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Andre Cymone interview from 1998 Some of you may have seen this, but I'm sure there are those who have not.
I found this on Google.com, first posted by Bart Van Hemelen. Andre's girl group the girls were put together before Vanity 6? Andre dated Vanity before prince? Rick James pointed a pop gun/starter pistol at him? Andre came up with the whole zoot suit Cool for the time from watching a guy on French TV? Morris said in a 2004 Tavis Smiley interview that Prince came up with it. Well I think Kid Creole from Kid Creole and the Coconuts was doing the Morris Day thing long before Prince even got a record deal. Now that I think about it, from the description Andre gives in the interview, the zoot suit,the women and the Bas-Nova music. I think he was talking about Kid Creole. I wish the interviewer would have asked him about the rebels project. Gayle Chapman talked about in a interview once. Bart Van Hemelen Feb 7 2003, 12:55 am show options Newsgroups: alt.music.prince From: Bart Van Hemelen - Find messages by this author Date: Fri, 07 Feb 2003 02:30:17 +0100 Local: Thurs, Feb 6 2003 9:30 pm Subject: André Cymone interview from KPFA Radio October 31, 1998 San Francisco/Oakland Bay Area Reply to Author | Forward | Print | View Thread | Show original | Report Abuse Digging through some old files... This was posted waaaaay back on the great Prince/ Family newsletter website... --------------- André Cymone Interview KPFA Radio October 31, 1998 San Francisco/Oakland Bay Area "G-Spot" - KPFA disc jockey (Thanks to Cecilia Vasquez for the transcription) G-Spot: Now "Purple Rain" was all about how Prince finally ran away, so to speak, but in real life when he ran away, he kind of found a home with your family right? Andre Cymone: Oh yeah. Actually, the movie wasn'tÉ it was a very good movie but it wasn't really done close to any kind of truth. It was kind of a fictional thing, you know a good story, and it was loosely based on the truth. But yeah, 'cause he came and lived with us and I think actually my mother adopted him and he lived with our family for a while and that's kinda how that went. G: Your mom's name is Bernadette and your dad's name is Fred right? AC: You got that right! (laughs) G: Moms, yeah! They say at those moments in time that you and Prince were like kind of learning the instruments down in the basement. AC: Yeah, pretty much, 'cause see I kind of learned a little bit beforeÉwe both knew how to play a lot of things before we actually met each other for the second time, 'cause we had met each other when we were really young but we met again when we moved up. We used to live in the projects, moved up from the projects into kind of an upper class Black neighborhood and I met him and some other friends of mine up there. So we rehearsed in my mom's basement and we got a chance to develop and learn through that whole situation. G: Man, there's rumorsÉ you know those were the days that you were getting women in the basement. I mean do you wanna even talk about that or does it speak for itself? AC: You know (laughs) when you're young you do what you gotta do. 'Cause it's about having some fun, it's a growing thing. G: You guys were youngsters. AC: Oh yeah, we were having fun. But the thing is, I wouldn't really want to promote any kind of negative things in terms of sexuality to kids 'cause there's a price to pay for that wild freedom that you have. And the thing about my situation is that my mother was going through an interesting period in her time herself, so she gave us a lot of freedom. Not only was Prince there at my house but Morris and a lot of other people, some other friends came and you know how in the neighborhood there's always one house that everybody kind of comes to and hangs out at? That was my crib. G: Kind of like the clubhouse. AC: Yeah, everybody came to my crib 'cause we could rehearse there and my mom was totally cool. She wasn't trying to sweat us about making the noise, she wasn't sweating us about having girlfriends, you know,even when we were 14, 15 years old. So she was cool, so we had fun. G: Speaking of the rehearsing, you guys eventually just formed a band right then and there and started going to high schools, YMCAs. AC: Yeah. G: What were those like, 'cause that was kind of your first time in front of a little audience. You probably had a lot of people that you knew but was it scary for you, intimidating or what? AC: You know the interesting thing is, it wasn't scary at all for us. I mean the cool thing about us, I think 'cause we had a little four-piece band at the time, so playing and performing was something that was in everybody's blood. I know it was in mine and I know it was in Prince's. Morris wasn't in the band at the time but my sister was in the band. It was a very kind of small situation. In fact, I'm sure you're hip to Flyte Tyme, that whole situation. G: Oh yeah, with Jam and Lewis in that group. AC: Right, but originally there was only Terry Lewis. Jimmy Jam came in til later. But we had a battle of the bands. It's interesting, 'cause at the time they were much older than we were and at the time they had all this really, really nice equipment. Just big amplifiers, nice guitars, they had a horn section and they had this guitar player that was rich so he had like a wah-wah pedal and all this other kind of cool stuff. We didn't have nothing! It was just me, Prince, a drummer, and a percussionist, you know, and