 
Publication: London Times [UK]
Date: July 6, 1996
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Title: "The Man With No Name Has No Label"
Interviewed By: David Sinclair
The man with the most celebrated identity crisis in pop is installed on the 48th floor of a Manhattan
hotel. The lift goes up so fast your ears pop. A security guard opens the door, and there he is.
Dressed from head to toe in black he sits like a crow in his cold, remote eyrie high above the city.
It is the middle of the afternoon but his face is immaculately made up and his high-maintenance
hairstyle scraped and greased into extravagant shape. The near-stilleto heels on his boots are at
least 3 inches high. His handshake is firm and when he eventually speaks his voice is deep and well
modulated.
The musician that most people still call Prince, even if his entourage fearfully avoids calling him
anything at all, has a new record out on Monday called Chaos and Disorder. Nothing unusual
about that. Apart from 1993, he has released one and sometimes two albums of new material
every years since 1978, a staggering output by the standards of today's pop superstars (over the
same period Michael Jackson has released just 5 new albums). Musically Chaos and Disorder is
nothing out of the ordinary either. Another rich stew of roller coaster funk riffs and spiky harmonies
leavened by a couple of pretty pop tunes - including the single Dinner With Delores - it is defined
mostly by a rather more solid dose of princely guitar soloing than the norm.
What does make this album special is that it is his last with the group, the New Power Generation
and his last for Warner Brothers, marking the end of an artist/record company squabble that has
been as intense as that of George Michael and Sony. "I have decided to part company with
Warners, but surprisingly we're now on the most amicable terms we've been for a long time." he
says.
So the man with no name now has no group and no record contract. He obviously still feels a
strong sense of injustice about Warners owning the mechanical copyrights of his recordings despite
having negotiated and signed a contract (reported to be worth $100 million to him) as recently as
1992. "I'm not free to write or record with who I want" he says "If I wanted to write and record a
song with you I could not do it".
Yes he fantastically vague when it comes to discussing the nuts and bolts of the dispute. Part of the
problem, apparently stemmed from Warners reluctance to release the sheer volume of work he is
capable of producing for fear of flooding the market.. You can see the companies point. Prince's
writing and recording habits are prolific to the point of profligacy. He tells me he wrote three songs
the day before. Two of these were "worked on" in a recording studio session that ended at 5am.
He has hundreds of unreleased songs in the vault.
He cannot even remember whether or not he wrote any original material specifically for the Joffrey
Ballet of Chicago's Billboards show featuring his music which has caused a sensation in the
American dance world and is coming to the festival hall next month. "I am energised by music," he
says "Music is my reason for existence, writing it, playing it listening to it". Interviews have the
opposite effect on him. A mixture of extreme shyness and overweening arrogance , he is an erratic
and unforthcoming conversationalist. On February 14th he married his former backing singer and
dancer Mayte, who is expecting his baby. But any talk of their relationship is strictly off-limits
("Too personal," he says, as if admonishing a naughty child). He will not discuss the lyrics to his
songs "Once they are in that record they are your to make what you want of them. I don't want to
spoil the process by explaining what I think they are about".
He will not say if he is negotiating a new recording contract and has no plans to tour. Despite
finding himself at a significant watershed both in his personal and professional life, he does not wish
to dwell on the past and will not talk about the future at all. Perhaps at the age of 38, he is feeling
threatened by the prospect of growing older. "Not at all, I love growing older. You can figure
things out quicker because you've seen how things happen in the past and so you what the results a
certain action will have. Also, the older I get the closer I am to where I'm going which is a better
place". This is the only point at which he begins to get at all animated. "We all have a purpose
within us. We are put here for a reason. My talent is God-given, but the music is made by me. I
make the choices that make the music." He starts to sound like a preacher, an image reinforced by
his long, black frock-coat and the gold cross cum-arrow which dangles from his neck. A lot of
cosmic waffle ensues. He insists I should read a book called embraced by the Light by Betty
Eadie, which is about near-death experiences and the I will fully understand what he is talking
about. But he goes all coy when asked if he has had any near-death experiences himself "That's
too psychological." Interviewing him is like trying to shake hands with a shadow. He changed his
name to a symbol in 1993 because his spirit told him to. Was he pleased that he had done it.
"Absolutely." Would he consider changing it again? "Yes, if I was instructed to. I just do what I'm
told"
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