 
Publication: Toronto Sun [CAN]
Date: June 6, 1997
Section:
Page Number(s):
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Title: "Artist's Jammin' Has The Royal Jelly"
Reviewed By: Jane Stevenson
JAM RATING: 4 out of 5
The Artist, otherwise known as Prince, brought his Love 4 One Another
Charities tour to the
Warehouse last night, hopefully as a sneak preview of a bigger-venue road
trip this summer.
I say hopefully because as exciting as it was to see the funky one up close
and personal, the
2,000 or so tickets available for the rare club show sold out in a matter
of seconds leaving many
of his fans disappointed.
Still, the exclusivity of the event also made it one of the hottest concert
tickets of the season and
The Artist, true to form, didn't let anyone expecting his usual flashy
showmanship down.
Supported by his five-person New Power Generation, including Canadians Kat
Dyson on
guitar and Rhonda Smith on bass, The Artist favored extended jams as
opposed to
straight-ahead versions of his songs and alternated between playing guitar,
bass, keyboards and
piano throughout the night.
He also did his best to overcome the Warehouse's cavernous by performing on
a huge stage
displaying gold Chinese lions and white palm trees on either side and
enormous symbol in the
middle.
The Artist began the 11/2-hour set with Jam Of The Year, also the first
song off his latest
three-CD set, Emancipation, and it seemed many of those in the crowd agreed
with the
sentiment of the tune.
From the moment he walked on stage in a mustard colored flowing shirt,
matching tights and
boots and clutching a gun-shaped microphone, the pop star incited
high-decibel screams.
Sensing he was hard to see due to the packed floor situation and extreme
back lighting, The
Artist also wasted no time in hopping on top of his piano and strutting his
tiny but powerful stuff.
Whether he was dropping into the splits or grinding himself against the
instrument, his moves --
repeated to great applause -- were half the show.
After Jam came the first official singalong of the evening with Purple Rain
although the artist did
his best to represent Emancipation with the uptempo Get Yo Groove On, the
new single Face
Down and his cover of Joan Osborne's One Of Us.
Other past hits included The Most Beautiful Girl In The World, Sexy M.F.
and an abbreviated
version of Raspberry Beret.
The Love 4 One Another tour pulls into Montreal tonight and then rehearsals
will begin for a
summer tour, Dyson said in an interview before the performance.
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