 
Publication: Q [UK]
Date: July 1994
Section:
Page Number(s):
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Title: "'I am normal!' - Talks To Q"
Interviewed By: Adrian Deevo
Pleased to meet you... Hope you’ve guessed my name. For the first time
since God alone knows when, the artist formerly known as Prince talks
exclusively and extensively about identity, insecurity, George Michael,
Nelson Mandela, ballet, boogie, opera, orgasm, freedom and the future. "I
follow the advice of my spirit," he tells Adrian Deevoy.
His name is not Prince. And he is not funky. His name is Albert. And he
is lurching across the dancefloor in search of accommodating company.
Slightly balding and chunkier than he looks in photographs, he moors behind
a gyrating female and clumsily interfaces.
Up on the stage another man whose name is not Prince says, "This is
dedicated to Prince Albert, the funkiest man in Monaco." It’s a wonder he
can get the words out with his tongue buried so deep in his cheek. Prince
Albert beams and grinds arhythmically on. Prince laughs, throws a swift
shape and stops the funk on the one. It’s his party and he’ll lie if he
wants to.
One hundred and twenty people have been invited to the Stars &alt; Bars
club in Monte Carlo for this most exclusive of celebrations. The champagne
is free, the spirits are freer and the house band is possibly the best live
act on the planet. You probably remember them as Prince And The New Power
Generation. They’re still the NPG but he’s not Prince any more. He is (to give him his
full title). Sir Hieroglyphicford for short.
Ursula Andress is at the bar, sipping sensually at a flute of champagne.
A few generations and a couple of yards along, Claudia Shiffer is doing
likewise. It’s that sort of a do. Everyone is wearing impossibly shiny shoes
and gold epaulettes. If God weren’t resting his suave old soul, you’d expect
David Niven to walk in with Peter Wyngarde on his arm. Without trying too
hard, you can imagine Fellini standing in the corner saying, "Christ, this
is weird!" Quit what the gnarled jet-setters are making of the music
programme is anyone’s guess. At 1.15am the Barry Manilow tape was exchanged
for a stripped down five-piece (and non-stop disco dancer Mayte - pronounced
My Tie - Garcia) who have just embarked upon the most daunting funk
experience of a lifetime. A knot of maybe 15 perfumed debs cluster aroundthe lip of the stage. Naturally you join them and find yourself standing so
close to the Artist Formerly Known As Prince (AFKAP to use the diminutive
that you can here him singing unamplified behind his microphone.
As the franc-trillionaires dance like your dad or simply stand looking
bemused, a set of entirely new material is unleashed: a slamming funk
madhouse named "Now"; a total headshag of a thing called "Interactive";
"Glam Slam Boogie", a swinging R &alt; B shuffle; this scorching rap, Days
Of Wild; "Space", a superb mid-paced chug; a Prince-of-yore smutathon which
boasts the chorus "Pop goes the zipper"; "Race", another blistering rap and
a freshly minted song which may not have been called "Jogging Machine".
Amazingly, despite performing for over two hours and dancing like an
amphetamined primate, he doesn’t break sweat. It’s only during the very last
song (during which he takes to calling out "Bass - hallowed be thy name" and
"You know you’re funky!") that minute moist tresses begin to
glisten at the back of his neck. Shirtless now, you can’t help but notice as
he cavorts on the floor with Mayte that here is a man who has no truck with
underwear. The trained medical eye can also detect, through sheer yellow
matador trousers, that he is circumcised. And she isn’t. It is indecently,
maybe even illegally, sexy. "Doesn’t anyone have to go to work tomorrow." he
asks rhetorically as the monied merry-makers bay for another encore. "Guess
not."
The Prince camp are an odd crew: all are deeply aware of the
idiosyncrasies of their bonsai boss - and they call him "Boss" - but they
hold him in unutterably high esteem. One lunchtime, his American PR, face
poker-straight, tells me that her charge is "an instrument of God." Over
drinks, his European PR is a little more terrestrial: "He doesn’t talk a
lot," he says, reflecting on Prince’s visit, a few days ago, to his newly
opened London shop. "He just came in and sat on the stairs sucking a
lollipop. Then he wandered around for a while, looking at things. Of course,
the next day I get long lists of changes he wants made."
