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Prince Talks
THE PHONE RINGS AT 4:48 in the
morning. Hi, its Prince~ says the
wide-awake voice calling from a room several yards down
the hallway of this London hotel. Did I wake you
up? Though its assumed that Prince does in
fact sleep, no one on his summer European Nude Tour can
pinpoint precisely when. Prince seems to relish the
aura of night stalker; his vainpire hours have been a
part of his mad-genius myth ever since he was waging
junior-high-school band battles on Minneapoliss
mostly black North Side. Anyone who was around back
then knew what was happening, Prince had said two
days earlier, reminiscing. 1 was rorking. When they
were sleeping, I was damming. When they woke up, I had
another groove. Im as insane that way now as I was
back then. For proof, hed produced a crinkled
dime-store notebook that he carries with him like Li-
ntiss blankeL Empty when his tour started in May,
the book is nearly full, with twenty-one new songs
scripted in perfect grammar-school penmanship. He has
also been laboring on the road over his movie musical
Graffiti Bnilge, which was supposed to be out this past
summer and is now set for release in November. Overseeing
the dubbing and editing of a film by way of dressing-nxwn
VCRs and hotel telephcmes~ Prince said, has given him an
idea. One of these days, he said. Tm going to
~rk onjust one project, and take my time. Despite
his all-hours intensity, the man still has his manners.
He wouldnt have called this late, Prince says
apologetically, if he didnt have some interesting
news. Hed already provided some news earlier in the
week, detailing, among other things, a late-night crisis
of conscience a few years back that led him not only to
shelve the infamous Black Album but also to ny and change
the way he wrote his songs and led his life. The
crisis didnt involve a leap or a loss of faith,
Prince had said, but simply the realization that it was
time to stop acting like such an angry soul. 1 was
an expert at cutting off people in my life and
disappearing without a glance back, never to
return, hed said. Half the things
people were writing about me were true. But
whats never been true, he felt, was what people
have written about his music. Until, that is, just this
minute. It seems that tonight a fresh batch of reviews of
the
soundtrack of Graffiti Bniige were faxed from MinneapoI to
the hotel while Prince was performing one of his fifteen
sold-out concerts in England. What Prince has just read
in the New Yoi* Times has astounded him.
Theyre starting to get it, he says from
his phone in the Wellington Suite~ which he has turned
into a homey workplace with the addition of some bolts of
sheer rainbow-colored doth, film equipment, a stereo and
tacked-up museum-shop posters of Billie Holiday and Judy
Garland. I dont believe it; he says
again, but theyre getting it! They, in
this case, are members of the rock intelligentsia who
have alternately canonized and de d Prince. In the past,
he has derided his professional interpreters as
mamma jammas and skinny
sidewinders. Two days ago, it became obvious that
his epithets, but not his feelings, had tempered
concerning those who would judge him. Theres
nothing a critic can tell me that I can learn from,
Prince bad said earlier. If they were musicians,
maybe. But I hate reading about what some guy sitting at
a desk thàkc about me. You know, Hes back,
and hes black: or Hes back, and
hes bad. Whew! Now, on Graffiti Bridge,
theyre saying Im back and more traditional
Well, Thieves in the Temple and Tick, Tick,
Bang dont sound like nothing Ive ever
done before. But hadnt he been cheered by the
albums almost uniformly rave notices?
Thats not what its about, Prince
had said. No ones mentioning the lyrics.
Maybe I should have put in a lyric sheet Now, in
pre-dawn London, hes called to say he was wrong
Theyre starting to get it, he says onee
last time, unbothered by the fact that the Times aiticle
-trashes his lyrics Thats okay, he says, because
theyre paying attenticm. sounding more
~re amazed than pleased, Prince hangs up the ~ne and goes
back to his dime-store notebook
FIVE YEARS HAVE PASSED SINCE PRINCE OPENED THE passenger
door to his 1966 Thunderbird and took me on a three-day
schlep around the hometown he has never left When I
finally got out, I felt like Melvin Dummar, the doofiis
milkman who daimed to have driven through the Nevada
desert with a surprisingly human Howard Hughes. No one
had believed Melvin, and no one, I thought, would believe
Prince was a being orbiting so
dose to planet Earth. Not that Prince hadnt shown
some signs of unease with his still-new superstazdom.
