That's cool. It's never too late.I know I'm late, but I watched Purple Rain for the first time this morning. Good movie, great music and Apollonia would get it.
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That's cool. It's never too late.I know I'm late, but I watched Purple Rain for the first time this morning. Good movie, great music and Apollonia would get it.
Another HOTT new unreleased track: My Love Belongs To You is an unreleased track recorded on 20 April 1983 at Sunset Sound, Hollywood, CA, USA (the day after Velvet Kitty Cat). The track was recorded for possible use on The Time's third album Ice Cream Castle, but the song was not included on the release.
When Prince Presented the NFL With His Super Bowl Halftime Show Idea, He Literally Gave Everyone Tissues to Wipe Their Tears Away
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Prince's Super Bowl halftime show in 2007 is regarded as one of the sporting event's most legendary performances, both for the music as well as the ambiance — the Purple One played an epic 12-minute medley of originals and covers in the pouring rain. Now, one month after his untimely death, we're getting the story of how the whole thing came to be. Charles Coplin, who served as Head of Programming for the NFL when the performance took place, recounted the events that surrounded the gig inan essay for The Daily Beast. He and his associates met Prince at a hotel in Los Angeles for a meeting, and were immediately taken aback by his remarkable aura and excellent footwear:
There he was… Prince! Petite and adorned in a canary-colored suit and full makeup. When he opened the hotel room door, it was as if he was backlit—he was luminous, phosphorescent, literally glowing. He opened the door and greeted us with a warm smile. As he led us into his suite you couldn’t help notice he was wearing wheelie sneakers with blinking lights on the back, in vogue for kids at the time. He asked us to sit down and began to explain his thought process behind what we were about to hear.
Prince created a special recording just for the halftime show, which he hoped would create a "global, spiritual" moment for everyone who watched:
After a few sentences he broke off his thought and said, “Rather than me continuing to talk why don’t we experience what I am referring to in the fifth dimension.” When we noticed a mixing board and concert-sized speakers at one end of the room we knew the fifth dimension was going to be loud. We were not wrong. He pressed a button and off we went. There were two cracks of thunder followed by clapping and girls’ voices singing, “We will rock you.” We sat there for the next eleven minutes and fifty seconds taking it all in. Audio only. While we were listening, he wheeled around the suite doing this or that. Towards the end—when “Purple Rain” was playing—he wheeled back in carrying a box of tissues and, without a word or explanation, gave each of us one from the box. Taking our cues from him we all held our tissues aloft in our hands wondering what exactly was coming next.
So, what exactly came next?
The music ended and there was an awkward silence as no one was sure what to say. We looked at him and he stared back at us holding his own tissue, with a penetrating expression on his face. He placed the tissue up to his eye and it appeared he was starting to cry. Just as things couldn’t get more uncomfortable, he broke out in a very big smile and started to laugh. “It brings a tear to your eye,” he said.
And the rest, as we know, is history.
Prince disguised as an Old Dude to present the comedy award to Chris Rock, Prince GOT JOKES!:
I don't know if has been mentioned, but both People and Time magazine put out a really nice Prince collector's edition. I picked them up at costco yesterday. They are about 10-11 bucks each, very nicely done.
Nice insight and a lot of funny quotables...this had me cracking up:
Former manager:
Phillips: He had huge overhead. Paisley Park was $2.5 million a month. It didn't make sense to have all those studios and that soundstage. It was never profitable. He'd meet a girl and take her back to Paisley and record a double album with her overnight. It would be ready the next day. Arnold had a conversation with him and said, "Stop doing A&R with your dick." But money didn't matter to Prince. He always thought he could make more. Money wasn't a badge of success to him. The badge was liking something he did.
And Prince kept his band working with rarely a day off.
Bland: We would get a chance to get to the hotel and shower. We'd take clothes with us from the wardrobe cases at the venue. We knew what we were going to wear later on [at a club after the official show]. We did get to use soap and water, and then we'd wait for the call. And then we'd go back out.
Nelson: On the road, you just had to kind of be on call. He had a studio booked in every city we went. Just docked out 24 hours a day. Had an engineer on call, ready to go. A day off came very rarely. I remember when we were in Sydney, we found out he was going to the opera with Mayte. I had met some people and it was my birthday, and so we went to a restaurant that was across the harbor from the opera house, so I could literally watch through the window till the opera was over. We didn't have cell phones then. I said, "OK, hopefully I can have my whole dinner before I have to go back to the hotel."
Bland: Sometimes we would rehearse up different things at soundcheck. We would be walking out to the stage and he'd say something like, "'When You Were Mine' instead of 'Raspberry Beret'! Don't mess up!"
Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/prince-in-the-nineties-an-oral-history-20160505#ixzz48yqt9YeT
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Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/prince-in-the-nineties-an-oral-history-20160505#ixzz48ypTnHcR
yeah got pdf somewheredoes anyone have a copy of this?
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does anyone have a copy of this?
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