The band plainly find his celebrity both a convenient distraction and a
bit of a laugh. They are more than used to fencing questions about their
commander, invariably dismissing enquiries with "He’s just a regular cat
like you and me", but in their hearts they know he isn’t. I ask them one
Fleet Street-type question about their shrift: "Is he Mayte’s boyfriend?"
"No," they say firmly. "She don’t have a boyfriend."
Amusingly, among the entourage, the P word is rarely mentioned for fear
it might result in the P45 word. There is a mild panic when a poster
advertising his appearance at Monte Carlo’s World Music Awards is spotted
with the dread legend on it. In the blink of an eye the name is erased and
the now familiar gold unisex symbol drawn in its place. "If he’d seen that,"
says a relieved minder, "he might have just have turned around and gone home."
A telling scene occurs one night as the band are sitting around talking
nonsense and drinking beer in the lobby of the oppressively posh Hotel De
Paris. A huge horde of fans have gathered outside having heard that their
hero is dining with Prince Albert tonight and will soon be emerging from the
hotel. At 8.30, Prince ghosts up by your side (you soon learn that he has
this unnerving habit of just appearing) and in an unimaginably deep
voice asks, "Shall I go out the front?" He is resplendent in full battle
dress: a jacket made from what once must have been fold doily, lace strides,
heels, walking cane and lollipop. "Yeah," cry the band, "go out the front!
Freak ‘em out!" With the cheekiest of smirks, he pops the lolly decisively
into his mouth and steps boldly out through the revolving door. The crowd
screech his old name as, surrounded by three minders, he steps - head down,
mouth corners curling knowingly - into a waiting car.
Only once during our five-day stay do we see Prince out of his stagegear. He is in a lift heading down to have his hair re-teased and is wearing
a black jumper, leather jeans and impenetrable dark glasses, presumably
because he hasn’t bothered to put on any make-up on. He looks remarkably
pale but then he has just got up. It’s 5pm.
Similarly, the only time you truly find him off-duty is when you wander
early into the empty Stars & Bars club and he is standing on the
dancefloor on his own picking out a riff on a bass guitar. After thrumbing
absently for a while he mutters "Sounds like shit" to himself. Then the
enigmatic song and dance man looks over to the technicians and says, "Can we
get separate EQ for the bass in the monitors?"
Such was the success of the gig at Prince Albert’s party, a decision is
made to play the same club the following evening. Sadly, the show isn’t
nearly half as good. It is merely transcendent.
"Do you feel ready to meet him?" It’s been four days now. It’s a little
after midnight. You’re not going to feel much readier. I’m escorted up to a
small room that features a large white bed an not much else. The doors are
open and, below, the guano-festooned roof of the Monte Carlo Casino looks
monumentally unimpressive. The junior suite is the temporary home of
Prince’s brother and head of security, Duane Nelson. In keeping with the
name change game, he has been re-christened The Former Duane. Prince’s
personal minder, a mightily be-blazered individual called Tracy, who looks
and sounds alarmingly like Mike Tyson, informs is that "he" will be
arriving soon.
Within a minute, there is a tiny commotion in the doorway and Prince is
suddenly standing before you like a virgin bride on her wedding night.
Dressed completely in white silk and wearing full make-up, he only breaks a
long floor-bound stare to flash one coquettish glance upwards by way of a
greeting. I’m introduced by name. He isn’t. We are left alone.
An agreement made prior to this meeting stipulated, in no uncertain
terms, that three rules were to by obeyed if intercourse of any description
were to occur: firstly, that no tape recorder be used; secondly, that no
notepad or pen be brought into the room; and thirdly, and most strangely,
that no questions be asked. He wanted to enjoy a half-hour conversation
unencumbered by the paraphernalia of nosy journalism.