Alone, hed been animated, funny and self-aware. But
out in public; even walking into places as hospitable as
Minneapdiss Fnst Avenue dub, he would palpably
stifi~n at the first sign of a gawk, his face set in
gmnite his voice reduced to a mumble. Now Prince seems
more open and comfortable, less likely to slip into
stridency. You have a few choices when youre
in that position, he says, remembering the first
year after Pwple Rain. You can get all jacked up cm
yourself and curse everybody, or you can say this is the
way life is and try to enjoy it Im still learning
that lesson I think I'll always be learning that lesson.
I'm a much nicer person now. This isnt to say
that Prince has turned into Dale Carnegie he still
has the hauteur of a star. But something has changed; his
philosophy no longer seems to hinge on things like the
size of ones boot heels. Cool means being
able to hang with yourself he says. All you
have to ask yourself is Is there anybody I'm afraid of?
Is there anybody who if I walked and saw I'd get
nervous? If no; then youre cooL Many
things, however, have stayed the same. Prince
is still very funny. (You can always renegotiate a
recaul contract You just go in and say, You know, I
think my
next project will be a country & western
alburm) He can still play the cocky rocker.
I dont go to awards shows
anymore, he says. Im not saying
im better than anybody else. But you11 be sitting
there at the Grammys, and U2 will beat you. And you say
to yourself Wait a minute. I can play that kind of music,
too. I pl~dLa Cmsse [Wisconsin] growing up, I btow how to
dog?BuwiflnotdoHousequake. His grasp of
history and current events remains quirky. Prince can
cite chapter and verse from biographies of Little Richard
and Jerry Lee Lewis, but he seems genii- mely unaware
that h is lIfe story was turned Into a book a couple of
years ago by an English rock critic~ He knows, blow by
bki~ the events in the Mideast, relating the crisis to
everything fmtn the predictions of the sbcteenth-centzny
seer Nostradamus tothe drug-intetdicticm policy of George
Bush But he hasn't yet heard 2 Live Crew. There is still
some residue of emotional pain. What if everybody
around me split? he asks. Then id be
left with only me, and Id have to fend for me.
Thats why l have to protect me. Princes
detractors might diagnose these words as tht classic
pathology of a control freak. His high-mindec supporters
might say those are normal protective feeling for
somebody who was kicked onto the streets by his be loved
father at age fourteen. Prince himself; however echoes
Popeye more than Freud as he analyzes just whc he is. m
what Ia he says. I feel if I can pleast
myself musicall>~ then I can please others, too.
Finally, there is one more philosophy unchanged witl the
years. 1 play music, Prince has saici I
make records. I make movies. I &mtdo
interviews. So what are we doing? Were
just talking, he says Hence, his decision not to be
taped or allow notes to taken or even a pad of questions
to be brought out. Tha would inhibit him, he says; that
would mean doing that thing that he just doesnt do.
No, Prince wws, he isnt trying to be a purposelit
pain. What he says he simply wants to amid is that
big Q followed by that big A, followed by line after line
a me either defending myself or cleaning up stories that
people have told about me. No matter what he might
say in a traditional inter.vie~ Prince continue;
hed oniy end up looking ridicuIons. Some
magazine a little while ago promised me their cover if I
answered five written questions, he says The
first one was What are your exact beliefs about
God? Now how can I answer that without sounding
like a fool? True. But isnt he afraid of
being misquoted? No, with says softly, staring at the
holstered tape recorder on that table before him. When
Prince says no, with pursed lip and a slight shake of the
head, it carries a certain finality. Still, in the coming
days he addresses just about everything short of Kim
Basinger (1 really dont know her that
well) or anybody else hes dating (1
never publicize that My friends around town are surprised
when I introduce them to someone rm seeing).
And you really wouldnt feel better having
your words taken down the second you say them?
NO.
Okay.