everybody laughed at us when we came up and thought that we were gonna lose and all that kind of stuff. You know, we had all this really bad equipment, it didn't have any paint on it. So we went up to them (wimpy voice) "You guys, can we like play on your stuff, man? You know, we promise we ain't gonna break it." So it was like, "Yeah, yeah go ahead." It was like letting the little kids, yeah let them go ahead. Man we turned it out! People came back. People were leaving and they came back and we won the battle of the bands and we played the rest of the night. Yeah, that was fun. The only problem was that Prince's cousin was our drummer. G: His name was Chaz, right? AC: Right, right! You did your homework! So when they announced the name of the winner, we thought we lost. You know his name is Chaz but his real name is Charles, so when they announced the winner, they announced, "The winner is Charles' Cousin and Friends" and we all looked at each other and thought we lost, 'cause our band's name was like Soul Explosion at the time. So it was like Charles' Cousin and Friends and we looked at each other and we looked at him and he was all excited: "We won, we won!!" We were like, "Man, when did you change the band's name?" (laughs) Well, you know... G: And once again the band's name changed again, was it Grand Central in '74? AC: Yeah, it wound up being Grand Central 'cause we went through some changes. It was like Soul Explosion, that was like my whole thing, then it was obviously Charles' Cousin and Friends (laughs), that was his cousin's thing, he just thought Sly and the Family Stone, you know Charles' Cousin and Friends. But it changed again, it went to Grand Central which is something I think Prince came up with 'cause he was really into Grand Funk Railroad. G: And you guys changed the name, was it because of Grand Central Station. Is that why you guys changed the name to Champagne? AC: Yeah, exactly. 'Cause they came along afterward and everybody said we were trying to copy them and it's like no, no, no, we're not trying to copy anybody. So we changed it, plus I think right around that time Prince had split, he had gotten a solo deal with Warner Brothers. So he split and we just changed the name. We actually changed the name before he split but, you know, it wound up being Champagne when he was out of the band. G: But tell me about these early days, in 1977, because I understand there's a recording right now that's called "94 East Minneapolis Genius." It features you and Pepe Willie and who is that exactly? AC: You know, it's an interesting little story and I'll tell it to you and your listeners 'cause it's funny. Back then they wanted us to record for Little Anthony and the Imperials. They wanted Prince and myself to do some tracks for them so they flew us out, I think a guy named Troy Sylvester was the producer, flew us out to New York and put us up in a really nice hotel. And we were out there and we came up with some songs. We came up with a bunch of songs, actually, some things that wound up coming out on a lot of stuff. I know there was one that came out on Chaka Khan's that's (singing) "Chaka Khan, Chaka Khan", I think it's called "I Feel For You". That was originally done for that project. I think there was a song called "With You" that was done in New York. It wasn't really for that project, it was done at the same time "Do Me Baby" was done. There were a lot of songs that were done at that time period but we got stranded in New York, 'cause obviously the producer didn't pay the hotel bill so Prince and myself kind of got booted out of the hotel. So we were wandering around New York cold, cause it was cold out. So we ran across a friend of mine, one of my high school buddies and luckily I was able to get some cash from him and we got a hotel and we were cool for the rest of the stay. G: Tell me about this song "Just Another Sucker". You've on bass. I mean those were early sessions for you right? AC: Yeah, those were really early. We were, what was happening was Pepe was trying to get a solo deal himself. He had himself and two girls and they were doing a group thing and so they just had us sit in and just do session stuff. We were just trying to make some money, never knew that they were gonna wind up coming out on any kind of bootleg thing, but my thing is, anyway a brother can make some money, you know, he's got my blessing, 'cause I know how rough it can be sometimes trying to make some money, so... G: We're you surprised when this came out, I mean all of sudden it came out of nowhere and you said "Wow, I didn't know this was ever going to be released?" AC: Yeah, I had no idea this was gonna be released. You know I was playing at the time so anytime I strap my bass on or started playing, I'm hoping people are gonna hear it. So I'm trying to play my best and I'm not embarrassed about anything that I ever do. I mean if it comes out 20 years from now, 50 years from now, I'm still going to be proud of it, 'cause I know I was playing from the heart. That's what it's all about. G: Were you there for Prince's "For You" album, the very first album? AC: Yeah, I was there when it was being cut, was involved in the whole situation. Did it in San Francisco in the Record Plant in Sausalito. G: Owen Husney had a place out here right? AC: In San Francisco? Actually it wasn't his place, it was the record company's. They rented a place in Corta Madera I guess, I'm not real familiar with that area. I