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Prince
- Biography
Prince Roger Nelson Born:
7 June
1958, Birthplace: Minneapolis, Minnesota, best known as: The
funky star who recorded 1999 and changed his name to
a symbol.
An
influential star of the 1980s, Prince wrote and produced
funky pop songs that had cross-genre appeal, including the
top-sellers 1999, When Doves Cry and Kiss.
He became known as something of an eccentric genius: he
dressed in high heels and finery and was so multitalented
that on many songs he played all the instruments himself.
His reputation for independent thinking was reinforced in
the 1990s, when he changed his name to The Artist Formerly
Known As Prince (or TAFKAP), then to an unpronounceable
symbol (reproduced on the Web as O(+>), and finally (in
2000) back to Prince. He has continued to write and perform,
operating out of his
Minneapolis
home base, called Paisley Park Studios. His 2004 album,
Musicology, was hailed as a "comeback," and included the
song "Call My Name," which earned him a Grammy for Best Male
R&B Vocal Performance. Prince's albums include 1999
(1983), Purple Rain (1984), Lovesexy (1988),
Newpower Soul (1998) and Musicology (2004). He
also starred in the 1984 feature film Purple Rain.
Prince was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in
2004.
Prince
was married to dancer Mayte Garcia from 1996-98. He married
Manuela Testolini in 2001; she filed for divorce in 2006...
Despite the persistent rumor, Prince did not appear in the
1996 movie
Fargo...
Prince was a mentor to singer/actress Carmen Electra...
Other single-name musicians include Tricky, Moby, Dido and
Sting.
Few
artists have created a body of work as rich and varied as
Prince. During the '80s, he emerged as one of the most
singular talents of the rock & roll era, capable of
seamlessly tying together pop, funk, folk, and rock. Not
only did he release a series of groundbreaking albums; he
toured frequently, produced albums and wrote songs for many
other artists, and recorded hundreds of songs that still lie
unreleased in his vaults. With each album he released,
Prince has shown remarkable stylistic growth and musical
diversity, constantly experimenting with different sounds,
textures, and genres. Occasionally, his music can be
maddeningly inconsistent because of this eclecticism, but
his experiments frequently succeed; no other contemporary
artist can blend so many diverse styles into a cohesive
whole.
Prince's first two albums were solid, if unremarkable,
late-'70s funk-pop. With 1980's Dirty Mind, he recorded his
first masterpiece, a one-man tour de force of sex and
music; it was hard funk, catchy Beatlesque melodies, sweet
soul ballads, and rocking guitar pop, all at once. The
follow-up, Controversy, was more of the same, but 1999 was
brilliant. The album was a monster hit, selling over three
million copies, but it was nothing compared to 1984's Purple
Rain.
Purple Rain made Prince a superstar; it eventually sold over
ten million copies in the
U.S.
and spent 24 weeks at number one. Partially recorded with
his touring band, the Revolution, the record featured the
most pop-oriented music he has ever made. Instead of
continuing in this accessible direction, he veered off into
the bizarre psycho-psychedelia of Around the World in a Day,
which nevertheless sold over two million copies. In 1986, he
released the even stranger Parade, which was in its own way
as ambitious and intricate as any art rock of the '60s;
however, no art rock was ever grounded with a hit as
brilliant as the spare funk of "Kiss."
By 1987, Prince's ambitions were growing by leaps and
bounds, resulting in the sprawling masterpiece Sign 'O' the
Times. Prince was set to release the hard funk of The Black
Album by the end of the year, yet he withdrew it just before
its release, deciding it was too dark and immoral. Instead,
he released the confused Lovesexy in 1988, which was a
commercial disaster. With the soundtrack to 1989's Batman he
returned to the top of the charts, even if the album was
essentially a recap of everything he had done before. The
following year he released
Graffiti
Bridge,
the sequel to Purple Rain, which turned out to be a
considerable commercial disappointment.
In 1991, Prince formed the New Power Generation, the best
and most versatile and talented band he has ever assembled.
With their first album, Diamonds and Pearls, Prince
reasserted his mastery of contemporary R&B; it was his
biggest hit since 1985. The following year, he released his
12th album, which was titled with a cryptic symbol; in 1993,
Prince legally changed his name to the symbol. In 1994,
after becoming embroiled in contract disagreements with
Warner Bros., he independently released the single "The Most
Beautiful Girl in the World," likely to illustrate what he
would be capable of on his own; the song became his biggest
hit in years. Later that summer, Warner released the
somewhat halfhearted Come under the name of Prince; the
record was a moderate success, going gold.
In November 1994, as part of a contractual obligation,
Prince agreed to the official release of The Black Album. In
early 1995, he immersed himself in another legal battle with
Warner, proclaiming himself a slave and refusing to deliver
his new record, The Gold Experience, for release. By the end
of the summer, a fed-up Warner had negotiated a compromise
that guaranteed the album's release, plus one final record
for the label. The Gold Experience was issued in the fall;
although it received good reviews and was following a smash
single, it failed to catch fire commercially. In the summer
of 1996, Prince released Chaos & Disorder, which freed him
to become an independent artist. Setting up his own label,
NPG (which was distributed by EMI), he resurfaced later that
same year with the three-disc Emancipation, which was
designed as a magnum opus that would spin off singles for
several years and be supported with several tours.
However, even his devoted cult following needed considerable
time to digest such an enormous compilation of songs. Once
it was clear that Emancipation wasn't the commercial
blockbuster he hoped it would be, Prince assembled a
long-awaited collection of outtakes and unreleased material
called Crystal Ball in 1998. With Crystal Ball, Prince
discovered that it's much more difficult to get records to
an audience than it seems; some fans who pre-ordered their
copies through Prince's website (from which a bonus fifth
disc was included) didn't receive them until months after
the set began appearing in stores. Prince then released a
new one-man album, New Power Soul, just three months after
Crystal Ball; even though it was his most straightforward
album since Diamonds and Pearls, it didn't do well on the
charts, partly because many listeners didn't realize it had
been released.
A year later, with "1999" predictably an
end-of-the-millennium anthem, Prince issued the remix
collection 1999 (The New Master). A collection of Warner
Bros.-era leftovers, Vault: Old Friends 4 Sale, followed
that summer, and in the fall Prince returned on Arista with
the all-star Rave Un2 the Joy Fantastic.
In the fall of 2001 he released the controversial Rainbow
Children, a jazz-infused circus of sound trumpeting his
conversion to the Jehovah's Witnesses that left many
longtime fans out in the cold. He further isolated himself
with 2003's N.E.W.S., a four-song set of instrumental jams
that sounded a lot more fun to play than to listen to.
Prince rebounded in 2003 with the chart-topping Musicology,
a return to form that found the artist back in the Top Ten,
even garnering a Grammy nomination for Best Male Pop Vocal
Performance in 2005. In early 2006 he was the musical guest
on Saturday Night Live, performing two songs with a new
protégée, R&B singer Tamar. A four-song appearance at the
Brit Awards with Wendy, Lisa, and Sheila E. followed. Both
appearances previewed tracks from 3121, which hit number one
on the album charts soon after its release in March 2006.
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