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Thread started 02/10/10 11:07pm

thedance

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"Cross The Line" - a Backstage experience before a Prince concert 1998 ("Free" article #1 out of 3)

This is an article from the danish FREE fanzine 1998:


here's the 1st article, written by David Dyhr, in 1998 back when Prince was called "The Artist":


Cross The Line

By David Dyhr.

At last The Artist was going to play in Denmark again. By bus I arrived a couple of hours before the show and sat down waiting outside Valby Hallen. Mike Scott from NPG came and talked with us. Just joking I asked if we could join him for the rehearsal. But he refused, that he could not allow that and went away. Well I have never, in all my wildest dreams, imagined what then happened. Me and another fan walked around and came by an open door. I thought I would just look inside, but my friend was a little afraid of that, but I persuated him and inside we went.

In the large but empty Valby Hallen the houselights were on. There sat The Artist himself, right in front of us. He was sitting at the soundboard and mixed something or whatever. I wanted to run towards him and shout: "I love You" ! Like I did once at The Gold Tour in Holland in 95. Back then he answered: "Not as much as I love You", while he performed "I Love U In Me". But that is another story. I was affraid that if I had done so we immediately would have been thrown out. So we quietly passed by and sat down behind him. After a while he walked away from the soundboard, nearly fell and then walked behind a big guy. For fun he tried to immitate his special walk in a klumpsy way, looking really funny. Then he suddenly entered the stage for the rehearsal and he rehearsed on stage for an hour or more playing three old classics "Let's Go Crazy", "U Got The Look" and "She's Always In My Hair". it was great to watch how he controlled it all. He tuned up Mike Scott's guitar and then tested the microphone by asking the soundman to "turn up my mike". After a while a soundman came again and asked The Artist something, to which he replied: "Well, this is your world" and the soundman went away.

After the band had rehearsed they walked to the private area. My friend didn't dare to stay any longer, but I wouldn't miss this and decided to stay as long as possible. I walked to the dressing rooms. Chaka Khan wasn't there, but Tina, Larry Graham's wife, was. As l caught her eyes, I imitateted the kisses she had sent to the audience when The Artist guested the recent VIBE tv-show with Sinbad. She was very surprised that anyone in Denmark has seen that: "Wasn't that only showed on american tv", she asked.

We talked about how funny it was when Sinbad said: I'm a slave until my daughter get's a job". Then I was introdused to her pretty daughter, the sax and trumpet players from Sly and The Family Stone and even to Larry Graham himself. They were very friendly and I told them, that I think it's nice, that The Artist and Larry had got together. We also talked about The New Power Pak which you can get on the internet and why Larry had left Sly. Then we went to the kitchen and I sat down and ate together with NPG and Larry's band. We had a very tasty and delicious salad and the band told me that even they weren't eating meat any longer.

When I finished my eating I went back-stage and stood behind Mr. Hayes while he played with his computer. At that time the doors was opened and people were beginning to come in. Therefor I walked to the dressingrooms, where no other than The Artist and his bodyguard were standing talking. As I passed The Artist my shirt almost touched him and then he went into his dressingroom. The bodyguard was the tall guy that keeps the door open for The Artist in the "Somebody's Somebody" video. He asked me if i hadn't a passport and since I could not answer him (I had none), he showed me very polite the door saying these words: "I know your story". Then I found my place in front of the stage and the concert started.




- 2 more articles from "Free" Magazine 1998 will follow asap... wink




http://prince.org/msg/7/330007

I once sent to Paisley Park:

Two copies of our self made Prince-Fanzine: "Free".

Made by 4 guys in Denmark (David Dyhr; Alex Mingolla; Nicolai Willumsgaard; Bo Egstrup).

It was in october 1998.

We never got any response back from Prince, but I hope he liked those articles.

If any of you wanna read it, I think I can still post those articles.

1. Meet & Greet Prince before the show in Valby Hallen, Copenhagen 1998.
2. Interview with half of the NPG at hotel SAS Royal 1998.
3. "Behind the lines", an experience backstage right before the concert in Valby Hallen 1998.