He paces around the cramped boudoir in deliberate, even steps, as if he
needed to fit the place with a new carpet and had forgotten his tape
measure. He wanders out on to the balcony, still having not uttered a word
and then comes back in, shutting the doors behind him. He is small but in
perfect proportion, like a scale model of an adult. A doll, an Action
Mannequin. He sits down next to me on the bed in a semi-lotus position and
fixes his gaze on the middle distance, smiling secretly. No-one has said
anything for a full minute. Then he turns with this curious expression. It’s
somewhere between the shamed but surly look of someone that has been wrongly
reprimanded and the suggestive yet intense glare of someone who is about to
shag you. Oh no! He leans forward and you can smell him. It is just
like the band said: he smells of flowers, music and innocence. I smell of
lager. Eventually, he says this:
"I don’t say much."
Oh dear. Silence.
Why not?
He shrugs in slow-motion and looks sideways and downwards. It’s a sad,
apologetic gesture, like he just killed your dog. This will serve as an
answer for many of the questions he’s initially asked.
Once again. Why is that? Why don’t you say much?
"You don’t need to."
That doesn’t bode well for this conversation really, does it?
"Guess not."
A different tack: "Speak to me only with thine eyes." Have you heard that
phrase?
"Mm".
He turns on the bed and laughs, rolling his eyes to heaven. He is wearing
an extraordinary amount of slap - foundation, eyeliner, black mascara (on
lashes of which Bambi is alleged to be fiercely jealous), brown eye shadow
on the outermost corners of his lids. He has the most slender line of facial
hair that runs from one temple, down his cheek across his upper lip and up
the other side. There are black, phallic rockets on the sleeves of his shirt.
We look at each other for a while. It isn’t quite uncomfortable, more
exhilarating, like a first date. In keeping with this, I say: "You look
lovely, by the way."
He exhales almost sexually, bites his lower lip and whispers, "Why, thank you."
This is becoming ludicrous. We’ve got 30 minutes and 10 of those have
just been swallowed up with nothing more than a handful of sighs, some
peculiar body language and one dodgy chat-up line to show for it. I decide
to forget the rules and fire a volley of questions at him.
How did you feel when you heard Jimi Hendrix for the first time?
He stops and thinks and arranges his hands in a steeple in front of his
mouth.
"That was before Puerto Rico," he says quietly and, to be honest,
mystifyingly. "I can’t remember much before then. That was before I changed
my name."
Why have you changed your name?
"I acted on the advice of my spirit."
Do you normally do that. Is it reliable, your spirit’s advice?
"Of course."
Is it significant that you’ve changed your name?
"It’s very significant."
Did you dream last night?
He frowns. "No, can’t remember. Although I had a dream recently and I was
telling Mo Ostin (Chairman of Warner Brothers Records) to be all a man and
not half a man."
Last night I dreamt I saw this article in print. Believe it or not, the
headline was Funny Little Fucker. Seriously.
He laughs. "Oh."
Do you fall in love easily?
"No."
You’re a slow burner then?
"Un-huh."
It isn’t going tremendously well. Knocking it on the head and suggesting
we just go out for a curry begins to seem like an excellent idea. Then
something highly bizarre and Prince-like happens: a sound starts to crackle
through a previously unnoticed and inert TV. Without missing a beat, he nods
towards the set and says, "It’s a sign. It’s a sign that we should go to my
room." He makes for the door, leading with his shoulders. Duane appears in
the hall and asks what the problem is. "A sound came through the TV,"
explains Prince. "It’s a sign." "Nah, says Duane, "you probably just sat on
the remote control." And with that, he ushers us back into the bedroom to
continue our "conversation".
Q: Do you think you’re underrated as a lyricist?
"Well, underrated by who? Against what? You know? Some people get them.
That’s what counts."
Q: Do people not get the humour in your work?
"Maybe, but there’s a lot of things that I don’t get the humour in."
Q: What’s the most moving piece of music you’ve heard recently?
(Long, sigh-strewn pause) "Sonny’s bass solo last night."
Q: What is your preoccupation with sex all about? it features in nearly
all your songs. Does sex really loom that large in your life?
