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Thread started 06/24/07 10:43am

AstonMartin

Prince LA times 1st review !!!

http://www.latimes.com/en...crosspromo

Prince charming at the Roosevelt
For fervid fans, it was a fantasy come true: an intimate night with the pop star (for an eye-popping price).
By Ann Powers, Times Staff Writer
June 25, 2007


There are shows, and then there's the pop fantasy realized. Having Prince practically sit in your lap as he takes a guitar solo midway through his debut at the Roosevelt Hotel? As the credit-card commercials say: priceless.

Eyebrows have been raised over the exorbitant ticket prices for the artist's seven nights of shows, billed as "3121 Live," at the Hollywood hot spot — $3,121.00 for dinner and tickets for two; move the decimal point one space to the left and you've got a standing-room spot — but once the funk-rock maestro hit the stage Saturday, all questions of money melted away.

The 200 beautiful people perched on couches or crowded into the corners of the lush Blossom Room had purchased the right to forget that Prince was there to do his job. Arena shows are often so rote; the chance to see one of the great arena-level musicians playing in an intimate (and, therefore, casual) was as rare as getting a soft seat at the Staples Center, and it needed to feel that way.

Prince knows this. Always one of the hardest-working, if most unpredictable, men in show business, recently he's figured out a way to reinvigorate the live experience for himself and his audience. His trick has been to transform often denigrated gigs — the Vegas run, the hotel engagement — into rare opportunities. He squashed the idea that appearing at a casino is for has-beens with his recent tour de force at the Rio; now, he's reclaiming a space once reserved for wedding bands and also-rans and making it a private domain where royals play.

Saturday, he began his set sniffing a flower and ended by triumphantly throwing down the microphone. In between, he performed a few hits ("Kiss," a hard rock version of "U Got the Look") but mostly concentrated on getting his powerhouse band in the pocket on material that stayed funky even when it simmered down into a slow jam.

The show started late, which is Prince's way. Absent the main attraction, a horn section anchored by funk founder Maceo Parker marched in playing "When the Saints Go Marching In," just like a New Orleans second line. The quartet wound through the room, which had been equipped with leather couches and coffee tables to hold $400 bottles of Patrón tequila, and the mood suddenly turned from Hollywood fabulous to Crescent City warm and rowdy.

After the horns joined the rest of the band, which included the hard-hitting drummer Cora Dunham and the noted Brazilian keyboardist Renato Neto, Prince finally strode out. Within moments, he was in the audience. This was a constant: Everyone not anchored to the stage by an instrument got out and pressed the fan flesh. The festive mood broke down audience expectations and kept the excitement high, even when Prince focused on newer or more obscure material.

Only one awkward moment emerged during Prince's forays into the crowd. He approached the daunting bunch on what could have been dubbed the "hip-hop power couch" — it included Diddy, Death Row Records founder Suge Knight, Erykah Badu and Nas, among others — and tried to hand the microphone to Nas.

The rapper declined to ad-lib, however, simply muttering, "I love Prince," and handing back the hot potato. Prince then tried to work his charm on Ms. Badu; she gave up a half-hearted rhyme about sisterhood, but it fizzled out. About half of those seated on the couch then abruptly departed (though Nas and Badu both stayed).

Other loose-limbed celebrities made up for that aloofness. Laker-turned-actor Rick Fox danced goofily with his sister; actress Penelope Cruz got one of those front-row hugs. Singer Nikka Costa even joined Prince onstage, belting out a rather metallic rendition of "Purple Rain."

The stars could let loose because of the house-party atmosphere Prince established by leading his band into the place where grooves and group interaction matter more than delivering sing-along choruses. Digging into his song bag and pulling out such gems as the carnal "Shhh" and the proto-electro "Girls and Boys," he was like a host running down to his wine cellar and pulling out that special bottle for good friends.

