i wonder if prince ever misses running around in his underwear on stage Bogey and Bacall, peanut butter and jelly, Wall being on fucking point, is "classic" dipshit. An iphone is top shelf technology. Get it straight. This thing is 4g. -Wall the great | |
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I played this song over and over again this summer... | |
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"The Rebels" Project Studio Outtakes 1. You 2. Too Long 3. Loving You 4. Thrill You Or Kill You 5. Disco Away 6. Instrumental 7. Instrumental 8. If I Love You Tonight 9. Turn Me On 10. Baby Baby Baby 11. Nadeara 12. K-Funk Interview
Before Prince formed The Time, he considered using his backing band as a side-project called The Rebels. The 1979 project was a group effort, with songs being written and sung by the various members. Andre Cymone and Dez Dickerson each contributed material and a few numbers were sung by Gayle Chapman. This record has hard rock toghether with disco and 70's funk on it. Also some good slow number as "If I Love U Tonight", later to Mica Paris, and "U", later to Paula Abdul. As the track showed up in the track list there is some bonus material apart from the original album content. | |
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She's doing well
In a telephone interview with Suite101, Gayle Chapman discusses playing keyboards with Prince, the duo Black Diamond, acoustic finger-picking and much more.
Gayle Chapman, singer-songwriter, recording artist, keyboardist and guitar player extraordinaire has wowed audiences as one of Prince’s first professional band mates, performed on a variety of television and radio shows and collaborated with a number of acclaimed musicians. Early Inspirations: Prince, Mountain Stage and Contemporary JazzAs early music inspirations go, Chapman, a little bit of Patti Larkin mixed in with a spot of Bonnie Raitt and the Indigo Girls, counts the Yellowjackets, Frank Zappa, Joni Mitchell, George Duke and Ten Wheel Drive, as perhaps her most significant; a diverse selection of influences, indeed.
Chapman’s professional credits are impressive, to say the least. She was hired to play keyboards and sing backup for Prince in 1978; produced a collection of compositions in 1989 called Standard Laments; performed on the long running Mountain Stage, the award winning public radio program; and recorded as one half of the duo Black Diamond including the noteworthy album, Change of Direction. Chapman then released a self-titled CD in 2003 plus the song, “Love Theme,” followed by “H2O” in 2005, which she co-wrote with jazz powerhouse, Morris Pleasure. California born and Minneapolis grown, Gayle Chapman is currently working with singer Sue Leonard on new material. Suite101 caught up with the artist for a telephone interview from her current home in Boise, Idaho.
Suite101: You were one of Prince’s first professional band mates, playing keyboards and singing backup vocals. How did you first meet Prince?
Gayle Chapman: Well, I auditioned after I met Prince’s cousin who was also a musician. I didn’t know at the time he was his cousin. I borrowed Prince’s music and while listening to it alone in my house in North Minneapolis, I really got revved up. It was so loud. While I was listening, this still voice said he’s gonna need a band, which I told my friend who turned out to be Prince’s cousin. I asked why he didn’t tell me sooner.
Suite101: When did you meet Prince?
G C: I met Prince soon after that. I auditioned, jammed and just left. Later on, three months to the day, Prince called me. He asked what I was doing and if I wanted to come to rehearsal. I said yeah. I rehearsed with some songs, a funky tune, too. They laid this groove on me and I laid one on them. I got the job.
Suite101: You are also an amazing acoustic guitar player. Sometimes you finger-pick - is that Travis style? G C: Thanks. I do play with a full set of finger picks, but more of a Leo Kotke style. It’s kind of a combination with familiar bass chord patterns, Travis and a little bit of something else.
Suite101: Do you play in both standard and open tunings? G C: Yes, I’ll use open tunings as well as standard, anything that makes you a better player. That’s what I tell my students.
Suite101: As part of the duo Black Diamond, with Jan Skurzynski, you performed on the long running show Mountain Stage. How did that come about? G C: I might be incorrect about this but I think there were between 35 and 102 audition contestants that tried out and we won, we got picked.
Suite101: Did you have a good time being in Black Diamond? G C: Oh yes. We had a CD out and we did a lot of playing, like in summer folk festivals and we opened for the Sweethearts of the Rodeo and Patti Larkin. We played together for seven years but Jan was also an engineer who went to work for HP which took her all over. That’s when I started playing solo.
Suite101: You co-penned the contemporary jazz song, “H2O” with Morris Pleasure, released on the Alliance/Watersign label. What led to writing that song? G C: Even though I did folk music I was involved in other areas. Mo came out and started listening when I was playing in the Flim Flam 4. We got together and he asked if I’d like to work with him. He then sent me “H2O” to work on. I thought it was a water theme, so I did the work and sent it back. He loved it. He asked what we should call it and I said just what it is, “H2O.” Mo was great.
Suite101: Do you compose at the piano or with the acoustic guitar? G C: Both, but it’s mostly mood oriented. I can sit at the piano and I’ll get inspired. I come up with a melody or a groove. Over the years you build up a well of musical ideas. It’s a decision that just comes out. If I have a lyrical concept to write I’ll make mental notes of it and then pen it out on the guitar.
Suite101: You recently worked with other musicians, Sandy Sanford and Sue Leonard. G C: I worked with Sandy for four and a half years, but less at this point. He’s a terrific blues player and getting busy with his own stuff right now. Sue Leonard and I are writing and getting ready to do our first recording. It’s not a finished recording, just the basic structure. We don’t have a working title. I think we have enough songs ready for a CD though.
