Prince Articles

Littledragon

Above The Law
Date: 18-08-2004
Source: http://www.philly.com/mld/dailynews.../9428941.htm?1c
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Prince still holds throne of music royalty

By RENEE GRAHAM -- The Boston Globe

'THERE'S A 17-year-old out there who has never experienced the visceral effect of this."

Prince mimics the motion of banging out a big guitar chord, and even without a Fender Telecaster in his hands, one can almost hear his soaring, elegiac solo from "Purple Rain" or the hip-tickling intro of "Kiss."

He's relaxing in his dressing room, aglow and fragrant with candles, several hours before he'll ascend, via a rising platform in the middle of an X-shaped stage at the center of the Toyota Center in Houston, and perform the first of two sold-out shows.

He's talking about a subject that occupies his mind these days - the heady rush of real music performed with passion and precision, the intangible joy of a stuttering horn, the hissing hi-hat of a drum, or the lavish retort of a guitar.

"That'll give you shivers, that'll change your life," Prince says with a satisfied smile. "There's nothing else like that."

For 25 stunning years, there has been no one else like Prince. In an industry in which the word "genius" has been falsely applied and misused into meaninglessness, there's no disputing Prince's virtuosity. He's won a fistful of Grammys and an Academy Award, and was inducted earlier this year into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. And he has composed such classic songs as "Let's Go Crazy," "When Doves Cry," "Erotic City," "Little Red Corvette," and "Sign O' the Times."

Heir to James Brown and George Clinton, and creative father to the spiritual soul of D'Angelo, as well as the genre-twisting, anything-goes approach of OutKast, the man born Prince Rogers Nelson can still scream like the Godfather of Soul and make a guitar weep and wail like Jimi Hendrix.

Scheduled to perform three shows next week at the Wachovia Center, Prince has been playing to sell-out and near-sell-out crowds across the country since March on the "Musicology" tour, named for his biggest album in a decade. Both the Sunday and Monday shows here are sold out; there are still some tickets for Tuesday's gig.

"It's been great, absolutely perfect," Prince says as he sits on a dark, plush couch in his fabric-draped dressing room. He apologizes for the mess, but the spacious room is orderly and comfortable.

He is, of course, immaculately dressed - a brown vest over a lighter brown shirt with cuff links, white pants with gold piping. He's svelte but not slight, and at 46, the years have been very good to him. Delicately handsome, he looks 20 years younger with nary a blemish or line on his face.

Now a devout Jehovah's Witness who eschews curse words and will no longer perform his most risque songs, he is a man of easy humor, hilarious impressions (primarily of mendacious, money-grubbing music-industry suits), and a probing curiosity that can lead him to ask nearly as many questions as he answers.

Though he has long endured a reputation as being petulant and mercurial, on this day, he's in high spirits - perhaps, in part, because his tour, which concludes next month, has been an unqualified success, one of the biggest of an otherwise balky summer touring season.

And even though he's been out of the spotlight for a decade, he has never doubted his ability to fill an arena.

" 'Let's Go Crazy' is what it is. It's like a piece of Americana in a way, and when you play the song before 20,000, there's going to be a reaction," he says between sips of bottled water, referring to his massive 1984 hit from his film debut, "Purple Rain."

"But I don't take this for granted," Prince says. "I feel this has been a blessing, and I'm very appreciative."

SUBHED HERE: Don't call it a comeback

Many have called 2004 Prince's comeback year. In February, he made a surprise appearance at the Grammys, opening the ceremony with a medley of his hits and performing with Beyonce.

A few weeks later, he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and during a tribute to a fellow inductee, the late George Harrison, Prince stole the show with a scintillating guitar solo on Harrison's "While My Guitar Gently Weeps."

When he was first informed of his election to the hall of fame, Prince says: "I didn't feel anything at first, but other people were so engaged by it. There would be 60-year-old white grandmothers congratulating me, and it's always an honor to have people appreciate what you do."

Then, in April, he released "Musicology," an album some consider his most pop-friendly music in more than a decade. Now platinum, it debuted at No. 3 on the Billboard 200 album chart and remains in the top 10.

Yet between 1991's "Diamonds and Pearls" and "Musicology," Prince seemed bent on confusing and alienating his fans. He changed his name to a symbol and was embroiled in a protracted battle with Warner Bros., his longtime record label, to free himself from a long-term contract worth $100 million. He compares record companies to Satan trying to tempt Jesus with the riches of the world.

To symbolize his predicament, he even began writing the word "SLAVE" on his cheek. The issue was finally resolved when Prince released a series of albums, mostly packed with unreleased tracks from what he called "the vault," to fulfill his obligation to the label.

Unwilling to sign another long-term deal, he set up the NPG (New Power Generation) Music Club, and through its Web site, he released a series of little-noticed albums, such as last year's all-instrumental "N.E.W.S." From the name change to his eccentric albums, Prince still defends his actions and his music.

"Now, it's all water under the bridge, but it was a serious matter," he maintains about his dispute with Warner Bros., which ended in 1996 and was marked with the release of a three-CD set, "Emancipation."

"I think many corporations are immoral. What was happening to me happens to artists all the time, you feel me?" Prince says. "What I was doing wasn't about arrogance; it was about someone trying to put me in a paper cage, and tell me, a grown man, what I couldn't do."

During his performance that night, Prince takes swipes at his former label, with the ad-libbed lyrics, "Warner Brothers used to be a friend of mine, now they're just a monumental waste of time." For "Musicology," Prince struck a one-off distribution deal with Sony. It was released on his NPG Records, and he retains complete control over the album.

As for his 1990s output, music some categorized as indulgent and obscure, Prince says, "I dismiss terms like 'comeback' and 'accessibility of music.' I never went anywhere. I was still making music. The media just stopped focusing on me.

"Besides, I'm from the Duke Ellington school. He never changed his sound," he adds. "I'm from the Marlon Brando school - you have to get with what I'm doing. If you want to be the best, you can't follow."

SUBHED HERE: Cleaning up his act

This year, lots of people are getting what Prince is doing. At his Houston show, the audience cuts liberally across racial, ethnic and generational lines. There are faded T-shirts from his "Purple Rain" tour in the mid-'80s, there are middle-age men in purple shirts (tour tickets suggest concertgoers "Wear Something Purple"), prepubescent kids with their parents.

Fans know the words to newer songs such as "Musicology" and "On the Couch," as well as to such classics as "Let's Work" and "D.M.S.R." He performs for more than two hours, including a tribute to Ray Charles with sax master Maceo Parker singing and playing "Georgia."

Prince also gives props to R&B legend Rick James, whose death was announced earlier in the day. On Prince's first tour in the '80s, he opened for James.

In those days, Prince was a prodigious upstart out of Minneapolis playing every instrument, composing and arranging every song. (Which, for the most part, he still does.) He was two albums deep into his career - with his debut, "For You," and his self-titled sophomore offering, which featured the hits "I Wanna Be Your Lover" and "Sexy Dancer."

In Houston, he performs "I Wanna Be Your Lover," but noticeably absent are such salacious songs as "Erotic City," "Gett Off" and "Darling Nikki," which gave Tipper Gore such a case of vapors that she formed the Parents Music Resource Center and got albums deemed explicit branded with "Parental Advisory" stickers.

These days, Prince won't be found writhing in beds or bathtubs onstage, as he has in the past. He's been married nearly three years to his second wife, Manuela Testolini, and champions monogamy, but that's only part of the reason he's cleaned up his act.

In a culture in which booty videos with bikini-clad women gyrating in slow motion abound, there's nothing interesting or daring in singing about sex anymore, he says.

"When I sang about sex, no one was singing about sex. Now that's not new anymore," Prince contends. "Now since no one is singing about monogamy, that's what I'm singing about, you feel me?

"I was there in '92-'93 with the band that made 'Sexy MF,' " he adds, referring to his 1992 song with the world's funkiest application of a certain dozen-letter cuss word. "I know what it's like to hear 70,000 people yelling that at me, and I don't need to hear that anymore. We want to retire some of these songs."

And with a quarter-century of songs, Prince has more than enough music to fill a frenzied evening.

"It's a challenge and a testament to the strength of a catalog," he says, remarkably without a hint of conceit. "I'm in awe of the scope of it."

Some of the songs he performs, like "Controversy" or "Baby I'm a Star" are decades old, and Prince messes around with the arrangements to keep them interesting. At his Houston show, he performs 1983's "Little Red Corvette" and 1991's "Cream" with just an acoustic guitar, and he even offers a countrified version of 1988's "Alphabet St.," as bluegrass legends Flatt and Scruggs might have recorded it.

He jousts with the younger members of the crowd, telling them, "I know what ya'll need," as his band launches into the opening vamp of Beyonce's "Crazy in Love."

No one seems to enjoy the moment more than Prince, who seems at peace with his past and with where his long musical journey has delivered him.

"I've never fit into a certain genre, and you can't pin my work down," he says. "I don't think about the future. I have to make the music I have to make now, and I have to go where the spirit takes me. Everything is about right now, and because I approach things like that, I enjoy every day so much more."
Prince's "Musicology Tour," 7:30 p.m. Sun.-Tues. (Sunday and Monday shows are sold out), Wachovia Center, 3601 S. Broad St., $75 and $47.50, 215-336-2000, www.ticketmaster.com.
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
Date: 18-08-2004
Source: http://www.projo.com/music/content/...rev.2a27f2.html
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Prince cleans up his act, but his funk remains pure

01:00 AM EDT on Wednesday, August 18, 2004

BY RICK MASSIMO
Journal Pop Music Writer

BOSTON -- There aren't a lot of acts out there who could play their own records as pre-show music, open a show with a current hit single, release the confetti from the ceiling on the second song, and take the energy level up from there. But Prince managed it last night at the FleetCenter.

Some of the most memorable songs of Prince's 25-year career have been his "slow jams" -- he's a masterful balladeer. But last night was a pure funk throwdown, from the opening "Musicology" through the final "Kiss." If, on record, Prince has fallen victim to the Van Halen syndrome (whereby one starts to sound like one's imitators), in performance he and his matchless band, the New Power Generation, cemented their reputation (with James Brown and George Clinton currently out of commission) as the world's prime funketeers.

