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Publication: Access Magazine [Can]
Date: February/March 1997
Section:
Page Number(s):
Length:
Title: "Portrait of the Artist as a Free Man"
Interviewed By: Cindy Waxer
"Yo, yo, yo. Wha'zup? Yours truly is in the house, chillin' at Paisley Park Studio
where The Artist Formerly Known as Prince ( ) is about to kick his funky vibe
for y'all." The camera swerves to capture the homeboy gesticulations of the obnoxious
MTV v.j. reading from cue cards smeared with urban slang. As Boyz II Men, D'Angelo
and Phish surrender to impromptu interviews, pony-tailed record label executives
and suave foreign journalists scurry past the gangsta-posing host. Rumour has it,
and his new bride Mayte have joined the exclusive CD-launch party and are sashaying
through the luxurious recording studio complex.
Over ceramic tulips planted in phallic arrangements, music from 's latest release,
an epic triple-CD set entitled Emancipation, resounds through corridors illuminated in
fluorescent purple light. The music's synthesized sexuality, funky backbeat and sizzling
guitar riffs overpower the cacophony generated by Paisley Park's estimated 1,000 guests.
Despite the media frenzy, controls the crowd like the Wizard of Oz in gold high heels,
having summoned his loyal subjects from all over the world to examine his freshly painted
portrait of a free man.
At a press conference immediately following his globally broadcast half-hour performance,
announces that "The old way of doing things is over." The studio's mesmerized
journalists and photographers have already noted the dawn of this new era, having been
formally invited to interview the formerly press-shy genius. And there are other changes.
Gone is the word SLAVE which once blazed upon 's cheek.
Gone, too, is his 15-year-old recording contract with Warner Bros. Records. Signed to
the prominent record label since the release of his debut album, For You, in 1978,
negotiated a lucrative contract that eventually netted him advances of $10 million
per album. But in 1992, Warner Bros. re-signed its prolific musical genius to a staggering
$100 million deal, which permitted him to unleash a new album only every year or two.
Warner Bros. argued that if was to flood the market with new material, they would
never see a return on their costly investment.
Enraged that antiseptic record label executives could stipulate the pace of his creativity,
The Artist retaliated. First, in 1993, he dissociated himself from any music he had recorded
for Warner Bros. under the name of Prince by adopting an unpronounceable cross-gendered
hieroglyph as his new name (a variation of which appears on the album cover of 1984's Purple
Rain). Second, in response to Warner Bros.' ploy to postpone the release of his album The
Gold Experience, began showing up in public with the word SLAVE scrawled across his
cheek. The frustrated record label acquiesced. Having managed to terminate his contract,
was finally free to reclaim control of both his career and his musical empire.
's newfound liberation is accompanied by a new bride, a newborn child, a new album,
a new record label and, most surprisingly, a newfound tolerance of the media. That is why
I now find myself trapped within the lobby of Paisley Park's 65,000 square foot expanse,
anxiously waiting to interview its infamously press-shy emperor.
"Whatever you do, just don't call Prince," warns the record label publicist as he escorts me
to a remote conference room. He relays the story of how recently stormed out of an
interview in Japan when the journalist did just that.
Accidentally mouthing the anathema 'Prince' is the least of my concerns right now.
is refusing to be tape recorded, a stipulation that stems from his desire to control every
aspect of his publicity. To make matters worse, the buzz from the press is that His
Holiness is adamantly opposed to discussing his personal life, particularly his child,
who is rumoured to have been born severely deformed.
Pre-empting my panic attack, a Dutch reporter bounds out of the conference room.
"It's going to be a beautiful experience," he cries with exultation. But before I can
respond to his prediction with classic Canadian sarcasm, I'm shoved into the room where
the emperor himself stands before me.
Dressed in a lime green velvet tunic, matching trousers and gold high heels,
offers me his hand. I accept and, in turn, sympathetically suggest that he must be
burnt out by now, referring to the army of journalists which has marched onto this
battleground before me. "Nope," he quips, as if to say, 'Let's get on with it.'
And so I initiate a conversation that leaves me alternately confused, inspired,
unsatisfied, elated, used and honoured.
"With songs, you can take your time and make sure what you're saying is the truth...
I can control what I mean with music," argues , explaining why he records his songs
yet won't allow me to tape our interview. So then why grant interviews at all? Leaning
back in his chair to ensure a reasonable distance between us, he explains: "I thought
it was important to talk about the music and to explain that this is a record by a
free man... and it's going to outshine anything I've ever done."
In fact, following his divorce from Warner Bros., has seized unprecedented
control of his music. Emancipation was released on NPG (New Power Generation) Records,
of which is the president and only act signed. As for the Capitol-EMI record
label executives mingling at the Paisley Park soiree, has recently signed an
agreement with the label making it responsible for pressing, distributing and
publicizing the new album. But it is who controls Emancipation's cost to
the consumer, rate of output and master tapes. "EMI is like Federal Express. You
call them up and ask them if they can deliver something for you... [The label] is
providing a service. No restrictions, no contract." Indirectly referring to the
endless hours spent at the negotiating table with Warner Bros., he adds, "This isn't
one of them big seven hour deals."
