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Publication: Esquire Gentleman [US]
Date: Autumn 1995
Section:
Page Number(s):
Length:
Title: "Glitter Slave"
Interviewed By: Julie Baumgold
Amid pomp and circumspection, rock's crown prince
extends his purple reign.
THE DARK CAR SLID INTO THE WELL guarded alley. On the day after his second
birthday as , he got out of the car and walked quickly into the Glam Slam
in South Beach, Miami. For twenty years, has had a life of rear
entrances, underground passages, announced and plotted arrivals, usually
when night is well tipped into day.
He owns the Glam Slam and two other clubs like it and was here to perform
on his birthday, make a video, and straighten out a little business
problem. He stared straight-ahead, the master of the place, with debutante
posture and, as is usual, "Slave" written artistically with marker on his
right cheek.
His white silk shirt floated back from his frail body, a white Borsalino
rode high on his hair, which glowed with glitter like stardust. He wore a
mask of absolute expressionless stillness. His vacant face is his armor. It
allows him to think without being bothered. It is convenient for creation,
and it keeps the mystique.
Living in mystery is a stage of stardom, a reaction to early fame.
Sometimes it is risky because silence can be misconstrued, but this is how
wants it. No interviews-or if he does agree to one, he cripples the
writer by removing his pen.
The big disco room had become a movie set since he left it after performing
until five that morning, his wet body wrapped in a robe. As he had reminded
the Glam Slam audience many times, "Prince is dead." He was feeling good,
for each day was bringing him closer to the end of the contract with Warner
Bros. Records that he feels enslaves him.
No one approached him. Those who did not know him well quickly averted
their eyes when they passed, as though even to look on him were forbidden.
He is the perfect combination of tininess and threat: Though he is
thirty-seven in his past life as Prince Rogers Nelson, with a deep voice
and a hairy chest-this is still a boy-man. With his long, slender fingers,
slightly pointed ears, and large beautiful eyes, the effect
is elfin. He is very small and so dainty in his visible
proportions that it is hard to imagine his childhood in
a rough part of Minneapolis.
HERE, AS HE SITS WITH CAROLYN
Baker, a vice president of artist development for Warner Bros. Records, and two
members of the band, the NPG, he is
completely accepted as the genius, the
boss, the coddled star, and the reason everyone is in
this room. They are used to his ways-the fabled sleepless energy that leads
him to do aftershows in clubs
following his performances. They know his talents as
songwriter, performer, star of four movies, producer,
autodidact on sixteen instruments, miniature sex
machine. They know he is so prolific he could put
out four albums a year if the record business
worked that way. They know him in his many
reincarnations as he redefines himself with the
times. They know the things that make him an
artist: the fact that he changes and gives himself
the possibility to fail, that he moves through
different mediums, that his life is the stuff
of his work and the reverse. They accept-
it goes with the job.
"He's a genius...like a Miles Davis, who
heard sounds no one else heard. They hear,
see, feel something we don't, and their job
is to interpret to us," Baker says a few days
later. "His whole world is colored differently
from mine. People used to say, 'Will you tell
him to do something?' And I'd say, 'No, you
need to work around it.' He has a vision.
He has got to be able to do it his way.... It's
kind of like being an alien."
The large, heavily fringed eyes are sneaking
a peek at me, checking me out although I have
been preapproved or I would not be in this room.
One does not approach. One waits as the big white
hat swivels slowly, the outlined eyes blink and consider. A little pencil
line of hair surrounds his mouth
When he is ready, he comes over sucking a cherry
Tootsie Pop, smiling redly. Juli Knapp, his director
of operations, privately refers to and introduces him
as "The Artist Formerly Known as Prince." Everyone is very scrupulous about
this name thing.
and I go up into the balcony to talk. His
bodyguard sits down in the row behind us,
but sends him away. "I'm a terrible interview," he says. His speaking
voice is very low, like his
low-register singing voice. I think he is afraid of not being as
interesting as this whole edifice he has created, happier to hide behind
his scarves and costumes and characters. With the press, as with his record
company, he has trusted people and been burned. Actually, he is the perfect
star for this era in which, as someone said, the way to get attention is to
shun attention. At least until the next album.
The stage , historically dirty with his "motherf---ers" and sex talk, is
obviously showbiz. He is very well-spoken, intense, funny, dipping into
funk speech when he wants to, and very smart. He leans forward to
tell me he feels angry at himself. When he signed
the Warner deal he didn't know what he knows now,
and sold what he feels is his birthright. He sold his
master tapes. And now his future children won't have them. This is why he
turned in disgust from "Prince"-taken as a seventeen-year-old boy, his
image controlled-and the work that was Prince. This is why he became and
does not sing Prince
songs. If I can't have me, they can't.
