Prince Articles

Littledragon

Above The Law
Date: July 28, 2004
Source: http://www.canada.com/news/national...d7-89b9e771227a
________________________________________________________________

Prince Assails Record Companies During Rare Appearance on Canadian TV

Chris Wilson-Smith
Canadian Press



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."
 

yudansha

TheGreatOne
You're very welcome, LittleD! :=)

"You know Prince bought his wife Mani a manchun in Toroanto."
I don't follow Prince ('cause I don't care :D) ... just when I stumbled on those Prince articles, I thought you'd like to give them a read (and I don't know where 'Toroanto' is :D)
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
yudansha said:
"You know Prince bought his wife Mani a manchun in Toroanto."
I don't follow Prince ('cause I don't care :D) ... just when I stumbled on those Prince articles, I thought you'd like to give them a read (and I don't know where 'Toroanto' is :D)


Ok ok, thanks for the articles again..
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
Prince

He is perhaps one of music's most enigmatic performers: aloof and distant according to some sources, engaging and upbeat with others. Perhaps the variance is just part of a chameleon-like personality -- and versatile talent -- that has weathered the fickleness of the music-buying public for more than two decades. We speak him about his new release, Musicology, and about living in Canada.

Video: http://www.ctv.ca/generic/generated.../AMdefault.html
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
NEW YORK (AP) -- In an unprecedented series of concerts in nine swing states, more than 20 musical acts -- including Bruce Springsteen, Pearl Jam, John Mellencamp and the Dixie Chicks -- will perform fund-raising concerts one month before the November 2 election in an effort to unseat President Bush.

The shows, which will begin October 1 in Pennsylvania, will take an unusual approach: as many as six concerts on a single day in cities across the states expected to decide the November presidential race. Other stops on the tour are North Carolina, Ohio, Michigan, Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri, Wisconsin and the key state in 2000, Florida.

"We're trying to put forward a group of progressive ideals and change the administration in the White House," Springsteen told The Associated Press in the most overtly political statements of his 30-year career. "That's the success or failure, very clear cut and very simple."

The artists of different generations and genres will tour under the name "Vote For Change," with shows October 1-8. But the money generated will go to America Coming Together, which promises on its Web site to "derail the right-wing Republican agenda by defeating George W. Bush."

The anticipated millions of dollars will be spent in the swing states before the presidential election, said ACT president Ellen Malcolm.

The shows will be presented by MoveOn Pac, the electoral arm of the liberal interest group MoveOn.org, with an official announcement expected Wednesday.

There was no immediate word on prices for tickets, which were going on sale for all shows August 21. The shows will pair artists, such as Springsteen and REM or the Dixie Chicks and James Taylor. There will be 34 shows in 28 cities.

Mellencamp, who lives in Bloomington, Indiana, is a co-founder of the Farm Aid concerts and he also will be performing in Farm Aid 2004 on September 18 in Auburn, Washington.

'A change is in order'
Natalie Maines, of the Dixie Chicks, who memorably told a London audience last year that she was ashamed to share her home state of Texas with Bush, echoed a Springsteen comment that this was the most important election of their lives.

"A change is in order," Maines said. "There's never been a political climate like this, which is so the polar opposite of me as a person and what I believe in."

The idea was hatched by several of the acts' managers, and quickly expanded. "Once we started talking to each other, ideas started percolating and other artists started reaching out to us," said Jon Landau, Springsteen's manager.

Other artists participating in the shows include hip-hoppers Jurassic 5, Bonnie Raitt, Jackson Browne, Babyface, Bright Eyes and the Dave Matthews Band. Most have a history of social activism, from Browne's anti-nuclear concerts to Mellencamp's Farm Aid shows. Pearl Jam front man Vedder was a Ralph Nader backer in 2000.

"At some point, you can't sit still," said Vedder, a harsh critic of the Iraq war. "You can't spend your life, when people are getting killed, without asking serious questions about why."

Springsteen said he didn't fear any backlash over going public with his personal politics.

"It's a pretty clear-cut decision in November," said Springsteen, whose songs have provided a backdrop for some Kerry events. "We're chipping in our two cents. That's all we're trying to do."
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
Date: August 8, 2004
Source: http://www.baltimoresun.com/feature...1,7979484.story
________________________________________________________________

The Artist Again Known as a Genius
Nastiness behind him, the mellow Prince shows he still can rock - and enjoy it

By Rashod D. Ollison
Sun Pop Music Critic
Originally published August 8, 2004

It is all about the funk, his stellar musicianship that inspires so many and, at times, leaves us spellbound. Prince's talent knows no limits. When he appeared on the pop scene in the late '70s, he was (and still is) like no other. And because he is such a genius, because he tirelessly challenges our notion of black or pop music, we have allowed him to be as eccentric and as nasty as he wants to be.

Back in the day, before Purple Rain, the dude performed in black bikini underwear, heels and leg warmers. His sexually charged lyrics ("Darling Nikki," "Let's Pretend We're Married," "Head") left little to ponder. And ambiguous gay connotations peppered his albums and concerts. Yet, hood rats and starry-eyed girls fawned over Prince: a short, lean man whose makeup and heavily styled hair rivaled that of any Fashion Fair model in Ebony magazine.

These days, the Purple One, who plays the MCI Center on two sold-out nights Thursday and Friday, has changed. In a way. At 46, he's still pretty, the hair and makeup as flawless as ever. He still rocks the three- to four-inch heels, dancing across the stage in them. But like Madonna, that other pop limit pusher, Prince has mellowed a bit and found some inner peace by way of the Jehovah's Witnesses. Unlike the former Material Girl, who practices Kabbalism, the Minnesota-based singer-songwriter-musician-and-all-round-funky-fella hasn't exploited his new spiritual calmness in recent concerts or in interviews. After spending the bulk of his 25-year career nearly a recluse, Prince is going to let us get only so close.