[Edited 2/10/10 23:13pm]
[Edited 2/10/10 23:13pm]
Prince 4Ever. heart
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Reply #1 posted 02/10/10 11:28pm

squirrelgrease

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That was quick. Thanks for posting it. Nice read. biggrin I would have loved to hear the conversation about why Larry left Sly.
If prince.org were to be made idiot proof, someone would just invent a better idiot.
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Reply #2 posted 02/10/10 11:33pm

thedance

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squirrelgrease said:

That was quick. Thanks for posting it. Nice read. biggrin I would have loved to hear the conversation about why Larry left Sly.
^

yes, I still had those articles scanned from the original Fanzine, scanned by Chastity a few years back...

2 more articles will be up soon... wink
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Reply #3 posted 02/11/10 12:12am

thedance

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2 more articles from "Free":

"The Meet & Greet Experience" - Meeting Prince before the concert in Valby Hallen 1998

http://prince.org/msg/7/330024

and..

"Meeting the N.P.G." at Hotel SAS Royal, Copenhagen 1998

http://prince.org/msg/7/330026
Prince 4Ever. heart
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Reply #4 posted 02/11/10 7:54am

scififilmnerd

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I'm amazed by this article. Imagine that someone actually had a kick out of meeting Larry and eating a salad with Prince's discount band. lol

You know, while all this was going on inside, someone was selling Uptown to the crowd outside and there was a lot of movement in the curtains to the entrance. Apparently prince was watching and then sent his bodyguards out to inquire about the magazine being sold. They brought a copy of Uptown back to Prince and a month or two later, Uptown got sued. mad

I think that's a much more juicy story. wink
rainbow woot! FREE THE 29 MAY 1993 COME CONFIGURATION! woot! rainbow
rainbow woot! FREE THE JANUARY 1994 THE GOLD ALBUM CONFIGURATION woot! rainbow
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Reply #5 posted 02/11/10 11:50am

squirrelgrease

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scififilmnerd said:

I'm amazed by this article. Imagine that someone actually had a kick out of meeting Larry and eating a salad with Prince's discount band. lol

You know, while all this was going on inside, someone was selling Uptown to the crowd outside and there was a lot of movement in the curtains to the entrance. Apparently prince was watching and then sent his bodyguards out to inquire about the magazine being sold. They brought a copy of Uptown back to Prince and a month or two later, Uptown got sued. mad

I think that's a much more juicy story. wink


Interesting.
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Reply #6 posted 02/11/10 12:00pm

thedance

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^^ Aww, really bad..... I never understood the trial against Uptown. They couldn't print the prince symbol - distributed by Prince, himself... confused
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Reply #7 posted 02/11/10 12:09pm

squirrelgrease

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thedance said:

^^ Aww, really bad..... I never understood the trial against Uptown. They couldn't print the prince symbol - distributed by Prince, himself... confused


I know. Incredibly ludicrous.
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Reply #8 posted 02/11/10 4:07pm

specdude

thedance said:

This is an article from the danish FREE fanzine 1998:





damnit thought this article was 1988. oh well still cool . thx!
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Reply #9 posted 02/11/10 4:31pm

yankem

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Cool story !!! Well done David !!!
"open your heart, open your mind
A train is leaving all day..."
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Reply #10 posted 02/11/10 4:33pm

porfyrivrohi

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Thanks for the article!
I am but mad north-northwest
when the wind is southerly I know a hawk from a handsaw
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Reply #11 posted 02/11/10 5:15pm

klick2me

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Cool story! Tina waved to me once during the Key Club performance in L.A.. She seems like a nice lady.

Klick
klick
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Reply #12 posted 02/11/10 5:46pm

BartVanHemelen

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squirrelgrease said:

That was quick. Thanks for posting it. Nice read. biggrin I would have loved to hear the conversation about why Larry left Sly.


He'd probably lie about it anyway. Seriously, Larry has a tendency to change his stories.

Best source of what went on inside the Family Stone is "Sly and the Family Stone: An Oral History" by Joel Selvin, which basically consists of interviews with a lot of the people that were around. Larry doesn't come off looking good. It's a raw and painful book, because there was a lot of nasty stuff going on in private. IIRC the members from S&TFS hate the book, which means it's probably too honest for their liking.

It's kinda depressing so few books and documentaries exist about S&TFS, mostly because almost everyone is sitting on their stories waiting for the time when someone will pay them crazy money for their "tell all" book. I've got a Dutch documentary from the early/mid-1990s on a VHS somewhere that's really depressing, I think that some S&TFS members were doing seriously crappy jobs just to get by. There was a recent docu by two Dutch twins on their quest to interview Sly, which was OK but kinda anti-climatic.