A COUPLE OF NIGHTS LATER, PRINCE IS DEALING WITH the
painstaking minutiae of piecing together his
almost-finished movie. People are going, Oh,
this is Princes big gamble, he says,
sitting on the floor of his Lcm&in hate room,
fast-forwarding a video version of his most recen cut.
What gamble? I made a $7 million movie with sorry
body elses n~ axxl rm sitting here finishing it
Prince stops the tape at the point when gospel queen
Mavis Staples is leaning out of a window in
Minneapoliss Seven Corners, waxing wise on the
night action
down on the street The movie appears to be set in the
1950s, when Seven Corners was a Midwestern hotbed of
dubs and hipsters. The Seven Corners set, raised on the
Paisley Park sound stage, resembles the kind of backdrop
used in Gene Kelly musicals. Yeah, cheap!
says Prince with a laugh. Actually, thats
okay. Its like how we did DM-y Min~L But man, what
I could do with a $25 million budget Ill need a big
success to get that, but Ill get it, I wz11 get
it Film-speak is now part of his ~,cabuhry; the
first director Prince mentions he admires is Woody Allen,
because I like anyone who gets final cut
Movies have also worked their way into his philosophical
references. If youre making your moves in
life because of money or pride, he says, then
youll end up like that dude who got beat up on the
grass at the end of Wall Sheet. Hed been wheeling
and dealing, then oompb! Thats what time
itwas! Hes been studying, he says, and kaming
from his own film failures. I dont regret
anything about Under the Cherry Moon, hes~ I
learned that I cant direct what I didnt
write. Participating in Babn~ meantime, allowed him
to spy on the making ofa megaton hit Composing songs on
locations, Prince mostly stayed on the sidelines and just
watched. There was so much pressure on [director]
Tim
[Burton], he says, that for the whole
picture, I just said, Yes, Mr. Burton, what would you
like? Burton had hired him on the
recommendation of Jack Nicholson, a longtime Prince fan.
Prince, whod never met Nicholson before, found the
inspiration for Partyman when he first saw
the actor on the set. He just wall over, sat down
and put his foot up on a table, real cool, Prince
says. He had this atdnzle d~t reminded me of Morris
[Day] and there was that song. Prince says
hell sutvive if Graffiti Bridge is less than a
blockbuster. I cant please everybod~.~
he says. I didnt want to make Die Hard 4. But
Pm also not looking to be Francis Ford Coppola. I see
this more like those 1950s rock & roll movies.
Unfortunately, rumors have swirled for months that a
better comparison might be the 1959 howler Plan 9 From
Outer Space. I dont mind, says Prince.
Some might not get it But people also said Pwple
Rain was un- releasable. And now I drive to work each
morning to my own big studio. Originally, Graffiti
Bridge was going to be a vehicle for the reborn Time,
with Prince staying behind the camera. But Warner Bros.
wouldnt go for it, so Prince wrote himself into a
new movie. Later, visitors to Paisley Park saw a version
of a script that was allegedly obtuse to the point of
near gibberish. That was just a real rough
thirty-page treatment I wrote with Kim, Prince
says. Grafjill Bridge is an entirely difl~rent
movie. As in Puiple Rain~ the plot features Prince
as a musician named the Kid. Willed half-ownership of a
Seven Corners club named Glam Slam, the Kid must share
control with Morris Day, once again playing a comic sat-
yr combining Superfly smoothness and Buddy Love sincerit~
Its a fight of good versus evil, and band versus
band, for the soul of Glam Slam. Then theres the
unknown Ingrid Chavez, Princesfirst fi~male movie
lead who doesnt look like she was ordered out of a
catalog. Throw in the talents of Staples, the reborn
Time, George Clinton and the thirteen-year- old Quincy
Jones protégé Tevin Campbell, and youve got,
Prince says, a different kind of movie. Its
not violent Nobody gets laid. Its impossible
to judge Graffiti Bridge from just a few selected scenes.