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Possessed: the Rise & Fall of Prince
Chapt 2: One Man Band pg 25
April 1978: release of For You Prince's next task was forming a band that could tour behind For You. He wanted to create an ensemble that, like his longtime influence Sly & the Family Stone, embraced different races and genders. The first and most obvious selection was Anderson(Andre Cymone) on bass. Although his aspirations went well beyond being a sideman, he and Prince shared musical and personal chemistry. Next chosen was drummer Bobby Z. Rivkin, who by now had been playing with Prince on and off for about a year. Using a rehearsal studio at Del's Tire Mart in Minneapolis, this three man nucleus began auditioning candidates for keyboards and guitar who responded to advertisements placed in local publications by Husney. Gayle Chapman, a quiet young woman and a devout adherent of a Christian sect called the Way, filled the first keyboard slot. Dez Dickerson, a rock oriented guitarist with a punkish sense of fashion, was tabbed as the guitarist. Auditions for the 2nd keyboard slot took longer, with Prince finally settling on Matt Fink, an acquaintance of Rivkin's. Sue Ann Carwell briefly joined on backing vocals and congas but withdrew when she and Prince ceased recording together.
The band members were attracted not just by Prince's obvious talents, but by his focus and drive. Dickerson, recalling a conversation with Prince after he auditioned on guitar, came away impressed by the nineteen year old's maturity. "He asked me deep, long term oriented questios," Dickerson said. "I could tell he was a thinker- he wasn't just saying, 'Gee whiz, we're all going to be rock stars."
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Prince, the Pauper
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Purple Rain the prequal
http://www.startribune.co...27586.html
It was no "Purple Rain," but the movie Prince shot at Minneapolis Central High School had some of the artist's hallmark themes: He wrote, directed and starred. He played the self-conscious underdog. And, of course, he got the girl. Schoolmate Robert Plant remembers the film class well. He was in a group with Prince and his best friend, Paul Mitchell. Prince conceived of a movie in which a small, shy kid tried to win the heart of a pretty cheerleader. "He had a crush on a girl named Kim Upsher," said Plant. "So the movie was about him trying to get the girl. Paul Mitchell played the team quarterback -- which he was -- and every time Prince was with the cheerleader, Paul would come by and push him out of the way and walk away with the girl."
Cut to Prince in the library, reading a book on kung fu. In the final scene, "Prince pulls this kung fu move and walks away with the girl," Plant said. To those of us who roamed Central High in south Minneapolis, he was the little guy with the big name and the Afro to match: Prince Rogers Nelson. We just called him Prince. He walked almost unnoticed in the uniform of the day: An open shirt with large collars, maybe a pair of "baggies" over platform shoes, a "choker" around his neck. His hair was teased into an enormous dome that Buckminster Fuller would envy, and his upper lip wore a faint moustache. Pass him in a hallway, and he'd meet your eyes, smile and nod. In class, he'd seem bemused, but never impolite or rowdy. You wouldn't see him in the adjacent alley where some kids gathered to smoke pot before class, or hanging across the street, where they could smoke cigarettes with impunity.
"He was very quiet," said Al Nuness, Prince's sophomore basketball coach and physical-education teacher. "Very low-key. He was so shy you couldn't believe it to see him perform in front of people." Although he was obviously smart and a decent student, "he never said anything in class," Nuness said. "He is one of those students everybody talks about, but he was an average kid that you really didn't notice very much." Except when he played music, which he did nearly every day in the Central music room. Football players coming in from practice could hear him banging on the piano or the guitar, hours after other students had gone home. During lunch hours, the music teachers locked the door for him so he could practice without interruption. Maria Muldaur's "Midnight at the Oasis" was a favorite. The prodigy of Prince is well known: He learned to play piano at age 7. By seventh grade, he joined a local dance band, Grand Central, and played in it until age 16. Despite his shyness, he was confident. In a 1976 interview in the school newspaper, he said: "I was born here, unfortunately. I think it is very hard for a band to make it in this state, even if they're good. I really feel that if we would have lived in Los Angeles or New York or some other big city, we would have gotten over by now."
'A real good kid' Don McMoore never saw Prince's instant success coming. McMoore was an assistant principal -- and the school enforcer -- during those years. Racial tensions sometimes led to fights. There was a fair amount of drug use. If you spent much time with McMoore, you were probably a problem student. Prince didn't spend any time with McMoore. "He was a real good kid," said McMoore. "I don't remember him getting in trouble at all. I admired him for his ambition; even though he was very small, he played basketball. Though his hair made him look like he was 6 feet tall." Nuness said he "had to chase Prince, Paul Mitchell and [Prince's brother] Duane Nelson out of the gym all the time. They were always sneaking in there to play, bringing their bikes and their dogs in. But they were all good kids."
In fact, he said, "Prince was a darn good basketball player. The problem is he just didn't grow." His class had one of the best basketball teams in Minnesota history, and Prince couldn't crack the giant-sized lineup despite great quickness and ball-handling skills. He wasn't pleased. As youth leader for Park Avenue United Methodist Church -- where Prince had his first wedding in 1996 -- Art Erickson saw him almost every day throughout his teens. Prince came to play ball, and also went to church camp. Erickson made the rounds at local schools, so he often would join Prince at lunch. Blacks, whites and biracial kids segregated themselves, and Prince normally sat with the biracial kids, Erickson said. One day, the budding musician told Erickson that his home life was troubled, and that his stepdad had sometimes locked him in a room for hours. There was a piano in the room, and Prince taught himself to play, said Erickson. He believes Prince's continuing religious odyssey is not a gimmick, but a search to find meaning in his remarkable, controversial life. "There are periods in people's lives when they sense the bottom, and reach out for something," Erickson said. "Prince has been doing this for years. "I don't know [whether] he has many friends. That's the problem with his story. He's a musical genius, but just who is Prince? I don't think anyone knows." Jon Tevlin is at jtevlin@startribune.com | |
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