"My songs aren’t all about sex. People read that into them."
Q: But sex is such a dominant theme. Your new song called "Come" is
unarguably about orgasm.
"Is it? That’s your interpretation? Come where? Come to whom? Come for what?"
Q: Oh, come on!
(Laughs) "That’s just the way you see it. It’s in your mind."
This is the first subject he warms to: different perceptions. How one
man’s meat is another man’s muesli. This, he explains, is why we can’t label
music, feelings, people. He says something convoluted like: everything is
something else to everyone. When I begin to ask him about how he thinks
other people perceive him, it obviously touches a nerve. He adopts the voice
of an especially demented mynah bird and asks, "Are you normal? Are you
normal? Is that what you’re asking me? Do I think I’m normal? Yes, I do. I
think I’m normal. I am normal."
Q: What happens in your life when you’re not doing music?
(Hikes, eyebrows, looks incredulous) "When I’m not doing music?"
Q: Do you have a life outside of your work?
"Yes."
Q: And what does that involve?
(Pinteresque pause) "Have you never read about me? I’m a very private person."
Q: I’m not prying, I’m just interested.
"I know. I understand."
The subject of his recording contract with Warner Brothers comes up, as
does the topic of Prince’s work - he speaks about Prince in the third
person. Whether or not Prince the recording artist is finished, consigned to
the bunker of history, is unclear. He says several times that the body of
work is complete but later admits that he hasn’t ruled out the possibility
of adding to it, under the name Prince or otherwise, in the future.
Q: Is it possible to shed a entire personality?
It’s not like it’s a real personality."
Q: It’s a person then?
"Yeah, I think it is."
Q: Have you turned your back on pop music?
"What’s pop music? It’s different things to different people."
Q: Beatles-derived four)chord tunes that everyone can sing along to.
"Still don’t help. Is The Most Beautiful Girl pop music? I can’t say?
You can’t say."
He mentions George Michael’s court case for the first time. It’s a
subject he’ll return to with astonishing regularity and persistence. At one
point, he almost shouts, "Why can’t George Michael do what he wants? Why
can’t he write a ballet if he wants to?" What he is talking about is
artistic freedom and its place in the future. By the end of the rant, and it
is a rant, I suggest that he should get in touch with George Michael as he
might find such supportive words encouraging. "Oh," he says breezily. "We
speak."
Q: What do you think about when you’re playing a guitar solo?
"I’m normally just listening."
Q: You look like you’re about to cry sometimes.
"Really? Mm. Maybe."
Q: You seem at your most relaxed on stage.
If it’s all going well, I’m pretty happy up there. It’s a very natural thing
for me."
Q: Offstage you seem to be having a good old laugh at us sometimes.
He laughs.
The categorisation of music is another area which gets his goat. How on
earth can we categorise something like music when everybody hears and feels
it differently? How many people do you know that have just one type of music
in their record collections? Non, right? You don’t get home and think, I’ll
listen to some ambient jazz punk, do you? You just have a mood in your head
and yet we, or at least the record companies, feel the need to
compartmentalise everything. Tell you what, when you play a song live, and
it’s a jam, man, and you think up some little vocal line and everyone is
still singing that when you’ve left that stage. That’s marketing. Period.
Wouldn’t it be great if someone made an album and gave it away for free?
Like air. You could just have it. Anyway, what type of music do The Sundays
play? Is it pop, indie, rock? Who cares?
When eventually, I say that anyone who heard Prince play would assume
that his new direction was big funk, he says cryptically, "You could ask
those people what they saw and they might say that they didn’t see Prince
play at all..."
Q: Do you ever have a problem translating the sounds you hear in your
hear into music?
"No, that’s never been a problem. The problem is getting it all out before
another idea comes along."
Q: Do you exhaust people?
(Laughs) "Yes, I do."
Q: A joke: you used to be called Prince and then you were Victor. Why not
just call yourself Vince?
"I read that somewhere. I was never called Victor. That was the line in the
song, ‘I will be called Victor,’ I never called myself Victor."