remember, 'cause we didn't have a driver's license but we were driving anyway. G: All these songs in here, on this album credits, it says that he did everything. I mean would you say that? Did he pretty much play everything, play every instrument for this album? AC: Actually, he pretty much did. I'd have to say he pretty much played everything. You know there was a little bit here and there, but for the most part he played everything and I wouldn't want to take any credit from what he did 'cause I think he did a great job and I was right there. So it's pretty true to what it says, you know, performed, played, produced and all that kind of stuff by Prince. G: In 1979, he came out with the "Prince" album. Were you more involved in this record? AC: A little bit. I think I played and sang on that one a little bit more than I actually got credit but it wasn't credited in the way of I did this or I did that but it was credited, I think, "Heaven sent help" or something like that. G: So Prince pretty much kept in touch with you and played everything and used you for the tour. AC: UhhhÉI played a little bit here and there. You know a lot of times what happens, 'cause I know there's a lot of rumors saying that I did this and I played that, but what happened was that he had a recording studio and we'd have a lot of jam sessions, and sometimes you jam and a song would come out of it, right? And you wouldn't know for sure whether you played bass on it or not because it was a jam session when you went in. When he got through it wound up being a song, so you'd hear the song later and you'd go, "Wait a minute, that sounds like..." you know, but you were never quite sure because my bass style and his bass style is a lot alike. It's like my guitar style and his guitar style is a lot alike. Obviously I played bass a lot longer than he did and he kind of picked up how I play bass and he played guitar a lot longer that I did, so I kind of picked up his style of guitar from playing back and forth, so I mean when you hear us play, it sounds a lot alike, whether I'm playing bass or whether he's playing bass or I'm playing guitar or he's playing guitar. So it got kind of hard to tell, so I really didn't want to say, "Oh, I did this or I did that," because it reallyÉ see my thing is, I do my thing and get credit for it, so I'm not trying to get credit for anything I didn't do. By the same token, if I did it, really only he knows for sure and I'm sure he wouldn't try to like not give me credit (little louder) now would he? G: Naw, he wouldn't at all. We just wanted to know, man, 'cause we always wondered. (laughs) Now do you remember the Rick James tour, first big giant tour right? AC: Oh yeah. We had a lot of big giant tours but I think that was the first one. Yeah, I remember that. That was a good gig. I know I had a little fallout with Rick right before that gig 'cause he pointed a bop gun at me (laughs). I think that's what it was, no, what was itÉ love gun, what was the thing he had? G: Yeah, love gun. AC: Right, he pointed that thing at me and that thing shot stuff out and I'm like, "Listen brother, don't point guns (laughs), you don't point guns at brothers. But anyways, we worked that out and everything was cool. G: And during that time, it's actually in print, that he talked about Prince saying that he was mentally unstable and kind of weird, right? He was quoted as saying that. AC: I wouldn't be surprised, but that wouldn't be cool for him to make a statement like that. I mean, far be it for him or really anybody else in the music business to call someone unstable. I mean, 'cause this is a pretty wacky business. I mean, it's a little strange anyway, so for him to call somebody strange, 'cause that's what this is all about, it's about being unique and being different. So I think that anybody calling somebody strange in this business, sounds like a little bit of jealousy and you should leave that alone. You can lose fans like that. G: For "Dirty Mind," were you more involved in the record or was it once again Prince just coming through with these jams and having you come through later? AC: You know it's really hard to say 'cause when you say was I involved, 'cause when you think about all of the stuff that you're naming, I'm always there. I'm always making music and I'm always involved. What winds up being on tape is all influenced by everybody around you and when you listen to stuff, especially when you have really talented people around you and obviously I'm not trying to toot anyone's horn but I think I've got some talent and I think that a lot of people around had talent, so I think you're influenced by your surroundings. So I definitely hear a lot of things that I do in some of the music and then I definitely, specifically play on certain songs. So I mean, I think I'm definitely involved, but I think,once again for the most part he played it all and did his thing and he's really great at it. G: And you guys on stage, outrageous! Started wearing like underwear on stage, zebra striped and a little bit of everything else. I mean you were first doing that right? AC: Yeah, well actually how that worked out was we did our very first gig at the Roxy here in Los Angeles and it really wasn't underwear but I used to wear clear pants. I don't know if you've ever seen the Dick Clark thing, any of the early stuff. I was wearing clear pants but under the clear pants I couldn't be naked so I had to wear some black underwear. So