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Prince Discography Blogspot -

This is the goldmine. The Controversy, 1999, and Purple Rain era. A standard discography list will show these albums, but a Prince discography Blogspot will include the B-sides.

To understand a Blogspot discography, you must understand the eras. Here is how most high-quality Prince blogspots break down the timeline. prince discography blogspot

If you search for "prince discography blogspot" and click past the first page, you will find the treasure: The Bootleg Lists. This is the goldmine

Here are the bootlegs every Blogspot worth its salt will list: Warning: These blogs often used defunct hosts (RapidShare,

Warning: These blogs often used defunct hosts (RapidShare, MegaUpload). The value today is not the dead links, but the metadata—the liner notes that tell you when and where the track was cut.


To understand the rise of these blogs, one must understand the "Prince Vacuum." In the mid-2000s, Prince became erratic regarding digital distribution. He shunned iTunes, refused to allow his music on YouTube, and aggressively litigated against fan sites. His official album releases were often fragmented—sold exclusively at concerts, given away with British newspapers (like Planet Earth), or distributed through fleeting NPG Music Club memberships.

For a casual or even moderate fan, legally obtaining a complete Prince discography became a nightmare. This is where the Blogspot blogs stepped in. These sites, often run by obsessive collectors known as "fams," offered a curated, chronological library. From the blockbuster hits (1999, Purple Rain) to the deep cuts and "protégé" albums (The Time, Sheila E., Vanity 6), these blogs served as the definitive library for the Digital Age.