After "Musicology," Prince blazed through versions of "Purple Rain" hits ("Let's Go Crazy," "I Would Die 4 U," "When Doves Cry," "Baby I'm a Star") that were not so much abbreviated as thrown into a blender. A verse was trimmed here, a solo there, turning the sequence into less of a maybe-you-remember-this medley than a distillation of a period.

"Controversy" merged into "A Love Bizarre" (a Prince song that Sheila E. had a hit with); "Sign O' the Times" melted into Led Zeppelin's "Whole Lotta Love" (don't ask how). Even more surprisingly, early-'80s nuggets such as "DMSR" and "Let's Work" came out of the closet. In this party atmosphere, they lost the chilly, hermetic feeling of their recorded versions (on which Prince sang and played all the instruments). That has its positives and negatives; the sense of alienation and weirdness was much of the appeal. Oh well; there's always the records.

Bassist Rhonda Smith and drummer John Blackwell were inseparable, a living, breathing, just-right-behind-the-beat unit that recalled the best work of the classic rhythm sections of R & B and early-'70s funk, such as Brown's and Clinton's.

Prince gave himself plenty of chances to work out on guitar as well. As he has said previously, he gets tagged as a Hendrix disciple mainly because he's black; his main influence is clearly the sweet-but-piercing sound of Carlos Santana, most apparent on the encore, "Purple Rain."

Performing in the round can leave a singer looking like he's running ragged trying to cover all bases, but with Prince it looked more like he was unleashed. He cavorted with his musicians, particularly his horn section (led by saxophonist Maceo Parker, famous for his work with James Brown), and showed his dance moves, some of the best since (maybe including) Michael Jackson.

The centerpiece of the show was the acoustic set, during which Prince, in a revolving chair, showed the classic songwriting roots of such synthesizer-driven hits as "Little Red Corvette," "Cream" and "Alphabet St.," as well as more obviously guitar-based songs such as "Raspberry Beret," "I Could Never Take the Place of Your Man" and "I Wanna Be Your Lover." He threw in a rap about his dissatisfaction with his former record company, Warner Bros., but capped it with his inimitable braggadocio: "They keep getting older, and I just look the same." The Rolling Stones' "Satisfaction" was a curveball -- if not necessary, an interesting sidelight. Then the funk returned -- gently at first, with "Pop Life," then full force with "Sign O' the Times."

Some of Prince's more notoriously explicit lyrics were cleaned up for this show, a reflection of his recent conversion to the Jehovah's Witnesses. For example, in "I Feel for You," "It's mainly a physical thing" became "It's mainly a spiritual thing," and of course "I'm your messiah" became "He's your messiah" in "I Would Die 4 U." These were a little jarring, but mainly unobtrusive.

This tour is the first time Prince has run through his hits in years, and supposedly the last time ever. That could be, but if the treatments he gave them last night, and the way they went over, are any indication, he can pretty much do whatever he wants from here, including go back on his word.
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
Date: 09/2004
Source: http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/12.09/play.html?pg=1
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The Prince Pipeline



The Purple One is a true early adopter. He's been distributing his music online and writing in SMS-style shorthand (as in "I Would Die 4 U") for ages. Prince has been off the main_stream's radar since his breakup with Warner Bros. in 1996. But he's continued to record at a frantic pace, using the Web to reach out directly to fans and to sell seven indie releases. Now he's back in the limelight with a critically acclaimed major label CD, Musicology. Wired caught up with the pop visionary via email to get his take on the importance of controlling your own product.

WIRED: So why did you ditch the majors and stars your own label. NPG?
PRINCE: Throughout the '90s, the music business was in a state of flux, especially Warner Bros. Records. Knowing that we could no longer remain on a ship that had no captain, plans were made 2 distribute r music independently. The 1st single NPG released was "The Most Beautiful Girl in the World." With its success, the die was cast, so2speak.

And that led to NPG Music Club what's it like selling your product and promoting your image online?
It's a great way 2 connect with music lovers all over the world. This is old news now, but artists will always do better when they distribute themselves. Most of the manufactured music stars of 2day do not have deals that allow them 2 participate in the OWNERSHIP of their art, so they have 2 take a backseat when it comes 2 marketing and promotion.

What sort of marketing tactics are you using for Musicology, and the current tour?
We introduced the concept of purchasing a brand-new CD with the concert ticket. That's all that really matters anyway: getting the music 2 the people. By any means necessary

Does that include P2P file-sharing?
File-sharing seems 2 occur most when people want more QUALITY over quantity. One good tune on a 20-song CD is a rip. The corporations that created this situation will get the fate they deserve. 4 better or 4 worse. 4 every action there is a reaction. An MP3 is merely a tool. There is nothing 2 fear

If corporations are the problem, why did you partner with Sony for the new album?
Sony has graciously agreed 2 augment the Musicology project with worldwide promotion and distribution. They r cool because they do not restrict NPG's ability 2 sell the product as well. It's a win-win situation.

Suddenly you're geeing terrific press again. Where has the media been the past few years?
Perhaps they had another agenda. We should really xamine how and where we find out about new music They don't call it PROGRAMMING 4 nothing!

When you changed your name to [symbol] you sent new font sets to the journalists covering you - quite a tech-savvy maneuver. Are you still on top of the PR genre?
True artists should b involved with every aspect of their work. Thanx again 4 ur help in getting the message out. Peace.

- Eric Steuer
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
Date: 08/22/04
Source: www.dvdfile.com
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http://www.dvdfile.com/software/rev...cherrymoon.html

Under the Cherry Moon
Warner Home Video / 1986 / 109 Minutes / Rated PG-13
Street date: August 24, 2004



Reviewed by Mike Restaino on August 22, 2004. (Bio / Equipment list)

"All I can tell you is that you'll have a good time. I'm hoping that everyone understands where I was trying to go with it. It is like an album for me, and I put my heart and soul into it and I worked very long and very hard. There's a message behind it all and I hope people think about it when they leave. That's the main thing. It's a lot of fun, but there's something to think about when it's over. You know, there's a reason for everything."

- Prince discussing Under the Cherry Moon in The Electrifying Mojo DJ (1985)

Despite being the winner of five Razzie Awards, including a nomination for worst film of 1986, Prince's Under the Cherry Moon (and, yes, he directed it, thank you very much) is a legitimate nominee for the most deliriously fun motion picture ever made.

Seeing as the film has been in a moratorium of sorts over the past fifteen years (before this DVD came around, it was almost impossible to find this picture anywhere, even on VHS), it's only natural that its merits have been overlooked, but now that its inaugural DVD release is here, it's time for we camp aficionados to give Under the Cherry Moon another chance. It should not, and will not, be ignored.

Under the Cherry Moon is like eating a delicious dinner at a lovely restaurant and then finding out that there was a rat in your soup. A dirty rat. A dirty, rabid rat. A pregnant, dirty, rabid rat. A bug-infested, pregnant, dirty, rabid rat. You follow me? I hate using this kind of an allegory but since obtaining a review copy of this picture, this writer has watched the thing almost five full times. There's always something new to marvel at. During my first go-around, I couldn't get over the raucously awful scene where Prince (our leading man, natch) sees Kristin Scott Thomas from across a crowded patio for the first time. As Prince coos and plays with his hair while wearing the most ridiculous outfit Earth has ever seen (it's kind of like a skin-tight tuxedo with tails worn backward), a painfully synthesized drum beat pulsates through the air - this is no mere meeting of the minds. It's a percussive mating dance. Yikes.

There is more that is truly disturbing in a terribly funny way. I double-checked on some UTCM websites just to make sure I wasn't crazy: when Prince and Thomas dance for the first time, there's a shot in which Prince's - how should I say? - “little red corvette” is just about ready to pop out of his skin-tight paisley tuxedo. And it ain't so little, either, ladies - as the purple one and Thomas cut a rug, it looks as though the Starship Enterprise is about to go into warp drive out of Prince's jockey shorts.
This is movie magic. Am I right?

Under the Cherry Moon is a monolith of outrageous filmmaking, a motion picture terrible but valiant, and uniquely transcendent entertainment. I know you've “heard” it's terrible and that “it's nowhere as good as Purple Rain”, but it's time to discover for yourself. Do Prince and yourself a favor. Just see this movie. It'll make a believer out of you.

Video: How Does The Disc Look?

This first-ever 1.85:1 anamorphic widescreen presentation of the film is just fine. The movie was originally shot in color, so while there are a few examples of muddiness here and there that can be attributed solely to the color-to-monochrome conversion, overall the contrast of the film benefits nicely from its source material. The telecine print used is clean and crisp, as well, and there are very few examples of dirt and dust. Detail is pretty good for a nearly 20-year-old film, and edge enhancement is noticeable but slight. Pretty nice.

Audio: How Does The Disc Sound?

The Dolby 2.0 surround track won't knock your socks off, but it gets the job done. Consistency and dialogue reproduction is sketchy, but the music comes through quite lovely. Atmospherics and effects are all but nonexistent, though, and surround imaging weak. Bass is also a step down from the CD soundtrack. Just fair.

Also included are English, French and Spanish subtitles and English Closed Captions.

Supplements: What Goodies Are There?

Where's that Prince commentary? What about a two-hour documentary about Mary Lambert getting fired as director because of “creative differences”? Ugh! At least we get the theatrical trailer, which is cute, and four music videos (“Girls and Boys”, “Kiss”, “Mountains” and “Anotherloverholeinyohead”). They are are cheesy, but Prince fans will eat them up.

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

There are no ROM extras on the disc.

Parting Thoughts

This writer can't deny that he wishes Under the Cherry Moon received a four-disc collector's box set, but since many people have yet to experience the wonders of this black and white masterwork, the fact that there's even a bare-bones edition out there allows me to sleep better at night. So drop the $19.99. You will laugh your ass off. And if you don't, just write me some hate mail. I'll be checking my inbox as I watch the movie over and over again over the next few weeks.
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
Date: 8/24/04
Source: http://music.ign.com/articles/541/541915p1.html
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Purple Rain
20 years later it's still Prince's masterpiece.