Of course he took the money, a deal worth a variously reported $30 million
to $100 million. But they are not releasing or promoting his work the way
he wants. Warner Bros. Records refuses to put out albums at the fast rate
he writes songs, preferring to promote one album and one tour a year, as
more might overwhelm the market.
of this is involved in the name change. It was both a spiritual
conversion and a business move. Just when he
had been around long enough to have
generations of fans, he became someone else and was reborn, artistically
recast. He has his slave self, which is issuing a new album,
The Gold Experience, and his semifree self, which
contributed to Exodus, by the NPG. And there is a third self, a big hidden
album.
Some time, he says, he has been working on Emancipation,
which will be his first album when he is free-maybe fifty new songs.
Then, he says, he will reemerge. He will speak to the press.
His face has changed now, as though the plastic boss face was to keep
everyone else
calm. He tells me his heart and perhaps his best work are in Emancipation.
This album is a big surprise to people at Warner. No one seems to know
about it.
"He's been here since the '70s," says Baker. "He was very young. Sometimes
you love your parents but want to leave home. None of us wants to see it
happen."
is a businessman. He has a $10 mil- lion studio, Paisley Park, where he
produces
other recording artists; he has these clubs l throbbing until dawn,
stores in London 1 and Minneapolis, where the symbol and the face take on
iconic dimensions, his own love scent, and so forth. In 1992-93, Forbes
ranked him the fifth most highly paid entertainer in the world. But a part
of the Warner deal was a restructuring. Right now he is a businessman who
made a bad deal. He doesn't want it to happen to others. He says he wants
to take care of other artists. His ambition is nothing less than to form an
alternative recording industry where artists own their own work and have
creative
freedom. The NPG, the New Power Generation, the people of the sun, are part
of this
new quasi-hippie world. When he performs with them he is "Tora Tora," his
head and face wrapped in a chiffon scarf, yet another self. He is hidden,
as he was in the "My Name is Prince" video when he wore a curtain of chains
over his face.
IS IN AN ARTISTIC CONUNDRUM- art versus what is "commercial." When he
hears that word, he almost leaps from
his seat in the balcony. When they let him handle his single "The Most
Beautiful Girl in the World," he says he had his most commercial hit of the
decade. ("It would have been spooky if it was the whole album," he says
later.) It is every artist's devil-his vision and the world's may not
always mesh. His best stuff may be beyond them, but he knows how good or
bad it is. Though sometimes he can fool himself, inside the artist always
knows. The record company sometimes knows. The dilemma was there as early
as his movie Purple Rain. People kept warning The Kid ( 's role): "Nobody
digs your music but yourself." Of course, central to artistic freedom is
the freedom to fail on your own terms.
He talks about people who don't own their parent's work-Nona Gaye doesn't
own Marvin. Does
Lisa Marie Presley own Elvis's masters?
He talks of the creative accounting of the
record business, how black stores don't always have the digital scanners
and miscount, so say, for instance, a big rap artist,
who is said to have sold four million copies, might really have sold twenty
million. He totally sympathized with
George Michael, whom he considers a great
talent, in his fight with Sony, which he says
is an "even worse" company than Warner.
Warner goes ahead and promotes what they
want from the NPG album, which isn't always the right song, though the one
he likes is nine-and-a-half minutes long. "Everyone gets to play on it. I
have the best drummer in the world," he says.
According to his people, his deal is this: He gets an advance that might
cover his living expenses while making the album. Once the work is
delivered, Warner can decide how or if promote and market it. The final
decisions are not his. Thus, he is a "slave" to the system.
Warner, I'm sure, has a different interpretation. I do not say to him that
perhaps it trivializes the
African-American experience for a millionaire rock star-who travels with
aides, bodyguards, a chef, a hairdresser, valet, backup security, wardrobe,
band, technical people, a pyrotechnics expert, a personal dancing muse, and
a man who sits behind him on the Concorde handing him freshly sharpened
pencils-to write "Slave" on his face. This-glittery chains on the face
versus chains on the ankles-is his version of slavery. Though he is half
white, he identifies completely as a black man and talks about the lack of
images for black children in movies and television.
"And who is at the head of these companies?" he says.