Still, they were very good scenes. Prince fast-forwards
to a sequence in which Day tries to seduce Chavez on the
fairy-tale-looking Graffiti Bridge. When Prince is
amused, which is almost every time Morris Day comes on
the screen, he slaps his hands, shakes his head and
throws himself back in his seat. I hope Morris
steals this movie he says, recalling the charge made
after Purple Rain. The man still thinks he can whup
me! Prince pushes rewind, searching for a scene
with the Time. Waiting, he reminisces about the old days,
when he oversaw the band. For a tutonal on the proper on
stage attitude, Prince remembers, he showed the Time
videos of Muhammad Ali troundng, and then taunting, the
old champ Sonny Liston. To this day, he says,
theyre the only band Ive ever been
afraid of. At first it seems strange to hear Prince
talking in such fond and nostalgic terms about Day and
the band. Day left the Minneapolis fold right after
Purple Rain, with some nasty words about the bosss
supposedly dictatorial ways. Now, Prince says, I
honestly dont remember how we got it together
again. Days old charge of overbossing,
however, brings a quicker and crosser memory. That
whole thing came from my early days~ when I was wodting
with a lot of people who werent exactly designed
for their jobs; Prince says.
Ihadtodoalot,andlbadtohavecofltrOb becausea lot of
them didnt know exacdy what was needed. The
most often-told tale involves Prince firing the
then-unknown Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis from the Time in
1982. Jam and Lewis, all parties now agree, left a Time
tour on a day off to produce their first record for the
SOS Band. A freak snowstorm in Atlanta grounded them for
an extra day, and the two missed a gig. When Jam and
Lewis returned, they were summarily fired. Jobless, the
two missed Pwple Rain, so they set up as producers and
went scrounging for clients. In the years since,
theyve produced everyone from Janet Jackson to Herb
Alpert, becoming the other superpower on the Minneapolis
music scene. Im playing the bad guy;
says Prince, but I didnt fire Jimmy and
Terry. Morris asked me what I would do in his situation.
You got to remember, it was his band. Despite the
rap, Prince says, he harbors no ill will towards the
now-famous producers working across town
from Paisley Park at their Flyte Tyme studios.
Were friends, he says. We know
each other like brothers. Jimmy always gave me a lot of
credit for getting things going in Minneapolis, and
Im hip to that Terrys more aloof, but I know
that And their music? Terry and Jimmy really
arent into the Minneapolis sound, Prince
says. Theyre into making every single one of
their records a hit. Not that theres nothing wrong
with that,
we re just diflrent. With this, Prince cues up the
Graffiti Bridge movie sequence in which the Time performs
Shake! The scene looks like something Busby
Berkeley would have cooked up if he had choreographed
funk. The Time, Prince says, is proof of the good that
can come from a group dissolving and eventually coming
back together. They broke up because theyd
run out of ideas, he says. They went off and
did their own thing, and now theyre
terrifying. Prince says this formula was just what
he had in mind when, in short order, he broke up the
Revolution. 1 felt we all needed to gro~ he
says. We all needed to play a wide range of music
with different types of people. Then we could all come
back eight times as strong. No band can do
everything, he continues. For instance, this
band Im with now isfimky~ With them, I can drag out
Baby Im a Star all night! I just keep
switching gears on them, and something else funky will
happen. I couldnt do that with the Revolution. They
were a different kind of funky, more electronic and cold.
The Revoluion could tear up Darling Nikki,
which was the coldest song ever wntten. But I
wouldnt even think about playing that song ~th this
band. The breakup of the Revolution apparently
didnt go down easy. Today, Princes
relationship with his onetime best friends Wendy Mekvin
and Lisa Coleman is somewhere between uncomfortable and
estranged. I talk to Wendy and Lisa, but its
like this; Prince says, moving his hands in
opposite directions. 1 still hear a lot of hurt
from them, and that bothers me. When I knew them, they
were two spunky, wonderful human beings. I honestly
dont know what theyre hurt about So
fir, Prince says, the two women havent listened to
the few tidbits of advice he has offered. For their first
video, Prince recommended that they try to announce
themselves by making a splash, by doing something
like jumping off a speaker with smoke pouring out
everywhere. Something. When he saw the video,
however, Wendy was sitting in a chair, playing her
guitar. You cant do that when youre
just getting established - kids watching MTV see that and
they go click, Prince says, miming a channel being
changed. Theyd rather watch a
commercial. Still, Princes pronouncements
seem proffered more in mourning than in malice.