He launches into a stream of consciousness monologue about names. What
they mean. This seems to confuse him. He has, he says, a friend called
Gilbert Davidson, and one day he said to Gilbert, Who is David? Is he your
father? No, said Gilbert. Is he your grandfather? No. Then, man, you’d
better look back and find out who he is. Then Prince started thinking, My
name is Nelson. Who was Nel? My mother? No. My grandmother? Uh-un. Then he
thought, Maybe she’s someone that I don’t want to know about.
Q: I asked the band, individually, what you smell of?
"What I smell of? What’d Sonny say?"
He said you smell of music.
(Delighted smile) "That’s a good answer, Sonny. That’s a like, yeah, yeah,
let’s have the next question type answer, isn’t it?
Q: And I asked them to sum you up in one word. The word one of them chase
was, Wow!
(Laughs "Who said that? No, let me guess. Was it Michael?
Q: Yes.
"That’s funny. Wow. We don’t normally talk about that kind of stuff."
Now he’s getting excited. He has moved to a chair and is sitting with his
boots - high-heeled silver stage numbers covered in mini mirrors - up on the
counterpane. At one pint, whilst agreeing about something with particular
enthusiasm, I grab hold of his boot. He doesn’t flinch, but his toes wriggle
inside. He has left behind the cautious customer of yesterhour an is
freewheeling through the thoughts as they enter his head. Suddenly it
strikes you. Blimey! It’s just like having a chat with a normal bloke.
Q: Tell me about the opera you’ve written.
"I don’t want to give too much away. It’s just a story.
Q: What sort of story? A love story?
"Could be."
Q: Did you write the libretto?
"Yeah, (he laughs at the pretentiousness of the word) I wrote the story."
Q: Did you find opera difficult to get into?
"I don’t really listen to opera."
He had spoken to Placido Domingo earlier in the evening. "He said some
very beautiful things and you could sense that he had a feeling of all the
power that was in the room and what it could achieve if we did something
with it." While they were talking, Prince got this tune in his head that
he’s going to get down pretty quickly.
Q: I’ve been told that you’re an instrument of God.
"Oh yeah, stuff’s been written about that. Who said that?"
Q: Your PR.
(Laughs) "Really?"
Q: Do you seriously feel like you are a conduit for some higher power?
"No, I just practice a lot."
Q: Do you ever feel a certain telepathy exists between you and the NPG?
"Sure, musically, that happens sometimes. But we rehearse too."
He tells a long story about the making of the video for The Most
Beautiful Girl In The World. They placed ads and got shedloads of letters
and home videos back. They selected a cross section of women all from
different backgrounds and invited them to meet Prince. He asked them what
their dreams were and then to the best of his mortal abilities set about
making those dreams come true. Like Jim’ll fix it with "O" Levels. Then they
filmed the women watching footage of their fantasies. One of the women, and
he get suite emotional as he relates this, wrote to him afterwards saying
that although she was overweight, he had made her feel beautiful and she
would lose weight with the intention of modelling one day.
Q: Is physical beauty an overrated virtue?
"Yes. See, you understand."
Q: Did you sit on The Most Beautiful Girl In The World so Warners
couldn’t have it and you could release it on your own terms?
No, I didn’t sit on it. I heard that I did that but I only wrote it recently."
Q: What would you have done if it had stiffed?
"If it had stiffed? (Laughs) It wouldn’t have mattered. I put the
record out, that was the important thing. People got to hear it."
Q: Did you feel vindicated when it was so successful?
Well, it’s nice when people appreciate what you do."
We discuss the future again. He says, "That’s why I wanted you to help me
- and I need some help with this - because you think that anything is
possible." He peels off at a tangent. "In the future," he announces, "I
might be interactive. You might be able to access me and tell me what to
play." It’s certainly a thought. He says he’s found a you drummer "who plays
things you can’t even think. And if he wants to do an album of drum
solos, then I’m prepared to go out on tour to finance that." He reveals that
he’s got a blues album completed and in the can and lets out a vocal wail of
anguished guitar to illustrate just how good it is.
