 
Publication: Los Angeles Times [US]
Date: July 8, 1996
Section:
Page Number(s):
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Title: "'Chaos' Was Just What His Majesty Needed"
Reviewed By: Cheo Hodari Coker
PRINCE
"Chaos & Disorder"
Warner Bros.
* * * *
With a title like "Chaos & Disorder," you might assume
that Prince's 20th album would reflect a kingdom in disarray.
His Paisley Park label has been disbanded; he's changed
his name to an unpronounceable symbol; he's closed his L.A.
nightclub, Glam Slam; he's at war with his record company;
and in the most un-Princely move of all, he's apparently
abandoned the hedonistic life to marry and have a child.
But "Chaos & Disorder" is his most vibrant and
evenhanded work in years. By restoring the electric guitar as
the center of his musical universe and abandoning the confining
dictates of dance-music drum machines, Prince has produced a
record that leaps from the speakers with a force that he hasn't
mounted since he disbanded his band the Revolution.
Beginning with the stripped-down title track and the brisk
"I Like It There," the album ranges from the metallic to the
mellow. "Dinner With Delores" is a narrative that, like "The
Ballad of Dorothy Parker," wins you over with its subtlety. The
rollicking "Same December" and the brash "Zannalee" raise the
volume and the energy.
But what unites all the songs is Prince's soaring guitar.
Every wail, sigh and delectable electric tease serve as the
musical counterparts of the beating heart found at the end of
the title track.
Albums are rated on a scale of one star (poor), two stars
(fair), three stars (good), four stars (excellent).
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