The house party is, after all, the model for Prince's current live act. After staging several legendary fetes at the West Hollywood manse he once rented, Prince clearly decided that their mood could be translated to more formal setting. It's as if this former hit machine, tired of playing the commercial game, redirected his focus on the informal process of making music with friends — and then decided to let his fans (those with enough green, that is) in on the fun.

One flaw not unlike what might happen at a real house party marred the evening: The sound needed work. Prince's spoken asides were barely decipherable through an echo-prone microphone, and his singing also sometimes got lost. Such kinks can be worked out, though, and could be expected in a room that's also been used for bar mitzvahs.

The sound got better during the jazzy jam session that the most elite members of Saturday's audience witnessed after Prince's initial 90-minute set. Moving into the hotel's cordoned-off lobby, they perched wearily on different leather couches as the band unwound with a tasty selection of jazz standards. Long solos impressed, but the absence of the night's leader dulled the mood at first.

Prince finally showed up at nearly 4 a.m., teasing the crowd with a fiery guitar solo and then decamping to the back of the room. Twenty minutes later, he returned, sunglasses affixed the his head, and picked up a five-string bass. The crowd started to dance.

Perhaps not everyone who'd scored this special ticket expected a dream night that would end with Prince, the great original, leading the crowd in a rousing version of "Brick House" by the Commodores. Isn't that what karaoke nights with pals are for? But this didn't sound like karaoke. Seeing Prince rip it up three feet away, and getting to sing along too? Priceless.

ann.powers@latimes.com
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Reply #1 posted 06/24/07 10:51am

sharkbaiter

AstonMartin said:

http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/music/la-et-prince25jun25,1,206126.story?coll=la-headlines-entnews&track=crosspromo

Prince charming at the Roosevelt
For fervid fans, it was a fantasy come true: an intimate night with the pop star (for an eye-popping price).
By Ann Powers, Times Staff Writer
June 25, 2007


There are shows, and then there's the pop fantasy realized. Having Prince practically sit in your lap as he takes a guitar solo midway through his debut at the Roosevelt Hotel? As the credit-card commercials say: priceless.

Eyebrows have been raised over the exorbitant ticket prices for the artist's seven nights of shows, billed as "3121 Live," at the Hollywood hot spot — $3,121.00 for dinner and tickets for two; move the decimal point one space to the left and you've got a standing-room spot — but once the funk-rock maestro hit the stage Saturday, all questions of money melted away.

The 200 beautiful people perched on couches or crowded into the corners of the lush Blossom Room had purchased the right to forget that Prince was there to do his job. Arena shows are often so rote; the chance to see one of the great arena-level musicians playing in an intimate (and, therefore, casual) was as rare as getting a soft seat at the Staples Center, and it needed to feel that way.

Prince knows this. Always one of the hardest-working, if most unpredictable, men in show business, recently he's figured out a way to reinvigorate the live experience for himself and his audience. His trick has been to transform often denigrated gigs — the Vegas run, the hotel engagement — into rare opportunities. He squashed the idea that appearing at a casino is for has-beens with his recent tour de force at the Rio; now, he's reclaiming a space once reserved for wedding bands and also-rans and making it a private domain where royals play.

Saturday, he began his set sniffing a flower and ended by triumphantly throwing down the microphone. In between, he performed a few hits ("Kiss," a hard rock version of "U Got the Look") but mostly concentrated on getting his powerhouse band in the pocket on material that stayed funky even when it simmered down into a slow jam.

The show started late, which is Prince's way. Absent the main attraction, a horn section anchored by funk founder Maceo Parker marched in playing "When the Saints Go Marching In," just like a New Orleans second line. The quartet wound through the room, which had been equipped with leather couches and coffee tables to hold $400 bottles of Patrón tequila, and the mood suddenly turned from Hollywood fabulous to Crescent City warm and rowdy.

After the horns joined the rest of the band, which included the hard-hitting drummer Cora Dunham and the noted Brazilian keyboardist Renato Neto, Prince finally strode out. Within moments, he was in the audience. This was a constant: Everyone not anchored to the stage by an instrument got out and pressed the fan flesh. The festive mood broke down audience expectations and kept the excitement high, even when Prince focused on newer or more obscure material.

