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Thread started 10/18/10 5:27pm

benh

Prince's Dirty Mind: 30 Years On

Hey everyone,

I work for a website called The Quietus - earlier this year we did a feature on our favourite of Prince's B Sides, and I spoke to a few people on this forum who really liked it, so hope this is OK? We've just published a piece re-examining Dirty Mind 30 years later, and I thought some of you guys may be interested in giving it a read.

http://thequietus.com/art...-revisited

I hope this isn't seen as spam or advertising - we love Prince so just wanted to share this with some like minded folk! If it's a problem though, just let me know; I don't want to rub anyone up the wrong way.

Cheers

Ben

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Reply #1 posted 10/18/10 5:51pm

hhhhdmt

thanks alot for the link. Interesting read, but i disagree with one thing. Prince still did alot of good work in the 90s. For me, The Gold Experience is one of his best albums ever. What he did lack in the 90s was quality control

I am convinced that if prince released fewer songs in the 90s and picked the best ones (especially on emancipation) that his 90's would be nearly as good as his 80's. He just released too much in the 90s but if you go through all of it, you'll undoubtedly find gems. He just devoloped an oversized ego and started releasing too much stuff.

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Reply #2 posted 10/18/10 6:40pm

squirrelgrease

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Great read. I posted the text here in case the mods see fit to delete your link as it contains a YouTube video.

I completely agree with the assessment of When You Were Mine.

Memories Of Genius: 30 Years On Prince's Dirty Mind Revisited
The Quietus , October 18th, 2010 05:16

John Freeman is not a fan of post-Witness rebirth Prince. Here he recalls happier days with Dirty Mind

To understand how magical the 1980 version of Prince was, it’s perhaps pertinent to map out his later implosion.

In April 1987, Prince released his magnum opus, the double album Sign ‘O The Times to hyper-salivating fans and critics. All was good in Paisley Park. There were even rumours of another album release within months. But, at some point during the autumn of 1987, Prince had an ‘awakening’. He re-affirmed his commitment to God and renounced the evil that was the funktastic, and mysterious, Black Album. After an incredible period of creative output - including the albums 1999, Purple Rain and Parade - Prince would rebirth himself on 1988’s (good but not great) Lovesexy, before plummeting into (artistic) oblivion. Two years later he released the execrable Graffiti Bridge; two decades later he’s giving away his tat free with the Mail on Sunday. Never has someone with such a visionary talent fallen so far. Bob Dylan managed to extricate himself from his religious vacuum of the 70s. Even Madonna has knocked out a couple half-decent tunes in the last 20-years.

Being a huge Prince fan during my teenage years, his demise seemed like a painful act of treachery. The anniversary of Dirty Mind perhaps permits some brief relief. Like many UK-based Prince fans, I found his music in 1984 when Purple Rain ruled the planet. And like any self-respecting obsessive adolescent, the back catalogue was quickly acquired, through some expensive US imports. Dirty Mind stood out immediately. The cover in itself was a work of wonder: black and white, with Prince eyeballing the camera, dressed in tiny black briefs and a dirty mac.

Prince’s previous two albums were interesting more than anything else. His debut, For You is musically unmemorable, but gives first sight of the prodigious tag line of ‘Written, performed, arranged and produced by Prince’. A second, eponymous album would feature his first hit – ‘I Wanna Be Your Lover’ – and his original version of Chaka Khan’s global smash, ‘I Feel For You’. The album’s production was slick, and its success ensured Prince was up and running.

Dirty Mind felt different though. By now Prince had built a rudimentary recording studio in his house, and many of the final tracks are essentially demos and early recordings. The production was raw and the starkness at odds to the previous polish. The opening title track features Prince’s falsetto scream over a new wave beat; Minneapolis funk had met with post- punk.

And all notions of Prince being merely a precocious disco diva had been shattered by track two. ‘When You Were Mine’ is his first great rock song. In fact – and please pardon a moment of bombast – it is one the great, underrated, American rock songs. Over frantic guitars and Dr Fink’s squidgy keyboards, Prince flails at an unfaithful lover who “didn’t have the decency to change the sheets,” before admitting “I love you more than I did/ when you were mine.” It’s a breathtaking song; the veneer of libido is suddenly obliterated and Prince’s heart is on the line. It’s also one of his most covered songs, with everyone from Cyndi Lauper to Casiotone For The Painfully Alone bashing out versions with varying degrees of success.

However, lyrically ‘When You Were Mine’ is an outlier – it is Prince’s obsession with sex that is in the spotlight on Dirty Mind. The sleazy cover art suggests that Prince fully understood the power of shock value and the album contains two of his most infamous songs. ‘Head’ outlines the shameless seduction of a bride-to-be with the promise of oral delights, over a sweating, squelching synth hook. It’s a cracker of a track, and would become the sort of song that would almost single-handedly provoke Tipper Gore into a PMRC fury.

But ‘Head’ is a W.I. tea party compared to the quite astonishing ‘Sister’. Clocking in at 90 seconds, Prince’s most furious punk song leaves nothing to interpretation – “My sister never made love to anyone else but me/ She showed me where it’s supposed to go/ And that a blow job doesn’t mean blow/ Incest is everything it’s said to be.” Of course, it’s a huge piss-take – back then Prince was adept at not taking himself too seriously – and gained the album instant notoriety as rock critics pounced on the sheer gall of the man.

By 1984, Dirty Mind had amassed sales of 500,000 in the US; small-fry compared to the global success of Purple Rain. But Dirty Mind remains a pivotal moment in Prince’s career, which saw him pushing his music into endless territories. The seeds for the magnificent 1987 track ‘If I Was Your Girlfriend’ were sewn with the gender-bending couplet of “Oh girl, when you were mine/ I used to let you wear all my clothes” from ‘When You Were Mine’; the song’s dynamic would form the blueprint for tracks like ‘Little Red Corvette’ and ‘Paisley Park’. The feel of the minimalistic ballad ‘Gotta Broken Heart Again’ would appear throughout 2006’s Parade album, while the impact of ‘Head’ and ‘Sister’ would become standard practice as Prince’s libido went into superstar overdrive. He would follow Dirty Mind with 1981’s solid consolidationControversy, before achieving worldwide lift-off with 1999 the year after.

I often think about a world in which Prince didn’t lose his musical mojo in 1988, and the last twenty years does contain moments of his magical foresight. Maybe he would have heard Kid Aand entered a musical arms race with Radiohead, like Lennon and McCartney did with Wilson. [What a distressing vision of horror, Ed] There could have been an Appalachian folk album, or a twinkling Americana period. He could have teamed up with Jack White to rip out some raw blues or dragged hip-hop into new territories. But he didn’t and he won’t.

Dirty Mind is a reminder that once upon a time, Prince saw music as a boundless, constraint-free orgy of creativity. Its final track ‘Partyup’ is a good-time freak out jam, with Prince extolling the merits of “revolutionary rock & roll”. Hold tight to the memory.

If prince.org were to be made idiot proof, someone would just invent a better idiot.
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