He brings up Nelson Mandela and the current situation in South Africa.
Mr. Mandela, as he calls him, must have had a very clear vision of what
would happen. He envies this and would like to have that gift. Something of
a basketball fan, he alludes to Magic Johnson time and time again. "He wants
to form his own team," he says. "How long will that take?" He looks at his
non-existing watch and shoots a look to the ceiling. "Look at South Africa,"
he says, palms upturned. "Bosnia. You can’t tell people what to do for that
long." He appears to be equating racial and artistic freedom, then he has to
be prepared to put up with that Mick Hucknall jazz harmonica album, which,
under these terms, could easily emerge. "But would that be a bad thing?" he
asks, his argument crumbling. "OK", he concedes, giggling. "I guess you
wouldn’t have to listen to everything."
Q: Won’t people say, It’s all very well Prince banging on about artistic
freedom when we’ve got bill to pay and mundane reality to cope with? Aren’t
you speaking from a privileged position?
"If you’re shackled and restricted, it doesn’t matter how much money you
got. Money don’t help. And I’ve got bills to pay. People at Paisley (Park),
they’re like my family, I have responsibility towards them."
Q: Would you like to have children?
"That’s something I haven’t thought about."
Q: You’ve been thinking about the future so much and you haven’t
considered children?
"No, but I’d like to contribute to the future generation."
He’s tearing up and down the room now, having talked for almost an hour
and a half. His voice has become excited and slipped up a key. Not suite
Kiss standards but getting there. Now and then, he slips into black slang.
He even belches once, very gently but it’s a belch nonetheless. It’s like
the Queen farting and lighting it. He enthuses about his new songs, Now and
Days Of Wild. "What the fuck is that all about?" he asks, shimming
around the bed with one arm stiff behind his back, rapping the opening
lines, which involve copious use of the Oedipal compound noun. He raves
about the genius of George Clinton, froths about his Smell My Finger album
and is plainly in awe of his talents. "George is the funk," he
explains breathlessly. He speaks about purity in music. "Rock N’ Roll, man",
he says, "was so much better when people were hungry. It was better when you
didn’t automatically make money. When James (Brown) was putting out an album
every four months, that was the stuff."
It’s getting on for 2am now and we have one final bash at distilling what
he really wants to convey. Before that, he asks about magazine editorial
practice and is stimulated by the fact that an article can go from writer to
reader virtually untampered with. He speculates about producing music that
you would listen to as you read this article. "That would be great, wouldn’t
it? And although I am an artist without a contract, that’s just the sort of
thing I can’t do."
He recaps one last time: artistic freedom for everyone with fearlessness
and limitlessness well of the fore; love and care to be liberally
distributed and accepted; peace to reign; dolphins to leap; choirs of
children to sing and, um, George Michael to write that ballet.
"So," he says spinning on his spangly heels. "Are we gonna party?" He
dances towards the door, flicks a final seductive glance over his shoulder
and sashays out. Funny little fucker.
THE NEW POWER GENERATION GAME
|
TOMMY BARBARELLA |
SONNY THOMPSON |
MICHAEL BLAND |
MORRIS HAYES |
| Can you explain "the funk", please? |
"It's the derivative of the hyperbole of pi squared minus
the circumference of the kick drum. There's no such thing as a funky note.
