Prince Articles

Serena

Administrator
For Littledragon: Prince articles

Purple Reign: Prince's royalties
New York Times, Jon Pareles
Wednesday, July 14, 2004

CHANHASSEN, Minnesota The sound of someone knocking out a funk drumbeat thumped down a hallway as a visitor walked into Paisley Park, the studio complex that Prince built in this Minneapolis suburb. Soon afterward the drummer emerged, wearing a white jacket of Chinese silk, tight white pants with buttons up the leg, white shoes and a red T-shirt lettered NPGMC. It was Prince, who had been using the time before an interview to record one more track for one more song in progress.
.
Prince has been virtually a one-man studio band since he released his first album in 1978, and in the years since he has recorded funk and rock, pop ballads and jazzy excursions; he has written streamlined, straightforward hits and complex experiments. His skill and versatility have made him a model for musicians as different as D'Angelo, Beck and OutKast, and his storehouse of unreleased material, which he calls the Vault, may well hold thousands of songs.

"I record all the time," he said simply. But last Thursday he paused to reflect on what has been his best year in at least a decade.

Prince led off this year's Grammy awards broadcast in February, joined onstage by Beyoncé, and he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in March. His current album, "Musicology," has sold more than a million copies in the United States since it was released in June, and it is lodged in the Top 20 of the Billboard album chart. Meanwhile, Prince is selling out arenas on tour.

He usually follows arena shows with late-night jam sessions at clubs. He has also renovated Paisley Park to change it from two recording studios to four. And on Dec. 31, 2001, he quietly married Manuela Testolini, a former Paisley Park employee.

Prince, 46, said he was a bit sleepy as he led his visitor into Studio A and settled in behind the 48-track mixing console. But on "Musicology" he boasted that he didn't have an off switch, and he grew more animated as he spoke: jumping to his feet, picking up a guitar to play a funk vamp, declaiming and gesticulating like a gospel preacher.

The lascivious young man who recorded albums like "Dirty Mind" (1980) has affirmed a newfound faith. "I always knew I had a relationship with God," he said. "But I wasn't sure God had a relationship with me."

One of the new rooms in Paisley Park has the word "Knowledge" painted outside it. Its shelves hold books and pamphlets from the Jehovah's Witnesses, and a Bible sits open on a lectern. Prince has stopped using profanity and has stopped singing about casual sex.

"I've always understood the two to be intertwined, sexuality and spirituality," he said. "That never changed. What became more clear-cut to me was the importance of monogamy. And that was in the Scriptures many years ago."

"The word 'sex' has been turned into something so - it means so many things to so many different people," he added. "I don't use it much anymore. It's been sullied."

On tour, he has been reaching into his old repertory for songs like "Purple Rain" and "DMSR," which stands for "Dance Music Sex Romance." Is he embarrassed now by some of the raunchier songs in his catalogue? "Embarrassed?" he said with a smile. "I don't know that word. Have you seen my outfits?"

Tabulating Prince's current success has been contentious. On his current tour, concertgoers receive copies of the album as part of the price of the ticket, and those albums have been counted for Billboard's chart rankings. "Once the ticket is sold, the CD is sold," Prince said. "It's one-stop shopping." According to Sony Music, those albums account for about 27 percent of sales of "Musicology." Yet even during the week ending July 4, when Prince was not playing concerts, the album sold 61,000 copies, keeping it at No. 15.

After complaints that Prince was giving the album away, Billboard and SoundScan, which compiles the charts, changed the method for counting album sales. If an album is sold with a concert ticket, the buyer now has to specifically authorize a surcharge for the price of the album if the sale is to be counted. The rule is not retroactive, so Prince is likely to remain near the top of the chart for as long as he is on tour.

Prince's new visibility is not exactly a comeback. He never stopped making albums or touring, but for years he left behind the star-making machinery of the major labels. His longtime contract with Warner Bros. Records turned sour in 1993 as he changed his name to an unpronounceable glyph and appeared with the word "Slave" written on his face. Albums credited to Prince, with songs from the Vault and titles like "Chaos and Disorder," continued to appear on Warner until the contract ran out, while albums credited to the glyph were released independently. He is now negotiating with Warner Bros. over the release of remastered versions of his old albums, including a 20th-anniversary edition of "Purple Rain."

