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Thread started 05/02/17 8:56am

mikemike13

1999: Love in the Age of Prince

In August, 1982, two months before the release of Prince’s electro-pop-soul masterwork 1999, my best friend Jerry Rodriguez and I watched the performance clip of the album’s self-titled first single when it played on the thirty-foot video screen at our favorite nightspot, the Ritz. Clad in a dark vintage suit and white sneakers, I was a nineteen-year-old college student at Long Island University who spent more time prowling darkened clubs than studying. After becoming boys, Jerry and I would take the D train into the city from his Brooklyn apartment where we usually ended up at the Ritz with its five-dollar cover charge, ear-blowing sound system, and cheap drinks.

Buzzed on Long Island iced teas, my jerky dance movements came to a sudden halt when I heard keyboard chords bubbling. Turning around, I stared in stunned awe at the spectacle projected on the screen. Wearing a flowing purple coat and high-heeled boots, Prince resembled a futurist Dr. Strange steppin’ through time and space to warn us mere mortals of the forthcoming apocalypse that would happen in 1999. “I was dreamin’ when I wrote this, forgive me if it goes astray,” he sang, “but when I woke up this morning I could have sworn it was judgment day.”

For the next few minutes, sonically tripping, head nodding to the future shock blaring through the speakers. Musically, Prince made a song that was, at least to me, the best new wave and best funk single of that year. Lyrically, he laughed in the face of Armageddon while shaking his ass until the dawn. As the world was being ravished by nuclear annihilation, Prince was just getting the party started.

From the opening party at ground zero and the robotic voice of God declaring, “Don’t worry, I won’t hurt you, I only want to have some fun” to the smoldering ballad “International Lover” that closes the over-an-hour-long aural experience, the album was prophetic (“1999”), hedonistic (“Let’s Pretend We’re Married”), spiritual (“Free”), sexy (“Little Red Corvette”), and sinister (“Something in the Water”), and collectively visionary. When 1999 was finally released in October, I bought the album at Disc-O-Mat in midtown and ditched school for the rest of the day.


Hurrying back home to Harlem, I bought a sack of chucky black and retired to the bedroom for the rest of the day. After sliding out the glossy picture sleeves (on one he looked like a black Bowie, while the other was a semi-nude shot of Prince in bed with watercolor paints and a blank page), and for the remainder of the day, I toked reefer and played records.

To this day, 1999 remains my personal favorite Prince album, winning over Purple Rain or Sign O’ the Times. 1999 took me from mere fandom to the deepest love for the man and his art. A maverick musician who was constantly topping himself, making me “ponder the mystery of human greatness,” as Ralph Ellison once wrote. After hearing 1999, I wouldn’t date any woman that wasn’t down with Prince.

While the album played again and again, I lay on the blue-sheeted bed studying the bizarro album art. Gazing at the striking purple cover for what felt like forever. Prince’s name and the album’s title were scrawled in graffiti-style crudeness that resembled boys’ bathroom drawings and the weirdness of Pedro Bell’s cartoon designs for P-Funk albums. Stoned from the weed, my red eyes constantly returned to the title 1999.

Playing a silly game with myself, I calculated that in 1999 I would be thirty-six years old, which to my then-nineteen-year-old self sounded ancient, dusty as an old record. If I’d had access to a crystal ball, what exactly would I see in my future? Would I be a famous novelist chatting with Dick Cavett on PBS? Would I be married to my college girlfriend Denise and living in Long Island with our badass kids? Or who knows, maybe Prince was on some Nostradamus shit and the sky really was going to turn purple, followed by destruction.

For the rest of this story: https://catapult.co/stori...-of-prince
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Reply #1 posted 05/02/17 10:58am

ChadNPG69

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Wow....I broke down about 2/3 through this.....simply heartbreaking. God bless u my friend.

::Official Member of the 1978-1995 Club::
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Reply #2 posted 05/02/17 11:10am

bsprout

Great story...I was too young to go to clubs in 1982 but that sure brought me back to that time.
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Reply #3 posted 05/02/17 2:20pm

KoolEaze

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Great read. I remember that 1994 gig at the Palladium from a bootleg of that show. The version of Shhh... that he played that night is one of my favorite versions of that song. I loved what he said when he ended the song (but I would have to paraphrase because I don´t remember the exact quote).

And I absolutely LOVE the 1999 album, and much like the author, I spent a good amount of time looking at the album cover over and over again.

What a sad little story.

I like how the author shares these highly personal memories with the readers.

His book Bring the Noise sounds very familiar to me, I think I´ve read it back then.

" 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 #4 posted 05/02/17 2:25pm

KoolEaze

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If I recall correctly, he ended Shhh... with something like "New York, all women are beautiful. Love your women." or something like that.

I think I´ll go and listen to that bootleg recording of that show again. Shhh....was the absolute highlight of that show.

And I love the cold vibe of the 1999 album...songs about sexual frustration, unrequited love, heartbreak...Something in the Water, Lady Cab Driver, Little Red Corvette...the hedonism and carefree and celebratory attitude of DMSR.....the uplifting gem of a song that is Free.

1999 is one of those Prince albums that probably saved my life. wink

" 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 #5 posted 05/03/17 2:59am

laurarichardso
n

I was to young to go to nightclubs but I had walkman and I listened to 1999 until the tape popped. I then went out and got the album and spent s lot of time checking out that water color pic. 😀
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Reply #6 posted 05/03/17 3:38pm

214

It took mer some time to get into it, now that i am, it's a superb album. Cold and lonely kind of sound.

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