people just assumed I had black underwear on, you know if you saw from a distance it looked like I was just somebody standing up here in his underwear. But what happened was, his management -- 'cause the girls were screaming and they were trying to tear my clear pants off (laughs) -- and it was like, "Hey man, this is Prince's thing," and I'm like I didn't care if I was in the band or not 'cause me and Prince were really tight, so it's like, "Look man, I'm going to do what I want. If I can't do what I want then I don't want to be in this band." So they couldn't stop me from doing what I wanted to do so they came and tried to say, "Well, why don't you try to wear some different stuff?" and I'm like, "You know what, later for this gig," and they're like, "Ah, no. Ok, just wear what you want." So the second gig, 'cause we did two gigs that night, the first show and the second show. For the second show he came out, he had on some like underwear (laughs). Just straight underwear! There were no clear pants (laughs). So that's how that whole thing started. So it wasn't long after that that I stopped wearingÉ 'cause after a while, if one person kind of has that vibe, it's cool. With two people then it starts turning into the Chip n' Dale thing, so I put some pants back on and let him have the thing and it was his thing after that. G: You were kind of known for wearing jeans, right? AC: Yeah, I kind of went into the whole tore-up jean thing and you know, just doing something different. I really don't like toÉ I'm one of those kinds of people, I'm a nonconformist. I don't like to be like anything else which is why I'm always doing (laughs) strange stuff. G: You guys were real free with your bodies and free with your music. That's what it just seemed like. You guys were free. AC: That's what it's about, man. You don't break new ground by being anything other than free. If you start trying to constrain yourself or fit into some kind of box, you're really notÉ if you're talented and you're born with talent, your talent is not seeing the light of day. You have to be true to your talent. It's a gift and if you're not true to it, you're liable to get it taken away. So you need to just express yourself. G: During this tour you were going to New York, Paris. Were those tours great, going to like Europe and receiving that crowd? AC: Well, you got to understand, man, I'm from the projects (laughs). So a brother from the projects in Paris? (laughs) That's like a lovely experience. I mean it was great. I unfortunately got a hold of some serious strange, I mean they have like hash bars and things like that. We were in Amsterdam and I ran into these girls and they hooked me up with I guess hash or something like that. I never had that before but it completely made me like, I was a little disorientated for a couple of days. But it was cool. Obviously all after the gig, 'cause I don't believe in performing in altered states of minds or anything like that. I try to keep a clear head about myself. I mean after the gig we did go and party. So I wound up staying in Paris a little extra. I stayed there a couple weeks after the gig. G: When you started pursuing your solo career, did you use the experience you saw from Warner Brothers? AC: After I split the group, 'cause that last tour I did we kind of had a fallout because there was a problem about a couple of songs and things like that. I was like, "You know what, I don't wanna hassle about this song. Take the song (laughs). Take the credit, I don't care. I'll write some other songs," and so I split the group. So he was trying to do this European tour and trying to do Saturday Night Live and at the time we used to be really close, 'cause obviously he was adopted by my family and all that kind of stuff. So he went to my mom and said, "Listen, why don't you talk him into doing this gig. It's really important, blah, blah, blah." So my mom said, "Why don't you do it. He's like a brother to you. You should do it." So I'm like cool. I said, "I'm gonna do it but you gotta pay me some more money," 'cause I was only getting a couple hundred dollars, right , and so he made a big deal about me asking for more money. So I was like, "You know what, never mind. I'll do it for free." So I did it for free but when I came back (whispers) I was broke! (laughs) So I had to really get my hustle on. So I wrote some letters to Columbia and sent them some demo tapes and that whole thing and pretty much got it on myself. I also hooked up with Owen Husney and had him make some calls on my behalf as well. And once he called and got some connections happening I had him become my manager as well. G: In the video "Uptown" there's this part where you push Prince out the way and take lead vocals. What was that about? AC: Well you know, liveÉ we used to, the cool thing about playing in a band with somebody that you're really cool with like me and Prince playing together is because we really know each other like brothers so it's like, "Move man (laughs), I'm singing this verse." Or he would just come and grab me by my shirt and pull me up to a microphone or something. Now normally, if somebody grabs me by my shirt, it's on. But when you're really close, these kinds of things become petty. It's just fun, 'cause performing should be fun and you should have that. It should be loose. I really like seeing some of the groups that are performing now. The one thing I like about Wu Tang and some of those groups is they have that same kind of like attitude. They look like they're just having fun and I like that. That's where I come from, just that loose... and when it starts getting too uptight, that's not my thing and I let other people do that. G: Let's talk about the deal with CBS. How did that deal come to be? You just sent some demos and they said, "Let's do this."