The peculiar lengths has gone to obtain his artistic freedom have the makings of one
of David Letterman's Top Ten Lists. A millionaire musical genius who adopts a symbol
for a name and scrawls SLAVE across his baby smooth cheek is bound to be accused of
carrying around a misplaced persecution complex. But when I ask him if perhaps
African-Americans have a better understanding of his plight than the music industry's
rich white folk, his response is emphatic: "If you tell an African American that I don't
own my music and that I left that regime with nothing other than the cheque, they'd
understand."
In fact, left Warner Bros. with more than just an undisclosed lump sum of money.
Included in his bon voyage package was a seething bitterness towards an industry that
can treat its musicians and their work like stocks and bonds. "There are restrictions
and rules placed on you when you go in to make art," says , incredulously. Is it
kind of like asking for a wallet-sized Picasso, I suggest? suddenly breaks into
laughter and howls: "I'm going to use that!"
It's not unusual these days to see the characteristically guarded musician relinquish
enough control to show his sense of humour. Nor is it uncommon to hear
philosophize over his unsavoury pas predicaments. "[Warner Bros.] was the least of
my problems," he says. "I had a lot of personal problems at the time. I had to
exorcise a lot of different demons." As for telling me who or what those demons were,
snaps, "That's personal."
It's a response the exceptionally private musician has been prone to offer ever since his
Valentine's Days marriage last year to 24-year-old dancer Mayte Garcia and the unconfirmed
birth of their first child. At the time of our mid-November interview, the child -
whose name, gender and birth date has yet to reveal - was rumoured to have been
born prematurely with a severe birth defect. A week later, during an interview with
Oprah Winfrey taped November 4, reassured the celebrity talk-show host: "It's
all good. Never mind what you hear."
But on November 23, a report was issued by the British tabloid The Daily Express
stating that the couple's baby actually died weeks earlier, on October 23, "from a
rare illness known as Cloverleaf Skull Syndrome." Since then, radio, TV and various
tabloids have supported the story, albeit without the official confirmation of
Capitol-EMI Records or Paisley Park.
may be unwilling to discuss the status of his child's health, but he is eager
to share it with the world in one way. Emancipation's sultry song 'Sex in the Summer'
features a sample of the unborn baby's heartbeat. It is an unique touch that
jokingly tells me resulted in a warning from his lawyer, Londell McMillan, that the
baby would be born "with a pen and a contract in hand." Taking advantage of the
moment of levity, I ask what impact fatherhood has had on him, both personally and
artistically. "I don't speculate on how my child will affect me," is 's staunch
reply.
Leaving the speculation to the tabloid journalists, exudes a spiritual faith
that permeates Emancipation's 36 songs. There are emotive ballads like 'Somebody's
Somebody' and 'Let's Have a Baby', funky grooves like 'Sex in the Summer' and 'Emale',
as well as faithful cover versions of Joan Osborne's 'One of Us' and the Stylistics'
'Betcha By Golly Wow!', the album's lead-off single. But regardless of Emancipation's
eclectic components, the frenzy that once accompanied hit singles like 'Little Red
Corvette' and 'When Doves Cry' is blatantly absent. In its place is a tranquility
that guides the listener to 's empire of freedom. "It all goes together, all of
the universe goes together. And the sooner you realize that, the quicker we'll learn
how to heal one another," he rhapsodizes as if staring out of a foggy car window on
a seemingly endless road trip.
The direction the conversation is heading strikes me as odd. 's impressive
empire was built upon the power he wielded over others, not on half-baked homilies
one would expect at a Yanni concert. Single-handedly, moulded virgin talent
like Sheena Easton and Sheila E. into bustier-clad vixens, turned a record deal
into the luxurious Paisley park Enterprises and cunningly played the press with the
same virtuosity as his trademark symbol-shaped guitar.
Touched by this musical genius who seems to have abandoned his controlling ways for
more nurturing habits, I rise to shake 's hand. I thank him for letting me into
his home, his music, and however cursorily, his soul. He embraces my hand with his
very first hint of coquettishness, replies through a lurid smile: "We'll meet again."
Not unlike the Dutch reporter who came before me, I exit the room dumbstruck and
awe-inspired. Then the reporter's words return to me. It's going to be a
beautiful experience. Hanging behind 's small frame was a poster that read
'The Beautiful Experience'. Intentionally or not, The Artist had subconsciously
controlled the reporter's perceptions of him.
Curiously deflated, I realize that - like the MTV v.j. reading from his cue cards,
like 's band being guided by each of his notes, like the women whose lives he
has transformed - the Dutchman and I had both become just another unwitting colour
for The Artist to paint his self-portrait of a free man.
(For more information about The Artist Formerly Known As Prince, check out his
website, www.thedawn.com.)
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