Only one awkward moment emerged during Prince's forays into the crowd. He approached the daunting bunch on what could have been dubbed the "hip-hop power couch" — it included Diddy, Death Row Records founder Suge Knight, Erykah Badu and Nas, among others — and tried to hand the microphone to Nas.

The rapper declined to ad-lib, however, simply muttering, "I love Prince," and handing back the hot potato. Prince then tried to work his charm on Ms. Badu; she gave up a half-hearted rhyme about sisterhood, but it fizzled out. About half of those seated on the couch then abruptly departed (though Nas and Badu both stayed).

Other loose-limbed celebrities made up for that aloofness. Laker-turned-actor Rick Fox danced goofily with his sister; actress Penelope Cruz got one of those front-row hugs. Singer Nikka Costa even joined Prince onstage, belting out a rather metallic rendition of "Purple Rain."

The stars could let loose because of the house-party atmosphere Prince established by leading his band into the place where grooves and group interaction matter more than delivering sing-along choruses. Digging into his song bag and pulling out such gems as the carnal "Shhh" and the proto-electro "Girls and Boys," he was like a host running down to his wine cellar and pulling out that special bottle for good friends.

The house party is, after all, the model for Prince's current live act. After staging several legendary fetes at the West Hollywood manse he once rented, Prince clearly decided that their mood could be translated to more formal setting. It's as if this former hit machine, tired of playing the commercial game, redirected his focus on the informal process of making music with friends — and then decided to let his fans (those with enough green, that is) in on the fun.

One flaw not unlike what might happen at a real house party marred the evening: The sound needed work. Prince's spoken asides were barely decipherable through an echo-prone microphone, and his singing also sometimes got lost. Such kinks can be worked out, though, and could be expected in a room that's also been used for bar mitzvahs.

The sound got better during the jazzy jam session that the most elite members of Saturday's audience witnessed after Prince's initial 90-minute set. Moving into the hotel's cordoned-off lobby, they perched wearily on different leather couches as the band unwound with a tasty selection of jazz standards. Long solos impressed, but the absence of the night's leader dulled the mood at first.

Prince finally showed up at nearly 4 a.m., teasing the crowd with a fiery guitar solo and then decamping to the back of the room. Twenty minutes later, he returned, sunglasses affixed the his head, and picked up a five-string bass. The crowd started to dance.

Perhaps not everyone who'd scored this special ticket expected a dream night that would end with Prince, the great original, leading the crowd in a rousing version of "Brick House" by the Commodores. Isn't that what karaoke nights with pals are for? But this didn't sound like karaoke. Seeing Prince rip it up three feet away, and getting to sing along too? Priceless.

ann.powers@latimes.com


Goddamn I can't wait until Fri!!!!
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Reply #2 posted 06/24/07 10:52am

Graycap23

I'm a late night cat myself but damn....4:00 A.M.? I could not hang with that if I tried.
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Reply #3 posted 06/24/07 10:54am

wonder505

awww man. wish i could go. sad
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Reply #4 posted 06/24/07 10:58am

AstonMartin

live4lust said the GA tix are in the back.. we need to work a trick to get close to the stage damnit.. hehehe ;p
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Reply #5 posted 06/24/07 10:59am

DanceWme

Damn sad that sounded like a lot of fun
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Reply #6 posted 06/24/07 11:20am

Crystal777Ball

avatar

sounds really cool, cosy and jazzy
Feel free to send me a message and add me as a friend on 'My Space' http://www.myspace.com/murtazaarif
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Reply #7 posted 06/24/07 1:00pm

Nothinbutjoy

avatar

Graycap23 said:

I'm a late night cat myself but damn....4:00 A.M.? I could not hang with that if I tried.



I wasn't in LA last night, but have done the 4am nights with Prince in LV.