Back to the music

What is so refreshing about the platinum-selling Musicology, his latest and tightest album in years, is that the Artist Formerly Known As Prince and Is Prince Again remembered us: the discerning music lovers who have excused his puzzling personal style and erratic behavior over the years for his innovative, penetrating grooves. After nearly a decade of convoluted, self-indulgent albums that only Prince fanatics cared about, the artist has given us a CD that, as they say in the black Baptist church, "makes it plain." The feel is free and spirited throughout. The title track and first single, a slick, James Brown-inspired workout, is for the "true funk soldiers," Prince proclaims. It rides a spare, rubbery bass line and the singer, for the first time in a while, sounds as if he's having some fun.

Acclaimed everywhere it stops, his tour is one big party fueled by Prince and his energetic nine-piece band. He revisits his greatest hits - "Little Red Corvette," "Take Me With You," "Kiss" and others - but he's not touching the songs of his former racier self. He doesn't cuss anymore and won't go near any alcohol. Twenty years ago, a Prince show was definitely not a family affair. Now, mothers, grandmas, kids, teens are welcome to get out of their seat and move to Prince's beat.

"I used to be more involved with every aspect of everything onstage," the recent Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee told Rolling Stone magazine in May. "I'm way more relaxed now. It feels like anything can happen. That's one of the reasons we're doing these shows in the round: The music is a the center of everything."

Although he keeps his private life, well, private, Prince has let some of his spiritual leanings leak out here and there. At the Hall of Fame induction this year, he opened his remarks with "all praise and thanks to the most high Jehovah." I remember seeing Prince on American Bandstand when his first smash, "I Wanna Be Your Lover," was all over radio; during the interview, the ever-lovable Dick Clark could barely get a word out of the guy. Never one to get all moralistic on us before, Prince told Rolling Stone that "[pop] culture is in big trouble. All you see on television are debased images."

Now, this is Prince talking - the same guy who, years ago, wore seatless pants during a live MTV performance. The same guy whose 1981 Controversy album came with a poster of the performer standing in a shower, clad in skimpy leather briefs with a gold chain around his waist. The same guy who wore absolutely nothing on the cover of 1988's Lovesexy. Prince, it seemed, was never afraid to be naked in front of us.


Nudity and music

There was a point to this - though it was certainly overdone and rubbed some the wrong way. Back then, in the early '80s, Prince's nudity reflected the stripped approach to his music. The artist usually played all the instruments on his records. And unlike the full, orchestrated funk and disco that preceded his superstar ascent, Prince's music ushered in a bare, electro-funk style in which the beats were nervy, rigid and mechanical. Punk and new-wave accents also blazed through the tunes on Dirty Mind (1980) and 1999 (1983).

By 1984's Purple Rain - the megaselling soundtrack and the blockbuster movie - Prince was the only other person besides Michael Jackson who mattered in pop: His illuminating fusion of Hendrix-style rock, infectious pop lyricism and driving rhythms lifted his sound to another stratosphere. Sign o' the Times, his masterpiece from 1987, cemented his peerless musical status.

In the '90s, however, Prince focused much of his energy on fighting for his artistic freedom at Warner Bros. Records. During the nasty feud, he was often seen in public with the word "slave" across his cheek. He temporarily changed his name to an unpronounceable symbol. As a result of his artistic and business frustrations, Prince's music suffered. He rehashed some ideas and overcooked others. He put out several albums on his own - Emancipation, Rave Un2 the Joy Fantastic and The Rainbow Children among them - but none captured the fervor and mastery of his past work. Finally, with Musicology and its tour, Prince is back to making simply genius music.

He hasn't been this accessible in years. His performance on the Grammys last February - which, in a way, set this whole "comeback" in motion - was freewheeling, fun, brilliant. No, Musicology isn't exactly up there with Sign o' the Times or Purple Rain. But at this point, Prince has nothing to prove musically. He's a seemingly happy man with a gorgeous, 27-year-old wife, Manuela. And apparently, the once lust-obsessed artist has found a solid spiritual foundation. He smiles in press shots, accepts flowers from adoring fans and sings melodic love songs about monogamy.

Prince may not be nasty anymore, but the funk underneath his new, less provocative lyrics certainly is. And the man still looks so pretty laying it down.
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
Date: August 10, 2004
Source: http://www.nola.com/living/t-p/inde...28127180720.xml
________________________________________________________________

Send out the clowns

Prince doesn't like the funny painted men with rubber noses and big feet, so word is he wouldn't play on the Superdome stage last month unless Ronald McDonald hit the road first. What Prince wants, Prince gets.

Tuesday, August 10, 2004
Chris Rose

Who could have known that the presence of a clown at the Essence Festival last month would nearly cost the event its headline act?

Details are just trickling in at this late date -- a full month after the festival -- but the story is so bizarre that it simply must be told, even if the expiration date has passed.

Here's what happened: It was Friday, opening night, and the hottest touring act in the country, Prince, was the headliner.

The Superdome was sold out, the energy was palpable. There were a couple of warm-up acts on the Main Stage, broken up by sponsor greetings -- representatives from Coke, Chevrolet, Bud, etc. -- keeping the chatter up and the crowd alive.

Shortly before Prince's show, he apparently saw Ronald McDonald -- a sponsor mascot, a company guy, a man of the people -- working the crowd. Prince immediately sent word to festival bigwigs: The clown goes or I don't play.

And Prince meant "goes," as in: leaves the building.

Now apparently this wasn't a personal knock against the McDonald's brand in particular, but against clowns in general. I don't mean to get all pop-psych on you, but it appears that Prince suffers from coulrophobia -- the fear of clowns.

Either that, or he just hates them. Or maybe something happened at a birthday party when he was a kid and well . . . whatever.

"He indicated that the clown needed to not be in the building," said a highly placed source on the scene. "He (Ronald) was escorted to the exit," said another source working the backstage area. "It was that -- or no show."

Once Prince was reassured that the clown had been safely exiled to Poydras Street, or wherever, without incident, the show went on and the Great One put on a killer performance by all accounts. (But don't ask Ronald; he missed it.)

Getting someone to go on record confirming this sequence of events was tricky business -- the festival, the Superdome, the production companies and even McDonald's have all officially been mum. Maybe because of the high dollar value of the event or maybe because Essence is a bit of a sacred cow in this town and no one wants to ruffle their -- or Prince's -- feathers.

