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Cox News TRC Review TRC Review, Cox News Service
Copyright 2001 Cox Enterprises, Inc. Cox News Service December 6, 2001 Thursday SECTION: Entertainment, Television and Culture LENGTH: 210 words HEADLINE: Recycled Prince with religion BYLINE: Bob Underwood DATELINE: DAYTON, Ohio BODY: Review: B CD Genre: Pop Artist: Prince Title: "The Rainbow Children" Deep in2 the jam on "The Everlasting Now," track 13 on "The Rainbow Children," a voice comments, "This is funky, but I just wish he'd play like he used 2." Next sound: that person getting smacked. The joke makes the point that Prince didn't leave his fans; rather, they left him (and ignored his previous album, "Rave Un2 the Joy Fantastic," though it was packed with should-have-been hits). While the new album occasionally lacks flow, it's Prince, indulgences and all. So, for all ex-fans, read on to the tune of Prince's mid-1980s smash "When Doves Cry": "Dig if u will the new disc / A concept CD unfolds / A slowed, deepened voice narrates / Can u, Prince fans _ can u go with this? Hear if u can the fable / About serving God as one / 14 songs sing gospel-like praises / They make some heat /Though preachy funk gets old. Still how can u just leave Prince standing? / Alone in a business so cold / Maybe you're just 2 demanding / Maybe Prince's ambitions are 2 bold / Maybe it's much like his others / With no guest rapper this time / Why won't the old fans discover? / This is what it sounds like when Prince tries." Bob Underwood writes for the Dayton Daily News. | |
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