Prince formed his own company, NPG Records (for New Power Generation, the name of his band). Fans can subscribe to the NPG Music Club (www.npgmusicclub.com), which offers music to download, as well as advance notice and discounts on concert tickets. After the Warner contract ended, Prince resumed using his old name.

By then he had decided on a new business model. In a typical recording contract, the label finances the recording of an album and other costs, and then recoups its investment from the musicians' royalties, typically about 15 percent of the album's wholesale price. After costs are recouped, the label still owns the master recording, an agreement that some musicians have compared to paying off a mortgage but having the bank still own the house.

Prince refuses to accept that arrangement anymore. In his current deal with Sony Music USA, Prince pays for recording and promotional costs, and Columbia presses, distributes and markets the album, receiving a percentage of each sale. "No one can come and claim ownership of my work," Prince said. "I am the creator of it, and it lives within me."

The New York Times
 

Serena

Administrator
Billboard Bits: Prince
Daily Music News
July 13, 2004
Billboard.com

Prince has made a new track, "Silver Tongue," available exclusively via his online NPG Music Club Store. The cuts's lyrics were penned by Nikka Costa, whose own "Push & Pull" has been covered live by Prince in the past. Members of the NPG Music Club can download the track for 77 cents, while non-members can obtain it for 99 cents.

Prince's tour in support of his latest studio album, "Musicology," is in the midst of a multiple-night stand at New York's Madison Square Garden.
 

Serena

Administrator
The New York Times
For Prince, a Resurgence Accompanied by Spirituality
By JON PARELES
Published: July 12, 2004

HANHASSEN, Minn., July 8 — The sound of someone knocking out a funk drumbeat thumped down a hallway as a visitor walked into Paisley Park, the studio complex Prince built in this Minneapolis suburb. Soon afterward the drummer emerged, wearing a white jacket of Chinese silk, tight white pants with buttons up the leg, white shoes and a red T-shirt lettered NPGMC. It was Prince, who had been using the time before an interview to record one more track for one more song in progress.

Prince has been virtually a one-man studio band since he released his first album in 1978, and in the years since he has recorded funk and rock, pop ballads and jazzy excursions; he has written streamlined, straightfoward hits and complex experiments. His skill and versatility have made him a model for musicians as different as D'Angelo, Beck and OutKast, and his storehouse of unreleased material, which he calls the Vault, may well hold thousands of songs.

"I record all the time," he said simply. But this afternoon he paused to reflect on what has been his best year in at least a decade.

Prince led off this year's Grammy Awards broadcast in February, joined onstage by Beyoncé, and he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in March. His current album, "Musicology" (Paisley Park/Columbia), has sold more than a million copies in the United States since it was released in June, and it is lodged in the Top 20 of the Billboard album chart. Meanwhile, Prince is selling out arenas on tour.

On Monday Prince starts a three-night stand at Madison Square Garden, followed by shows at the Continental Arena in East Rutherford, N.J. (July 16 and 18), the Hartford Civic Center (July 17) and Nassau Coliseum in Uniondale, N.Y. (July 20). He usually follows arena shows with late-night jam sessions at clubs. He has also renovated Paisley Park to change it from two recording studios to four. And on Dec. 31, 2001, he quietly married Manuela Testolini, a former Paisley Park employee.

Prince, 46, said he was a bit sleepy as he led his visitor into Studio A and settled in behind the 48-track mixing console. But on "Musicology" he boasted that he didn't have an Off switch, and he grew more animated as he spoke: jumping to his feet, picking up a guitar to play a funk vamp, declaiming and gesticulating like a gospel preacher.

The lascivious young man who recorded albums like "Dirty Mind" (1980) has affirmed a newfound faith. "I always knew I had a relationship with God," he said. "But I wasn't sure God had a relationship with me."

One of the new rooms in Paisley Park has the word "Knowledge" painted outside it. Its shelves hold books and pamphlets from the Jehovah's Witnesses, and a Bible sits open on a lectern. Prince has stopped using profanity and has stopped singing about casual sex.