McDonald's -- which suffered the ignominious dismissal of its mascot -- could have gone ballistic about this but even its people played it close to the vest. When I asked McDonald's local reps if I could get a comment from Ronald McDonald himself (there's only one working the New Orleans area), I was told: "Ronald probably shouldn't talk about that."

I left several detailed messages for Prince's business manager in New York but -- hard to imagine -- his office did not return the calls.

About Prince: No question he is a superior musical talent; the word genius -- way overused in the pop music world -- might even apply. But he's also just about the strangest guy in the business, with the obvious exception of Michael Jackson.

I could list 25 notable quirks and anecdotes about the guy, but it should suffice -- for the uninitiated -- to note that for a period in the '90s, he changed his name to Victor, and then to an unpronounceable hieroglyphic symbol that may or may not have had some kind of alchemical meaning.

And when I say unpronounceable, I don't mean it was hard to say. I mean that there was no word for it. In English, at least.

He said the symbol had been following him around for years so that's what he decided to call himself.

Anyway, you get the picture.

But in his defense, it should be noted that Prince is not the only major music star said to be suffering from coulrophobia. P. Diddy (who, like Prince, has changed his name on several occasions -- what does this tell you?) reportedly also is afflicted with this condition. However, he has denied the rumor that his performance contracts include a "no-clown" clause.

Alas, even the great Johnny Depp reportedly won't work with clowns, which is weird considering the way everyone was dressed on the set of "Pirates of the Caribbean," but who am I to judge?

Celebrity phobias abound: Billy Bob Thornton can't work with antique furniture in the room and actress Christina Ricci has a fear that sharks will enter swimming pools through the filtration systems and this one is so out there, it doesn't have a fancy name like coulrophobia.

Anyway, I stray. The happy ending to this story is that, for the following two nights of the Essence Festival, Ronald McDonald was allowed back into the Superdome to work the crowd.

Mary J. Blige, Frankie Beverly, the O'Jays, Gladys Knight and LL Cool J -- among others -- were able to perform in the presence of a clown without incident.

(I don't like clowns either. So: Bassie, please stay at home when Prince plays in The Netherlands.- Marika)
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
Still in the top 10 after all these weeks!

Date: 08/11/04
Source: www.billboard.com
________________________________________________________________

As Prince continues touring, his latest album, "Musicology," climbs back into the top tier. Sales of the NPG/Columbia set rose 21% to 73,000 copies. The artist's strategy of including a copy of the album with each concert ticket continues to pay off, helping "Musicology" jump 15-7.
 

yudansha

TheGreatOne
From the August issue of Maclean's...

Prince was a hit here and has made a huge impact on Toronto ... so they've printed an article on him in the recent issue of Macleans. I thought you might like this (you might want to enlarge the article 200% to see how it was meant to be seen).
 

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Littledragon

Above The Law
yudansha said:
Prince was a hit here and has made a huge impact on Toronto ... so they've printed an article on him in the recent issue of Macleans. I thought you might like this (you might want to enlarge the article 200% to see how it was meant to be seen).


Thanks Yudansha!!
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
Date: August 11, 2004
Source: http://www.santafenewmexican.com/artsfeatures/2912.html
________________________________________________________________

Prince's 'Musicology' : relaxed genius

By Rashod D. Ollison | Associated Press
August 11, 2004

It is all about the funk, his stellar musicianship that inspires so many and, at times, leaves us spellbound. Prince's talent knows no limits. When he appeared on the pop scene in the late '70s, he was (and still is) like no other. And because he is such a genius, because he tirelessly challenges our notion of black or pop music, we have allowed him to be as eccentric and as nasty as he wants to be.

Back in the day, before "Purple Rain," the dude performed in black bikini underwear, heels and leg warmers. His sexually charged lyrics ("Darling Nikki," "Let's Pretend We're Married," "Head") left little to ponder. And ambiguous gay connotations peppered his albums and concerts. Yet, hood rats and starry-eyed girls fawned over Prince: a short, lean man whose makeup and heavily styled hair rivaled that of any Fashion Fair model in Ebony magazine.

These days, the Purple One has changed. In a way. At 46, he's still pretty, the hair and makeup as flawless as ever. He still rocks the three- to four-inch heels, dancing across the stage in them. But like Madonna, that other pop limit pusher, Prince has mellowed a bit and found some inner peace by way of the Jehovah's Witnesses. Unlike the former Material Girl, who practices Kabbalism, the Minnesota-based singer-songwriter-musician-and-all-round-funky-fella hasn't exploited his new spiritual calmness in recent concerts or in interviews. After spending the bulk of his 25-year career nearly a recluse, Prince is going to allow us only so close.

What is so refreshing about the platinum-selling "Musicology," his latest and tightest album in years, is that the Artist Formerly Known As Prince and Is Prince Again remembered us: the discerning music lovers who have excused his puzzling personal style and erratic behavior over the years for his innovative, penetrating grooves. After nearly a decade of convoluted, self-indulgent albums that only Prince fanatics cared about, the artist has given us a CD that, as they say in the black Baptist church, "makes it plain." The feel is free and spirited throughout. The title track and first single, a slick, James Brown-inspired workout, is for the "true funk soldiers," Prince proclaims. It rides a spare, rubbery bass line and the singer, for the first time in a while, sounds as if he's having some fun.

Acclaimed everywhere it stops, his tour is one big party fueled by Prince and his energetic nine-piece band. He revisits his greatest hits -- "Little Red Corvette," "Take Me With You," "Kiss" and others -- but he's not touching the songs of his former racier self. He doesn't cuss anymore and won't go near any alcohol. Twenty years ago, a Prince show was definitely not a family affair. Now, mothers, grandmas, kids, teens are welcome to get out of their seat and move to Prince's beat.

"I used to be more involved with every aspect of everything onstage," the recent Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee told Rolling Stone magazine in May. "I'm way more relaxed now. It feels like anything can happen. That's one of the reasons we're doing these shows in the round: The music is the center of everything."