Wendy and Lisa are going to have to do some more
serious soul-searching and de- dde what they want to
write about; he says sadly and shakes his head.
1 dont know what Wendy and Lisa are so hurt
about I wish I did, but I don't
ITS A BROILING SUMMER AFrERNOON IN NICE, FRANCE,
and Prince is performing before an almost completely
empty soccer stadium. Its a sound check, and Prince
and his band have been going for over an hour, segueing
from John Lee Hookers Im in the
Mood to the free- form jamming in
Respect After the checb, Prince retreats to
the bowels of the stadium to wait for night Camped out in
his dressing room under a gaucho hat, Prince plugs in a
tape bearing some early versions of songs hes
written on tour. Prince says the first song, called
Schoolyard, is about the first time I
got any. Funny and funky, the song is an in-
ner-city Swnmer of 42 that tells the story of a
fumbling sixteen-year-old-boy tr~nng to seduce a girl to
the strains of a Tower of Power album. 1 think
thats something e~6ody can relate to, he
says. Still, that probably wouldnt prevent the song
from
getting a parental-warning sticker. 1 dont
mind that, Prince says. 1 think parents~have
a right to know what their children are listening to. At
first it seems an unlikely sentiment coming from the man
who once wrote about the onanistic doings of a woman
sitting with a magazine in a hotel lobby. But Prince
hasnt turned into a bluenose, he insists
hes just changed his outlook on how to present his
still eros- heavy creations. The change, he says, came
soon after he finished the Black Album, in 1987. The
reason the album was pulled from release had nothing to
do with record-company pressure, he insists, or with the
quality of the songs. Rather, Prince says, he aborted the
project because of one particular dark night of the soul
when a lot of things happened all in a few
hours. He wont get specif-. ic, saying only
that he saw the word God. And when I talk about
God, he says, 1 dont mean some dude in
a cape and a beard coming down to Earth. To me, hes
in everything if you look at it that way.
I was very angry a lot of the time back then,
he continues, and that was reflected in that album.
I sod- denly realized that we can die at any moment, and
wed be judged by the last thing we left behind. I
didnt want that angry, bitter thing to be the last
thing. I learned from that album, but I dont want
to go back By the time of the album Lomsexy, Prince
says, he was a certifiably nicer human being and a
happier creator. 1 feel good most of the time, and
I like to express that by writing from joy; he
says. 1 still do write from anger sometimes, like
in Thieves in the Temple. But I dont like to.
Its not a place to live. Hes been
angling for a different effect on each album he has made
in the last few years. What people were saying
about Sign o the Times was There are some great
songs on it, and there are some experiments on it I
hate the word experiment - it sounds like something you
didnt Finish. Well, they have to understand
thats the way to iave a double record and make it
interesting. Losesexy, Prince says, was a
mind trip, like a psyche- Ielic movie. Either you went
with it and had a mind- ilowing experience or you
didnt All that album cover~as, was a picture.
If you looked at that picture and
some ill come out of your mouth, then thats what
you ire - its looking right back at you in the
mirror. The Graffiti Bridge soundtracb, a couple cuts of
which iave been floating around for a few years, is
just a Alhole bunch of songs; he says. Nobody
does any exerimenrs or anything like that. But I still
want to know how it stands up to the other albums.
Im always going forward, always trying to surprise
myself. Its not about hits. Iknew how to make hits
by my second album. Not that Prince is above
appreciating a good old Number One with a bullet
especially when he wrote it I love it, its
great! he exclaims when asked about Sinéad
OConnors version of Nothing Compares 2
U, which Prince wrote in 1985 for the Paisley Park
act die Family. Is he sorry that he didnt get to
sing the song before OConnor? Nah,
Prince says. 1 look for cos- mic meaning in
everything. I think we just took that song as far as we
could, then someone else was supposed to come along and
pick it up. ile being so productive on his o~ Pnnce
has also found time to produce such disparate talents as
Mavis StapIes, George Ointon and Bonnie Raitt. The
best thing about prockucing is that there are so many
really talented people out there who just never got that
push over the top he says. Without that push, they just
get lost."