"I've always understood the two to be intertwined, sexuality and spirituality," he said. "That never changed. What became more clear-cut to me was the importance of monogamy. And that was in the Scriptures many years ago."

"The word sex has been turned into something so. . . . it means so many things to so many different people," he added. "I don't use it much anymore. It's been sullied."

On tour, he has been reaching into his old repertory for songs like "Purple Rain" and "D.M.S.R.," which stands for "Dance Music Sex Romance." Is he embarrassed now by some of the raunchier songs in his catalog? "Embarrassed?" he said with a smile. "I don't know that word. Have you seen my outfits?"

Tabulating Prince's current success has been contentious. On his current tour, concertgoers receive copies of the album as part of the price of the ticket, and those albums have been counted for Billboard's chart rankings. "Once the ticket is sold, the CD is sold," Prince said. "It's one-stop shopping." According to Sony Music, those albums account for about 27 percent of sales of "Musicology." Yet even during the week ending July 4, when Prince was not playing concerts, the album sold 61,000 copies, keeping it at No. 15.
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
Thank you so much!

Thank you so much Serena! This is so kind of you and you truley are a great person! You really don't know how much I appreciate this. Thank you so so much.

Tarek
 

Serena

Administrator
littledragon869 said:
Thank you so much Serena! This is so kind of you and you truley are a great person! You really don't know how much I appreciate this. Thank you so so much.

Tarek

What a nice thing to say. :)
Thank you, Tarek.

And you're very welcome. :)
 

yudansha

TheGreatOne
I've stumbled upon this ...

Prince plans to tone down his lascivious lyrics in the future

NEW YORK (AP) - Prince is turning down his mojo.

"I have a responsibility to (young fans) to perform in a manner that I would like my children to be performed in front of," he says in an interview to air Tuesday on CBS News's The Early Show. Prince, who has written songs such as Gett Off, I Wanna Be Your Lover and Kiss, says he's moving away from the explicitly erotic lyrics of the past. "I just want to be the best human being I can be . . . on stage and off," he says. Excerpts of the interview were released in advance.

The 46-year-old singer-songwriter is listed as the No. 1 "greatest rock frontman" of all time, beating out Mick Jagger and Robert Plant, in the August issue of Spin magazine.

Prince earned a 10 out of 10 for sex appeal, in a vote of editors, and kudos for singing like an "oversexed elf."

© The Canadian Press, 2004
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
yudansha said:
Prince plans to tone down his lascivious lyrics in the future

NEW YORK (AP) - Prince is turning down his mojo.

"I have a responsibility to (young fans) to perform in a manner that I would like my children to be performed in front of," he says in an interview to air Tuesday on CBS News's The Early Show. Prince, who has written songs such as Gett Off, I Wanna Be Your Lover and Kiss, says he's moving away from the explicitly erotic lyrics of the past. "I just want to be the best human being I can be . . . on stage and off," he says. Excerpts of the interview were released in advance.

The 46-year-old singer-songwriter is listed as the No. 1 "greatest rock frontman" of all time, beating out Mick Jagger and Robert Plant, in the August issue of Spin magazine.

Prince earned a 10 out of 10 for sex appeal, in a vote of editors, and kudos for singing like an "oversexed elf."

© The Canadian Press, 2004


Wow excellent article thanks Yudansha! Man listed as the No.1 Greatest rock frontman of all time is very impressive!
 

yudansha

TheGreatOne
Prince schools Toronto crowd during electrifying, funk-filled Musicology show

TORONTO (CP) - In an era of manufactured pop acts and gadgetry microphones that fix vocal pitch, Prince seems bent on schooling those who've forgotten about the craft of musicianship.

He taught his lesson of "musicology" Tuesday night to a sold-out audience at the Air Canada Centre. Filling the air with deep base lines, squealing saxophones and deft instrumental breaks, Prince took fans on a sweaty romp through funk, blues, rock, R&B and soul.

"Canada, are you ready for me?" shouted the petite singer, dressed in a resplendent red long jacket over stark white pants and heeled boots.

The show, the first of two nights in Toronto, was a homecoming for the Minnesota-born megastar. He's credited the city, where he became a part-time resident after marrying Toronto-born Manuela Testolini, for helping him craft the sound of his latest record Musicology.