Although he guards his private life, Prince has let some of his spiritual leanings leak out here and there. At the Hall of Fame induction this year, he opened his remarks with "all praise and thanks to the most high Jehovah." I remember seeing Prince on American Bandstand when his first smash, "I Wanna Be Your Lover," was all over radio; during the interview, the ever-lovable Dick Clark could barely get a word out of the guy. Never one to get all moralistic on us before, Prince told Rolling Stone that "(pop) culture is in big trouble. All you see on television are debased images."

Now, this is Prince talking -- the same guy who, years ago, wore seatless pants during a live MTV performance. The same guy whose 1981 "Controversy" album came with a poster of the performer standing in a shower, clad in skimpy leather briefs with a gold chain around his waist. The same guy who wore absolutely nothing on the cover of 1988's "Lovesexy." Prince, it seemed, was never afraid to be naked in front of us.

There was a point to this -- though it was certainly overdone and rubbed some the wrong way. Back then, in the early '80s, Prince's nudity reflected the stripped approach to his music. The artist usually played all the instruments on his records. And unlike the full, orchestrated funk and disco that preceded his superstar ascent, Prince's music ushered in a bare, electro-funk style in which the beats were nervy, rigid and mechanical. Punk and new-wave accents also blazed through the tunes on "Dirty Mind" (1980) and "1999" (1983).

By 1984's "Purple Rain" -- the megaselling soundtrack and the blockbuster movie -- Prince was the only other person besides Michael Jackson who mattered in pop: His illuminating fusion of Hendrix-style rock, infectious pop lyricism and driving rhythms lifted his sound to another stratosphere. "Sign o' the Times," his masterpiece from 1987, cemented his peerless musical status.

In the '90s, however, Prince focused much of his energy on fighting for his artistic freedom at Warner Bros. Records. During the nasty feud, he was often seen in public with the word "slave" across his cheek. He temporarily changed his name to an unpronounceable symbol. As a result of his artistic and business frustrations, Prince's music suffered. He rehashed some ideas and overcooked others. He put out several albums on his own -- "Emancipation," "Rave Un2 the Joy Fantastic" and "The Rainbow Children" among them -- but none captured the fervor and mastery of his past work. Finally, with "Musicology" and its tour, Prince is back to making simply genius music.
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
Date: 12.08.04
Source: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dy...-2004Aug11.html
________________________________________________________________

Purple Reign - Prince Is Back in The Building, and Ready To Rattle the Rafters

By David Segal
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, August 12, 2004; Page C01


After a self-imposed exile from the concert stage and recording studio, Prince is back with "Musicology." The tour begins its local run tonight at MCI Center. (Afshin Shahidi -- Copyright Npg Music)

DETROIT

"Turn this up for everybody, please."

Pacing onstage in the middle of Joe Louis Arena, Prince is huddling with an engineer. You think: Is that Prince? The sex-machine mystic of American pop and record-label scourge is a wisp of a man, dressed for the moment in a dark suit, eyeglasses and black turtleneck, like a professor at some university where soul is in the syllabus. A bass player, drummer and keyboardist wait nearby, ready. On cue, the band erupts and Prince, a lime-green Stratocaster around his neck, wades into a humid nine-minute blues.

"If you've got the time, baby," he moans, over Hendrix-inspired riffing, "I've got the ride."

Oh yes. That is Prince, at a sound check before a concert a few weeks ago, a show that he brings, at long last, to Washington for a three-night stand at MCI Center, starting tonight. During this particular song he'll steer his guitar through 20 different moods -- it's blustery, then worried, then weeping, then joyful for a few bars. He's so fluid and so preternaturally one with the instrument that you watch and must fight the urge to laugh. Or shake your head. Or cry. The performance, like so much of Prince's best work, falls somewhere between a stupid human trick and a miracle.

After a few songs, Prince jumps off the stage and takes a seat in the stands, which will be packed in a few hours but are empty for the moment. He listens to the band, offering directions and one-liners over a wireless microphone. Once he likes what he hears, he strolls over and introduces himself.

"Are you my doctor?" he quips, with a handshake and a wry smile. A golf cart has been backed into the arena and Prince is heading toward it.

"We've got a ways to go, so we're going to drive," he says as he settles in behind the wheel.

"Hang on," he says, over his shoulder. "I don't have insurance."

Prince in the driver's seat -- it couldn't be scripted any better. Known for the fastidious grip he keeps on every detail of his professional life, Prince has longed for this perch throughout his polychromatic career and, at the age of 46, he is finally and firmly there.

Behind him is the rancorous contractual fight with Warner Bros., his former label, during which he changed his name to a squiggle that couldn't be pronounced and appeared in public with the word "slave" inked on his cheek. Prince wanted out of a deal, reportedly worth $100 million, that he signed in the late 1980s, one that gave Warner rights to the masters of his recordings. He reassumed his given name only after his publishing contract with the company had expired.

Behind him, too, is all the personal trauma that so devastatingly complemented the professional turmoil. There was a son who died after just a week of life, from a rare bone disease, in 1996; a subsequent divorce from his first wife, a former backup dancer named Mayte Garcia; the passing of both of his parents. Prince never wanted to discuss any of it. That, plus his cage-match tactics with Warner Bros., took a public relations toll through most of the '90s, turning this deeply private man into what looked a lot like a humorless eccentric.

It didn't help that his output in recent years, available through his Web site, had been uneven, to put it generously, and didn't sell anywhere close to his "1999" and "Purple Rain" peak. As bad, the information vacuum left by his silence was filled by the Jay Lenos of the world, who told jokes like this one, on the "Tonight Show," in 2000:

"The Artist Formerly Known as Prince announced Tuesday that he will be, now and forever, known again as Prince. He should change his name one last time to the Artist Who Formerly Sold Albums."

A knee-slapper. But who's laughing now? After years in a kind of self-imposed exile, Prince is behaving, and recording, like a rock star again. He's filling arenas on a marathon and hugely successful tour, the wind of a certifiable hit album, "Musicology," at his back. He even eased off his phobia about major labels enough to let Sony distribute the album, though the company is merely getting a cut for shipping the disc into stores and will not own the copyrights on the masters.