Raitt was perhaps his most talked-about reclamation
project. Oh, those sessions were lacking!
Prince says. But nothing was ever released a fact
which Prince takes the blame for. There was no
particular reason it didnt come out, he says.
1 was just working on a lot of things at the same
time~ and I didnt give myself enough time to work
with her. I used to do that a lot start five
different prc~jects and only get a couple done.
Thats the biggest thing Fm working on: patience and
planning. What Prince listens to on his own time is
a grab bag. He likes rap; hes recently signed
rappers T.C. Ellis and Rabin Power to record on his
Paisley Park label but denies that hell be producing
songs for M.C. Hammer. I like his stuff a
lot; Prince says. Weve talked but not
about working together, He also gives highly favorable
mentions to the likes of Madonna, Michael Jackson, Patti
LaBelie and Bette Midler. Im not real into
Bruce Sprmgsteens music, he says, but I
have a lot of respect for his talent. Prince and
Spnngsteen occasionally exchange notes; in recalling a
Sptingsteen concert he saw from backstage a few years
bach, Prince displays the respect of a general reviewing
another mans army. I admire the way he holds
his audience - ther&s one man whose fans I could
never take away; he says with a laugh. And how does
he compare their stage tactics? Fm not sure;
says Prince. But at one point, his band start going
off somewhere. Springsteen turned around and shot the
band one terrifying look You know they got tight back on
it!
For his own enjoyment, however, Prince usually relies on
himselE 1 like a lot of peoples music, and Fm
interested in whats going cm, he says,
but I dont listen to n Fm getting ready to go
out or driving in the car, I listen to my own stuff.
Never the old stuff Thats the way its always
been. Prince walks back over to the stereo and
plays with the cassette of his latest creations until he
finds a number featuring Rosie Gaines, his bands
unknown keyboardist and vocalist, who may be the next big
star to come out of Princes camp.
Terrifying, says Prince, shaking his head,
simply terrifying.
ITS ANOTHER SWELTERING AFTRNOON IN ANOTHER soccer
stadium, this time in Lucetne,Switzerland Its as
tame as a church picnic in the dressing rooms; drugs have
long been a firing offense, and even cigarettes have been
forbidden from the entire area. Killing time in the
hallway, the members of Princes band seem more
like the kind of winning, good-natured characters in a
script for the television show Fame than jaded road
warriors. Gaines is doing her imitation of Daisy Duck as
a soul sister. Be quiet, boyfriend! she
quacks. Whats
happening, baby? goes a squawk directed at fellow
keyboardist Mat Doctor Fink.
Fink, the only member of the Revolution still playing
with Prince, has just read in USA Today of a 2 Live Crew
parody made by a group called 2 Live Jews. Shucking in
his own estimable Jewish-man voice, Fink begins rapping:
Oy, its so humid! Over in the corner,
Michael Bland is poring over a purple copy of The
Portabla Nietzsche. A corpulent twenty-year-old drummer,
Bland is probably the urn fearsome-looking band member.
Actually, hes a scholarly innocent who still lives
with his parents in Minneapolis and plays drums in his
Pentecostal church. Nierzsches cool,
Bland says, putting down his book. But Schopenhauer
now theres a
brother with no hope! Also lolling in the hail are
Miko Weaver, a hunkish guitarist, and Levi Seacer Jr., a
thoughtful bass player, who has been entrusted with
speaking to the European press about this roadshow. The
Nude Tour is a greatest-hits production with lean
arrangements and none of the Liberace-on-add costumes and
special effects of the Lovesexy tour. Prince, hanging out
behind a closed door a few feet away from his band, makes
no apology for the shows programming. Kids
save a lot of money for a long time to buy tickets, and I
like to give them what they want, he says.