The disc has refuelled fans' feverish admiration of the multi-faceted singer.

He showed off his funk dexterity to those too young to remember his records from the early 1980s, by ripping through a more than two-hour long set filled with some of his biggest hits.

After beginning the show with Musicology, the title track from his latest CD, Prince tore into Let's Go Crazy, from his 1984 record Purple Rain which cemented the singer's place in pop culture.

After the first few bars, white and purple confetti washed over the approximately 17,000 fans - who each received a free copy of Prince's current disc on their way inside - bumping and grinding in their seats.

The agile performer's passion was matched by the skilled New Power Generation band, all dressed in red and white to match their leader.

Playing songs from his more than 25-year-old eclectic catalogue, Prince and the band immaculately purged the sounds to give the concert a cohesive feel as they jumped from I Would Die For You, to When Doves Cry, to I Feel 4 U.

"This is not MTV," he told the crowd midway through Controversy.

"There will be no lip-synching on this stage tonight. This is real music by real musicians."

The 46-year-old craftsman showed off his guitar skills with several finessed solos. But he was especially mesmerizing during an acoustic set, where he was alone on the stage, perched on a stool strumming his shiny purple guitar. He reworked some of his biggest hits including Little Red Corvette, Cream and Alphabet Street as single-instrument tunes.

He frequently acknowledged his part-time home throughout the show. During a blues jam about trying to hide from telemarketers he gave the crowd his best impression of how Canadians speak.

"Who do you want to speak to, eh?" he said, pretending to be on the phone. "Prince?"

Prince's success has always hinged on the bountiful energy he's able to conjure through his stage performance and he didn't lack any Tuesday night. His lithe body continuously criss-crossed the stage - built in the centre of the stadium in the shape of a plus sign - to urge the audience to sing and clap along. Prince and the band even teased the crowd with some covers, including a few bars of Beyonce's booty-shaking anthem Crazy in Love.

His almighty Purpleness is, however, less inclined to indulge in his raunchier tunes about copulation and other carnal activities now that he's found religion - he became a Jehovah's Witness a few years back.

But no one seemed to miss them as he slithered across the stage giving the crowd heavy doses of grunting and plenty of suggestive hip swaying.

The Musicology tour runs through August 31. Prince's Toronto dates are his only Canadian stops.

ANGELA PACIENZA; © The Canadian Press, 2004
 

Serena

Administrator
Serena, filling in for littledragon.

Cool article. Thanks.
:D


I miss our young prince. Hope he's having a great time. :)
 

yudansha

TheGreatOne
LOL Serena LOL ... ok then ... you're welcome "littleD"

LOL ... :D

Prince seems like he made a big impression in Toronto. He's been all over the news for the last couple of days.
 

yudansha

TheGreatOne
He's popular around here now...

Prince assails record companies during rare appearance on Canadian TV

TORONTO (CP) - Rock superstar Prince used a rare appearance on Canadian television Wednesday to attack record companies for what he calls their "restrictive" control of the music industry.

With computer technology allowing people to record and distribute their own music, the days of record companies making money off artists are numbered, he said during a 20-minute interview at a MuchMoreMusic taping. "Kids today, I mean, they're so talented and sophisticated," Prince said. "They can create their own albums on laptops. They can deliver it through the Internet. They can even be their own distribution service."

"I mean, what do we really need record companies for?" asked the performer, who lives in Toronto part-time with his wife, Toronto-born Manuela Testolini.

The Grammy winner got the audience of about 80 going before the interview with a three-song performance with his band. He even invited the foot-stomping crowd to dance alongside him on stage.

About 20 fans took him up on the offer as Prince gyrated and sang in front of several cameras.

Hours later, he was to perform his second concert in as many nights at the Air Canada Centre.

Even by MuchMusic standards, this was not a typical day. A quick scan of the audience hovering around the stage revealed many of them to be MuchMusic employees.

Veteran VJ Bill Welychka, the host of the show, said there "really is a sense of royalty" in the air with Prince in the building.

"What can I say?" Welychka said. "Everyone's really excited to see him because he's no less than a legend."