He's also talking to journalists again, something he's rarely done in recent years. Still, there are plenty of ground rules. Like no tape recorders -- Prince has said he doesn't like the sound of his voice, a claim that is crazy on so many levels, it's hard to know where to start. Also, no questions about his private life.

Even with those caveats, Prince seems mellowed and readier than ever to retrieve that part of his audience that believed he'd gone missing or a little mad. Did he miss fame on the scale of his MTV days in the '80s?

His answer: Not at all.

"Once you've done anything, to do it again ain't no big deal, you feel me?" Prince says, easing back into a dark sofa in his dressing room. "I was on the cover of Rolling Stone with Vanity, I was on the cover of Rolling Stone when I didn't even do an interview, when I wouldn't talk to them. Once you've done something like that it's like, okay, what's the next thing?"

Sipping a bottle of water, Prince looks serene, uncreased and about a decade younger than he is. A guitar and keyboard are in one corner of the room, which has been draped with purple silks and tie-dyes, lighted by candles and lined with couches.

"They do this everywhere we go," he says, sweeping a hand around the place. "Makes it feel like home."

Prince is soft-spoken, intense and a tad pious, and he commandeers the course of this hour-long chat as if it's another golf cart. He also sounds, now and then, a bit paranoid, offering half-serious and dark theories on topics like water fluoridation, childhood vaccines and the Grammys, which he suspects are essentially rigged by record execs.

But here's the surprising part: He's also funny. Even the conspiracy stuff is funny, intentionally so. Humor actually seems like much of what defines the man, and when he talks about his major-label feud, he gets arch instead of angry.

"I wasn't getting anywhere by telling Warner Brothers that they were abusing me," he says. "But the minute I said, 'I got this, okay, that's cool, that's brilliant. I got to give it to you -- you can't sing, you can't dance, you can't write a song, but you own the product afterward and make the lion's share of the money? You're a genius!' "

It's a note he'll go back to again and again: comedy as a survival mechanism, comedy as an answer to what he considers the greedy absurdity of the fame business as it operates today. Like the recent visit from HBO executives who wanted to tape the "Musicology" concert for the channel. The catch, he says, was an agreement that he wouldn't appear on another TV special for a year.

"I said, 'Excuse me? Oh no. End of discussion. You want to talk about something else? I know you flew a long way, we might as well talk philosophy or something.' They said, 'Well, that's just our policy.' I said, 'Well, you keep your policy. You want some pizza? Cause you ain't going to get no concert.' "

No Sweat

Later this same evening, watching Prince perform, you realize how disappointed the suits at HBO must have been to go home with a slice instead of a show. This is one of the best arena concerts in years.

"I'm going to do some damage to this building this evening," Prince promises the crowd at Joe Louis, and darned if the guy and his blazingly taut band -- which includes the legendary saxophonist Maceo Parker -- don't make that hoary cliche come nearly true. There are times it seems anything that isn't bolted down here is going to fly apart.

Through "Cream," "Controversy," "Let's Go Crazy" and a couple dozen other songs, Prince sings, dances, solos and never so much as perspires. Other artists -- Bruce Springsteen comes to mind -- make their effort and sweat part of the spectacle, part of what binds the audience and artist together. Prince goes the other way. He's rarely still, but to a perplexing degree he never appears to be working. There are lots of ta-da flourishes with his hand that say, basically, "Can you believe I just did that?"

It's such a dazzling and uncanny display that when Prince, in one segment, lays his guitar on the stage and stares at it as he slowly retreats from the instrument, you think, for just a moment, he is going to play that thing with his mind.

"I never take it for granted," Prince says when asked in his dressing room about the joy of playing live. "I'm completely outside of it, I'm sitting, watching my consciousness. I do the work because, you know -- I might get misty-eyed now -- but I do the work because I get to watch. I get to marvel at it, too."

Changes

With the possible exception of Brian Wilson, no one in pop has been called a genius more often than Prince. It started in the early '80s, as it dawned on everyone that this tiny kid from Minneapolis wasn't just writing all the songs on his albums but playing all the instruments, too. And then he started writing hits for everyone else, for acts including the Time, Wendy & Lisa, Apollonia 6. It was strange. All this choppy, racy, synthed-up fusion of rock, soul and R&B pouring out of Minnesota, of all places. And one guy is the Svengali of it all.

Prince seemed to set to music all manner of ambiguities -- black or white, straight or gay, slightly sacred or totally profane? The guy was hard to pinpoint, which is exactly how he wanted it. Tipper Gore began her crusade to label albums with ratings stickers after overhearing "Darling Nikki," a cut from "Purple Rain."

Prince doesn't play "Nikki" any more. Nor for that matter does he curse, and his ladies'-man days are behind him. He's married again and he's a Jehovah's Witness now. But ask why his act is PG-13 instead of R and he'll talk to you about smart marketing.

"Times were different back then," Prince explains. "I wouldn't stand out today if I was brand-new and came like that. But see, back then nobody else was doing that, and I knew that would get me over. I didn't dress like anybody, I didn't look like anybody, I didn't sound like anybody. We still try to do that. Why do what everybody else is doing?

"Bowie and Madonna, even if it wasn't good, we still talk about it because it was something new. That's a beautiful word."

The impulse to juke when everyone is jiving comes from his father, he says, a plastics molder for Honeywell Electronics who played jazz in a band called the Prince Rogers Trio, which performed at local parties. John L. Nelson gave his son his stage and left the piano behind after he divorced Prince's mother when the boy was 10. "Skipper," as young Prince Rogers Nelson was known then, was shuttled among a host of different families. Along the way, Prince acquired a near-maniacal work ethic; he still gets about three hours of sleep a night. On this tour, as with previous ones, he'll often finish his 2 1/2-hour show and then peel off to a local club and jam till it's nearly dawn. It's one reason, he has said, that he handles all the instruments on so many of his albums; he's the only guy up at 5 a.m., when he's recording.

"The curse part of it is that it physically drains you," Prince says, "when you try to do everything that comes into your head. Like right now, I could write a song. If I go over there," he says, gesturing toward the instruments, "and start noodling around, I'll write a song. Because I hear stuff all the time. I can make something out of nothing. And that's just weird. But I'm used to it now."