August 24, 2004 - It's always strange to revisit an album that is universally regarded as a classic. And it's even stranger to re-examine one that's just turned 20, yet still sounds fresh, invigorating, and above all cutting edge. Such is the case with Prince's seminal offering Purple Rain, which was originally released back on August 6th, 1984 and is celebrating its 20th anniversary this year.

Following on the heels of the uber successful 1999, this album—and the accompanying film—proved once and for all that his purple majesty from Minneapolis was bona fide. No, Prince Nelson Rogers, esq. was not merely a flamboyantly sexual cross between Hendrix and Little Richard, but his own singular talent as guitarist, songwriter, and object of sexual desire.

Each and every one of the 9 songs (yes, there's only 9. Why? Because Prince understands the value of crafting a tight album, unlike many of today's pop stars who find it necessary to overload their albums with 17-plus tracks, many of which are nothing more than vapid filler) contained within is a gem, ranging from the rock infused anthem "Let's Go Crazy" to the nastication of "Darling Nikki" and the slow burn slink of "When Doves Cry." Not only is the album rife with classic hits, but it's one of those rare hit pop records that has been masterfully sequenced. In short, every track fits into place like a well-oiled machine, setting a mood and then carrying over to the following track. This is perhaps one of the smoothest flowing albums ever crafted. Period.

As if sonically foreshadowing his future Al Green-esque career path (from secular singer to Born Again Christian and then back to a permutation of the two) Prince kicks off the album with mock church organ and an uplifting sermon that commences with the words "Dearly beloved/we r gathered here today/2 get through this thing called life/electric word, life…" before grinding off into a guitar driven chug of fist waving and booty sashaying exuberance. In fact, Prince's six-string ejaculation is what holds the song together (and thankfully his axe wielding prowess will continue to rear it's glorious head throughout the album) cresting in a searing solo that will leave even the stoutest of air guitarists gasping for breath.

From this upbeat opening Prince and the rest of The Revolution (easily the best backing band he ever utilized) shift into the bubbling "Take Me With U." Featuring Prince's protégé of that moment in time, Apollonia, it's a bouncy pop number that shuffles along thanks to some kinetically spicy rhythms, faux string enhancements and Prince and App's cajolingly sexy counterpoint. With the next track, "The Beautiful Ones," Prince and company tone things down, at least musically speaking, for a low-n-slow tempo number that has the Purple one crooning, gasping, sighing, and vocally genuflecting with uber sensuality.

"Computer Blue" begins with Lisa (Coleman, one half of the duo of Wendy & Lisa and the Revolution's keyboardist) asking the following sultry question: "Wendy, is the water warm enough?" Naturally the answer is "yes" and the song kicks off into Prince's trademark sauciness, this time revolving around the seemingly rhetorical question "Where is my love life?" and then slipping into ambiguous phraseology regarding the titular computer blue. Buzzing guitars intertwine with sizzling keyboards and a clopping rhythm, keeping everything decidedly in the red before collapsing into a dizzying guitar driven aural melee.

In reality, "Computer Blue" was nothing more than a 3-minute and 59-second lead in to the album's centerpiece. "Darling Nikki" is the notorious grinder wherein Prince talks about meeting a woman in a hotel lobby where she is masturbating with a magazine. Those self-same lyrics ring with just as much controversy today as they did 20 years ago, capturing the musician's pure, unadulterated rock and roll bravado with a graceful sleaziness. Prince's accompanying whelps, yelps, and ecstatic screams only add more fuel to the fire. Brilliant, sexy, nasty, and dirty; everything a great rock song should be. That it culminates with a climactic guitar flurry is like the proverbial icing on the cake. Plus the back masked ending is classically nebulous.

The skirling spiral guitar crunch that signals the opening of "When Doves Cry" is perhaps one of the most recognized axe blasts ever laid to tape. Coupled with the loping rhythm track and Prince's restrained nasal vocal tang, the song is one of the seminal numbers in his vast canon. From the introspective (and rumored to be autobiographical) the album shifts into the speed shuffle of "I Would Die 4 U," in which Prince unveils the somewhat cryptic lyrical rush "I'm not your lover/I'm not your friend/I am something that you'll never comprehend…" The song more or less bleeds seamlessly into "Baby I'm A Star," yet another musically upbeat number propelled by spastic rhythms and Prince's yelping cat call vocalistics.

But the previous two songs, while catchy and infused with unbridled energy, are merely the set-up for the grande finale: "Purple Rain." The closing track is an epic 8-minutes and 41-seconds of slow burning intensity, initially beginning as nothing more than a stripped down drum beat, soft keyboards, and Prince's guitar, all flowing smoothly underneath his quietly calm tenor. The imagery instilled in the deceptively simple lyrics is wonderful (c'mon, purple rain? F@#kin' brilliant, if you ask me) and the song slowly builds up in musical and emotional tension, Prince's voice cracking and careening and screeching with wild, yet restrained abandon. Then the guitar kicks in, buffered by piano and swelling synth orchestration, all of which is just a precursor to the enrapturing "oh-oh-ohs" that lead into the squelchingly intense guitar apocalypse that shuts the song down. Sure, it's crazy '80s, but damn if it still doesn't resonate, both musically and emotionally, these twenty years later.

Given the quality of the songwriting and the almost uncanny timelessness of the music contained on Purple Rain, it's really hard to imagine somebody who has never heard a single note of this album. In fact the very thought of such a notion is nothing short of mind-numbing. At the risk of being over laudatory, Purple Rain is one of those albums that belongs in everybody's record collection. It's really that simple.

-- Spence D.

Overall Score 10
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
Date: August 24th, 2004
Source: http://www.upperroomwithjoekelley.com/musicology.htm
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Hi !

In this review, I am talking about a person that has made us react, by saying : Wow! He is very special, very eccentric, and an excellent guitarist. In addition, he sings and dances very well.

He plays piano, guitar, bass, drum and keyboards like nobody, and he is a gifted multi-instrumentalist. He can play funk, hip-hop, rock, pop, r & b, blues and jazz.

It’s sure that the language used in his songs and some suggestive dances shocked you. Nevertheless, he is an excellent writer, composer, performer, producer, and business-man.

He has been a filmmaker and also an actor; he gave us a few good films like:

Purple Rain (1984), Under the Cherry Moon (1986), Sign O’ the Times (1987), Graffiti Bridge (1990),

Even in most of his videos, he does not only play music. There is always a story at the beginning and between each song to tie the story in; e.g 3 Chains O’ GOLD.

We name him Joey Coco, the Purple Dwarf, Love Symbol, the Minneapolis kid, the Artist.

In 1991, the artist became in conflict with his record label, "Warner Bros". This is when he replaced his name by a "Love Symbol."¸ We also called him the "Artist formerly known as P….."

In 2000, he finally became free of any contract and took back his name P- - - - -. After that he came back with the Emancipation album and with an excellent show with these dynamite dancers. The premier show was live from Paisley Park studios in Minneapolis.

He wrote a few successful songs for many artists like:

Céline Dion, title: "With This Tear".

Madonna: Love Song, + Like a Prayer (Dub Remix) (Prince plays guitar; very rare).

No Doubt: Waiting Room.

Kenny Rogers: You’re My Love.

Tina Turner: Let’s Pretend we’re Married.

The Bangle title: "Manic Monday".

Sinead O'Connor: Nothing compares 2 u

Deborah Allen: Telepathy.

Brown Mark: Shall We Dance? + Bang Bang.

George Clinton: We can Funk, + the Big Pump +T weakin'.

Joe Cocker: Five Women.

Andre Cymone: Dance Electric

Candy Dulfer: Sunday Afternoon.

Earth Wind and Fire: Superhero.

Sheena Easton: Cool Love, 101, Eternity, Sugar Walls,

Carmen Electra: Fantasia Erotica, Fun, Go Go Dancer, Just A Little Lovin’, Good Judy Girlfriend, Go On Witchabadself. Step 2 The Mic, Skin Tight. This Is My House.

T. C. Ellis: Bambi Rap, Girl O’ My Dreams, Miss Thang, T. C.’s Rap.

Aretha Franklin, And James Brown: Gimme Your Love.

Rosie Gaines, Morris Day, Nona Gaye, Larry Graham, Nona Hendryx, Jesse Johnson, Jill Jones , Chaka Khan , Patti Labelle, Kohuru Kohiruimaki, Eric Leeds, Mazarati , M.C. Hammer , Taja Sevelle , Sheila E. St. Paul , Mavis Staples , TLC , Tupac , Wendy and Lisa , Apollonia 6, Ingrid Chavez, and more …

He never leaves anybody indifferent. He is a multiple-facted person: sometimes shy, mocking, charmer, inapproachable and another moment ,very close of his fans.

He proclaims peace in the world, respect of others, (no racism) and faith in good deeds.

Onstage, it is something to see him direct his musicians like an excellent bandmaster, a simple movement of a finger or of the hand to make everybody understand what he wants from them.

His father John Nelson played piano in a jazz trio name: "P- - - - - Rogers band". His mother Mattie sometimes went onstage to sing with them.

You surely must have guessed that we talk about the one and only Prince.

Since the year 2002 he has given us some very good albums like: the box set ONE NITE ALONE…LIVE! The cover of the box set is very beautiful with a nice picture of him. Inside the box, you find a great program with beautiful pictures and one CD with 2 Disc ( one nite alone… live)and another single CD The after show: IT AIN’T OVER! It is an excellent box set. I remember when the One Nite Alone…tour came in Montreal at the Molson Center. I bought the program and when I arrived at the second floor of the arena a friend of mind say, "hey look at that Gamillah! It is Maceo Parker." And we went to ask for an autograph. He took my program and he signed ("Gamillah" Hey okay Maceo) It was a great memory for me. After that, he released a great D V D of PRINCE LIVE at the Aladdin Las Vegas (2003) with special guests: NIKKA COSTA, MACEO PARKER, AND SHEILA E . Excellent show .And in the same year he released the CD N.E.W.S it was an instrumental CD, the 4 letters of title of this album represent NORTH, EAST, WEST, SOUTH .I remember a great moment during my vacation when I was at my brother-in-law's chalet. I woke up earlier than them. I was sitting by the window watching the lake and the landscape. I took my walkman and I listened to this excellent, relaxing CD. I could feel in this music the peace within myself and imagine the wind outside or hear the Canada geese singing on my small lake and many others emotions.