It's the spaces between the notes." |
"It's like having a piece of greasy chicken. I play bass,
and funk for me is just something you feel. You can almost damn eat it." |
"It's as vital to our constitution, physically, as marrow
and blood, so how do I explain that? It's something that pervades my
existence. I'm going to try and avoid sexual metaphors here but you know how
to do it or you don't." |
"The funk is like a vibe, it's a feel. It hits you and you
can't sit still. It makes the neck come loose. Then you get a hump in your
back and you know you got the funk. In my opinion." |
| Is there one song the whole band, Prince included, would
agree upon as being the greatest funk record? |
"It would have to be Sly & The Family Stone. Any track,
pretty well." |
"Sly & The Family Stone - Fresh." |
"You could probably put on Lovesexy and we'd all stand
around speechless. But other than that, Graham Central Station's first
record." |
"Any Sly track. It's so hard to pick a definitive track but
let me just pick one out of the box: Thank You (Falletinme Be Mice Elf
Again)." |
| You get in a huddle before you play. What goes on there? |
"We just try to come together and focus as a group and give
thanks for the opportunity to share our music." |
"We just say a prayer. Thank God and ask Him to protect us
and the audience and ask Him for us to do good." |
"Pray that God will bless us with the funk." |
"We pool our thoughts and it's just a quiet moment to think
about what's ahead. It's execution time." |
| Is there a type of telepathy involved when you play
together? |
"I think it's a combination of telepathy, musicianship,
rehearsal and knowing each other very well." |
"We definitely have a second sight when it comes to locking
into certain things. Michael (Bland, drummer) and I often hit a lick
together, no matter how complicated it is. It's crazy." |
"Oh yeah. That's pretty well what it is. We know over 500
songs and we have to be prepared to pull out anything. We have to just about
be able to read his mind." |
"I think there is, because we all get the grit in our teeth
when we're listening to certain songs. And it's the same when we play. It's
like, Ooooh, I looove playing this one." |
| What was the first thing Prince said to you? |
"Hi. He said it in this particular way. Quite serious
sounding. The work ethic was very obvious from the start." |
"'Let me borrow your guitar'. We were real young, we both
came up together and I'm real proud of him. But that was the first thing he
said and I'm kinda glad I gave it to him." |
"He came up to me in a club in Minneapolis in '88 and he
used to hang out and watch a group I was in called Dr. Mambo's Combo. He
used to get up and play with us. And after I think the first time we played
together, he came over and said to me, 'Man, you're scary.'" |
"Prior to getting in with him, I had done a remix on Shake
and he'd heard it. And he came by at Paisley park and said, Hey, that mix
was pretty great. It was a very heavy moment for me. I was in awe of him. He
doesn't say a whole lot. You see him and you see this image and you see him
on TV and you think, Oh, that's just TV, but he's like that all the time.
He's a very majestic person." |
| Do you find his celebrity amusing? |
"Yeah, I do. It takes the heat off us in a way. But being
under such scrutiny is pretty tough." |
"Well, no. We do what we do because we're musicians and he
don't think he's any better or any worse than anyone else. We try to be
normal people but he's just such a hard worker. That's his thing. He wants
to create great music." |
"Sometimes, but I think he deals with it very intelligently
and gracefully." |
"He's the lightning rod, the centre of attention. So yeah,
that makes us feel more comfortable. But what he does is give us the space
to be ourselves and get out there, which a lot of guys in his position
wouldn't do." |
| What's your favorite Prince song? |
"The Question Of U. Or Condition Of The Heart." |
"Too many, man, too many." |
"A week ago I was in the kitchen bustin' suds, and I put on
1999 and that really hit home. That sparse electronic thing. Musically, it's
not a very complex, ground-breaking record, but it has real feel." |
"It ain't on a record yet but people have just got to wait
until they hear Days Of Wild. We just get into a groove on that and it's
like being in church - you're just going to keep right on going until they
turn the lights out." |
| What's your favorite moment on a Prince record? |
"There were a lot on the 'symbol' album because we did quite
a bit of that live and all the parts evolved as we were going to tape. Some
of that was really spontaneous. The climax of The Beautiful Ones, I love
that too." |
"At the moment it's the song Now, although that's not on a
record. But that's the one I get to use all my toys on." |
"All The Critics Love U In New York off 1999. I never used
to understand that but I get it now and I love it." |
"Playing keyboards, I remember the keyboard solo on Head so
much. I used to have a big eight-track tape and back that solo up over and
over again." |
| What does Prince smell of? |
"Flowers and petals." |
"Music, man. He smells of music." |
"He reeks of innocence and naiveté and a sense of time,
space and dimension." |
"He smells like a million bucks, all the time." |
| Sum Prince up in one word. |
"Genius." |
"Fantastic." |
"Wow." |
"Prolific." |
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