They are not easy...but sooooo worth it lol
I'm firmly planted in denial
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Reply #8 posted 06/24/07 1:12pm

paperposter

did they serve alchol at the after show
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Reply #9 posted 06/24/07 1:23pm

georgiapeach

avatar

paperposter said:

did they serve alchol at the after show





No.....
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Reply #10 posted 06/24/07 1:32pm

paperposter

so they stoped serving booze at 2am correct
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Reply #11 posted 06/24/07 2:03pm

Graycap23

Nothinbutjoy said:

Graycap23 said:

I'm a late night cat myself but damn....4:00 A.M.? I could not hang with that if I tried.



I wasn't in LA last night, but have done the 4am nights with Prince in LV.

They are not easy...but sooooo worth it lol

I have as well but the next day was SHOT as far as trying 2 do anything productive.
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Reply #12 posted 06/24/07 3:45pm

georgiapeach

avatar

paperposter said:

so they stoped serving booze at 2am correct




That is correct...smile
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Reply #13 posted 06/24/07 3:55pm

paperposter

wrong city to hold a concert till after 5am in
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Reply #14 posted 06/24/07 5:05pm

PapaSmurf

Correct me if I'm misunderstanding this article but...for $312 people got an hour and a half long concert with bad audio production? And for $3121, people got that same hour and a half concert plus a jazz concert primarily featuring Prince's band (and not Prince)?

Though I'm sure the show was fun, it looks like a lot of people got robbed.
[Edited 6/24/07 17:06pm]
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Reply #15 posted 06/24/07 5:31pm

wonder505

PapaSmurf said:

Correct me if I'm misunderstanding this article but...for $312 people got an hour and a half long concert with bad audio production? And for $3121, people got that same hour and a half concert plus a jazz concert primarily featuring Prince's band (and not Prince)?

Though I'm sure the show was fun, it looks like a lot of people got robbed.
[Edited 6/24/07 17:06pm]


you think so?

according to another report, the show started at 12:45 ended at 2:30am, then the afterparty started at 3:45 ended at 5:00a.m. not to mention the interaction with band members and the intimacy of the being in the room for only 200 and later on only 30 folks jamming with Prince.

I think the dinner part was too pricey, but i guess it was for folks who got it like that and per one of the reports most of the booths were empty. But for $312 for that location, concert+aftershow i think it was not that bad. i would assume most celebrities would charge much more for that type of setup. However as always, we all have to determine individually if its worth and choose to go or not to go.
[Edited 6/24/07 17:33pm]
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Reply #16 posted 06/24/07 5:43pm

AvramsDad

AstonMartin said:



Only one awkward moment emerged during Prince's forays into the crowd. He approached the daunting bunch on what could have been dubbed the "hip-hop power couch" — it included Diddy, Death Row Records founder Suge Knight, Erykah Badu and Nas, among others — and tried to hand the microphone to Nas.





eek
what the schnapp!?!?
[Edited 6/24/07 17:43pm]
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Reply #17 posted 06/25/07 4:20am

KoolEaze

avatar

AvramsDad said:

AstonMartin said:



Only one awkward moment emerged during Prince's forays into the crowd. He approached the daunting bunch on what could have been dubbed the "hip-hop power couch" — it included Diddy, Death Row Records founder Suge Knight, Erykah Badu and Nas, among others — and tried to hand the microphone to Nas.





eek
what the schnapp!?!?
[Edited 6/24/07 17:43pm]



Right ? Diddy and Suge...