In February2004, Prince and Beyoncé opened the 46th annual Grammy Awards show in Los Angeles. It was a great performance. In March 2004 in New York, Prince was inducted to the rock’ n’ roll hall of fame for his 25 years of contribution in the music business, and he shook the house with 3 good songs( Let’s Go Crazy, Sign O’ the Times and Kiss. According to me, Prince is certainly one of the best musicians in the world.

AND NOW! HE RELEASED HIS LATEST CD, whose title is,

Musicology

Song Titles:

1st song: Musicology 4.02- Amazing funk and this is another in Prince’s long line of stellar album openers.

2nd song: Illusion, Coma, Pimp & Circumstance 4.45: - Innovative guitar and vocals. Check the arms for goosebumps.

3rd song: A Million Days 3.49;- Mid-tempo rock that lets us catch our breath.

4th song: Life O The Party 4.29- Go-Go beats, reggae-funk, and co-vocals with Candy Dulfer. Prince, will we be on the guest list to this party, bro?

5th song: Call My Name 5.15: - Dim candles and with the one you love.

6th song: Cinnamon Girl 3.56;- Right On, for once an music artist is not afraid to say what’s on their mind in 2004. This is a great track.

7th song: What Do U Want Me 2 Do? 4.15- Modern-day Camille influenced track.

8th song: The Marrying Kind 2.48- Monogamy never sounded so good and musical.

9th song: I f Eye Was The Man In Ur Life 3.09- Lots going on in this song and it is a nice twist to the album.

10th song: On The Couch 3.33: - Beautiful vocals in soulful feel. Humorous at the same time. Will play on my stereo when my lady kicks me to the sofa.

11th song: Dear Mr. Man 4.08- Love this song and it brings some tears to my eyes. Mid-tempo funk with touching lyrics.

12th song: Reflection 3.00- Prince connects with this heart-felt song. Memories of growing up.

Now he is coming back with his recent cd "Musicology". A cd of very good quality. You will also be able to admire that magnificent video clip that has the same title than the album. The Musicology tune is my favourite song because it is pure funk, very energising. I can’t stop to move my body when I listen to that song. I love it very much. The story of the clip starts with a young kid who goes in an old style record store to buy a ticket to see this idol named Prince. At the same time the Musicology 45 RPM is given to him. He goes back home and listens to the Musicology 45 RPM many times so he can learn how to play guitar. Then after he starts to dance, doing the same movements as his idol, using the vacuum-cleaner pole as a microphone stand.


According to me, this is the story of Prince when he was young and started to sing and play music.

At the end of the video you see the young guy (now he has a show that is made for the whole family) coming inside the theater, looking all amazed at his idol. This happens in a theater with a decoration style like the English ball-rooms, very warm, with small balconies on each side of the walls.

Each person in this clip, Prince, all members of his musicians, dancers and the crowd have a gracious and original style.

Excellent dancers of all styles appear. Out of them are two tap dancers.

Beside the video, you have many good tunes of different styles . Prince brings great funk, rock and ballads. His voice has never sounded better. My favourite’s songs are tracks #1-2-4-(5 excellent ballad) 7, and 10-12 (amazing slow, jams).

Hurry up and get it. It is really worth it. It sure is a very nice piece of collection for all fans.

Have a good listen with real music with real musicians

Peace and love.

Gamillah
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
Date: august 22nd
Source: http://www.ent-today.com/
________________________________________________________________

Purple Rain: 20th Anniversary Edition

Warner Bros.

Thanks to an acclaimed new album and the best tour of the year, Prince is back on top nowadays, though it’s a poorly-kept secret among music journalists that Musicology isn’t so much a return to form as merely another great album in a long, long series of them. This new two-DVD set offers you the chance to travel back 20 years to the unveiling of his first masterpiece, the soundtrack to the two-star-at-best autobiographical film Purple Rain. No, folks, the film does not hold up, despite a stellar collection of tunes and some very pretty clothes adorning very pretty people, and though Prince fans will want this on their shelves even they won’t play it very often. Oddly, the biggest problem with the movie isn’t the badly written scenes or the wooden acting—the plot is actually a fairly solid taking-charge-of-your-life sort of thing, with a ham-handed love story thrown in for good measure—but rather the songs, which actually work against that plot at almost every turn. Prince plays the Kid, a Minneapolis up-and-comer with acrobatic stage moves, a purple motorcycle and a surly attitude that leaves everyone cold. “No one cares about your music but you,” explains an exasperated club owner at one point, driving home the point that the Kid needs to shape up and change if he wants to make it. Except that, uh, the club owner is criticizing a fiery one-two performance of “Computer Blue” and “Darling Nikki” that would leave any real-world audience flabbergasted. The entire movie is punctuated with these incredible performances of flat-out great songs—any musician would gladly be screwed-up if only he could write songs like these—and you can’t help feeling repeatedly like the Kid shouldn’t change a thing so long as music like this keeps pouring out of him. To the film’s credit, it serves up as proof of the Kid’s eventual redemption a moving rendition of “Purple Rain” itself, perhaps the only song anyone has ever written that really is better than all the songs that preceded it, and Prince’s powerful delivery of it suggests, contrary to what the rest of the movie leads you to believe, that he might actually have some acting chops. The bonus materials here include an audio commentary, a fun 1984 MTV broadcast of the premiere and videos for all the songs, but the fact of the matter is that if you have the Purple Rain album you’ve already got the best of what this film has to offer. (Steven Hanna)
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
Review | Prince succeeds in his mission

By Tom Moon

Inquirer Music Critic

"Right about now we need to do some shout-outs,” Prince told the capacity crowd in the middle of his show yesterday at the Wachovia Center, during a rare moment when the music wasn't roaring. “I'd like to shout out to all the lip-syncers ... NOT!” he said with a grin, to loud applause. “I'd like to shout out to MTV ... NOT!” “Like to shout out to radio ... NOT."

Finally the Minneapolis multi-instrumentalist and singer shouted for “real musicianship,” the endangered aesthetic he'd poured considerable energy into reviving all night long. This time he meant it, and to underscore his point, trombonist Greg Boyer and alto saxophonist Maceo Parker appeared by his side wearing caps and gowns, playing a sassy little horn phrase that dipped and swerved as if it had been cribbed from Louis Jordan's jump-blues playbook.

The message was clear: Prince is not happy with the status quo. This decorated veteran and new inductee into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, who's fought his share of battles with radio, MTV and large corporations, sees his current tour as an ideological mission, a door-to-door crusade to rescue core musical values he believes have lately been trampled in the pursuit of heavily marketed hits.

No individual on the planet is better equipped to make this point.

Yesterday's whiplash-intense performance - the first of a three-night run that ends with a show tomorrow night, for which some tickets are still available - was a striking contrast to typical pop-concert fare, those exercises in poseur pageantry in which the stars look super-fine, but lack the basic musical skills.

For more than two hours, Prince tripped back through his catalog, a trove of pop hits, funk curiosities and psychedelic experiments that in terms of sheer invention has no equal in recent pop history. Much of the show was done medley-style, with brief renditions of old favorites knit into a seamless assault: An early high-speed chase through material from Purple Rain pushed “Let's Go Crazy” into a jittery electronic “I Would Die 4 U” into “When Doves Cry” into a stunning new groove for “Baby I'm a Star."

The diminutive star sang with impressive flexibility - on several selections, including the pirouetting ballad “Adore,” his falsetto ad-libs were more elaborate, and more thrillingly demanding, than those on the original recordings. He routinely made the guitar talk, and sometimes what it said amounted to a dissertation on rock axemen as cliche peddlers. On Led Zeppelin's “Whole Lotta Love,” one of several bold covers sprinkled throughout the show, Prince transformed the undulating rhythm into a writhing, hypnotic journey that was equal parts spacey Brit-rock mysticism and relentlessly melodic post-Hendrix virtuosity.

First appearing in a natty suit that was black on his right side and white on his left, Prince hit the stage - which was configured like a plus sign in the center of the arena floor, with four ramps for cavorting - in a whirl of motion, and didn't let up for nearly an hour. He elongated the form of “When Doves Cry” to accommodate a new dance routine, which found him pantomiming a la Charlie Chaplin one minute and moving with robotic precision the next. He did his usual conductor thing, shouting to the band for stop-time sections and using commands like “kick drum” to build grooves from quietude to utter frenzy that kept the crowd in motion for virtually the entire show. Wiggling as if his spine were spaghetti, he made a James Brown medley (which included “Shake Your Money Maker” and “Pass the Peas") into a physical tour de force, with each move catching and celebrating a different syncopation.

There were many highlights -- the obligatory encore “Purple Rain,” the rumbling “Life O the Party” from the current Musicology, a treatment of “I Feel 4 U,” the Prince-penned Chaka Khan hit -- but perhaps the biggest surprise came during an “unplugged” set featuring just Prince and acoustic guitar. First he reimagined “Little Red Corvette” as a coffeehouse meditation. Then he dabbled in a bit of blues that featured a blistering guitar solo, then “I Wanna Be Your Lover,” then he interpreted “Cream,” a minor hit from his 1991 Diamonds and Pearls. This song, which included a mouth-percussion beatbox interlude and a rap about a beat “tight like a rimshot on a new Roots joint,” illustrated the depth of Prince's gift: Even working with material that's clearly in his second-tier, he was clever, uplifting, utterly transfixing.

Early in the evening, Prince made what seemed, at the time, to be a boast: “You are about to witness the tightest show of your life.” By the time he finished, that claim was an accurate assessment of the evening.