I've just ordered "Sly: The Lives of Sylvester Stewart and Sly Stone" by Eddie Santiago, which seems to be good, according to some reviews I've read. "I Want to Take You Higher: The Life and Times of Sly and the Family Stone" by Jeff Kaliss seems to bets be avoided: it's apparently a thinly disguised rewrite of "Sly and the Family Stone: An Oral History" and doesn't add anything.
© Bart Van Hemelen
This posting is provided AS IS with no warranties, and confers no rights.
It is not authorized by Prince or the NPG Music Club. You assume all risk for
your use. All rights reserved.
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Reply #13 posted 02/11/10 5:49pm

squirrelgrease

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BartVanHemelen said:

squirrelgrease said:

That was quick. Thanks for posting it. Nice read. biggrin I would have loved to hear the conversation about why Larry left Sly.


He'd probably lie about it anyway. Seriously, Larry has a tendency to change his stories.

Best source of what went on inside the Family Stone is "Sly and the Family Stone: An Oral History" by Joel Selvin, which basically consists of interviews with a lot of the people that were around. Larry doesn't come off looking good. It's a raw and painful book, because there was a lot of nasty stuff going on in private. IIRC the members from S&TFS hate the book, which means it's probably too honest for their liking.

It's kinda depressing so few books and documentaries exist about S&TFS, mostly because almost everyone is sitting on their stories waiting for the time when someone will pay them crazy money for their "tell all" book. I've got a Dutch documentary from the early/mid-1990s on a VHS somewhere that's really depressing, I think that some S&TFS members were doing seriously crappy jobs just to get by. There was a recent docu by two Dutch twins on their quest to interview Sly, which was OK but kinda anti-climatic.

I've just ordered "Sly: The Lives of Sylvester Stewart and Sly Stone" by Eddie Santiago, which seems to be good, according to some reviews I've read. "I Want to Take You Higher: The Life and Times of Sly and the Family Stone" by Jeff Kaliss seems to bets be avoided: it's apparently a thinly disguised rewrite of "Sly and the Family Stone: An Oral History" and doesn't add anything.


That's good information to have. Thanks.
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Reply #14 posted 02/11/10 6:09pm

jdcxc

BartVanHemelen said:

squirrelgrease said:

That was quick. Thanks for posting it. Nice read. biggrin I would have loved to hear the conversation about why Larry left Sly.


He'd probably lie about it anyway. Seriously, Larry has a tendency to change his stories.

Best source of what went on inside the Family Stone is "Sly and the Family Stone: An Oral History" by Joel Selvin, which basically consists of interviews with a lot of the people that were around. Larry doesn't come off looking good. It's a raw and painful book, because there was a lot of nasty stuff going on in private. IIRC the members from S&TFS hate the book, which means it's probably too honest for their liking.

It's kinda depressing so few books and documentaries exist about S&TFS, mostly because almost everyone is sitting on their stories waiting for the time when someone will pay them crazy money for their "tell all" book. I've got a Dutch documentary from the early/mid-1990s on a VHS somewhere that's really depressing, I think that some S&TFS members were doing seriously crappy jobs just to get by. There was a recent docu by two Dutch twins on their quest to interview Sly, which was OK but kinda anti-climatic.

I've just ordered "Sly: The Lives of Sylvester Stewart and Sly Stone" by Eddie Santiago, which seems to be good, according to some reviews I've read. "I Want to Take You Higher: The Life and Times of Sly and the Family Stone" by Jeff Kaliss seems to bets be avoided: it's apparently a thinly disguised rewrite of "Sly and the Family Stone: An Oral History" and doesn't add anything.


Thanks. Another classic example of Rock Journalism's abandonment of the serious analyis of black music. It's depressing to go to the music aisle of one of the chain bookstores and find 300 Springsteen, U2, Rolling Stones, Patti Smith and Sex Pistols books and not one that seriously explores the artistic gifts of Stevie Wonder, Aretha or George Clinton.

And your right, the Kaliss book was weak. It's strange that the complicated and painful histories of other bands (RS, Pistols, Kinks, etc.) usually make for deep and interesting books.
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Reply #15 posted 02/12/10 3:18am

Edance

BartVanHemelen said:

squirrelgrease said:

That was quick. Thanks for posting it. Nice read. biggrin I would have loved to hear the conversation about why Larry left Sly.


