 
Publication: Los Angeles Times [US]
Date: May 26, 1986
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Title: "Amiable Prince Previews New Show"
Reviewed By: Robert Hilburn
Prince'sconcertat the Warfield Theatre here Friday night was the third in
a series of recent warm-up dates in connection with the controversial pop star's
expected summer tour. Let's hope there'll be a fourth warm-up. Prince needs to
rethink some of this show.
Because all 2,200 tickets were sold in just 17 minutes after the concert
was announced Wednesday, there was an enormous electricity in and around the
Warfield. How often do you get the chance to see a star of Prince's stature
previewing a new show in a small hall? Scalpers lined the street in front of the
theater and hundreds of fans stood by the stage door, hoping to get a glimpse of
their hero.
Inside the Warfield, most of the fans stood on their feet in the old movie
theater from the moment the opening notes of the light and inviting "Around the
World in a Day" filtered through the closed curtain until Prince left the stage
2 1/2 hours later.
But even that affection couldn't hide the fact that this show -- which was
previewed earlier in Minneapolis and Boston -- needs more of the one thing it
most seeks to present: the human side of Prince.
The concept of the new show appears sound: a fast-moving revue that casts
Prince in the informal role of an amiable, old-fashioned bandleader -- someone
who might have played the Cocoanut Grove in the days of Pickford and Harlow, and
who would probably stop by your table for a drink between sets.
Though he only stepped from the stage to actually mingle with the crowd
twice, Prince acknowledged the audience at every turn -- either winking or
slapping hands with people in the front rows, making humorous asides or inviting
someone on stage to dance.
This constant courting made the evening seem like one long dramatization of
the mood of Prince's latest hit single, "Kiss." He was sometimes playful,
sometimes sexy and aggressive, but he was always trying to seduce.
Much like the old bandleaders, Prince also shared the stage with his expanded
Revolution band, establishing a sense of community -- joking with them and
allowing everyone from the guitarists to the saxophonist to take solos on the
hard-edged and funk-accented music.
On one hand, this warmer approach was a major -- and welcome -- change from
the rock-star egotism and conventional format of the "Purple Rain" tour, which
was suffocated by Prince's sexual posturing and clumsy, overblown skits.
Several costume changes added a bright touch of color (he moved in the show
from a gray, paisley bolero outfit with a bare midriff to a yellow
double-breasted suit), and the musical arrangements were frequently imaginative.
Rather than perform the songs as separate entities, tunes from various albums
have been linked together in aggressive, highly rhythmic couplings to build a
dazzling sense of non-stop energy.
Yet, all of this seemed secondary. The show appeared chiefly designed to
present Prince -- widely viewed as arrogant and aloof after the "Purple Rain"
success -- in a more sympathetic and human setting; a musician who is enjoying
himself in a creative environment.
And you can't help but wonder if this energy wouldn't better have been served
by just turning the show into a one-time cable TV special. It's easy to picture
him getting as bored with the show by the time it works its way across country
as he seemed to be with "Purple Rain" by the end of that marathon tour.
That's because there simply isn't enough revelation or provocation in the
production to live up to Prince's early standards. During the "Dirty Mind" and
"1999"tours,Prince came on with a sexual renegade stance that challenged
social assumptions ("Am I black or white/Am I straight or gay?") more forcefully
than any major pop figure since David Bowie.
There was no time in Friday's show where you learned anything about Prince or
yourself. There were no questions posed, no answers given, no new emotions
shared.
Except when he sat at the piano and sang "Under a Cherry Moon," the delicate
title song from his uncoming movie, or when he led the band through the
anthem-like "Purple Rain," he was like a blur racing across the stage.
It's fine to try to make the audience feel like it's part of the show. It's
nice to make the band feel like co-stars. But Prince's primary obligation is to
himself and his art, and he comes across in this show as perilously close to
having nothing new or important to say. Without a strong personal vision on
stage, the fact that you are a nice guy is a bit beside the point.
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