Those who have followed Prince through the rocky last decade probably weren't surprised. Because though he's riding a wave of “comeback” media attention, the fact is Prince never stopped performing at this relentless level of energy. He might have leaned too much on Bootsy Collins one-chord vamps during some shows, and been stingy with hits on others, but he never lost either the commitment or that increasingly exotic ability to galvanize listeners with “real musicianship."
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
Date: August 22, 2004
Source: http://filmcritic.com/misc/emporium...8/?OpenDocument
________________________________________________________________

Under the Cherry Moon

A film review by Christopher Null - Copyright © 2004 filmcritic.com

Prince followed up his cult classic Purple Rain by hopping back in front of the camera -- and behind it -- in the oddball disasterpiece Under the Cherry Moon.

For this opus, another music-filled epic writ small, Prince plays bored bachelor Christopher Tracy, who plys the French Riviera for divorcees and socialites with the help of a friend named Tricky (Jerome "The Time" Benton, who appeared in exactly three movies -- all of them starring Prince). The bulk of the story concerns his persual of Mary -- and Kristin Scott Thomas's appearance as her in this, her first motion picture, makes the movie about as noteworthy as it's going to get.

Unfortunately, Prince's directorial work pretty much sinks the ship from the start. With no experienced filmmaker there to advise against Prince taking a bath in a goucho hat or yelling out insults like "party pooper!" there's just no handle on that Prince mystique. Making the film in black and white is an inspired misstep, draining the color (where's that "cherry moon," anyway?) right out of not just the screen but the story as well. In a purple suit and lace top, Prince's goofy grin and waxed eyebrows look kitschy to the point where they're fun. In shades of gray, Prince comes off as a buffoon. The entire film feels like Pennies from Heaven without the irony.

While it's certainly got some artistic merit in lighting and set design (with a vaguely flapper feel), the end result is that Cherry Moon is a colossal bore that can't generate sympathy for any of its characters. The tepid "love story" is matched only by Benton's limp-wristed attempt at executing a faux punch to a villain's face. Stick to the rock operas, Princester.

The new DVD includes four Prince videos from music from the film -- most notably including Prince's rendition of "Kiss."
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
Date: august 24th
Source: http://www.freep.com/entertainment
________________________________________________________________

NEW DVD RELEASES: Prince stands the test of time

August 24, 2004

BY TERRY LAWSON
FREE PRESS COLUMNIST


It's still too early to know whether the remarkable resurgence of Prince provides proof positive that brilliance will prevail (or whether it's just the latest case of one's longing for lost youth), but it has produced at least one lasting artifact: a 20th Anniversary special edition of "Purple Rain" (THREE STARS out of four stars, Warner, $26.99).

When it was released in 1984, the drama about a musician known only as the Kid who is struggling with identity and ambition in Minneapolis surprised critics and the public by being something deeper than the usual jukebox musical cash-in. It also exposed Prince to an audience that had been willing to dismiss him as another MTV-made novelty. The performance footage undoubtedly sold more than a few concert tickets.

Seen 20 years later, what was good about "Purple Rain" -- how the Kid was affected by his parent's volatile marriage, Prince's cocky confidence, the nightclub scenes and the humor -- remains good. "8 Mile" may be a better-made and more realistic movie, but the debt it owes "Purple Rain" is obvious.

The film's shortcomings, however, are also obvious, especially in its casual misogyny and the abuse the Kid heaps on the adoring Apollonia Kotero, who was no more an actor than she was a singer.

The musical sequences retain all their power, and the climactic performance of the title tune is stunning. Although we may wish the remix into 5.1 surround sound had been more dramatic, it still sounds pretty terrific, and seeing the concert sequences again in wide screen (the previous video was a full-screen crop job) allows us to appreciate the contribution of Prince's band, the Revolution.

The extras on the second disc are just passable. They include a look at the Fifth Avenue nightclub where Prince's craft was honed and his reputation was made, interviews with former members of the entourage (excluding his foil and protege, Morris Day) and a look back at '80s fashions. The inclusion of the music videos made to support the album and one for Apollonia 6's single "Sex Shooter" is very welcome.

The success of "Purple Rain' inspired a follow-up, 1986's "Under the Cherry Moon" (ONE STAR out of four stars", Warner, $19.96), a stylish but embarrassingly bad romantic comedy notable only for being the first film by future Academy Award nominee Kristin Scott Thomas and for including snippets of the songs that would show up on "Parade." That was followed by a lamentable sequel of sorts, 1990's "Graffiti Bridge" (TWO STARS out of four stars, Warner $19.96). Taken together, the two fed into a growing perception of Prince as an ego-driven exhibitionist and a very unreliable judge of his own strengths and weaknesses.

If anybody's asking, though, I'd love to see a DVD release of the blistering 1987 concert film "Sign 'o' the Times."
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
Date: August 23, 2004
Source: http://filmcritic.com/misc/emporium...6/?OpenDocument
________________________________________________________________

Graffiti Bridge

A film review by Christopher Null - Copyright © 2004 filmcritic.com

Does cinema have a more inspired moment than the one in Graffit Bridge where Morris Day sings the alphabet song, then, when he gets to "P," urinates on a house plant -- and then sets it on fire?

No, I say.

This little-seen and ill-regarded sequel to Purple Rain gives us Prince again as The Kid, dueling with Day for a second time -- this time as businessmen. Both are now Minneapolis club owners, and Kid's in hock to Day for some reason -- so to settle their debts, they agree to a songwriting contest. If Kid loses, he has to give his club over to Day.

Kid seeks a muse in Aura (Ingrid Chavez, in her one and only film appearance), who coaxes a masterpiece out of him under the titular Graffiti Bridge (which looks suspiciously like something you'd see on a miniature golf course) just before tragedy strikes. Convenient ending ensues.

Prince is directing this time out, and even more so than in Under the Cherry Moon, the man proves he has no idea what to do behind the camera. Everything about Graffiti Bridge screams corny -- not just the straight-outta-Vegas mini-sets, but the horrible acting, terrible dialogue, and inane script (also, ahem, written by Prince). Considering he had six years to get this together since Rain, we could have expected something a little more fully baked.

Bridge has one thing going for it, and that's that the DVD packs more bass in it than any other disc I've ever screened. If you want to give your home theater setup a workout, this is the way to do it. You'll find a handful of music videos on the disc as well.
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
Date: August 20, 2004
Source: http://www.twincities.com/mld/twinc.../9442869.htm?1c
________________________________________________________________

Let's pause and remember the deluge caused by 'Purple Rain'

BY CHRIS HEWITT

Pioneer Press



With the 20th-anniversary screening of "Purple Rain" on Saturday, Prince will again ask the musical question, "Why do we scream at each other?"

Maybe I'm just like my mother (she's never satisfied), but no screaming should be allowed when the movie is shown at First Avenue, the place where Prince and crew shot much of the landmark 1984 musical. Wear ruffles, since there's a dress-as-your-favorite-character contest. It's all a benefit to raise money for the upcoming Central Standard Film Festival and, since it's a benefit, there's a party afterward.

Those who attend will get a unique chance to compare and contrast First Avenue as it looks in the movie and in real life and to ponder these earth-shaking changes Prince's movie has wrought:

1. It cost Al Gore the presidency. Work with us: "Darling Nikki," the masturbation song on the soundtrack, led to the creation of the Parents' Music Resource Center, co-founded by Tipper Gore, Al's wife. Given the closeness (ahem) of the 2000 elections, it's not too hard to imagine that the retaliatory votes of a couple still-bitter rockers (Kip Winger, maybe?) sent the election Dubya's way.

2. It cost Prince his career, almost. The huge, un-follow-up-able popularity of "Purple Rain" didn't have an impact on Prince creatively — he continued to drop great records for another decade — but commercially, it made everything else he did look like a stiff. At least, up until his current renaissance.

3. It changed the Oscars forever. Forgot he won one of those little gold men, didn't you? He won in the best original song score category, beating out Kris Kristofferson and the Muppets in a category that was promptly dumped forever.

4. It is responsible for the crestfallen faces of every band that plays First Avenue for the first time. "Where's the long hallway from the movie?" they ask, as they take their initial, puppyish looks around the club. Answer: Elsewhere. That scene was not shot at First Ave.

5. It led to Kristin Scott Thomas' big break and Albert Magnoli's bad one. Flush from the success of "PR," Prince had the chance to direct himself in "Under the Cherry Moon," hiring Thomas for her first major role (it only took her a couple of years to live it down). Meanwhile, "PR" director Magnoli, whose career had seemed promising, virtually disappeared. The Sylvester Stallone stinker "Tango & Cash" is his biggest subsequent credit.
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
Date: August 23, 2004
Source: http://www.startribune.com/stories/389/4941691.html
________________________________________________________________

Here comes the rain again

Jon Bream, Star Tribune
August 23, 2004

For this week's 20th anniversary DVD release of "Purple Rain," Prince has been, well, a purple pain.

He refused requests from Warner Home Video to do a commentary or interview for the $27 reissue, which includes a bonus disc of extras. Nor did he do anything for "Under the Cherry Moon" and "Graffiti Bridge," the final two in his rock-musical trilogy, also being released Tuesday for the first time on DVD.

Although he's having his most lucrative year ever as a concert performer, Prince reportedly demanded a fee to participate in the project. Typically, DVD commentaries are unpaid, although a few stars -- including Arnold Schwarzenegger for "Total Recall" -- have been paid for their extra efforts. Prince, who has feuded with Warner Bros. for more than a decade, also urged other "Purple" principals not to play without pay. His two co-stars, Morris Day and Apollonia, didn't do interviews, either.

Although Prince will get some royalties from the DVD, that is chump change compared with what he's hauling in from his concert tour or his current bestselling CD, "Musicology."

Also missing from the DVD are outtakes from the movie. The notion of saving footage for future use wasn't common in 1984. Plus, "Purple Rain" was done by first-time producers and a first-time director, with a first-time star and a cast of mostly amateurs in Minneapolis, of all places.

