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Publication: London Sunday Times [UK]
Date: August 25, 1991
Section:
Page Number(s):
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Title: "The Little Prince Grows Up"
Written By: Robert Sandall
A mile or so down Highway 5 from the Paisley Park studio complex, where
Prince and his band New Power Generation are currently rehearsing the show to
be premiered at Blenheim Palace this Saturday, there is a sign which reads
"Life is too short to be little".
Who put it there and why are not clear as you drive past, but, like so much
else in and around Minneapolis, it immediately brings to mind the city's most
famous son: his protean ambitions, his prodigious work rate, his tiny size
and, last but by no means least, his ineffably cryptic public persona.
For of all the superstars to have emerged from the razzmatazz of rock in the
1980s,Princeis the most musically respected and the least personally
understood. Madonna has just made a movie out of bits of her private life;
Michael Jackson's autobiography, Moonwalker, deals at length with the pets and
the amusement parks which comprise his.
Prince,by contrast, exists only in his work and in our imaginations. The
Garbo-esque silence and secrecy which surround his off-duty self are, in these
media-mad times, remarkable. There hasn't been a full Prince interview since
1983 the year before Purple Rain earned him major league celebrity. "I play
music," he revealed at the time. "I make records, I make movies. I don't do
interviews. "
And he isn't exactly doing one today, either. But he has granted a tour of
his $10m recording, film and rehearsal complex, prior to the release of a new
album, Diamonds and Pearls, on September 9; he is allowing a private viewing
of the 90-minute show which will be supporting the album in Europe and America
this autumn. And, before the performance, he is prepared to say hello, or
something on a strictly off the record, no-note-taking-or-tape-recorders-allowed
basis, of course.
WhateverPrince'sreason for keeping away from journalists may be, shyness
doesn't seem to have much to do with it. As he skips coquettishly on and off the
triple-tiered set in Paisley Park's "sound stage" aerobically stretching his
improbably petite 5ft frame over monitor speakers and casually issuing technical
instructions as he goes Prince looks like a kid in a high-tech sandpit. You
would never guess that this hyperactive sprite in the citrus-yellow chiffon top,
high-waisted magenta trousers and tiny, pointy boots with high heels has just
turned 33.
When he shakes hands, he surveys his inevitably taller interlocutor with
playfully twinkling eyes and adopts a slightly fidgety manner which, again
recalling a clever child, is both engaging and distracted at the same time. He
talks, though, like a cool dude, laconically, in a voice much lower than the one
you usually hear on record. As often as he can, Prince reverts to gesture
rolling the big brown eyes, nodding and shaking his head, smiling slow, wide
smiles.
But however he chooses to communicate, Prince doesn't put out much. He
likes to say Yes, Uh Huh, or failing that, No. If he scents criticism as he does
when asked about the sparing use of his guitar and the abrupt inclusion of rap,
a genre he has previously disparaged, on the new album he takes polite but swift
umbrage: "Everybody has the right to change their mind." Another favourite
tactic is to turn questions back on the questioner. "What do you think?," he
frequently asks.
At all times you are aware that he has at least half an ear on the drum
sound-check jackhammering away in the back no, make that fore ground. The
situation, in fact, almost seems calculated to make the would-be interviewer
feel like an irrelevant intruder upon more serious business. The abiding
impression is of a person impatient with the loss of control that having to
field inquiries implies.
Which isn't to say that the guy is a rampant egomaniac.
In the current show the individual skills of the band are more prominent than
ever before. Reflecting the eclectic range of the Diamonds and Pearls album
which makes up half the set, this is a perfectly arranged marriage of funky
rhythmic teamwork, pop-rock virtuosity and soul-revue showmanship. It isn't just
the efforts of the boss that ensure that versions of repertoire classics such as
Kiss and Purple Rain are delivered here with an unrivalled passion and
precision.
Rosie Gaines the most mature female soul-singer he has so far shared vocal
duties with gets several opportunities to take the centre stage alone and
performs a thrilling cover version of Aretha Franklin's Respect. A trio of male
dancers cut comical capers on the trampoline and off the high walkway at the
back. And although there are several visual stunts which feature Prince
variously sprawled atop a blue baby-grand piano, or spread eagled, Christ-like,
on a hydraulic moving heart, he has thankfully given up those tedious and tacky
X-rated humping routines. In general, he seems now to be devoting more of his
on-stage efforts to making us listen than, as used to be the case with Prince,
frenetically devising things for us to watch. This show breathes without
panting.
The change of emphasis was corroborated by the band-members I spoke to.
Locally recruited for the most part, they are, with the exception of a new
bass-player, Sonny Thompson, the same bunch who came here last year on the Nude
tour. He called it that, one of them told me, because of its deliberate lack of
visual frills: " Prince thought that if this band could cut it without the
sauce, they must be good." The reportedly heavy losses sustained by the
Lovesexy extravaganza in 1988, of course, never entered the equation. " Prince
has to do less babysitting with us. In the past he had to work to make up for
other people. This is the band he's always wanted."
Maybe. But not all of them are so keen on him. Another member, who begged to
remain anonymous, talked of tyranny of 18-hour days, of being forced to attend
rehearsals while running a fever, of having to survive, as Prince himself
does, on three hours of sleep a day and of an intense longing for the next tour
to be over. This person has no plans to remain in New Power Generation beyond
the present contract and claims to know of others who have left "burned out,
basically".
Well, we always knew that Prince modelled himself in part upon "the
hardest-working man in show business", James Brown, a man with a military
instinct for discipline. More surprising, though, was this disaffected
employee's insistence that, contrary to the Paisley Park anti-materialist
rhetoric, Prince is deeply concerned about his record sales. In recent years
these have fluctuated wildly: 1989's Batman sold 4m worldwide, but neither
Lovesexy (1988) nor Graffiti Bridge (1990) made it into seven figures. None of
the seven albums with which he has flooded the market since 1984 has come close to equalling that year's 15m seller, Purple Rain.
Touring,Pncebelieves, is a good way of selling albums. It is certainly
a more reliable way than through the cinema as he learned with last year's flop
movie Graffiti Bridge and with a previous stiff in 1986, Under the Cherry Moon.
With his first American tour in three years about to begin and the slightest
question mark now surrounding the durability of his mass appeal, Prince's
decision to open his doors just a crack to the media, seems significant. Life,
after all, is too short to be little.
Princeat Blenheim Palace, August 31.
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