MuchMoreMusic's Intimate and Interactive with Prince airs Sunday at 9 p.m. EDT.

CHRIS WILSON-SMITH; © The Canadian Press, 2004
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
Date: August 1, 2004
Source: http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/front/2710276
________________________________________________________________

Purple passion
Confessions of a die-hard Prince fan

By JOY SEWING
Copyright 2004 Houston Chronicle

I never dreamed of a handsome prince on a white horse.

My prince came wearing an Afro, boots and a garter belt.

Prince Rogers Nelson emerged onto the music scene in the late 1970s, a strikingly beautiful young man from Minneapolis with an Afro so big you were afraid he'd topple over.

Right On magazine -- the Tiger Beat for young African-Americans -- ran a pullout poster of his 20-year-old badness, and I fell head over heels.

His talent was raw and undeniable. He played 20 instruments on his first album, For You. The lad they’d called "Skipper" was now a royal mystery, mixing spirituality and sexuality in a way no other had.

I was in the audience during his first Houston performance, at University of Houston's Hofheinz Pavilion. His hair slick, Prince took the stage wearing an overcoat, women's underwear and stiletto boots. I had envisioned him as a statuesque 6 feet, but he wasn't much taller than me, a pubescent 5 feet.

It didn't matter. I was struck by his coolness, his energy and his boots.

He could dance in those boots.

That was many years and so many concerts ago that I've lost count. I shudder to call Prince my obsession. I am part of a legion of fans who see him as a genius, our rebel with a cause, who speaks to us through his music, lifestyle and flamboyant dress.

Though he’s now a Jehovah's Witness and has cooled the sexual overtones, Prince's hip audiences continue to love him.

He says this will be his last concert tour.

If so, we’ve had a blast.
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
Houston Chronicle: Prince of Wails

Date: August 1, 2004
Source: http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/front/2710768
________________________________________________________________

Prince of wails
The Artist formerly known as raunchy steps back into the spotlight with a master's in Musicology

By BRUCE WESTBROOK
Copyright 2004 Houston Chronicle

prince3.jpg
prince1.jpg

Then and now: Prince has gone from the bump-and-grind days of Dirty Mind, left, to marriage, monogamy and Musicology, right.

After a decade of lying low, Prince is back with a vengeance. His return began with February's Grammy telecast and a sensational, show-opening duet with Beyoncé. It continued with his March induction into the Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame. And it is peaking this summer with the million-selling album Musicology and concert tour, which hits Toyota Center Friday and Saturday. This year's multipronged attack comes from a wildly innovative rock wonderboy, who's evolved continuously since his explosion in the '80s.
Prince has left behind the brash, lewd showman who recorded the trailblazingly explicit Dirty Mind album and simulated sex acts on stage.

Don't get us wrong -- he hasn't gone mellow. He still enthralls crowds with furious energy and dazzling flamboyance, whirling and spinning with rapturous sass while singing and playing with soulful fervor and uncanny precision.

But Prince no longer utters profane lyrics or warbles explicit sex songs. Rather, his meticulous fusions of rock, funk, soul, jazz and pop reflect grown-up concerns (The Marrying Kind) and pleasures more musical than carnal.

Often wearing jewelry, makeup and tailored silk suits, Prince remains a dapper dandy of a rock star. But he no longer poses for photo shoots in skimpy briefs or in the buff. Hey, he's 46.

Besides, he's embraced monogamy and marriage. Wed on New Year's Eve of 2001 to Manuela Testolini, a former employee, Prince shares with her his newfound faith in Jehovah's Witnesses.

He also remains a Minneapolis homebody, recording his masterworks at Paisley Park, a suburban sound palace. In this sanctuary of sound, Prince can tweak and fiddle to his heart's content, often playing each instrument and singing each note. If the concert stage is Prince's pulpit, the private studio is his rectory.

During ebbs and flows in his popularity and visibility, studio work has been a constant in his career. Yet Prince Rogers Nelson also remains as big a musical maverick as when he signed his first record deal with Warner Bros.