John Blackwell, Prince's drummer, isn't used to it yet. He remembers one day in the studio he started fiddling with the drums for an engineer who was trying to mike his kit.

"I started doing this crazy uptempo Latin fusion beat and Prince was like, 'Keep that going.' And they pressed 'record' and he immediately started adding things, like a bass line. The next day I came in and he said, 'Check this out,' and it was a whole song. I mean, it had everything. My mouth just dropped."

The track, "Everywhere," wound up on Prince's "Rainbow Children" album.

"I've always heard stories like that about him," Blackwell adds, "but until you see it for your own eyes, you can't grasp the whole picture."

In Control

It's possible to look at celebrity as a series of deals between performer and fans. The performer gets money, glory and a kind of immortality and, in return, must sign on a bunch of dotted lines. Deals that cut in lawyers, accountants, businessmen, deals that consign a portion of your life to the whole wide world.

Prince is done with those deals -- or he'll sign them only on his very particular terms. He changed his name to a glyph because he couldn't control the brand that "Prince" had become, and he wasn't going to enhance the value of that brand if it was ultimately owned by someone else.

Today, he has more control over his work than any other major artist. He can release music at the same frenetic pace as he creates it. And because he owns the rights to "Musicology" he's giving a copy to everyone who attends his shows, the price having been built into the ticket. It's a move that ensures the disc will hover in the Top 50 for weeks to come.

He calls this "emancipation," and the road map to it, he'll tell you, is right there in the Bible.

"It's in the Scriptures, sir. The system is designed to use you up like a battery and kick you out when they're finished with you. When Jesus was here, the first thing He said was how jacked up everything was. It wasn't like He said, 'Oh, this is great and it can be even greater.' He said, 'This is not the way it was intended, in no way, shape or form.' "

Even if it's in the Good Book, the Prince path to freedom isn't available to unknown artists -- they still need labels to foot the bill for the publicity machine required to get on the radio. But after years of struggling, not to mention plenty of ridicule, Prince has the industry exactly where he wants it, though he's loath to gloat about it. He'd rather exult in the Right Now of all this.

"I don't even know what day it is, really. But man, I get to cue Maceo Parker in? I get to say, 'Maceo, blow your horn'? Are you kidding? I better enjoy this, right? Do me a favor. Just imagine being up onstage, tonight, in front of all these people, and you get to say, 'Maceo, blow your horn.' "

Prince shakes his head with a kind of awe, a man who has carefully counted blessings.
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
Saturday 25th September…

Europe's biggest Prince party is back with a special nite in celebration of the 20th anniversary of the Prince classic Purple Rain. Music from Europe's top Prince music specialist deejay's DJ UNIQUE plus special guest from Belgium DJ Le FREAK. An unmissable nite featuring two dancefloors of pure Prince party jamz plus a chillout area and rare merchandise stall. A great atmosphere and party experience is guaranteed for all at a superb venue in the heart of London.

SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT: There will be a CHARITY RAFFLE on the night to help raise funds for Sheila E's Lil' Angel Bunny Foundation.
Founded by Sheila E. and Lynn Mabry, the charity is dedicated to providing abused and abandoned children an alternative method of recreation and educational treatment and therapy through music and the arts, by creating and funding special services and programs that assists the needs of these children.
The DAWN Experience along with UPTOWN UK will try to raise as much as we can for this charity by donating a selection superb prizes (see below) for a special draw to take place on the night of the party ... Sheila E's charity has also kindly donated a t-shirt and a programme (signed by Sheila E. and Lynn Mabry).

1st PRIZE: Purple Rain Special Ed. DVD (NTSC Region 1), Purple Rain vinyl LP (mint, unopened, unplayed), Uptown's "The Vault", LABF "Family Jamm" T-Shirt and (signed) Programme plus a bottle of champagne!!!

2nd PRIZE: Parade DVD (NTSC Region 1), Musicology Ltd. Ed. Double Vinyl LP, Musicology tour t-shirt, 'Musicology' CD single plus a bottle of wine.

3rd PRIZE: Graffiti Bridge DVD (NTSC Region 1), 'Cinnamon Girl' CD single plus a bottle of wine.

Raffle tickets are only £1 each or 6 tix for £5 or 15 tix for £10 and can be purchased now or on the night of the party.

Details of how to purchase advance tickets for the party and/or the charity raffle can be found on our website party page… http://www.thedawnexperience.co.uk/princeparty2004.htm

PLEASE NOTE: If you are buying raffle tickets in advance, you must be present at the party on the night in order to claim your prize at the draw.

Good Luck!!! :)
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
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Littledragon

Above The Law
Date: 12/08/04
Source: http://dvdfile.com/software/review/...plerain_se.html
________________________________________________________________

Purple Rain
Warner Home Video / 1984 / 115 Minutes / Rated R
Street date: August 24, 2004


Reviewed by Peter M. Bracke on August 12, 2004. (Bio / Equipment list)


There comes a moment in the life of every major popular artist when the stars align and, for what usually amounts to only one brief, shining moment, they and the audience become one. The zeitgeist is captured, and forever onward, they become irrevocably fused with a particular moment in culture and our memories. For the Beatles it was their appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show. For Michael Jackson, it was when he first moonwalked on the Motown 50th Anniversary Show. And for Prince, it was Purple Rain.

Prince stars as The Kid, and he is funky. Jamming with his band The Revolution every night at the local First Avenue Club in Minneapolis, The Kid has big dreams and an even bigger ego. But when his abusive homelife threatens to crash the party, and the new girl in town takes a liking to both him and his musical rival (Morris Day), The Kid will have to make a choice. Can he find redemption in music, or will he self-destruct?

Purple Rain adheres to the tradition of every great (or usually putrid) rock movie, which is to blur the line between artist and character and leave it up to us to separate fact from fiction. It will come as no surprise to learn that the relationship of Prince himself and his real-life father is not that far off what we see in the film. And as we learn on the included supplements, the tensions between The Kid and his band were also the same problems that plagued The Revolution. So Purple Rain, however silly it may be, does achieve genuine resonance, because when we see Prince/The Kid up there belting out those ten songs, every one now a classic, we truly believe that if he hadn't, he would have exploded.