When I was a kid, I didnt want to go hear
James Brown play something I never heard before. I wanted
to hear him play something I knew, so I could
dance. For now, Prince has no plans to bring his
tour to the States. The main reason, he says, is that he
wants to get back to Minneapolis and the studio. Prince
also says that Warner Bros. is pouring in- creasingly
large amounts of cash into Paisley Park Records, which
means he must put in some serious time behind the
desk It was only a couple of years ago that Prince
was rumored to be in financial straits. But Forbes
magazine estimated that in 1989, Prince earned $20
million in pretax profit, and the New York Times recently
reported that his Paisley Park empire was quite solvent.
Were doing okay is all that Prince will
say. He has other reasons for wanting to get back home.
Prince wants to get roll ing on a screenplay he has been
working on with Gilbert Davison, his best friend, his
chief adjutant and the owner and proprietor of the
soon-to-open Minneapolis nightclub Glatn Slam. Prince has
lent the dub his full endorsement as well as its name,
the motorcycle from Pwple Rain and some of his
more-historic guitars. GIam Slams going to
kick ass~ Prince says. Itll be one of
tbase joints that?s remembered! rve just always wanted to
have a place where Iknew Icould just
show up and my stuff wauldbe there, sol wouldn't have to
jump onstage with equip. ment meant for Dwight Yoakam7
The point of helping Davison, Prince says, goes far
beyond nepotism. Glam Slam will be another thing to
center Minneapolis in the national eye, he says.
People talk about Minneapolis sound or the
Minneapolis scene, but they dont really know what
the place looks like or means. I want itto mean
something. For Prince, the place still mostly just
means home. It feels like music to me
there, he says. You dont feel prejudice
there. I know it exists, but you dont feel it as
much. I can just drive around the lakes or go into stores
without bodyguards or just hang out Nursing a cold
and chewing on Sudafed, Prince excuses himself to rest up
for the show. The next time he appears in the doorway,
his intimidating game face is on. The band comes in for a
last-minute hud- dle; Paisley Park costume designer Helen
Hiatt fixes a crucifix neddace big enough to scare off
Nosferatu. Its rauning Davison says to
Prince. Its raining is Princes
mumbled reply, accompanied by a thousand-yard stare.
Moments later, an army of damp and
screaming Swiss teenagers hear the first beats
of1999. The oldies come, as do some nifty
hommages beyond the requisite James Brown footwork.
Prince sings Nothing Compares 2 U, with a
Wilson Pickett wail, the song ending with him crucified
on a heart. Blues, sung with Rosie Gaines,
hearkens to Otis Reddung and Carla Thomas doing
Tramp. Baby Im a Star lasts
twenty-four minutes, and after two encores, Prince is
whisked to a backstage BMW that is gone well before his
funs stop screaming for more. Soon after, the band bus is
being rocked in the parking lot by highly nonneutral
Swiss. Were the Beatles! says Michael
Bland, giggling and waving to the fans. Oy,
its so humid, raps Dr. Fink.
AT FOUR IN THE MORNING, FLYING INTO their third country
in the past twenty-four hours, the band and the entire
entourage of about thirty are sacked out in what looks
like the sleep of the dead. Every- bodys
unconscious on this charter, including one of the flight
attendants. Theres movement, however, up in row 1.
Princes headphoned head is bopping against the back
of his seat, his arms pounding the armrests. From the
back, it looks like a priaoner is being executed in an
upholstered electric chair. Earlier in the day, Prince
had refused to make any predictions about his future.
I dont want to say anything that can be held
against me later, hed said with a laugh.
Mick Jagger said he hoped he wouldnt be
singing Satisfaction at thirty, and hes
still singing it. Pete Townshend wrote, Hope I die
before I get old. Well, now he is old, and I do
hope hes happy to be around. And himself?
When I pray to God, I say, Its your
call when its time to go, its time to
go, Prince had said. But as long as
youre going to leave me here
heslappedhishands-thenrmgoingto cause much
rudws! Now, while his band mates and support staff
snooze around him, Prince keeps air-jamming beneath the
glare of hs seat?s my spodtght Lsteming to a tape if his
own performance that day, Prince stays up all night. all
the way to London.

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