 
Publication: Los Angeles Times [US]
Date: November 19, 1994
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Page Number(s):
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Title: "Prince's Mighty Glam Slam Losing Some Of The Glam"
Written By: Heidi Siegmund
Perhaps it's a Sign O' The Times, but the once radiant Glam Slam has
lost its luster. The decadent downtown dance club opened by Prince at the
beginning of 1993 has quickly come to resemble Sodom - after the fall.
Of the million-dollar renovation the club underwent when it was
transformed from Vertigo to Glam Slam, only a couple of notable features
remain - the powerful sound system and the opulent columns. The two
pillars of groping nudes flanking the dance floor and the giant Egyptian
goddesses on each side of the stage are all that's left of Prince's
erotic-city vision.
The walls are in disrepair, the bathrooms are unkempt, and the club
operates with a skeleton crew. If this were the funky Al's Bar or any
number of seedy punk or rock clubs, none of this would be unusual. But
because it's Glam Slam, the home of performances by Prince himself as well
as nearly every popular R&B and hip-hop artist, the attitude permeating
the club is more depressing than exhilarating.
Apparently, not even a rock star can get around the main issue: Clubgoers
want their Hollywood-style nightclubs in Hollywood."
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