? AC: Basically yeah. It took a while. I spent some time after I came off the tour doing the Prince thing. I took basically a year off and had a baby, well I didn't have the baby, my girlfriend had a baby, and did that whole thing and wanted to spend some time with my little girl and I just chilled. I was trying to figure out what I wanted to do, 'cause when you're in a band, like Prince's thing, people make comparisons. You have to find a way how to break out of that, and the one thing that I figured that I wanted to do was I really wanted to be an underground artist. I wasn't interested in being a big sensation, 'cause I kind of lived that through the Prince group. That was like a pretty big rock group. So I was able to kind of fulfill that dream. I wanted to be more underground and just be able to do what I wanted, 'cause I was really into Devo at the time and all that electronic type stuff. So I really got into that. So I thought, what I'm going to do is, I'm going to do something a little different, 'cause Prince is doing this over there. I was gonna come out and do The Time thing, what The Time wound up doing. I don't know if you know it or not, but I was involved in putting together The Time originally. G: Yeah, let's talk about that real quick. You were around when The Time recorded their first album. Tell me how you were influential in that. AC: Well actually I'm on some of that, too, as well, playing bass. But what happened, at the time we were trying to put some things together. I was trying to put some other groups together. I put "The Girls" group together. I put together a couple of other groups, just trying to make some money 'cause being just in Prince's band, I really wasn't making that much money, nothing against him, but I just wasn't making that much money. I was living with him, living at my mom's crib and doing that whole thing, and it just wasn't a whole lot of money, and I saw him and he was coming up. He had his own crib, had a nice ride, and I'm like, "Wait a minute!" (laughs) Then I saw him turning down productions, offers from like Diana Ross and some other people, and this is like good money, and I'm like going, "Wait a minute, man, let's just do some of this." So finally I said, "Let's just put together a group. If you don't want to do any of these people, let's put together a group and try to find somebody that you can really be involved," 'cause I would have done it myself but I didn't have a name, and at the time if you didn't have a name, people are gonna look at you like you're crazy. So he said, "Why don't you guys put together a group?" And I talked to Morris and he was at the time playing with Flyte Tyme and had Alexander O'Neil singing lead vocals and I said to Morris, "Why don't you put together a group so we can get something happening at the side?" and he started trying to put his thing together and got those fellows together. He wasn't originally going to sing lead, he was gonna play drums, 'cause Morris actually played. So when we got time after we came back off one of the tours, we started working with them and we kind of had a fallout because some of the songs that I had -- that they wanted to use for The Time stuff -- I was gonna use for this girl group that I was working with. So we had a fallout about wanting to use these songs I had, so that was when I was like, "Hey, you know what, ya'll go ahead and do your thing, I'm gonna do my thing." So that's how that whole thing went down. And after we came back from Europe, 'cause the cool thing was that when I was in FranceÉ 'cause the whole thing with the zoot suit and all that kind of stuff came from an idea that I saw when I was in France. There was this guy on French television that was doing this thing. He had on a zoot suit, this dude was cool, you talk about cool, this dude was straight up cool. He had on the zoot suit and he had two or three girls on each side, the music was kind of cool, kind of funky, Basa Nova-ish kind of thing, and he would sing a little bit in French and just kind of like groove, and I just thought, man that is so cool, nobody's doing that. So I thought when I come back to the States I'm gonna do that, and I called Prince in his hotel room and I said, "Man, you got to check this dude out," and I had him check the dude out. So he was like, "Man, it was cool, totally cool." So we went back and thought that would be kind of the vibe that I was gonna do, right? (laughs) But when we fell out, I was gonna do it anyway, but he quick and did The Time and The Time came out and did that thing before I got a chance to do it. So I didn't do that, so I had to come out with something totally different. So I came up with the whole electronic thing and doing that whole futuristic thing, which obviously was (laughing) very underground. G: Tell me about this song, "Living In the New Wave." How'd you come up with this one? AC: Well, I really wanted to do something different. I knew people were going to compare me to the Prince thing, and there was a lot of rumors out that we had a lot of animosity between us, and people thought that I was jealous, which