It wasn't a great deal -- the label claimed more of the profits than he wanted -- but he did receive rare artistic control of his work. His ensuing albums were adventurous if uneven forays into rock-funk experimentation, but Prince got all the credit -- or blame. No number-crunching label executive ever has dictated the song sequence on a Prince album. And now that he's formed his own company, NPG Records, he has no need for labels, anyway.

Prince is now lord of his own recording kingdom, taking control of his music at the retail level. As the Beatles tried and failed to do with Apple Records, he's asserted artistic independence by carving out financial independence.

Just as Mel Gibson made a fortune by financing his film The Passion of the Christ, Prince has become his own investor, covering all production costs. By assuming the risk, he reaps more reward. Prince pays minimal fees to Sony for manufacturing and distributing his albums.

"They (Sony) respect my career, and they understand that it's important that we own the work, so there isn't an issue about that," Prince told CNN in a rare interview.

He's even circumvented Sony by offering a copy of Musicology with each ticket to his concert tour, factoring the CD's value into the ticket price. Fans receive their CDs as they exit the arena.

Prince likes to call this "one-stop shopping." He's even arranged for the record industry to recognize such ticket-linked sales along with conventional retail transactions, thus boosting his chart ranking. The tour has sold out in many cities. Houston's Friday show is a virtual sellout, and a packed house is expected Saturday.

Joined by his band, the New Power Generation, Prince launched his tour with unusual flair. The opening show -- March 29 in Los Angeles -- was broadcast to movie theaters with high-definition projectors. That included Houston's Edwards Marq*E, which showed the concert to two packed houses. For a $15 ticket, patrons also got a copy of the new CD.

Such bold marketing moves were perhaps inevitable after the rancor between Prince and Warner. Saying that he was being exploited, he changed his name to an unpronounceable symbol in 1993 and penciled the word "slave" on his face.

While unreleased tracks were cycled through the music machine to fulfill contractual obligations, Prince retreated from the pop-cultural summit. Waiting for his contract to expire at the end of 1999, he tinkered and dabbled. But he never stopped stoking his artistic fires -- which perhaps explains how he burst back on the scene this year, as if he'd never left.

As songsmith and as performer, Prince is so respected by his peers that, even alongside greats such as George Harrison, Jackson Browne, Bob Seger and ZZ Top, he was the only one inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame this year in his first year of eligibility (which comes 25 years after a debut recording). He also was virtual headliner for the induction show at New York's Waldorf Astoria Hotel. After drawing lavish praise in a retrospective segment, Prince performed the evening's first -- and longest -- set.

Just as he showed 20 years ago on the 10 million-selling album Purple Rain and accompanying semi-autobiographical film, he was a guitar maestro. Prince played stinging, frenzied riffs while strutting and spinning across the stage. He also was an energetic vocalist, singing with falsetto wails and soulful bombast.

While exploring musical possibilities, Prince has written and recorded hundreds of songs -- most of which he's never released. But in middle age, he also seems to be gaining awareness of his legacy, embracing the past while pointing to the future.

"Musically, I think I've evolved by the simple fact of working on my spirit as a human being," Prince told CNN. "I've been studying the Bible as of late, and it's begun to play a major role in my life. So it's going to affect everything, especially the music, because music is so dear to me. That said, I don't know if I'm getting to be a better guitar player or a better singer or anything like that, but I feel more confident in my gifts."

This year, along with new material more mainstream than the esoterica he'd toyed with for years, Prince has been playing neglected vintage songs. Besides some of Musicology's 12 tracks, audiences are hearing Little Red Corvette and the title tune for Purple Rain. Prince resists the now-dated 1999 -- a party anthem he wrote in 1983 -- and sexually aggressive songs, but anything else seems fair game.

Perhaps he realized that his comeback couldn't happen without nods to the songs that made him a star. Yet for a musical genius, Prince seems to keep his ego in check. Though his new album earned raves, he described it in an interview with the New York Times as just another day at the office.

"I make all kinds of records," Prince said. "For this album, I didn't feel like making some grand statement. It ain't like me trying to pull the trigger back and annihilate something. I'm just chillin.' "
 

Serena

Administrator
I enjoyed this article on Prince, littledragon. He really has changed his life around, hasn't he? I admire the changes he's made in his life. And I hadn't realized he was the only performer inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame who made it in his first year of eligibility. Though I'm not a huge fan of his music, it's only because it's not really my style. He does keep impressing me as a performer, though, and I do respect his obvious talent.