Unfortunately, Purple Rain is also an ugly film. It offers more than just casual misogyny, but downright hatred of women. Such "comic" scenes as Day, after being confronted by a date he blew off then throwing her into a dumpster, are cringe-inducing. And one wonders what was going through the mind of the screenwriters when they conceived of Apollonia. (To the credit of Apollonia Kotero, who in fact was married at the time and not sleeping with Prince, she has publicly stated ever since how far removed from the character she was playing despite the name.) Only the most clueless male fantasy could think that this poor girl, despite being repeatedly humiliated, slapped and berated by The Kid, would continue to purr over him like a cat in heat. And the conclusion is the worst kind of MTV pop psychology. Apparently, as long as you sing a song as admittedly stunning as "Purple Rain," all is forgiven. Ah, the power of music to cure domestic violence!

But it is the music that makes Purple Rain still worth revisiting. It was the zenith of Prince's career, when he was at his peak as a commercial artist. Mixing funk, rock, pop, new wave, soul and gospel, he blazed a trail not only for African-American artists, but modern American music. The riffs, the melodies, the lyrics - all seem effortless and fit together like some cosmic jigsaw puzzle, as if Prince was just channeling some sort of higher musical power that said "if you build it, they will come." It is hard to define that elusive thing called magic, but in 1984 Prince had it in spades. The musical sequences in Purple Rain are still blistering, and even if director Albert Magnoli shoots the whole thing like one long music video, the concert footage is ranks as some of the best ever seen in a motion picture. So crank it up, raise your lighter and sing along. Prince reigns in Purple Rain.



Video:How Does The Disc Look?

At last making its widescreen debut on home video, Warner has put together another nice new remaster. Presented in 1.85:1 anamorphic widescreen, this one easily trumps the previous, artifact-laden full frame release from 1997. While the print is not significantly better, there far less grain and noise, with more vibrant, clean colors that don't smear despite all the deep purples, blues and reds. Contrast is also pretty good, although the film can look a tad dark at times. Detail is also impressive, with fairly good depth to the image for a film of this vintage, and edge enhancement is not a problem. Also greatly improved is the compression, with none of the horrible blockiness that marred the previous release. Purple Rain looks pretty darn good.

Audio: How Does The Disc Sound?

We know it is all about the music, and Warner has given us a pretty good Dolby Digital 5.1 surround track. Truth be told, the music still sounds like it is in stereo and is comparable to recently soundtrack CD remaster. But that is not a bad thing, because personally, I think most pseudo-5.1 music remasters sound cheesy. In this case, the music is front and center, with only crowd noise and various sound effects being directed to the back speakers. Also, I only noticed a couple of instances of truly discrete rear effects. Otherwise, frequency response is quite good although not excellent, and dialogue is fairly clear, although high end sounds a little clipped. Also, the .1 LFE is pretty powerful on the music, but otherwise somewhat flat. Not an amazing sonic experience, but good enough to deliver where it counts, which is the music.

Also included is a French mono dub, plus English and French subtitles and English Closed Captions.


Supplements: What Goodies Are There?

First the bad news: Prince was not involved in the making of this DVD. Why? Who knows when it comes to His Mysterious Purpleness. Perhaps he is still pissed at Warner over the whole "Slave" thing? Or he wanted to much money? In any case, the omission is not as detrimental as I had expected. In a weird way, his absence makes him even more of an enigma, as if those assembled are dissecting, Citizen Kane-style, not a man but a legend. So all of the extras assembled are still pretty darn fun.

First up on disc one of this two-disc, 20th Anniversary Edition is a new screen-specific audio commentary by director Albert Magnoli, producer Robert Cavallo and cinematographer Donald Thorin. I felt it might be the weakest extra on the set. Surprisingly for a track with three participants, it is full of dead patches and short bursts of info followed by dull meandering. For some reason, the trio decided to focus almost exclusively on tech details (how cold it was, where this scene was shot, etc.) and not the stuff we really want to know, i.e., Prince. I can't imagine anyone but the most diehard fans making it all the way through this one.

Also on disc one are theatrical trailers for all three of Prince's motion picture epics: Purple Rain, the dreadful Under the Cherry Moon, and the even more dreadful Graffiti Bridge. (Hey, where's a DVD release of Sign O' the Times!?) And note the Purple Rain trailer: it has a surprisingly amount of footage not seen in the movie, but alas there are no deleted scenes on this DVD. Bummer.

The meat of the extras is on disc two, led by three new featurettes. The most straightforward is Purple Rain: Backstage Pass , which runs 26 minutes. Given the absence of Prince (as well as Apollonia and Morris Day, who also both declined to participate), this is surprisingly good, with most of the key Revolution members giving us the juicy stuff (Wendy & Lisa, Bobby Z., Dr. Fink and The Time's Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis), plus Magnoli, Cavallo, Prince's tour crew members Alan Leeds and Craig Rice, and actress Jill Jones. The making of the movie takes a backseat

Also interesting is the 12-minute First Avenue: The Road to Pop Royalty , which gives some good background on the club the movie made famous, as well as how a hip joint Prince used to jam in suddenly became a tourist attraction after the flick hit big. Also on hand to deliver insight are fellow musicians Chris Osgood, Chan Poling and Macy Gray, DJs Mike Bosley, Walter Banks and Cowboy, and rock writers Neal Karlan, Jim Walsh and Kurt Loder. Good stuff. And the most celebratory of the three is the 10-minute Riffs, Ruffles and a Revolution: The Impact and Influence of Purple Rain . This one is just fun nostalgia, VH-1 style. Yes, people used to really were clothes like that, and thought it was cool. But more than a fashion victim, Purple Rain truly did impact pop culture in a major way. I just can't believe it was twenty years ago. Sigh.

Rounding out the extras is 13 minutes of MTV Premiere Party footage, which is hilarious (Mark Goodman...love the hair!), plus a collection of eight music videos , including five from Prince ("Let's Go Crazy," "Take Me With U (Live)," "When Doves Cry," "I Would Die 4 U/Baby I'm a Star," "Purple Rain"), two from The Time ("Jungle Love," "The Bird") and the jaw-dropping, extended version of Apollonia 6's "Sex Shooter. A must-see!