Mayte wafts into the balcony. She is his current inspiration after a long
line of protégés including Apollonia and Vanity. tells her what to wear
for the video. Mayte has been with him for four years, since she was a
famously virginal seventeen. Mayte, who is also of
mixed parentage, grew up on army bases and studied ballet and belly dancing
from the age of three. She fulfilled her mother's own balked ambition in
the way fulfilled his father's. Mayte is his Tinkerbell, his Linda
McCartney. She bumps and grinds and tosses her black hair and cheerleads
his songs. She shakes her ass and belly dances with a sword on her head.
She punches the air and stalks the stage in her hot pants, not shy about
showing the cheeks of her tush, her dancer's thighs flexing. Her poster
sells next to his in the lobby. She is always next to him.
Together they look like they live on sweets and air, two ethereal beings
who inflate, take on power, persona and sexiness onstage. Offstage they
look like they should be wrapped in bathrobes, fed warm starches, and kept
safe till it is time to step out again into the pink smoke.
They reappear-she in her gold costume and he with his face wrapped in a
chiffon scarf beneath a Mad Hatter hat with a rose and wearing a
floor-length black gospel robe with the NPG insignia. When I tell him that
he looks like Thing in the Addams family, he starts to shuffle and make
squeaking Thing noises.
Glam Slam's lights are flashing, rebounding off the mirrored disco ball in
the ceiling, and a member of the crew falls to the floor in an epileptic
seizure. looks at him with his blank expression and, standing rigid,
alienated from the situation, makes no move to help. There are other people
helping the man. is disconnected. When things go wrong in the world he
controls, he does not scream. He walks away. He and Mayte stand there in
their funny show clothes with Marcello Mastroianni in La Dolce Vita on the
monitors because the song they will be doing is "The Good Life." The man is
carried out on a stretcher and the video goes on.
It is 's birthday night. He is onstage in a burntcherry-red jumpsuit cut
open in the back all the way down to the cleavage of his tiny behind. A
fabulous dresser, masculine in his feminine clothes, he has always dressed
out of his times and just like a prince in his frock coats, rampantly
ruffled shirts with fingertip-dragging cuffs, tight high-waisted pants with
matching Frenchheeled boots, royal medallions, arrogant walking sticks,
tiny boleros with high Beau Brummel collars. He has borrowed from both
masculine and feminine figures: the toreador, the languid Byronic poet
coughing in his cuffs, the dandy, the fop, Prince Charming, Coco Chanel.
It's 2 A.M. or so in the Glam Slam and he is playing the music he wants to
play. The place, which has been in a bit of a slump, is now filled with
bobbing, heaving fans, their arms waving in the dark like undersea fronds
blown back and forth by the currents. Mayte is strutting in her black
boots, punching the air with a tambourine, keening, sweating alongside him,
her ambition intertwined with his. The monitors are going, as are the video
cams, in this big throb of birthday love. pounds out the show-all
rocking, all beat, jamming and funk. He is the complete mid-career . This
is his night in his club with his symbol over the bar, on the waitresses'
chests, on his boots, on his -shaped guitar. "Prince is dead," he keeps
saying, enjoying it, shucking the old self, as Mayte flips her hair down
and back. He asks to hear the crowd; he wants his feedback from the void.
He says the obligatory "motherf---er"s to prove he has
not crossed the line into Lite Rock. Reminiscent of his old dirty days, he
gets into a whole "pussy control" rant: "How many ladies got pussy
control?" "I got a headache tonight," says Mayte. "I got something for your
headache," he says- kind of like a dirty Captain and Tenille. He is no
longer feeling "The Kid" when he says to them, "I am your mom's favorite
freak." Mayte carries out a cake but he waves it away. "I hate that Happy
Birthday song."
The next night he plays even longer-three hours instead of two-and is even
hotter, released from his video chores, having imparted his bit to me. He
has a chiffon scarf over his face, a white suit with fringe, another
Elvisoid chest-baring white suit with gold trim. Up in the balcony, at 4:30
A.M., his three aides in black dresses are dancing away-his accountant, one
of his lawyers, his director of operations, all reminded of why they work
for this man.
"This is your captain," he says onstage in the colored cone of streaming
light, his rhinestone necklace shining on his slender throat. He is at his
best in the hour of the owl with the creatures of the moon. Now, over these
bodies, he has the power. When he is free, emancipated from his demon
Warner, if it all works out, he will be laughing in the purple rain. And
maybe it will be the last laugh.
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