It was a hard sell to Warner Bros., co-producer Bob Cavallo recalls on the DVD.

" 'OK, that's a great idea,' " was the sarcastic reaction of studio powers-that-be, Cavallo said, but they ultimately agreed to the $7 million gamble, which went on to gross more than $65 million and catapult Prince to international stardom.

Twenty years later, "Purple Rain" still holds up as one of the most exciting and essential rock movies. The script and acting will never win any awards, but has there ever been a dramatic rock movie with as many riveting and powerful stage performances? In one song after another, Prince is positively irresistible, his dazzlingly magical combination of singing, dancing and guitar playing being the glue that makes the soap-opera plot turns palatable. (He won an Oscar for his soundtrack.)

The key, explains director Albert Magnoli in a commentary on the DVD, is that these sequences were filmed in front of an audience at First Avenue in Minneapolis in the fall of 1983, with Prince actually singing, accompanied by pre-recorded music (although his band appeared to be playing live). Using four cameras, Magnoli was able to capture Prince's captivating performances in only one or two takes. Nowadays, that approach would be unheard of for a concert scene.

Moreover, the filmmakers shot the stage sequences in a mere 10 days, even though a month had been budgeted.

"We went into it three weeks behind and came out of it on schedule," Cavallo said.

"Purple Rain" tells the quasi-autobiographical story of the Kid, a struggling but overdressed Minneapolis musician from a broken home. His parents fight as he battles for supremacy in the local club scene. In the end, Prince gets the girl (and top billing), but his family life is a mess.

"Purple Rain" was first issued on DVD in 1997 as part of the initial wave of releases in that format. By current standards, however, that disc seems primitive -- there are no extras, and the original widescreen visuals are chopped to TV size.

Bonuses on the new edition include:

• Interviews with musicians Wendy Melvoin, Lisa Coleman and Jellybean Johnson, among others, and director Magnoli, producer Cavallo and screenwriter William Blinn.

• An overlong discussion of the significance of First Avenue from a parade of locals, such as Grammy-winning producer Jimmy Jam, Chan Poling of the Suburbs, former club manager Steve McClellan, Prince drummer Bobby Z and KMOJ announcer Q Bear.

• Footage of MTV's coverage of the Hollywood premiere of "Purple Rain" in July 1984, plus a discussion about the cultural significance of the movie and eight music-video clips related to the flick.

The most valuable extra is the "Mystery Science Theater"-like commentary from Magnoli, Cavallo and cinematographer Donald Thorin as they watch the film. Of course, these moviemakers aren't wise guys -- they play it straight.

The other two flicks

Watching "Under the Cherry Moon" and "Graffiti Bridge" ($20 each) in concert with "Purple Rain" proves that Prince is not an actor, director or screenwriter.

After dismissing director Mary Lambert, he ended up directing "Cherry Moon," in which he is far and away the worst actor. The only scene in which he seems natural is when he performs the song "Girls & Boys" in a swank nightclub. Shot in black-and-white, the tragically absurd 1986 romantic comedy follows two gigolos trying to romance rich women in the south of France.

"Graffiti Bridge," 1990's sequel to "Purple Rain," seems worse now than it did when it was released -- and it was dreadful then. Written and directed by Prince, the movie comes off as a series of poorly lit music videos (featuring Prince, the Time, Tevin Campbell, Mavis Staples and George Clinton) shot on a low-budget set. The soundtrack has its moments, but the film has little redeeming value.

Neither movie comes with extras, aside from music videos spawned by the two soundtracks. Prince was prudent to pass on these DVDs, but his failure to participate in the reissue of his first movie leaves a black cloud over "Purple Rain."
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
Date: august 22nd
Source: http://www.delawareonline.com/
________________________________________________________________

Career and spirit reborn, Prince rules

By EDNA GUNDERSEN
USA Today
08/22/2004

He took the reins so he could resume his reign.

Prince has come a long way since he scrawled "slave" on his cheek and changed his name to an unpronounceable symbol.

He blithely dismisses his battles with Warner Bros. as "water under the bridge." Prince is too busy counting his blessings to rehash his grudges.

Enjoying an artistic and spiritual rebirth, he also finds himself at the center of a popularity boom. The opening sales for his "Musicology" CD racked up his biggest week since 1991.

For the past 10 years, he's held the keys to his kingdom by funding his own projects, delivering music directly to fans and avoiding industry machinery and middlemen.

Dubbing the conventional system "prehistoric and antiquated," Prince says, "All I ever said was, "Let me drive.' Contracts have their purpose. Some artists need producers and songwriters and the direction record companies give. Other artists are more independent and self-contained. I press my own CDs. I employ people who handle what I can't do myself."

Prince, 46, seceded from the music industry in the mid-'90s. He remained busy, releasing rivers of music for his NPG label and music club (npgmc.com), but, aside from teaming with Arista for 1999's "Rave Un2 the Joy Fantastic," he seemed to drift off the pop-culture radar.

But 2004, Prince's banner year, got rolling with a show-stopping performance at the Grammy Awards. His subsequent "Musicology" album and retrospective tour yielded critical acclaim and hefty profits. He will be in Philadelphia today through Tuesday.

"Prince took himself out of the game when he was high on the mountain," says business partner L. Londell McMillan, a founder of the Artist Empowerment Coalition. "He even removed his 'name' from circulation. He was perceived as overly mercurial and bizarre, but by removing himself while staying true to his creative spirit, he was able to watch and listen and re-enter on his own terms."

"Over the past seven to 10 years, he's made more money than he did during the same period in his heyday with 'Purple Rain' under Warner," McMillan says. "He's a free agent in the marketplace, and we've created a multi-delivery model that works best for him, as tailor-made as the suits he wears."

Notoriously prolific, Prince occasionally seeks label partners for albums that suit mainstream tastes (he has a few-strings deal with Columbia) while funneling eclectic or experimental music to his NPG Music Club or packaging songs and collections for Internet-only release.

The hundreds of thousands of club members who pay a one-time $25 fee and standard download charges take the sting out of Internet thievery.

"I don't really take a stance on piracy," Prince says. "If I was only getting a few pennies off every album, I'd be worried. But I get $7 a pop for every album that sells for $10. That's enough."

Prince's royalty crusade is behind him. He expresses respect for current partners Sony and Clear Channel, but he'd rather talk about the healing properties of sound and the genius of Miles Davis. He works up a sweat on the dying craft of live musicianship.

"You can't bring a prerecorded event to the stage," he says. "You have to be able to vibe off the audience and let a song marinate. Keep it alive! Where can you see a real band anymore? You can't get a machine to play like my drummer."

He won't discuss Manuela Testolini, his wife since 2001, or his conversion to the Jehovah's Witness faith, though he touches on biblical topics and doesn't hide his zeal.

"There is a God, and he cares about us," he says. "Satan wants us to think life is a burden and that you have to be a slave. We're rolling on 'fast forward' right now. Let's hit 'pause' and find out what our lives would be like if we aligned ourselves with God's will. Am I the genius here? No. I'm following God's will."

Consequently, he's ditched such crude staples as "Gett Off." "I have an older, more sophisticated audience now," he says.

"I want to be my own special effect," he says. "Music is a beautiful language we call the truth. There's a right way to play a song and a bunch of wrong ways."
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
Date: August 23, 2004
Source: http://www.startribune.com/stories/389/4941686.html
________________________________________________________________

'Purple' people: Where are they now?

August 23, 2004
Jon Bream

We all know what Prince has been up to in 2004. What have some of the other key players from "Purple Rain" done in the past 20 years?

PRODUCER BOB CAVALLO

Co-manager of Prince 1979-89; he went on to help manage Green Day, Alanis Morissette, Seal, the Goo Goo Dolls and others. In 1998, he became chairman of Buena Vista Music Group, running all the Disney record labels and working with Hilary Duff, Polyphonic Spree, Los Lobos and Morris Day.

DIRECTOR ALBERT MAGNOLI

A first-time director on "Purple Rain," he never really cashed in. He directed "American Anthem" (1986), helped on Prince's splendid concert movie "Sign o' the Times" (1987) and finished up the Sly Stallone/Kurt Russell buddy picture "Tango & Cash" (1989) after another director started it. He directed Don Johnson's TV series "Nash Bridges" in 1996, the same year he did his last feature, "Dark Planet," a cheesy sci-fi flick starring Michael York.

SCREENWRITER WILLIAM BLINN

This old-school TV writer -- recruited for "Purple Rain" because he worked on the musical drama "Fame" -- produced and wrote this year's film "Starsky & Hutch." (He created the original TV series.)

APOLLONIA

Prince's love interest in "Purple Rain," she became Lorenzo Lamas' lover on the 1980s TV soap "Falcon's Crest" and made a few Italian movies. Her last U.S. film credit was a small part in "Anarchy TV" ('97). She has done a number of small TV roles, appearing last year on "The Wayne Brady Show" as herself. And did you catch her on VH1's "I Love the '80s"? She also made a solo album in '88, an exercise video and a Spanish-English CD in '98. She was invited to Carmen Electra's wedding this year (Prince wasn't), and recorded a Chaka Khan song with Greg Dulli for his Twilight Singers project.

MORRIS DAY

After playing Prince's rival in "Purple Rain," the cartoonish dandy signed a three-picture deal with 20th Century Fox but landed no major film roles. He has made four solo albums and reunited with the Time in '90 for the album "Pandemonium" and the Prince movie "Graffiti Bridge." He is touring with original Time members Jerome Benton, Jellybean Johnson and Monte Moir, and released "It's About Time," chiefly a live CD of old Time songs, this spring. A recently recorded Time album, produced by original members Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis, is sitting in the can, Lewis says. Day appears in the new film "West From North Goes South," along with Tina Louise, Phyllis Diller and other names from the past.

CLARENCE WILLIAMS III

The former co-star of TV's "Mod Squad" went on to become a major character actor, appearing in more than two dozen films, including "The General's Daughter" and TV shows such as "Judging Amy."

