Friday, 22 April 2016

I remember Prince

Prince
Prince Nelson, the maverick musician who later decided he has no name, is dead. He passed away in at his estate in Minnesota, USA, at the age of 57.
My first whiff that there was something wrong was when I saw a report that a dead body had been taken out of his home by paramedics. It never occurred to me that it was Prince.
Then the dreadful news came. Prince was dead.
“It is with profound sadness that I am confirming that the legendary, iconic performer, Prince Rogers Nelson, has died at his Paisley Park residence this morning at the age of 57,” said his publicist Yvette Noel-Schure.
According to reports, the seven-time Grammy award winning singer had been suffering from flu for a number of weeks and was believed to be recovering, but took a turn for the worse in the early hours.
In early April, he cancelled a concert because he wasn't feeling well. Some days later, he performed in Atlanta but after that concert, his plane was diverted and made an emergency landing because he was not feeling well.
Prince, who was a Jehovah's Witness, was treated for three hours before being released. At the time Noel-Schure told CNN, “He is fine and at home.”
Little did she know that he wouldn’t be fine for long. Police found Prince unresponsive in an elevator in his home before he was pronounced dead.
Prince shook the music world. He won seven Grammy Awards, and earned 30 nominations. Five of his singles have topped the charts and 14 other songs hit the Top 10. He won an Oscar for the original song score to the classic film "Purple Rain."
The singer's lavishly kinky songs earned him the nickname, His Royal Badness. Others called him the "Purple One" because of his outlandish and colourful clothes.
He took the world by storm when he released “I Wanna Be Your Lover” in 1979. The song sold over a million copies and went straight to the top of the Hot Soul Singles chart.
After that, the hits came thick and fast. They included, “Uptown,” “Controversy,” “Kiss,” “1999,” and “Sign O’ The Times.”
Prince and Michael Jackson were the first two black artists to enjoy heavy play of their videos on MTV. His was “Little Red Corvette” while Jackson’s was “Billie Jean.”
In 1984 Prince released the monster hit “Purple Rain,” which included the iconic “When Doves Cry” and “Let’s Go Crazy.” The album sold more than 13 million copies in the US and spent 24 consecutive weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 chart. The film of the same name won an Oscar and grossed more than $80 million in the USA alone.
At one point in 1984, Prince simultaneously had the No. 1 album, single, and film in the US. It was the first time a singer had achieved such a monumental feat.
I remember checking the back of his albums for credits. The whole project was composed, arranged and produced by Prince. And he played virtually all the instruments too! Was this guy for real?
I was hooked. Who is this genius that could play 27 instruments? Physically he was small and frail but musically he was a towering giant.
If you didn’t like Prince, you were considered prudish. Even though, back in the 1980s, many of us didn’t understand his lyrics, we recognized his musical genius.
His feud with the late Rick James over who was the undisputed king of Punk Funk made tabloids and music magazines sell like hot cake. These two guys left no stone unturned in a bid to prove their superiority.
When Rick James formed the Mary Jane Girls, an all-female group, Prince formed Vanity 6 and Apollonia 6. James launched the careers of Teena Marie and Val Young. Prince responded by establishing the careers of Sheena Easton, Sheila E. and Jill Jones.
When James formed an all-male group called The Stone City Band, Prince formed The Time (now known as The Original 7ven). Prince wrote and performed most of the instrumentation and backing vocals, with lead vocals by Morris Day.  Two members of the group, Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis, went on to become one of the most successful songwriting and production teams of the 1980s and 1990s.
Prince, a shy and withdrawn guy, was not too comfortable around people. This is the reason he missed the recording of the iconic “We Are The World” in 1984, according to music producer Ken Kragen.
“One of the reasons Prince didn’t turn up, (and Prince later recorded a song for the We Are The World album), is because he always recorded alone and not with an engineer,” Kragen said last year in an interview to mark the 30th anniversary of the recording.
“He would go into the studio, do his own engineering and record every instrument and sing and no one else would be there. All of a sudden, he couldn’t be in a room with his peers.
“He knew it was a mistake. It was unfortunate that he didn’t show.”
Prince used pseudonyms to separate himself from the songs he wrote for others because "I was just getting tired of seeing my name."
According to him, the only reason people wanted to see take credit for everything they do is ego. Was this a veiled dig at Rick James? Your guess is as good as mine.
His mystique grew in 1993 when he changed his stage name to an unpronounceable symbol. He became the known as “the artist formerly known as Prince.” It stayed that way until 2000 when he began referring to himself again as "Prince". Such was his charisma that his fans lapped it all up.
Like James, many of Prince’s songs had sexually explicit lyrics. Some were so sexually charged that Tipper Gore, wife of then US Vice President Al Gore, founded the Parents Music Resource Center advocating for the mandatory use of a warning label on the covers of records that have been judged to contain anything unsuitable for minors. The recording industry later voluntarily complied with this request. That’s how the warning, "Parental Advisory: Explicit Lyrics" was born.
In his tribute, President Obama said the world has lost a musical icon. “As one of the most gifted and prolific musicians of our time, Prince did it all, Funk, R&B, Rock and Roll. He was a virtuoso instrumentalist, a brilliant bandleader, and an electrifying performer.”
Prince, who sold over 100 million records, was one of the best selling recording artists of all time. He had 10 platinum albums and 30 Top 40 singles. At a time when the word “legend” is thrown about anyhow, this was a true legend. 
Image courtesy of Rolling Stone

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