He'd probably lie about it anyway. Seriously, Larry has a tendency to change his stories.

Best source of what went on inside the Family Stone is "Sly and the Family Stone: An Oral History" by Joel Selvin, which basically consists of interviews with a lot of the people that were around. Larry doesn't come off looking good. It's a raw and painful book, because there was a lot of nasty stuff going on in private. IIRC the members from S&TFS hate the book, which means it's probably too honest for their liking.

It's kinda depressing so few books and documentaries exist about S&TFS, mostly because almost everyone is sitting on their stories waiting for the time when someone will pay them crazy money for their "tell all" book. I've got a Dutch documentary from the early/mid-1990s on a VHS somewhere that's really depressing, I think that some S&TFS members were doing seriously crappy jobs just to get by. There was a recent docu by two Dutch twins on their quest to interview Sly, which was OK but kinda anti-climatic.

I've just ordered "Sly: The Lives of Sylvester Stewart and Sly Stone" by Eddie Santiago, which seems to be good, according to some reviews I've read. "I Want to Take You Higher: The Life and Times of Sly and the Family Stone" by Jeff Kaliss seems to bets be avoided: it's apparently a thinly disguised rewrite of "Sly and the Family Stone: An Oral History" and doesn't add anything.


The twins you talk about are working on a book: see www.slystonebook.com
Also, Willem Alkema made a documentary including an interview with Sly. See www.dancetothemusic.nl.
There's an article in the latest issue of Mojo about it.
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Reply #16 posted 02/12/10 4:27am

nuthinbuttamuf
fin

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so let me get this straight... whoever this person is broke into/gatecrased an unauthorised private zone?

i felt slightly uncomfortable reading this.
----------

AND I GOTTA ALOTTA BUTTA 2 GO!
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Reply #17 posted 02/12/10 4:29am

yankem

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nuthinbuttamuffin said:

so let me get this straight... whoever this person is broke into/gatecrased an unauthorised private zone?

i felt slightly uncomfortable reading this.

eek
"open your heart, open your mind
A train is leaving all day..."
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Reply #18 posted 02/12/10 10:12am

scififilmnerd

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nuthinbuttamuffin said:

so let me get this straight... whoever this person is broke into/gatecrased an unauthorised private zone?


Yes, he did. And he got to see prince in rehearsal, darn it! biggrin
rainbow woot! FREE THE 29 MAY 1993 COME CONFIGURATION! woot! rainbow
rainbow woot! FREE THE JANUARY 1994 THE GOLD ALBUM CONFIGURATION woot! rainbow
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Reply #19 posted 02/12/10 12:27pm

BartVanHemelen

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jdcxc said:

Thanks. Another classic example of Rock Journalism's abandonment of the serious analyis of black music.


I sense a racial overtone in that complaint.

jdcxc said:

It's depressing to go to the music aisle of one of the chain bookstores and find 300 Springsteen, U2, Rolling Stones, Patti Smith and Sex Pistols books


Those sell.

jdcxc said:

and not one that seriously explores the artistic gifts of Stevie Wonder, Aretha or George Clinton.


Part of the problem is that so many of these people seem to be unavailable and/or unwilling to cooperate. On Dutch TV around Christmas they have a daily show where they talk about the records that populate the "Top 2000" people vote for, and part of that program are short documentaries on some of the hits. And each time it involves a soul/r&b artist, I keep getting the feeling that they were holding back, and that while they were happy somebody paid them attention, they weren't planning on being 100% open.
© Bart Van Hemelen
This posting is provided AS IS with no warranties, and confers no rights.
It is not authorized by Prince or the NPG Music Club. You assume all risk for
your use. All rights reserved.
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Reply #20 posted 02/12/10 3:44pm

jdcxc

BartVanHemelen said:

jdcxc said:

Thanks. Another classic example of Rock Journalism's abandonment of the serious analyis of black music.


I sense a racial overtone in that complaint.



Those sell.

jdcxc said:

and not one that seriously explores the artistic gifts of Stevie Wonder, Aretha or George Clinton.


Part of the problem is that so many of these people seem to be unavailable and/or unwilling to cooperate. On Dutch TV around Christmas they have a daily show where they talk about the records that populate the "Top 2000" people vote for, and part of that program are short documentaries on some of the hits. And each time it involves a soul/r&b artist, I keep getting the feeling that they were holding back, and that while they were happy somebody paid them attention, they weren't planning on being 100% open.