WENDY & LISA

The only members of Prince's band, the Revolution, to have a prominent speaking role in the film, Wendy Melvoin and Lisa Coleman made three duo albums (the final one, in 1998, as the Girl Bros.). Lately, they have focused on scoring music for films and TV shows, including TV's "Crossing Jordan." Melvoin plays on Rob Thomas' upcoming solo album and recent discs by Liz Phair, Lisa Marie Presley, Terence Trent D'arby and Sheryl Crow. Coleman has played on albums by k.d. lang, Seal, Los Lobos and Victoria Williams.
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
Date: August 21, 2004
Source: http://www.rockymountainnews.com/dr...3126201,00.html
________________________________________________________________

Prince's new power
Party over? Rock star shows industry how it's done

By Mark Brown, Rocky Mountain News
August 21, 2004

Playing his biggest hits, mixed with his strong, new material, Prince wows crowds at Arrowhead Pond, Anaheim, above, and at Cincinnati, below. (Afshin Shahidi © © Npg Music, 2004)

The lazy take on Prince in recent years was that his best days were behind him.

His sales were down, the media said. His music wasn't as good as it used to be. His behavior was erratic - the name changes, the record company wars. Game over.

He turned his back on opportunities other performers would sell their souls for. The term "difficult" got slapped on him. Still more jeers from the sidelines.

But the truth is more interesting than the fiction. The man who once was one of the biggest rock stars in the world saw years ago that the music industry couldn't keep doing business the way it had, so he went directly to his fans online.

And halfway through the most successful tour of 2004, in a summer when almost every other tour is tanking, Prince's concerts are a virtual coast-to-coast sellout, breaking records in major cities. One Pepsi Center show next week is sold out, and the other is close to it.

His new Musicology album is great and near the top of the charts. All the hot young artists in 2004, from Alicia Keyes to Outkast, bow to him. And it has finally dawned on the record industry that selling music online is the future.

It turns out Prince made the moves everyone else wishes they'd made. While the music industry flounders, Prince flourishes. Does he ever just want to say "I told you so?"

"No!" Prince says, shaking his head firmly, but smiling slightly during a rare interview before a recent concert here. To hear him tell it, no vision was needed, anyway.

"It's almost like hearing a weather report and knowing it's going to rain. You can tell people and they either believe you or not."

Rather, Prince says, he's disappointed the industry didn't come along for the ride sooner. His label, Warner Bros. Records, had put great faith in him early in his career, but wavered as the years went on. "It just means they weren't enlightened enough or had the same faith that I had. If you love somebody, you should always love them."

The multitalented performer knew when he started this fight - when he went after Warner to gain control of the music that had made hundreds of millions of dollars - that it would be a long road.

"You're just worried how you're going to get out of this and not look like exactly what I eventually ended up looking like - this spoiled, pampered baby," Prince says.

But the need to keep his music pure - and Warner's refusal to release it - left him with no choice. "Before I left Warner Bros., I had a big and successful career in all areas. If they wanna run (a single) up the chart, they'll do it."

He couldn't play that game anymore. "I grew up when albums came out every three or four months. I wanted to make a lot of music."

And he wanted ownership of the copyrights, but the label balked. "Whoever created it is the owner. Is that even a question?" he says incredulously.

But now, backstage in Milwaukee, he smiles and chats happily about his life and music. "I'm not bitter or mad. You've gotta tip your hat" to the music industry, he says, sarcastically, for making so much money off artists' sweat for so many years. "It worked great for them."

The man behind the myth

Prince talks in passionate italics and exclamation points, enthused with music and society, far removed from the man of few words you often see in TV interviews, but every bit as intense.

Before the interview he ran an hourlong sound check, personally tweaking the sound on every microphone onstage, including those deep in the saxes of Maceo Parker and Candy Dulfer.

They worked through I Feel For You, Controversy and more Prince classics as he directed sound changes via wireless mike from all over the venue, calling out the changes in precise decibel levels. Much is made of Prince's perfectionism, but it has its purpose. The sound at the beginning of the check was as good as any concert; by the time he finished, it was like sitting in front of an upscale stereo system.

Fans know that 2004 is anything but a comeback. For years Prince has been productive, more musically accessible than ever, and making more money than ever. He tours regularly and records constantly. He divides his music between pressed CDs (the jazzy NEWS and the latest return to form, Musicology) and online-only discs (The Slaughterhouse and a new classic, Chocolate Invasion). Much of that music is as strong as his best-known work, such as Purple Rain and 1999.

So while it's not a comeback, Prince has chosen 2004 to be more visible. He has undertaken his most extensive tour in years and grabbed high-profile opportunities he has shunned in the past, including agreeing to open the Grammy Awards after years of requests. He is also sitting for more interviews, including this one. He insists, though, that much of it is out of his control.

"You can't take anything away from the media. They pick and choose what they want to focus on," he says. "We're given pre-packaged pop stars every day. They control who's on heavy rotation."

Yet, he notes with satisfaction, "the album's in the top 10."

Yes it is, in part because of the controversial way Prince is getting it out - every concert-goer gets a copy of Musicology added to the price of their ticket. That has pushed sales to 1.3 million so far, and Prince makes no apology for it. It gets the music out there without the usual record-company nonsense, and concert-goers for the most part have been thrilled with getting something tangible to take home. It also has stirred debate in the record industry and media.

Billboard and Soundscan have revised their policies to disallow such a tactic, but Musicology is "grandfathered" in and each copy still counts. The album returned to the top 10 again this week.

Prince likes the controversy.

"There's something a little different now that they have to pay attention to - this bundling situation," says Prince, who remains indifferent to criticism that it's artificially inflating his figures. To him, all that matters is getting heard.

"I know it's getting to people."

Battling for musical freedom

Prince has been a prolific songwriter, with more than 30 albums in his 26-year career. Does he ever just put down the guitar for days or weeks on end?

"I hear music still, but I spend long periods when I don't actually play it." Inspiration comes, but he just retains it. "I was hearing a song today in my head. I'll be messing with that later."

It's not just his own music that entrances him. For years he has sung Joni Mitchell's A Case of You; last year, he finally released a version on a limited edition of his live album One Night Alone – Live!

People ask: "How did Prince get like this? What's his history?" he says. Besides his obvious funk, soul and rock influences, he figures they should know the more subtle stuff.

"I love all Joni's music," he says, adding that he does her songs "just to keep her name out there. Joni's music should be taught in school, if just from a literature standpoint."

The same goes for James Brown, Earth Wind & Fire, and Sly Stone. "Take Sly out of time! Bring him back like he's brand new."

He laughs a lot these days, but knows he has a serious image when it comes to his music.

"My life got real serious there for a second - getting out of the record industry. You have to realize that I was told I couldn't leave. Excuse me? What did you say? With the mergers and revolving door of executives, it was like musical chairs or something."

The fight with Warner (which eventually allowed Prince to leave the label, but he had to leave his classic albums behind) took on guerrilla tactics. Prince famously wrote "slave" on his face and changed his name to a symbol as a protest. He took other tacks as well.

When Warner balked at releasing The Gold Experience in 1995, Prince had his independent publicity firm send the video for the first single, Dolphin, to the press, ensuring that the song would be written about and that the music would leak. Warner caved and the album was released as Prince intended.

Musicology is being distributed by Sony Music, but under a vastly different agreement than he had with Warner. It's a one-off deal with Prince's NPG Records; Sony only distributes it. And Prince pockets $7 for every $10 disc sold.

"I'm the content provider, I don't feel any pressure from them. They don't have any power over me," says Prince, who has learned a lot from his contract battles.

"Going through 10 years of struggle makes my meetings now with the executives a breeze. They know straight in they're not owning anything. That's not even a question," he says gleefully.

Do other artists come to him for advice? Yes, Prince allows, "but what's more interesting is when the executives come to me for advice."

So what does he tell them? "You get the artist you deserve," he says.

To fix things? "Start from scratch. You like music, right? Me too. Remember when there were these hippies running the business?"

It's time, he tells executives, to get back to that. "You're gonna have more fun. You're gonna make a lot more money."

"We have more record companies and look at their (failure) rates. They're trying to make more and more money. We gotta maybe get back to making some good music."

What infuriates him is watching the industry prey on rappers, bleeding them dry the way they bled bluesmen decades ago, then discarding them. New artists are encouraged to be more outrageous than what came before, to shock for the purpose of making a quick money score.

"They're taking our kids out of our community and doing it to them. You disenfranchise part of the nation," he says. "That's the sad part. What can you say other than arrogance and greed? That's what you school people on."

The issues of Prince

Prince always has commented on social issues. On Musicology, the song Dear Mr. Man doesn't mention anyone by name, but pointedly lays out problems in our nation. On July Fourth, he released The United States of Division via his Web site. It opens: "2004 / still at war / and everybody hates Americans."

"Look at the reality and the truth," Prince says. "They're our supposed 'elected' officials who are supposed to take care of us. Some people are benefiting, and some aren't."

The top 10 percent of the population controls most of the wealth in this country, Prince notes, "and it's not a rainbow coalition. Don't get me started on that."

But start he does. "What is democracy? What does that word mean?" he says with exasperation. He's also dismissive of those who won't speak up for fear of retribution. "Don't dare say anything about it or you're going to get your CDs smashed. What's so scary about that?"

Likewise, a thread of spirituality has always run through his work, be it subtle (Let's Go Crazy, Same December) or more overt (God, The Holy River).

"As you get older, you start to look at it. It's not even the age-old cliché of 'Why are we here?' There's right and wrong. And then there's the lie, an illusion so powerful people literally live in a collective hallucination. They see walls that aren't there," he says. "Sooner or later we have to . . . say 'When did we fall off track here? How are we going to fix this thing?"

His much-discussed path as a Jehovah's Witness has gotten too much sensationalized coverage, he says; he's interested in spirituality and answers, not strange ceremonies or theories. "I'm very practical. You go Trekkie on me, I gotta go."