Unbelievable.
" I´d rather be a stank ass hoe because I´m not stupid. Oh my goodness! I got more drugs! I´m always funny dude...I´m hilarious! Are we gonna smoke?"
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Reply #18 posted 06/25/07 4:21am

KoolEaze

avatar

So , for 312 bucks you get to hear Purple Rain sung by Nikka Costa ? Great.
confused
" I´d rather be a stank ass hoe because I´m not stupid. Oh my goodness! I got more drugs! I´m always funny dude...I´m hilarious! Are we gonna smoke?"
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Reply #19 posted 06/25/07 9:12am

amorbella

avatar

I want to take my daughter, they cant seems to get the age limit right.....
Say it's just a dream...
U open up ur eyes and come 2 realize
u simply imagined this
So u lean over and give her a kiss
Here on earth, here on earth,
with u it's not so bad
Here on earth, here on earth
eye don't feel so sad
Stay right here
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Reply #20 posted 06/25/07 9:36am

KidaDynamite

avatar

AvramsDad said:

AstonMartin said:



Only one awkward moment emerged during Prince's forays into the crowd. He approached the daunting bunch on what could have been dubbed the "hip-hop power couch" — it included Diddy, Death Row Records founder Suge Knight, Erykah Badu and Nas, among others — and tried to hand the microphone to Nas.





eek
what the schnapp!?!?
[Edited 6/24/07 17:43pm]


That's what I'm sayin, Suge Knight a Prince Fan I would have never thought in a million years! eek But then again your always surprised when it comes 2 Prince fans. cool
surviving on the thought of loving you, it's just like the water
I ain't felt this way in years...
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Reply #21 posted 06/25/07 10:25am

Nothinbutjoy

avatar

Graycap23 said:

Nothinbutjoy said:




I wasn't in LA last night, but have done the 4am nights with Prince in LV.

They are not easy...but sooooo worth it lol

I have as well but the next day was SHOT as far as trying 2 do anything productive.



lol

I always know that is coming so I plan for that

rose
I'm firmly planted in denial
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Reply #22 posted 06/25/07 2:59pm

Graycap23

KoolEaze said:

AvramsDad said:



eek
what the schnapp!?!?
[Edited 6/24/07 17:43pm]



Right ? Diddy and Suge...


Unbelievable.

I wonder what the implications of that parring means? Murder and all.....
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Reply #23 posted 06/25/07 3:13pm

KoolEaze

avatar

Graycap23 said:

KoolEaze said:




Right ? Diddy and Suge...


Unbelievable.

I wonder what the implications of that parring means? Murder and all.....


It´s good to see that they can be at the same place in a grown up and mature manner without going crazy or doing stupid shit but at the same time it´s quite sad when you know that they were partly responsible for all the fucked up westcoast-eastcoast beef in the 90s and two great rappers are dead now because of this , and ten years later these dudes ( both criminal pussies who let other guys do the dirty job ) chill out a an overpriced Prince show and be all cool.

Wasn´t Suge in prison and broke ? What talent do these clowns really have ? Can´t rap, can´t produce, can´t manage careers, ...and hang out at Prince concerts, of all people.
" I´d rather be a stank ass hoe because I´m not stupid. Oh my goodness! I got more drugs! I´m always funny dude...I´m hilarious! Are we gonna smoke?"
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Reply #24 posted 06/25/07 10:00pm

AvramsDad

KidaDynamite said:

AvramsDad said:



eek
what the schnapp!?!?
[Edited 6/24/07 17:43pm]


That's what I'm sayin, Suge Knight a Prince Fan I would have never thought in a million years! eek But then again your always surprised when it comes 2 Prince fans. cool


Actually, I seem to remember Suge offering P some "advice" back in the day. I believe it was 94, when it also rumored Mary J Blige would sign with Death Row.

Also, I recall Suge calling P a "sellout" or something to that effect after he went back to a major label. But he was still locked up and prolly just salty as he was going off on a few people in that interview.

All in all, I think Suge respects P's game, but who cares about his brand of respect, right?
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Reply #25 posted 06/26/07 11:25am

FunkshaII

avatar

Calling on universal influence...I see myself...at a Prince concert...front row...screaming and hollering hot and sweaty...yeah, one day I just might get there. They say the future is a fantasy. At $3121.00 Prince concerts tickets are becoming fantasies...for me anyway...but I can dream!!! biggrin
Inside of Me, I am Free, Free to be Me.
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