There's no "overtone" about it, it's explicit. Great generalizations in your Dutch TV example. Are you trying to say that soul/r&b artists are less interesting than other genres? Stevie, Aretha and GC have sold more records than many of the obscure musicians on the book racks. I didn't know you were such a believer in the "free" market and "true" capitalism. I don't think book publishers and editors have purely analyzed the strength of African-American dollar, middle class or crossover potential. Just look at the success of Ray, to a lot of people's suprise.
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Reply #21 posted 02/13/10 4:14am

blacksworld

hi nice 2 see that u like the article it was cool 2 be there i tell u :O) peace from david dyhr
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Reply #22 posted 02/13/10 5:03am

thedance

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blacksworld said:

hi nice 2 see that u like the article it was cool 2 be there i tell u :O) peace from david dyhr

Hi David, it's Bo here... Nice to see you here at the Org....

- and a very nice story / experience from back then... woot!

cool... thumbs up!
Prince 4Ever. heart
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Reply #23 posted 02/13/10 6:46am

yankem

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blacksworld said:

hi nice 2 see that u like the article it was cool 2 be there i tell u :O) peace from david dyhr



Cool story !!!!
"open your heart, open your mind
A train is leaving all day..."
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Reply #24 posted 02/13/10 1:57pm

squirrelgrease

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blacksworld said:

hi nice 2 see that u like the article it was cool 2 be there i tell u :O) peace from david dyhr


Hi David. Could you shed some light on why Larry left Sly, at least what you gleaned from the conversation that you had. I know it was a long time ago, so if memory fails, that's cool. Thanks.
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Reply #25 posted 02/13/10 2:17pm

thedance

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^ Hi Squirrelgrease,

I think David is gone again, and not very often here on the org..

But I will send your request to him in an email....

maybe he can remember something about that.... return here and write, let's see.. wink
Prince 4Ever. heart
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Reply #26 posted 02/13/10 3:56pm

squirrelgrease

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thedance said:

^ Hi Squirrelgrease,

I think David is gone again, and not very often here on the org..

But I will send your request to him in an email....

maybe he can remember something about that.... return here and write, let's see.. wink


You're a champ. biggrin
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Reply #27 posted 02/15/10 7:54am

BartVanHemelen

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jdcxc said:

There's no "overtone" about it, it's explicit. Great generalizations in your Dutch TV example. Are you trying to say that soul/r&b artists are less interesting than other genres?


No.

jdcxc said:

Stevie, Aretha and GC have sold more records than many of the obscure musicians on the book racks.


Years ago, perhaps. But does their audience buy books? Fact is that UK mags would love to put someone besides Pink Floyd/Beatles/... on their covers, but those issues simply don't sell. The Word magazine put Prince on the cover: bombed. Another mag had a similar experience.

jdcxc said:

I didn't know you were such a believer in the "free" market and "true" capitalism.


Look, these days there are a lot less music books than years ago. There simply isn't a big market for it, and that market has shrunk. Music mags are dying or dead.

jdcxc said:

I don't think book publishers and editors have purely analyzed the strength of African-American dollar, middle class or crossover potential. Just look at the success of Ray, to a lot of people's surprise.


Perhaps, perhaps not.
© Bart Van Hemelen
This posting is provided AS IS with no warranties, and confers no rights.
It is not authorized by Prince or the NPG Music Club. You assume all risk for
your use. All rights reserved.
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Reply #28 posted 02/26/10 4:23am

blacksworld

BartVanHemelen said:

jdcxc said:

There's no "overtone" about it, it's explicit. Great generalizations in your Dutch TV example. Are you trying to say that soul/r&b artists are less interesting than other genres?


No.



Look, these days there are a lot less music books than years ago. There simply isn't a big market for it, and that market has shrunk. Music mags are dying or dead.

jdcxc said:

I don't think book publishers and editors have purely analyzed the strength of African-American dollar, middle class or crossover potential. Just look at the success of Ray, to a lot of people's surprise.


Perhaps, perhaps not.
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Reply #29 posted 02/26/10 4:29am

blacksworld

hi squirrelgrease i cant remember but it was very nice 2 talk 2 tina Larrys wife and nice 2 be there peace
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