Thanks for the article! :)
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
Serena said:
I enjoyed this article on Prince, littledragon. He really has changed his life around, hasn't he? I admire the changes he's made in his life. And I hadn't realized he was the only performer inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame who made it in his first year of eligibility. Though I'm not a huge fan of his music, it's only because it's not really my style. He does keep impressing me as a performer, though, and I do respect his obvious talent.

Thanks for the article! :)


My pleasure. I am glad at least you have an open mind to read this. ;)
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
yudansha said:
Prince assails record companies during rare appearance on Canadian TV

TORONTO (CP) - Rock superstar Prince used a rare appearance on Canadian television Wednesday to attack record companies for what he calls their "restrictive" control of the music industry.

With computer technology allowing people to record and distribute their own music, the days of record companies making money off artists are numbered, he said during a 20-minute interview at a MuchMoreMusic taping. "Kids today, I mean, they're so talented and sophisticated," Prince said. "They can create their own albums on laptops. They can deliver it through the Internet. They can even be their own distribution service."

"I mean, what do we really need record companies for?" asked the performer, who lives in Toronto part-time with his wife, Toronto-born Manuela Testolini.

The Grammy winner got the audience of about 80 going before the interview with a three-song performance with his band. He even invited the foot-stomping crowd to dance alongside him on stage.

About 20 fans took him up on the offer as Prince gyrated and sang in front of several cameras.

Hours later, he was to perform his second concert in as many nights at the Air Canada Centre.

Even by MuchMusic standards, this was not a typical day. A quick scan of the audience hovering around the stage revealed many of them to be MuchMusic employees.

Veteran VJ Bill Welychka, the host of the show, said there "really is a sense of royalty" in the air with Prince in the building.

"What can I say?" Welychka said. "Everyone's really excited to see him because he's no less than a legend."

MuchMoreMusic's Intimate and Interactive with Prince airs Sunday at 9 p.m. EDT.

CHRIS WILSON-SMITH; © The Canadian Press, 2004


Thanks for those great articles Yudansha!
You know Prince bought his wife Mani a manchun in Toroanto.
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
Date: August 2, 2004
Source: http://www.mlive.com/entertainment/...58113143441.xml
________________________________________________________________

Priceless Prince: Whatever the ticket set you back, this Princely performance was worth it.

Monday, August 02, 2004
By Tricia Woolfenden
The Grand Rapids Press


When it comes 2 a Prince concert -- U can never have 2 much of a good thing.

All apologies 4 the numerals and letters, but after spending more than two hours witnessing the all-encompassing spectacle that is Prince, it's hard not 2 surrender 2 the Purple 1's mode of speech. Let's face it; when the man takes the stage -- he fully commands U in every possible way.

OK. Enough of that.

It's been three years since The Artist Formerly Known as The Artist Formerly Known as Prince hit Grand Rapids, and it seems like the 46-year-old performer hasn't aged a day. Strutting catlike and limber around the stage in a way that many twentysomethings only wish they could, Prince effortlessly gave off a sex appeal inhibited by neither age nor gender.

Opening his show in Van Andel Arena on Sunday night with "Musicology," the title track from his current album, Prince quickly established the mood of the night: Let's get crazy. Leaning his diminutive (5-foot-2) figure toward the audience, Prince slyly asked the crowd of nearly 10,000, "Grand Rapids -- are you ready for me? Are you sure?"

The lively crowd appeared to be fully prepared and roared an enthusiastic response to that effect. And so the "entertainer extraordinaire" launched into perennial crowd favorite "Let's Go Crazy" as confetti and purple streamers dropped from the ceiling into the screaming audience. The energetic opening left no doubt Prince was there to please the crowd, and, as he's said of this tour, "play the hits for the last time."

Watching a Prince show is akin to taking in a big dance party topped off with excellent musicianship and outlandish, indescribable stage antics. To describe Prince's outrageously fun live show, it's best broken down in-2 bits:


Hits played in medley form -- Early in the show, "When Doves Cry," "1999" and a riff from "Kiss" were run into one long, slightly bizarre conglomeration. A slight disappointment, considering each song is deserving of a full treatment.

