 
Publication: Rolling Stone [US]
Date: August 22, 1996
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Page Number(s):
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Title: "Chaos And Disorder"
Reviewed By: Ernest Hardy
2 Stars out of 5
On the back of the CD booklet is a disclaimer by the Artist Formerly Known as Prince: "Originally
intended 4 private use only, this compilation serves as the last original material recorded by O(+>
4 Warner Brothers Records." His ongoing war of protest and whining against his record label is
also reflected in the photos adorning the pages of the Chaos and Disorder booklet: a syringe with a
dollar bill rolled up inside, a toilet with a heart floating in the water, and the master-tape vault inside
Paisley Park Studios, framed by gold records. Before you hear a single note, you’re prepped for a
halfhearted transaction from a self-pitying celebrity.
The whole album --- its vibe, purpose and effect --- is summarized in the self-aggrandizing "I
Rock, Therefore I Am." Elements from the proverbial kitchen sink --- blaring horns, funky,
stuttering drums, police sirens, rap-cum-reggae-style toasting --- bracket defiant lyrics that flash
hints of social commentary to mask what is essentially O(+>’s taunting of his record company. The
lyrics gracelessly confuse the personal with the political.
Chaos and Disorder is distinguished by its confusion; even the title admits that the album’s
fractured parts never resolve into a thematic whole. At ist best, the record sounds like a collection
of polished demos. More often, though, it seems like the work of a Prince impersonator ---
someone who has closely studied the star’s moves and mannerisms but has nothing new or
substantial of his own to say. It’s a drag act that becomes a drag real quickly.
O(+> sings the delicate "Dinner With Delores" in a high register, his lead vocals backed by a
breezy, softly cooed chorus. Yet the result is still a less attractive twin of Sign o’ the Times’ "The
Ballad of Dorothy Parker." The title track has a searing organ, Rosie Gaines’ fiery backing vocals
and wild drumming that suits O(+>’s manic blasts of lead guitar. It’s wildly energetic --- but also
completely generic.
Whether he’s just distracted by his record-company battles or has truly shot his wad, it’s been a
while since O(+> has really had anything important to say in his music. It doesn’t matter what the
Artist Formerly Known as Prince calls himself. Chaos and Disorder is the sound of the man
repeating himself badly.
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