[Jimmy Jam|Jam]] and [[Terry Lewis|Lewis]]. [[Morris Day|Morris]] asked [him] what [he] would do in his situation. Remember, it was [Morris'] band." Whether their firing was due to the incident or to their increasing independence has never been cleared up. [[Monte Moir]] felt his loyalty was with [[Jimmy Jam|Jam]] and [[Terry Lewis|Lewis]] more than with [[Prince]], and also left. The three were replaced with [[Mark Cardenas]] and [[Paul Peterson]] on keyboards and [[Rocky Harris]] on bass. [[Rocky Harris|Harris]] only remained the bass-player for a few weeks as he was fired when he failed to show up on time one day filming a scene for [[Film: Purple Rain|Purple Rain]]. He was quickly replaced by [[Jerry Hubbard]]. This new line up was featured in [[Prince]]’s [[Film: Purple Rain|Purple Rain]] film. The Time rode the wave of popularity created by the movie and hit singles "[[Jungle Love]]" and "[[The Bird]]" and were household names in 1984. Unfortunately, the band was not to reap the benefits.<br> |
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It was Day who left next after arguments with [[Prince]], choosing to pursue a solo career in 1985 after a successful acting turn in [[Film: Purple Rain|Purple Rain]]. Soon thereafter, with [[Jesse Johnson]] also opting to go solo (taking Time members [[Mark Cardenas|Cardenas]] and [[Jerry Hubbard|Jerry]] with him), the band disintegrated; the remaining members ([[Jerome Benton]], [[Jellybean Johnson]] and [[Paul Peterson]]) were subsequently reformed into a new short-lived project called [[The Family]]. Meanwhile, [[Jimmy Jam]] and [[Terry Lewis]] went on to become one of the most successful songwriting and production teams of the 80s and 90s.<br> | It was Day who left next after arguments with [[Prince]], choosing to pursue a solo career in 1985 after a successful acting turn in [[Film: Purple Rain|Purple Rain]]. Soon thereafter, with [[Jesse Johnson]] also opting to go solo (taking Time members [[Mark Cardenas|Cardenas]] and [[Jerry Hubbard|Jerry]] with him), the band disintegrated; the remaining members ([[Jerome Benton]], [[Jellybean Johnson]] and [[Paul Peterson]]) were subsequently reformed into a new short-lived project called [[The Family]]. Meanwhile, [[Jimmy Jam]] and [[Terry Lewis]] went on to become one of the most successful songwriting and production teams of the 80s and 90s.<br> |
Revision as of 06:45, 5 October 2022
The Steeles ◄ | All Biographies | Prince Biography | ► Vanity 6 |
The Time |
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The band went on to release four albums (mostly performed by Prince & singer Morris Day alone) during the course of their main career, each a solid slice of jam-based, rock-infused 80s funk, generally light and humorous in tone, strongly influenced by Parliament. Although they scored numerous hits (including "Get It Up", "Cool", "The Walk", "777-9311", "Jungle Love" and "The Bird", mostly on the R&B charts) during the early 1980s, they never reached super-stardom. Jesse Johnson also launched a solo, releasing albums, writing songs and producing acts such as Vanity, Sue Ann Carwell, Three Shades of Brown (as The Funky Mercenaries), Ta Mara & The Seen, dá Krash / Kool Skool, Wendy And Lisa. He is experienced in arranging, engineering, programming and producing and appeared on many albums by other artists like Janet Jackson, Paula Abdul, Rod Stewart, Les Rita Mitsouko. Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis founded the labels Perspective Records and Flyte Tyme Records and became one of the most successful production teams, working with everyone from Full Force and Janet Jackson to the S.O.S. Band and Human League. To this day millions of sales on over 100 albums they produced have exceeded gold, platinum, and multi-platinum status. Their personal record include 15 No. #1 pop hits, 25 No. #1 R&B chart toppers, multiple Grammy Awards, and numerous other accolades and honors. Monte Moir followed the example of the pair, writing songs for Janet Jackson, Alexander O’Neal and Deja, and using his experience in arranging, engineering, programming and producing on many albums by other artists like Patty Austin, St. Paul, Deniece Williams, Cherrelle and the S.O.S. Band. Jellybean Johnson together with Susannah Melvoin, Jerome Benton and Paul Peterson joined a new Prince project: The Family. The band released a self-titled album in 1985 after which they split. He has written tracks for Alexander O’Neal, New Edition and Nona Hendryx, and is experienced in arranging, engineering, programming and producing. He appeared on many albums by other artists like Janet Jackson, Jill Jones, Karyn White, Herb Alpert and Mint Condition. Several members of The Time reunited in 1995 , added a few new recruits and have remained together (as Morris Day & The Time) since. This version of the band can be seen in the Kevin Smith film Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back and tours frequently to this day. A fifth Time album is rumored to have been completed in the late 90’s, recorded with the new lineup but production and coordination with Prince has prevented its release. The title Old Dogs, New Tricks was the working title. A 2004 album attributed to Morris Day called It’s About Time contains a few new tracks written and performed by Day and a number of live performances by The Time.
In June and July 2008, all of the original members of The Time (Morris Day, Jimmy Jam, Terry Lewis, Monte Moir, Jesse Johnson, Jellybean Johnson and Jerome Benton) reunited once again for a series of shows at the Flamingo Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas. In October 2011 they released a new The Time album Condensate without any Prince input. The album was released under the new moniker The Original 7ven, as Prince owned the rights to the band name The Time. In December 2011 Jesse Johnson announced he was leaving the band again, making their new name moot. | ||
Live
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performances outside the Controversy Tour and 1999 Tour
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Additional Information
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