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Publication: Miami New Times [US]
Date: March 19, 1998
Section:
Page Number(s):
Length:
Title: "Ball Of Confusion"
Reviewed By: Ben Greenman
In 1997 the Artist Formerly Known as the Artist Formerly Known as Prince
and Currently Known as a Pretentious Hieroglyph was lying low. It's all
relative, sure, but last year was the first since 1983 that hadn't seen a single
record released by the Funky Pop Polymath. There were reasons, of course. There
always are. The Artist was creatively exhausted: The late-1996 triple album
Emancipation tapped his reserves. The Artist was out and about: His Jam of the
Year tour was his first major U.S. roadwork in years. The Artist was
preoccupied: His first child with his wife Mayte Garcia supposedly was born
with cloverleaf skull syndrome and died shortly afterward. (To date neither
parent has commented.)
Now, though, it's a new year, and Prince is back. Sort of. Though there
won't be a new studio album until 1999 -- wonder what song he'll remix for that?
-- Prince has plugged the gap. And when he plugs a gap, he really plugs it.
His new release, Crystal Ball, is a four-CD set that includes 30 songs of
vault material and an entirely new acoustic album, The Truth (see sidebar). In
copping to his own apocrypha, Prince proves once again that he's pop music's
most prolific composer. Crystal Ball is a cloudy sprawl, a massive musical
mess that oscillates between outstanding songs and songs that should have been
left out standing in the cold. How versatile. How frustrating.
The frustration began before the set ever hit stores, in behind-the-scenes
machinations. Crystal Ball was supposed to mark the debut of Prince's
long-awaited direct-marketing plans, which he hatched after severing ties with
major record labels. All last year Prince took preorders for Crystal Ball
through his toll-free number (800-NEW-FUNK) and Website, charging $50 for
product, shipping, and handling. Up until the first of this year, most sources
were still reporting that this would be the only way to purchase the album. At
the last minute, though, Prince struck a deal with the Blockbuster and
Musicland chains. On February 20 the album appeared on shelves across the
nation, priced at an alarmingly affordable $29.95. Fans who had preordered the
set at $50 weren't so pleased, and the hasty announcement that they would
receive a free additional CD of the Prinstrumental score for the Kamasutra
ballet struck many as weak consolation. Rival record chains, locked out of the
deal, weren't too thrilled either. As usual, the market found a way; Tower
Records and HMV stores began retailing Crystal Ball in the $50 range,
prompting speculation that they were simply buying the set at Blockbuster or
Musicland and then marking it up for resale. Muddled as it is, this new approach
to hawking his wares seems to be working in Prince's favor. By eliminating
most of the middlemen, he's guaranteeing himself another big payday.
Emancipation, distributed in similar fashion in 1996, put more money in his
pocket than any record since 1984's Purple Rain.
This would be no more than a moderately entertaining tale of a fledgling
entrepreneur -- the kind of Widgets R Us illustration your business school
professor tells you on the first day of class -- if it weren't for the fact that
Crystal Ball is full of music. Almost four hours of music, in fact. Prince's
past ten years have been fraught with aesthetic dead ends, sour and didactic
songs that raged against publishers, record labels, retail chains, and even his
fans. Now he is rolling out what he was holding back during those ranting years,
and much of it is worth raving about.
The record kicks off with " Crystal Ball, " which was to be the title song of
a triple album rejected by Warner Bros. in 1987. (The album was retooled and
released that same year as the double LP Sign 'O' the Times.) Over a sparse,
slow groove adorned with whistles, canned drums, and on-again/off-again full
instrumental backing, Prince stretches out, delivering a hypnotic vocal about
love, lust, and loss. " Crystal Ball, " which has circulated for years among
bootleggers under its alternate title "Xpert Lover," is Prince at his most
hermetic and difficult -- and also at his most rewarding. The other songs from
1986-87 are equally strong. There's "Good Love," a sunny piece of popcraft that
was unjustly buried on the Bright Lights, Big City soundtrack; the delightful
"Movie Star," which proves incontrovertibly that Prince was always the model
for Morris Day's addled ladies' man; and "CloreenBaconSkin," a lengthy,
live-in-the-studio bass workout with improvised lyrics. The only chunks of
pyrite from this golden period are "Crucial," a swollen attempt at a swelling
ballad, and "Dream Factory," an anti-drug lyric sabotaged by its cluttered
arrangement.
A full third of Crystal Ball is composed of outtakes from 1993-94, when
Prince was recording a musical called Glam Slam Ulysses. (A funk opera based
on Homer's Odyssey makes more sense than one based on Tolstoy's Hadzhi Murad,
but less sense than almost anything else.) He performed the show in Los Angeles
and Minneapolis and placed some of its songs on 1994's underrated Come and
1995's overproduced and overrated The Gold Experience. The rest of it is
collected here for the first time. There's the gutbucket funk of "Interactive"
(previously available only on CD-ROM), the kinky reggae of "Ripopgodazippa"
(heard for a moment in the 1995 film Showgirls), and the nasty, hooky R&B of
"Acknowledge Me." Of course there are also throwaways such as "Calhoun Square"
and "Love Sign," the latter featuring vocals by Marvin Gaye's daughter Nona. But
the strongest compositions from this period, particularly "What's My Name?" (a
profoundly menacing song about celebrity and identity) and "Da Bang" (a
profoundly superficial song about boot-knocking), are complex and satisfying,
the equal of anything Prince has ever recorded. All in all the songs from
1993-94 are what outtakes should be -- interesting glimpses of a prolific
artist's creative process.
The more recent material also does the Artist proud. There's "Hide the Bone,"
a single-entendre rocker recorded with the NPG; "She Gave Her Angels," a lovely
ballad that the Artist performed on the Disney Channel's new Muppet Show; and
"2morrow," an Emancipation outtake that rolls gently over the bass line from
Parliament's "Turn That Mutha Out!"
Those are the highlights. The lowlights? Well, a few songs simply don't
warrant inclusion. Given that Crystal Ball will end up mostly in the hands of
hard-core fans, it doesn't make sense for Prince to pawn off "Tell Me How U
Want to Be Done" as a new song, when anyone with any Artist cred knows that it's
merely the second half of 1992's "The Continental." The dragging blues-rock
composition "The Ride" and the bombastic "Strays of the World" have been
bootlegged for years, and they're not improving with age. And there is a quartet
of previously released Glam Slam Ulysses songs ("P Control," "Days of Wild," "So
Dark," and "Get Loose") represented here either by superfluous live versions or
anemic dance-club remixes.
Crystal Ball is clearly a major statement of sorts, Prince's attempt to
prove that Warner Bros. screwed him out of better promotion, or that he's too
much for any label to handle. But it's also his second disorganized, leviathanic
release in a row, and these displays of virtuosity are beginning to have a faint
tinge of desperation about them. It's reminiscent of the mid-Seventies fate of
Stevie Wonder, who threw out his ability to edit himself on the double album
Songs in the Key of Life and then sent much of his talent after it on the double
LP Journey Through the Secret Life of Plants. To date, Stevie has not been able
to recapture the driving power of early-Seventies albums like Talking Book and
Innervisions. No matter how interested he is in giving free rein to his
creativity, Prince should take this example as a cautionary tale, and he
should also look back to the concision and unity of albums such as Purple Rain
and 1988's LoveSexy. In pop music, finally, genius is juggernaut.
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