 
Publication: Rolling Stone [US]
Date: November 28, 1996
Section:
Page Number(s):
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Title: "With A Loving Wife and A Baby on the Way, and A 'Slave' To Warner Bros. Records No More Is Feeling Downright Giddy About His New Three-Disk-Long Emancipation"
Interviewed By: Anthony DeCurtis
"WE STILL ALL RIGHT?" asks , the Artist Formerly Known as Prince,
with a maniacal grin on his face. "Let me know when I start boring you."
Not any time soon. leaps off the arm of the couch where he had
perched and bolts across the room to his CD player. He presses a button
to interrupt his lovely version of the Stylistics' 1972 hit "Betcha by
Golly, Wow," and then selects a fiercer, guitar-charged track called
"Damned if I Do, Damned if I Don't."
It's the sort of scene you've been in a hundred times: A music-crazed
friend ricochets between his seat and the stereo, torn between the song
he's playing and the greater one you've just got to hear, between
explaining what you're listening to and just letting you listen to it.
Two exceptions distinguish this situation: First, this isn't one of
my friends, this is ; second, the songs he's playing are amazing.
Of course, no such scenario would be complete without someone in the
role of the indulgent girlfriend. Cast in that spot is 's gorgeous
and very pregnant wife, Mayte, 22. Wearing a short black dress with
white trim, the word baby stitched across her chest in white above an
arrow pointing to her stomach, Mayte sits quietly and smiles, shaking
her head fondly at ' s uncontrolled enthusiasm.
"I'm bouncing off the walls playing this," says, acknowledging the
obvious. His sheer white shirt, lined with pastel stripes, is open to
the middle of his chest and extends to his knees. The shirt, open below
his waist as well, contrasts starkly with 's tight flared trousers.
Black-mesh high-heeled boots complete the ensemble.
, who is now 38, is previewing tracks from his upcoming triple CD,
Emancipation, which is set for release on Nov. 19. We're in the
comfortable apartment-style office quarters within 's Paisley Park
studio complex, in Chanhassen, Minn., just outside Minneapolis, his
hometown.
Eager to reassert his status as hitmaker, is verbally riffing in a
style that recalls one of his heroes, the young Muhammad Ali. "I ain't
scared of nobody," he exclaims at one point, laughing. "I wanna play
you the bomb. You tell me how many singles you hear - I wanna read
that. The only person who kept me down is R Kelly, and when I see him,
he's gonna pay a price for that!"
Producer and songwriter Jimmy Jam, whom fired from the funk band
the Time, in 1983, also comes in for some of 's good-natured
rivalry. Jam, along with his partner, Terry Lewis, has produced gigantic
hits for both Michael and Janet Jackson, as well as many other artists.
Like , Jam has remained based in Minneapolis. But the town isn't
big enough for both of them: sees the days of Jam's chart reign as
numbered.
As "Get Your Groove On" booms out of the speakers, screams over the
sound: "You can tell Jimmy Jam I'm going to roll up to his driveway with
this playing real loud! Honk! Honk! What do you think he's gonna say
about that?"
's energy is so high because he is finally negotiated his way out
of his contract with Warner Bros, for which had recorded since his
debut album, For You, was released, in 1978. In his view, he is now
free at last - hence the title of his new album. When I comment on
the relaxed, easygoing groove of the new song "Jam of the Year,"
smiles and says simply, "A free man wrote that."
"When I'm reading a review of my work," he adds, referring to some of
the negative comments garnered by his previous album, Chaos and
Disorder, this is what I'm listening to. They're always a year late."
's struggles with Warner Bros have wreaked havoc on his career in
recent years. He could see no reason why the company could not release
his albums at the relentless pace at which he recorded them. Meanwhile,
Warner Bros., which had signed to a hugely lucrative new deal in
1992, believed the singer should put out new material only every year
or two, thus allowing the company to promote his albums more effectively
and, it hoped, to recoup its enormous investment.
Matters deteriorated to the point where, in 1993, disowned the work
he had recorded for Warner Bros as Prince and adopted his new,
unpronounceable name. He later scrawled the word slave across his cheek
in frustration over his inability to end his relationship with the
company and to put out his music the way he wanted to. Such moves have
caused many to question not only 's marketing instincts - his album
sales have plummeted - but his sanity.
For Emancipation, which will be released on his own NPG Records,
has signed a worldwide manufacturing and distribution agreement
with Capitol-EMI. While neither he nor Capitol-EMI would disclose
financial terms, such an arrangement typically means that the artist
delivers a completed album to the company and assumes the cost of
recording it. For , those costs are relatively minimal, since he
plays virtually all the instruments on his albums and owns Paisley
Park, the studio where he records.
