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Thread started 12/29/04 10:54am

piscesglenn

Time Mag Mentions Prince - In RJ Obit

FABULOUS FLAMEOUT

It is a testament to the greatness of Rick James' greatest hit, Super Freak, that those who would surely take offense were they to read the song's lyrics on the page—"She's a very kinky girl/ The kind you don't take home to mother"—probably danced to it at their wedding.

James died of a heart attack that was most likely hastened by the "at least nine drugs" coroners found in his system. He was never a model of restraint. Raised in Buffalo, N.Y., by a single mother who ran numbers for the mob, James first discovered he could move a crowd at a school talent show. After a draft-dodging sojourn to Canada, he returned to the U.S. and signed a deal with Motown. (His uncle, Melvin Franklin, was an original member of the Temptations.) In 1981 James released Super Freak, his masterpiece about a sex-starved groupie, and for a moment, he eclipsed Prince as rock's libidinal funk hero. The rest of his life, though, was spent battling a cocaine addiction fueled by his Super Freak royalties. James laughed when comedian Dave Chappelle mocked him as a high priest of lost talent and lasciviousness; he thought Chappelle should play him in the movie of his life. You can guess what James wanted to call it.
By Josh Tyrangiel http://www.time.com/time/...iam/6.html

RIP



Good picture of RJ...sad...
[Edited 12/29/04 11:07am]
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Reply #1 posted 12/29/04 11:35am

CynicKill

piscesglenn said:

FABULOUS FLAMEOUT

It is a testament to the greatness of Rick James' greatest hit, Super Freak, that those who would surely take offense were they to read the song's lyrics on the page—"She's a very kinky girl/ The kind you don't take home to mother"—probably danced to it at their wedding.

James died of a heart attack that was most likely hastened by the "at least nine drugs" coroners found in his system. He was never a model of restraint. Raised in Buffalo, N.Y., by a single mother who ran numbers for the mob, James first discovered he could move a crowd at a school talent show. After a draft-dodging sojourn to Canada, he returned to the U.S. and signed a deal with Motown. (His uncle, Melvin Franklin, was an original member of the Temptations.) In 1981 James released Super Freak, his masterpiece about a sex-starved groupie, and for a moment, he eclipsed Prince as rock's libidinal funk hero. The rest of his life, though, was spent battling a cocaine addiction fueled by his Super Freak royalties. James laughed when comedian Dave Chappelle mocked him as a high priest of lost talent and lasciviousness; he thought Chappelle should play him in the movie of his life. You can guess what James wanted to call it.
By Josh Tyrangiel http://www.time.com/time/...iam/6.html

RIP



Good picture of RJ...sad...
[Edited 12/29/04 11:07am]



I'm glad he liked that joke. And his stunt at the BET Awards porved that he adopted the mantra.
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