Prince has made a tentative peace with Warner Bros.; there are rumors of a special edition of Purple Rain in the works. That may be merely wishful thinking; the new DVD of Purple Rain comes out Tuesday with no Prince involvement and thus no substantial upgrade.

An overhaul of his catalog is needed. Warner slapped substandard copies of his music onto CD years ago and has never upgraded them. Prince's best album, 1987's Sign O' the Times, sounds absolutely awful, with fluctuating volume levels and passable but muddy sound. Prince leaps to his feet in agreement when these issues are mentioned.

"Tell them that! We need to bring it up to the industry standard!"

He'd love to see remastered and expanded versions of his work and surround-sound versions of his classics, but with the master tapes in Warner's hands, he can't make that happen. "I can go re-record it and put it out - but should I have to?"

As well as looking forward, Prince has spent time looking back. The live show features his hits. Scattered through gigs this year - live and on TV - have been appearances with Prince alumni: Morris Day of the Time, drummer Sheila E, and most strikingly, an acoustic performance on TV with Wendy Melvoin of his most revered backing band, The Revolution.

When asked about that reunion with Melvoin, Prince grows wistful.

"She plays acoustic guitar with me better than almost anyone," he says quietly. "The opportunity came up and her name was the first to come to mind. I'm looking for things to juice me, too."


By the numbers

• 666,666: The number of CDs Prince had to sell under his old record deal to make $1 million.

• 142,857: The number of CDs Prince has to sell now, on his own, to make $1 million

• 13 million: The number of Purple Rain CDs sold since 1984

• $19.5 million: The money Prince made off those Purple Rain sales

• 1.3 million: The number of Musicology CDs sold this year

• $9.1 million: The money Prince made off those Musicology sales

• 30: Roughly, the number of studio albums Prince has released in 26 years.

• 24,800: The average number of people who see Prince in each city

• $1.5 million: The average concert gross in each city

• $63.26: Prince's average ticket price

• $143.60: Madonna's average ticket price

• $79.5 million: Madonna's tour gross

• $45.7 million: Prince's tour gross through June 30

• $100 million: Prince's expected gross at tour's end

Sources: Pollstar, Www.Riaa.Com, Sony Music, Www.Npgmusicclub.Com

Lack of airplay means a generation misses great music

Prince's newer music hasn't gotten the airplay it deserves.

Even though he took control of his musical life when he parted ways with his major record label deal, and even though he has done work as good as his biggest hits, much of it gets passed over by the mainstream.

Is being overlooked the downside of independence?

"Who overlooked it? You gotta sit in the creator's seat," Prince says defiantly, suggesting nothing is overlooked there.

Despite that, radio, video and the general public have, unfortunately, not had easy access to what easily ranks among Prince's best work. He may not much care, but we do. From the past decade, here are the 10 best Prince songs you may have never heard.

• THE HOLY RIVER

From 1996's Emancipation, it's one of Prince's most personal songs. The Holy River builds from a piano ballad to a rock rave-up, chronicling his disillusionment with fame and wealth ("putting your faith in things that only make you cry . . . the more they say they love you, the more you just wanna die").

But it's hardly rock-star moping. It has a gorgeous melody, self-deprecating lyrics, and a confessional story of spiritual redemption ("lookin' back, y'all, I don't miss nothin' except the time"). Just to prove his point, Prince finishes it off with a joyous guitar solo. One of his top five songs.

• DON'T TALK TO STRANGERS

From the 1996 soundtrack to the ill-fated Spike Lee movie Girl 6, this is an aching piano ballad as Prince says a forced goodbye to a child and urges them to have faith that somehow it's all going to be OK someday. A low-key tear-jerker.

• JUDAS SMILE

From the recent download-only album Chocolate Invasion, this funk-fueled morality tale was also reportedly intended for a Spike Lee movie, Bamboozled. It's a warning to not lose yourself and look for truth, warning "for every soul, there's a buyer."

• CALHOUN SQUARE

The 1998 Crystal Ball track has a loose tone set by the studio chatter that introduces the track, as Prince advises a musician: "You're listening to the drummer, but you still wanna have fun. It shouldn't be work." Languid, funky bass and guitar lines turn into a roaring guitar rock chorus, a mélange of everything Prince does best.

• WHAT'S MY NAME

Another gem on the four-CD Crystal Ball set, this is three angry minutes of muttered vocals and despair. "Take my fame / I can't use it / My girlfriend calls me lame / The game was over yesterday." The popping bass funk disintegrates into swirling, scratching chaos, sounding unlike anything else Prince has ever done.

• DOLPHIN

The rarely seen, filmed-in-one-take video from the 1995 album The Gold Experience is a revelation in itself, perhaps the most fun visual Prince has ever presented. Spurred by his business dispute with Warner Brothers, Dolphin is a song about standing your ground, laced with a soaring melody and stinging guitar solo. A tad overwrought, but fun.

• GOLD

Another classic from The Gold Experience finds Prince explaining to fans why he's fighting so hard for his art in a sweeping anthem reminiscent of his Purple Rain heyday. He also decries culture's obsession with money and youth: "What's the use of money if you ain't gonna break the mold? . . . What's the use in being young if you ain't gonna get old?"

• SAME DECEMBER

The best song off the overlooked 1996 Chaos and Disorder album, it's a mini-suite of styles with surging dynamics and the feel of an epic.

• A MILLION DAYS

A solemn ballad off the new Musicology album, it's full of loss and ache, underscored by a menacing electric guitar: "It has only been an hour since you left me / but it feels like a million days." It treads much the same ground as Prince's classic '84 B-side, 17 Days, but filled with more humility: "I didn't have the heart to say I'm sorry / Now I haven't got a heart at all."

• DEAR MR. MAN

Another Musicology track, one of the most political Prince has attempted since Sign O' the Times. "Ain't no sense in voting / Same soul with a different name / Might not be in the back of the bus / But it sure feels just the same."
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
Date: august 20th
Source: http://www.courierpostonline.com/
________________________________________________________________

Lifelong fan recalls Purple One's luring power

Friday, August 20, 2004

By SHAWN RHEA
Courier-Post Staff


Like most folks with a couple of decades between their current life and teen years, I've forgotten more than I remember about my angst-filled adolescence. But one thing I recall clearly is the first time I heard Prince's debut hit, "Soft and Wet," on the radio.

I was 14, it was summer and I was visiting my older cousin in Austin, Texas.

In 1978, Austin wasn't the funky little arts town it has become in recent years. There wasn't much going on for teens (particularly African-American ones) who hadn't reached legal drinking age. Still, we managed to make a memorable summer out of catching midnight revivals of Night of the Living Dead at a local theater, terrorizing the waitresses at Denny's and hanging out on the auto strip of a nearby park long after the sun had set.

It was during one of our park visits that I first heard Prince cut loose with his breathy, staccato delivery of "Soft and Wet." Within seconds, all of the cars were tuned into that station and I was mesmerized by the sound of a wa-wa pedal guitar kicking out body-moving rhythms and the sight of teenagers breaking into spontaneous dance in the middle of the parking lot.

The party only lasted one song, but it was enough to make me a devoted, lifelong fan of an artist whose lyrics were so racy my mother told me his albums could only be played on my own turntable in my own room with the door closed so she didn't have to hear.

My infatuation didn't end with buying and incessantly playing Prince's music. When we were old enough to drive, my girlfriends and I hit every college campus he played within 50 miles of our Detroit hometown. We sweated away all traces of our day-glow colored lipstick, fuchsia blusher and cat-like eyeliner while dancing and belting out his tabooed lyrics at those concerts. It didn't matter that he was shorter than most of us, that he performed in high heels and leg warmers or that his hair was more elaborately coiffed than any of ours: Prince was the man of our adolescent fantasies and songs such as "Dirty Mind," "Party Up" and "Uptown" provided the soundtrack for our budding sense of independence.

My friends and I entertained ourselves for hours immersed in the culture of the Purple One. We were among the few who scooped up the sole album by Prince protege band The Family. We envied the sexual confidence of Vanity 6, saw multiple viewings of the movie Purple Rain and debated whether band members of The Time truly played on the group's first hit, "Get It Up," or whether the track really featured Prince playing all the instruments and Morris Day fronting vocals.

My appreciation of Prince matured and grew with the release of albums such as Sign O' The Times and Diamonds And Pearls and songs such as "The Ballad of Dorothy Parker," "Adore" and "She's Always In My Hair." So when my brother offered me the chance to attend Prince's Madison Square Garden concert in New York City last month, I jumped.

As I drove up the New Jersey Turnpike, I couldn't help but notice a familiar sense of excitement. Neither rain nor traffic put a damper on my feeling that I was about to experience something special. I made a mental list of all the songs I hoped Prince would play. Twenty-six years of music making and 31 albums gave me a lot to choose from.

As I slipped into my seat a bit late and a few songs into the show, I noticed Prince's lyrics are a bit cleaner and his dress a bit more modest these days, but he still possesses a stage presence and talent bigger than his 5-foot-2 frame. He still made me sweat away every trace of my makeup dancing and singing at the top of my lungs.
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
For Non PRINCE Believers, This Will Blow You Away!!

For all you non Prince fans when you see this weither you like him or not you will conclude there is no one like this genious!

ERIC CLAPTON, GEORGE CLINTON, TERRENCE TRENT D'ARBY, QUINCY JONES, LITTLE RICHARD, RANDY NEWMAN, MILES DAVIS, talk about PRINCE!!!


http://users.telenet.be/hestr/PrincePortrait.wmv

Please have an open mind and check it out and tell me what you think.
 

katw_03

New Member
littledragon869 said:
For all you non Prince fans when you see this weither you like him or not you will conclude there is no one like this genious!

ERIC CLAPTON, GEORGE CLINTON, TERRENCE TRENT D'ARBY, QUINCY JONES, LITTLE RICHARD, RANDY NEWMAN, MILES DAVIS, talk about PRINCE!!!


http://users.telenet.be/hestr/PrincePortrait.wmv

Please have an open mind and check it out and tell me what you think.


Sorry to differ LD, Eric Clapton underestimates himself, I think he is the BEST! :)
 
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