Capitol-EMI receives a fee for every copy of the album it manufactures,
with the costs of the initial pressing possibly absorbed by the company
in lieu of an advance to . In addition, the company will assist in
promoting and publicizing the album, which should retail for between $20
and $25. If Emancipation sells well - mind you, a triple album is a
risky commercial proposition - will make a great deal of money.
There can be no question that he is determined to do all he can to
make sure that the album finds its audience: is abandoning his
reclusive ways and planning a live global simulcast from Paisley Park
and a Nov. 21 appearance on The Oprah Winfrey Show. He will also launch
a two-year world tour early in 1997.
is clearly stung by the skeptics who believe that he will never
again achieve the aesthetic and commercial heights he scaled with such
albums as Dirty Mind (1980), 1999 (1982), Purple Rain (1984) and Sign
0' the Times (1987). At one point, as we stroll through Paisley Park, he
gestures toward a wall of gold and platinum records.
"Everything you see here is not why I created music," says. Every
human being wants to achieve clarity so that people will understand you.
But when the media tell somebody what success is - No. 1 records, awards
- there's no room for intuition. You've put words in their heads. For
me, the album is already a success when I have a copy. Lovesexy is
supposed to be a failure, but I go on the Internet and someone says,
'Lovesexy saved my life.' "
As for people making fun of his name change - "The Artist People
Formerly Cared About," in Howard Stern's priceless slag - and his
branding himself a slave says, "The people who really know the music
don't joke about it. A lot of black people don't joke about it because
they understand wanting to change a situation that you find yourself
in."
has erased slave from his face, and he now sports a neat, carefully
trimmed goatee. Blond streaks highlight his brown hair, which is slicked
back. He is delicate, thin and slight, almost spritelike - you feel as
if a strong gust of wind would carry him across the room. But far from
seeming shy or skittish, as he's often portrayed, he burns with a
palpable intensity. He looks me in the eyes when he speaks, and his
thoughts tumble out rapidly.
It is indicative of the idiosyncratic way 's mind works that he does
not permit journalists to record interviews with him because he
is afraid of being misrepresented His fear isn't so much that he will
be misquoted as that he will be trapped within the prison house of his
own language, frozen in his own characterization of himself. For an
artist who has built his career - and, to some degree, unraveled a
career - by doing whatever he felt like doing at any particular moment
and not looking back, that fear is deep.
Still, is sufficiently concerned about saying that will damage the
truce he's struck with Bros. that he initially requested that a court
stenographer be present during our interview. Sure enough, when I
arrived at Paisley Park, the stenographer was sitting in the reception
area, transcription machine at the ready. But after came out to
greet me and took me on a tour of the studio, he felt comfortable enough
to abandon the idea. The stenographer was sent away.
"It's hard for me to talk about the Warner Brothers stuff because I
start getting angry and bitter," explains before beginning to play
some of the so ngs from Emancipation. "It's like, to talk about it, I
have to get back into the mind state I was in then. It's frightening."
Making a triple-album set, it turns out, was one of 's long-standing
ambitions - and one of his difficulties with Warner Bros. "Sign O' the T
imes was originally called Crystal Ball and was supposed to be three
albums," says of the double album he released in 1987. `You'll
overwhelm the market,' I was told. `You can't do that.'
"Then people say I'm a crazy fool for writing my face," he continues.
"But if I can't do what I want to do, what am I? When you stop a man
from dreaming, he becomes a slave. That's where I was. I don't own
Prince's music. If you don't own your masters, your master owns you."
As part of the deal to end 's relationship with the company, Warner
Bros. Retains the right to release two compilations of the music that
the singer recorded while under his contract with the label. In
addition, has provided Warner Bros. with an additional album of
music from the thousands of hours he has in his own vaults; this album
would be released under the name Prince. "The compilations don't
concern me," says dismissively. "They're some songs from a long
time ago - that's not who I am."
Despite all the bad blood that has flowed between them, insists he
bears no grudge toward his former label. He views his battles with the
company as part of a spiritual journey to self-awareness "What
strengthens is what I know," he says. "It was one experience - and it
was my experience. I wouldn't be as clear as I am today without it. I
don't believe in darkness. Every thing was there for me to get to this
place. I've evolved to something - and I needed to go through
everything I went through.
"And that's why I love the folks at Warner Bros. now," he says with a
laugh. "You know that Budweiser ad - `I love you, man'? I just want to
go there with them!"
Asked about the concept behind Emancipation, says, "It's hard to
explain in sentences." The album is based on complicated - not to say
incomprehensible - sense of the relationship among the pyramids of
Egypt, the constellations and the dawn of civilization. Each CD
is exactly an hour long and contains 12 songs.
"Recently I thought about my whole career, my whole life leading up to
this point - having a child helps you do that - and I thought about what
would be the perfect album for me to do," says. "People design
their own plans. That's when the dawn takes places. The dawn is an
awakening of the mind, when I can see best how to accomplish the tasks
I'm supposed to do. I feel completely clear,"
's marriage to Mayte and the impending birth of their child were two
of the important inspirations. for Emancipation. It's no coincidence
that what describes as his "divorce" from Warner Bros. Has occurred
right around the time of his marriage and Mayte's pregnancy. "I don't
believe in coincidence," he says flatly.