Hits noticeably absent -- The pop-radio classic "Raspberry Beret," plus "I Would Die 4 U," "Diamonds and Pearls" and "Get Off." Pretty much everything from the "Dirty Mind" record was a no-go, as Prince is now a Jehovah's Witness, and gratuitous references to sex would be highly frowned upon.

Hits played acoustically -- After a brief costume break, Prince -- who is an excellent electric guitar player -- took to the stage alone to demonstrate his acoustic skills. The slowed-down, mellow versions of party hits "Little Red Corvette" and "Cream" were perfectly presented. In fact, they were almost better than the originals. Almost.

Incalculable factors in an amazing show:


The number of square feet of purple fabric and/or accessories worn by audience members. Tickets requested that people wear "something purple," and in astonishing numbers, they did.

The number of completely awesome guitar solos performed by Prince. He never ceased to amaze.

The level of musical proficiency possessed by Prince and the nearly dozen members of his talented backing band.

Beginning to end, Prince and his New Power Generation band brought to the show a furious level of energy and passion. Rarely have I seen a performer who seemed so intent on bringing the audience pleasure and who played with such unadulterated joy.

Playing a seamless blend of rock, jazz and funk, Prince &Co. performed each tune as though it were a party in and of itself. The musician has been performing many of these tunes for well over a decade, but he never appeared bored with what he was doing. Instead, he found ways to keep the songs fresh, taking opportunities with his bandmates to venture into many a musical side trip.

Arena manager Rich MacKeigan said the venue was happy to get a show of such "high caliber." The Prince concert ranks as one of Van Andel's best-selling events of the summer. Pretty impressive considering the Artist already had played four concerts in Detroit this summer and announced the Van Andel date fairly late in the season.

First-timers Loved it:

Audience members Patty Baker and Diane Christensen said Sunday's show was the first time they had seen Prince, and the event was almost everything they had hoped for.

"He was awesome; it was a great show. 'Little Red Corvette' was great. I was disappointed he didn't play '1999' (all the way through), but 'Purple Rain' was great,'" said Baker, 38, of Grand Rapids.

The friends came attired in purple wigs and plastic crowns that Baker's 10-year-old daughter had found for them to wear to the concert. The women said the event was something fun to do as a girlfriends' night out -- as opposed to going with their husbands.

"We've been fans for a while. We grew up listening to Prince," said Christensen, 38, of Muskegon.

"It was due time to see him."
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
Date: August 2, 2004
Source: http://www.mlive.com/entertainment/...58097143440.xml
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prince showbox

Monday, August 02, 2004
Highlights from the show:

Stage time: Just over two hours, with one two-song encore. The Purple One took the stage at 8:20 p.m. and wrapped things up at 10:25.

Minute-to-dollar ratio: It was 39 cents per minute for the $47.50 seats and 57 cents for the $69.50 seats.

Song highlights: "7" and "Purple Rain"

Best song (and why): "7"; The song is fabulous in its own right, but it was also one of his only hits that was played to completion.

Best outfit: The Artist... and his band were attired in many stylish outfits throughout the night, but Prince's head-to-toe blood red suit -- complete with arm tassels -- was the most dashing.

Most outlandish costume: The unexplained cap-and-gown get-ups worn by two members of the backing band.

Merchandise: Tambourine adorned with the symbol used by Prince when he was the Artist Formerly Known As Prince -- $65; tank-tops -- $40; T-shirts -- $20-35; teddy bear wearing a mini Prince T-shirt -- $25

Signature Prince dance moves that were missing: The splits and that twirly thing he usually does

Best onstage aerobics: The amazing percussionist John Blackwell Jr. and his juggling act with the drumsticks -- while playing a solo.

Coolest accessory: A tossup between Prince's diamond encrusted ear monitors and his microphone which was shaped like a handgun.

After party: The Intersection, 133 Grandville Ave. SW, hosted an after-concert party complete with Purple Rain drink specials and a DJ spinning tunes from the '80s, including plenty by the King of Funk himself.
 
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