was completely wrong, and all kinds of other stuff. I just wanted to do something, whether it was big or a flop, I really didn't care. I just wanted to do something original. If nothing else, I could be respected for being original, which I was definitely original. So I thought I'm going to come up with something completely different. I'm gonna make a statement. So I did. I came up with "Living In the New Wave," which totally set me apart from the whole Time thing which was out and Prince's thing which was out and set a whole different side to the whole Minneapolis sound that was created back in that time period. G: Who were some of the people that were early inspirations for you in your hometown? AC: Well, Sonny Thompson is one of 'em. I mean, you talk about someone who could play the guitar, he's left handedÉ I mean some of the memories that I have growing up and being able to see some of these bands. There's a guy named Joe Lewis, oh monster drummer! I just used to sit and watch him, I would be just mesmerized because he would just rock, man, and I was almost hypnotized 'cause dude was just on beat. It was a whole different thing. That time in my life was one of the best times in my life, 'cause that was what really gave me the love for doing what I do, because I was able to really, really understand. They got to a point in their craft that few people get to and I was able to see that and I think I was so influenced by it, that it inspired me to push harder and push my band harder, 'cause I used to push the band and really try to get to that next phase, 'cause at the time we were just a young band and a lot of people in the band weren't taking it that seriously, and for me it's a life thing. This is what I do. I've never worked a job in my life. Music is all I've ever done. That's the way luckily, knock on wood, the way it's been for me, so I always push my other band members and try to get them into that frame of mind. I would always tell them, "We're gonna be famous, we're gonna be big!" They thought I was crazy and it didn't quite happen (laughs) the wayÉ it wound up being a little bit different, but we did wind up doing good. I'm still glad to see things worked out, even though it wound up getting kind of fragmented and broken off. But I'm really proud of everybody, from Prince to Morris to Jimmy, Terry, all of those guys, 'cause I know those guys so well and we've been involved in things before we were famous, after people knew who we were. They really wound up being really cool people. Sometimes it's really easy for people to get attitudes and get stuck up and really, really kind of bogus from just being famous. You make a lot of money and then you turn into a different person and a lot of people do that. In some cases it's happened to some people that I know, but I think all in all I think that they've kept their heart and really their respect for each other who kind of helped them even though they may not give the credit, but at least they have the love, and I appreciate that. G: Tell me about the 1984 release "The Girls" on Columbia Records. Was this part of your contract to put another group together? AC: Oh no, no, no. That was kind of a nightmare actually, I have to say. That album came out because, as I said, I put a girl group together 'cause I was trying to find something to do to give myself some extra cash and I put them together when I was still in Prince's group. G: Yeah, but there were some jams on this album. Tell me about "S-e-s-e-x." What made you want to bust out with this one? AC: Well, once again I wanted to be different. I think when you strive to be different, you strive to break barriers, and I had done that song a long timeÉ in fact I did that song before Vanity 6 had come out and once I did that, everybody was like rushing to put a group out before they came out. Like I said, I was trying to get them a deal and then once again Prince,'cause he had his thing with Warner Brothers, he was able to get Vanity out before my girl group came out, so it seemed like my girl group came after them, which wasn't quite how it worked out. But the bottom line is, listen to that "S-e-s-e-x," listen to the keyboard parts and some of the other parts on there and listen to some of the other things that came out shortly after that, like (singing) "Do-do-do-do, do-do" [synth line to Jam & Lewis' "What Have You Done For Me Lately"] Some of that Minneapolis stuff (singing) "What have youÉ," it's like a lot of similarities in a lot of things that are happening. But I think we all come from the same town and I think we all listen to the same stuff. I think we all learn from each other. G: It really wasn't a Prince sound, it was a Minneapolis sound right? AC: Oh yeah, definitely a Minneapolis sound. To call it a Prince sound, 'cause Prince obviously made a lot of stuff famous for Minneapolis but I think that I made a lot of noise. I think that Jimmy and Terry made a lot of noise. I think there's a lot of people still coming out nowÉ Next is making a lot of noise, I think Mint Condition, who I actually worked with early in their career, is making a lot of noise. There's a lot of groups that are making a lot of noise, that to call it just a Prince sound and to call Minneapolis "Prince town" and stuff like that is really kind of not that cool. I think we all appreciate his contribution to, not just hit the sound of Minneapolis, but the sound that he's been able to kind of influence all around the