DVD-ROM Exclusives: What do you get when you pop the disc in your PC?

There are no ROM extras included.

Parting Thoughts

Has it really been twenty years since Purple Rain? Yes, it has. So put on some blue eyeliner and crimp the hair, because Prince is back in town. While the lack of His Royal Badness on the supplements is a disappointment, the extras are still fun, and it is a kick to see this flick at last in widescreen. So this one is well worth an upgrade or a new purchase if you are a fan.
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
Date: August 17, 2004
Source: http://msnbc.msn.com/id/5737022/
________________________________________________________________

Prince takes center stage in ‘Purple Rain’

By Michael Ventre
MSNBC contributor
Updated: 4:02 p.m. ET Aug. 17, 2004



“Purple Rain”
20th Anniversary Two-Disc Special Edition
Most rock and roll movies are more about the rock and roll than they are about the story. Usually, they provide an excuse to take an idea that ordinarily would satisfy a five-minute music video and puff it up to an hour and a half of pop-culture fluff.

“Purple Rain” is one of the rare exceptions. This 1984 sleeper is a Prince vanity project, to be sure, but one that stands out because the music doesn’t smother the narrative. The two are deftly intertwined, thanks to the efforts of director Albert Magnoli, producer Robert Cavallo and the Purple One himself.

The story takes place in Minneapolis, Prince’s hometown, and most of the action centers on First Avenue, a popular club where edgy music acts battle for attention. Prince plays The Kid, a motorcycle-riding leader of the Revolution. He not only competes with Morris Day and the Time for on-stage supremacy, but also for the affections of the lovely Appollonia (Appollonia Kotero).

Setting it apart from most pop melodramas is a compelling subplot involving The Kid’s troubled and abusive father, played to perfection by Clarence Williams III of “Mod Squad” fame. Weaved together with musical numbers that include ’80s chart-toppers like “When Doves Cry” and “Let’s Go Crazy,” and the relationships with band members (including the lively duo of Wendy and Lisa), the interchanges between Morris and sidekick Jerome and a crabby club manager, the result is a highly enjoyable concoction.

To celebrate the film’s 20th anniversary, it is being released on DVD in a two-disc special edition. The first contains the feature, with a sharp digital transfer in widescreen, and Dolby Digital 5.1 sound that does justice to the Oscar-winning score. There are also commentaries by Magnoli, Cavallo and cinematographer Donald E. Thorin.

The second disc has lots of bonus stuff, including eight Prince videos and footage of the MTV Premiere Party, which is a hoot considering the hair and fashions of the day.

In addition to “Purple Rain,” Warner Home Video is releasing two other lesser works starring Prince, “Under the Cherry Moon” and “Graffiti Bridge,” which aren’t quite as significant but are worth checking out if you’re a Prince fanatic. Then again, if you’re a Prince fanatic, you probably have seen each about a hundred times.

Check out this special feature: They do a nice job with featurettes on this one. Lots of interviews with members of the Time, Prince’s former manager, members of Prince’s band, observers of the Minneapolis club scene, etc. It’s split into three separate pieces, and like most of these, could probably have been edited into one succinct version. But for Prince fans, it’s a feast.

(Warner Home Video, $26.99)
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
Date: August 18, 2004
Source: http://www.boston.com/news/globe/li...l_got_the_look/
________________________________________________________________

Prince proves he's still got the look
Pop icon wows FleetCenter crowd with old favorites, eclectic covers

By Renée Graham, Globe Staff | August 18, 2004

One goes to a Prince concert expecting to hear "Let's Go Crazy," "When Doves Cry," and "Raspberry Beret," all of which he performed during his fine two-hour-plus concert at the FleetCenter last night.

But it was an eclectic set of cover songs -- from the Rolling Stones classic "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" to Rufus featuring Chaka Khan's soul chestnut "Sweet Thing" -- that really distinguished the first of Prince's three-night Boston stop on his "Musicology" tour.

"This is school," he told his near-sellout audience at one point, and indeed the evening was a lesson in, as he put it, "real music by real musicians."

"Boston, we don't believe in lip-synching," he informed the crowd. "We don't believe in MTV. We really don't believe in the radio."

During his 30-minute unplugged set -- just Prince and a purple acoustic guitar -- he rolled out and reinvented old favorites such as "Little Red Corvette" and "Cream," and gave a nod to the Stones and Rufus with tunes that became audience sing-alongs.

By that midway point, the once-palpable audience irritation with the show's late start, more than an hour past its scheduled 7:30 p.m. beginning, had dissipated. After an opening video montage featuring Alicia Keys inducting him into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame earlier this year, Prince kicked into the muscular funk of "Musicology."

Backed by his excellent seven-piece band, New Power Generation, Prince, radiant in a red jacket over white shirt, pants, and bejeweled heeled boots, was in a loose, playful mood.

"Boston, ya'll been waiting for me, haven't you?" he teased.

In the first 15 minutes, he played a host of hits including "Let's Go Crazy," "Baby I'm a Star," and "I Would Die 4 U." On the latter song, he slyly changed the lyric "I'm your messiah" to "He's your messiah," a reflection of his newfound faith as a devout Jehovah's Witness.

As has been the case on this tour, Prince steered clear of his more salacious music. Still, with a 25-year catalog, such songs were hardly missed -- especially when he instead performed Led Zeppelin's "Whole Lotta Love," complete with a shattering guitar solo that would make Jimmy Page proud.

On stage, Prince seemed to enjoy himself, as well as his band, featuring sax great Maceo Parker who, accompanied by only keyboardist Renato Neto, performed Louis Armstrong's sentimental "What a Wonderful World." And deserving special mention is drummer John Blackwell, whose spellbinding stick-twirling solos were also a highlight.

To no one's surprise and everyone's delight, Prince closed the show with "Purple Rain," and certainly made good on his earlier promise when he said, "Boston, it's gonna be a beautiful night."

Prince is scheduled to perform tonight and tomorrow at the FleetCenter.
 
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