Along with covers of such smoochy ballads as "Betcha by Golly, Wow" and
the Delphonics' "La-La- Means I Love You," Emancipation is filled with
what sheepishly calls "sentimental stuff." Discussing how he has
been affected by the prospect of fatherhood, he says, "You'll definitely
hear it in my music." For the song "Sex in the Summer," which was
originally titled "Conception," sampled his unborn baby's
heartbeat. "Of course, that 's a tempo," he says. "The nothing baby set
the groove for this song. Mayte always smiles when she hears it."
may have used his baby's ultrasound as a rhythm sample, but he and
Mayte did not ask to know which sex their child is. "It doesn't matter,
" says. "We all have the male and female with us, anyway. We'll be
happy with whatever God chooses to give us." And just as has no
intention of once again taking the name Prince - the people around him
refer to him simply as "the Artist" - he says, "The baby will name
itself." As he prepares to preview a song called "Let's Have a Baby,"
turns to Mayte and says, "You're gonna start crying - you better
leave." Then he explains to me, "I got my house fixed up and put a crib
in it. Then I played this song for her, and she started crying. She
had never seen my house with a crib in it before." "Let's have a baby,"
the lyrics run. "What are we living for?/Let's make love." As for the
song's spare arrangement, described by as "bass, piano and
silence," he says, "Joni Mitchell taught me that. If you listen to her
early stuff, she really understands that."
He points to a portrait of Mayte that is framed in gold. "I can't wait
for my baby to look up and see Mayte's eyes," he says, his voice filled
with wonder. "Look at those eyes. That's the first thing the baby is
going to see in this world."
has transformed Paisley Park in anticipation of the birth of his
child. What had been a modern industrial park has become more playful
and vibrant, like the psychedelic wonderland implied by its name. And
it would warm the heart of Tipper Gore, who was inspired to found the
Parents Music Resource Center when she overheard one of her daughters
listening to the masturbatory imagery in the Prince song "Darling
Nikki," to hear the singer talk about how he now sees things through
the eyes of a child.
"When I looked at some of the artwork around here from that perspective,
pfft, it was out of here: `Those pictures go to go,'" says. "I
also wanted to make this place more colorful, more alive. This place
was antiseptic -- there's life here now."
The memory of the violence that his father introduced into the household
when was young preys on his mind. "How do you discipline a child?"
he asks. "You have to imagine yourself as one of them. Would you hit
yourself? You remember the trauma you suffered when you suffered
that."
For all of the drama he has created around himself, is about music
The only time he seems completely relaxed is when he is jamming with his
band, the New Power Generation, in a rehearsal space at Paisley Park.
The band, including Kathleen Dyson on guitar, Rhonda Smith on bass, Eric
Leeds on saxophone and Kirk Johnson on percussion - sets up in a circle,
with 0 (+> facing the indomitable Sheila E., who is sitting in on drums.
Playing his -shaped guitar, the singer smiles and leads his crew
through a series of rock-funk improvisations. He roams the room
calling for solos, pointing at whichever player is taking the music to a
higher plane so everyone can follow on that journey. They goof around
with a James Brown riff. Then, when Sheila E. introduces a syncopated
Latin groove, blasts off on guitar in the roaring style of Carlos
Santana.
"We don't really know any songs yet; we're just recording everything,"
explains to me at one point, nearly apologizing. But the music just
seems to course through him, and he fairly shimmers with happiness as
he drifts from guitar to bass to keyboards as his mood dictates.
During a short break, asks Leeds to play the theme of John
Coltrane's immortal "A Love Supreme." As Leeds articulates the line,
, sitting at the keyboards, crumples with joy. "It's that one note,"
he says, laughing, isolating the highest-pitched tone in the sequence.
"That's what tells you a madman wrote it."
's identification with Coltrane - a driven musical genius and
spiritual quester who seemed intent on playing himself out of his skin -
is plain. had spoken about the saxophonist earlier in the day.
"John Coltrane's wife said that he played 12 hours a day," he had said.
"I could never do that, play one instrument for that long. Can you
imagine a spirits that would drive a body that hard? The music business
is not set up to nurture that sort of spir it."
"Let's see," he continued "According to some people, I'm bankrupt and
crazy. I woke up one day, and the radio said I was dead. People say,
'He changed his name; he doesn't even know who he is.'"
The very notion that could be perceived that way seemed painful to
him. But then his spirit ascended. "I may not be like Muhammad Ali -
I ain't predictin' no rounds," he said, looking at me directly in the
eyes. "But I'm pretty well-focused. I know exactly who I am."
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