world, so I think everybody owes a debt of gratitude to where he was coming from, but I think that a lot of us had a lot to do with kind of making up part of that sound. I think if you take any of the equations away, if you take me out of that equation, it's not going to be the same Minneapolis sound that people were familiar with, and if you take any of the components away from it, it's going to change (laughs) quite drastically. G: Now who came out first, was it the "Mary Jane Girls," "Vanity" or "The Girls"? Who had the idea first? AC: I don't know. I know that the girl group I put together was put together before Vanity 6. That I know for sure 'cause actually at the time, before they came out, Vanity and I was going out. G: Wow. Did you meet Vanity before Prince did? AC: No, I didn't meet her before he did, but I went out with her before he did. 'Cause I had gotten invited to, they had a Minneapolis Music Award, and I usually don't go to award shows 'cause I don't really believe too much in all that kind of stuff, but I went to this award show 'cause my mom kind of sweated me and she said, "You really gotta go, you really gotta go." So I went. If my mom asks me to do something, I mean I love her so much, anything she'd ask me to do, I'm gonna do without even questioning it. So I went. I went in tore-up jeans (laughs), I think some Indian boots and just looking like completeÉ like I'm just here to do this for my mom (laughs) So I got there and I saw this girl that I could not believe, and I saw Morris and I said, "Hey man, who is she?" And he told me who she was and he said that Prince was working with her, and I said, "Well, is he going out with her?" and he said, "Naw," so I was like ok. G: So moms was a big influence on your career right? AC: Oh absolutely! Definitely. She was like our biggest fan, my biggest fan. She was all of our biggest fan. She was always right there, always pushing people to let us play places. She also let us record and rehearse down in the basement. I mean that's the only place we could rehearse. If you don't got no place to rehearse (laughs) you can't have no band, you can't learn. We couldn't rehearse at any of the otherÉwe wound up rehearsing at one of my percussionist's place sometimes. We couldn't rehearse at Prince's place so we only had my mom's place. So that's where we learned and got our whole thing straight. G: What was it like in the '80s going to all these television shows. Was it a good feeling? AC: It was a great feeling. The difference was, 'cause I did a lot of these things being in Prince's group, I did so many things and it was really, really, really popular. So doing these things on my own was cool because it was doing my own thing. Not that I didn't really enjoy what I was doing with Prince, 'cause I had a blast, 'cause to be honest ,I liked being in a band better than I liked the solo thing. So the solo thing, it's all on you and I like being surrounded by a lot of people and just having fun, and when you're on your own, it's just you. So there's definitely a difference, but I still had fun. I would always have fun anytime I was doing a gig. I would get into what I was doing. G: In 1985 you came out with "A.C." and you collaborated with Prince on "Dance Electric," but why or what happened to make you get together with him and collaborate once again? AC: Well actually that was a thing he came up with. He called me up, I was in the studio and he called me up and said, "Listen man, I got this song that I think we should really hook up and we should do this." And he played it to me over the phone and I said, "Yeah, that sounds like something that's right up my street." So he flew to L.A. and we hooked up. I was already in the studio working on my album and he came and brought me the masters. We sat down, listened to it and hung out, and he kind of gave me the whole run down on itÉ where he was coming from with the track, and so he actually left it there and just said, "Do what you feel. Do what you do." So I kind of did my thing to it. --------------- -- Bart Van Hemelen http://pr1nc3.com/BVH/-----... Looking for answer? Why not try: http://pr1nc3.com/google.asp (for searching alt.music.prince history) http://www.prince.org/faq/ http://www.prince.org/ (if there's any news, they'll probably have it) --------------- "Reality TV is like actual reality much in the same way that pro wrestlers are wrestlers and exotic dancers are dancers - not quite the real thing, but they draw a crowd." -- Matthew Felling, Washington D.C.'s Center for Media and Public Affairs, in Entertainment Weekly, issue # 692/693, January 24/31, 2003 [Edited 8/27/05 2:41am] | |
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Good drop. | |
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A very good read. Thanks for posting it. | |
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thanx for dat, did not know Andre had the "cool' idea, but I dont think he could have done like Morris | |
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Most excellent!!! Finally, an Andre interview - it's always cool to get a first-hand account of things from those who actually lived it. The one part that did surprise me, though, was when he stated that he actually dug being in a band more than being a solo artist. My author page: https://www.amazon.com/au...eretttruth | |
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moved into an "upper middle class" neighborhood and met prince ehhh..
wheres that person who slammed me for hinting that prince was middle class? Space for sale... | |
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sosgemini said: moved into an "upper middle class" neighborhood and met prince ehhh..
wheres that person who slammed me for hinting that prince was middle class? ----- No the discuss was about if Prince was middle class. He lived in someone else's house and the story goes he left a middle class area to live in a working class area when he went to live with Andre's family. Perhaps their status of their neighborhood is not looked at working class by Andre but, other people who were around back then have said it was working class. | |
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laurarichardson said: sosgemini said: moved into an "upper middle class" neighborhood and met prince ehhh..
wheres that person who slammed me for hinting that prince was middle class? ----- No the discuss was about if Prince was middle class. He lived in someone else's house and the story goes he left a middle class area to live in a working class area when he went to live with Andre's family. Perhaps their status of their neighborhood is not looked at working class by Andre but, other people who were around back then have said it was working class. As someone from MPLS, I can tell you that it might be considered a middleclass "black" neighborhood (not by "white" standards) but it sure as shit ain't upper middle-class anything. It is considered one of the poorest areas of MPLS and also, unfortunetly, has the highest crime rate. [Edited 8/29/05 6:05am] | |
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4nowneway said: thanx for dat, did not know Andre had the "cool' idea, but I dont think he could have done like Morris
I would take Dez Dickerson's word on this. I think he addresses itin his book. | |
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The girl group debate is meaningless. Between the Girls, Vanity 6, Mary jane Girls, and any other chick group (Morris Day's Day Zs or Madame X), Vanity 6 was the prototype and they were actually the best overall. Vanity alone makes that a sure thing. Susan was as beautiful and even less talented. But when they hit the stage, you wanted to bang them. When you heard Nasty Girl on the radio, you wanted to bang them. When you saw one of their cheap ass videos, you wanted to bang them. And lets face it - when it comes down to the girl groups - especially in the 80s - it was about bangability. There were no groups like the Supremes in that era: the new MTV era. If you looked good in lace and had some sexy moves (which Vanity had like no one else), you were a hit. With Prince backing you, thats it. | |
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Obviously it was an issue to Andre since he seems to have felt Prince ripped off yet another one of his ideas as well as Vanity from him. (DIDN'T know Andre hit that first. )
BTW, EnVogue came out in the 80s. That's as Supremes as you can get without Diana Ross as the lead. | |
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Anyone get the feeling that Andre Cymone was backpeddling his Ghost Work.
"Well, its hard to say if I did this o that" I still think Andre played more on the records. Alot Ghost musicians like to be unclear on specific session work. Steve Bailey (jazz fusion bassist who plays with Vic) is like that. Good Luck getting a list of what he is on. It's a black Hole. But he was on alot ALOT of records. Anyways, the point is if Ghost musicians are bound by an agreement they can hint and tease but not sya. Im not sure what I make of Andre's comments. | |
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Andre WAS on a lot of the earlier work. So were others. There are lots of ways to take credit. If there's a jam session and someone records it, and then replays all the parts the other musicians played and slaps his/her name on it, there is nothing legally those musicians can do without the proper proof other than make a claim. Prince pissed off a lot of cats back in the day. Like Andre said, it was the MN sound; not just Prince's sound. Lots of artists contributed. | |
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Very cool. Good thread. SynthiaRose said "I'm in love with blackguitaristz. Especially when he talks about Hendrix."
nammie "What BGZ says I believe. I have the biggest crush on him." http://ccoshea19.googlepa...ssanctuary http://ccoshea19.googlepages.com | |
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Quite interesting..... | |
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Thanks for the interview. We never hear much from Andre anymore so I'm always happy to see any info, old or new. Andy is a four letter word. | |
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thanx-he seems so cool | |
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interesting read.
in it AC definitely does not come across as "bitter" or anything after all that he went through with prince.. still, part of me wonders if his comments in this interview were at all "calculated" to come across this way, to specifically be contrite (or whatever) because AC has read/heard about how many have portrayed him as being bitter.. I will always dig "Kelly's Eyes" & "Satisfaction". I'll see you tonight..
in ALL MY DREAMS.. | |
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