This is a "featured" topic! — From here you can jump to the « previous or next » featured topic.
New topic PrintableI have read somewhere else
A rumor has surfaced yesterday: album, 20TEN, would be distributed on July 9 with French newspaper Le Monde ...
if this comes true, good 4 anyone going to the arras gig!
..& good 4 the french, obviously [Edited 6/24/10 3:41am] | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
so maybe everywhere where he is playing !,-) | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
the internet is over?
well obviously for him, it is. this too shall pass | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Well, we saw how he handled the websites... Pills and thrills and daffodils will kill... If you don't believe me or don't get it, I don't have time to try to convince you, sorry. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
exactly lol, and just because he couldnt make the internet work in his favor, doesnt automatically mean the internet is over this too shall pass | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
since i'm at home waiting for an appointment at the vet this afternoon, i figured, what the hell, i'll just translate for the english speaking orgers. here's part 1. part 2 coming soon
'what do you want to hear?'. This can't be true. I'm sitting two meters away from one of the most mysterious and successful popstars of the past decades and he's asking ME what he should play, sitting there at his black piano. That the mysterious Prince should allow himself to be interviewed this freely in his paisley park studio's in the american minneapolis is already inconceivable but what's happening now is beyond words. And something tells me the last surprise is yet to come.
'you have to hop on the first plain. Now. He wants to do the interview tomorrow'. Prince [52] may have spent the last few years outside of the spotlight but nothing has changed. The legendary musician is still as unpredictable as ever. For weeks we have been trying to get this interview scheduled – and due to the new music that he will release exclusively through this paper on july 10th – and just when I started thinking the interview will never happen, this email drops at my manager's. 'sorry but this is how he wants to do it. It's this, or nothing at all. Good luck'.
When I arrive at the airport in Minneapolis, 32 hours later and switch on my cellphone, some new instructions appear. 'You will be picked up at your hotel this afternoon. Please be aware that it is strictly off limits to use photo or soundrecording devices and that you will have to check in your mobile phone'. Damn. It used to be like that before and it seems it's still going down this way, the chosen ones who succeed to enter the inner sanctum of Prince won't return with a trophy. No pics to prove it and so voice on tape.
For those who may have forgotten: they don't come more illusive than Prince. Only very rarely does the headstrong popstar give interviews. In his heyday, at the time of classics such as Purple Rain and Sign o the Times, this lead to gossip and wild stories about his life to a point where no one knew what was truth and what was made up. Prince, the man who never slept and forever worked in his studio. Prince, the man with a girl on every finger. Prince, the man who would mercilessly show his musicians the door. Prince, the man who hid a true treasure trove of songs in his paisley park vaults, amongst which sessions with the legendary miles davis.
And here's the first surprise. It's happens faster than I'd imagined. Shelby, the lady who comes to pick me up at the hotel, turns out to be one of his back up singers. She drives me to a side- entrance of the large white complex that is the headquarters of Prince. A building as big as a film studio, on a wide road. Once inside, she disappears through a door. 'Shall I bring him in?' I hear her ask.
And before I know it, I'm standing in front of him. Wait. Back. Shouldn't there be 10 managers and 20 pr assistants standing here. Because that's what usually happens with stars of this kind of magnitude. No, a laughing prince extends a relaxed hand. 'How's it going?'. I gasp for breath and try to focus. Yes, he's small. He's wearing strange clothes: white shoes, white loose pants, a white sleeveless vest and under that a green shirt with wide sleeves. But he looks young and almost like a rascal.
'What I'd like to propose is that you'll listen to my new music first', he says, with a voice that sounds very low one moment and much higher the next. He points me to a stool in a corner of a the red and purple control room of his recordingstudio and puts a pair of headphones on me. 'That's how I like to listen to it myself', he says. 'with the music through the speakers and the headphones at the same time'. He sees my notebook. 'I wouldn't make notes if I were you. That would make this seem like a press review of a movie. To unnatural. Listen and enjoy'.
He presses PLAY and disappears. So here I am. At the epicenter of Prince's universe. The place where it all happens. There are candles burning here and there. On the mixing board I see the symbol he used as a name for a while, when he didn't want to be called Prince anymore, during the time he was battling his record company. There's also a dictionary. Even a genius needs a little help from time to time.
The music rings in my ears. And what music! Naturally, I was a bit scared of another album full of mediocre songs, the likes of which he's produced so often in the past decade. But this is good. Very good. I hear songs and sounds that take me back to a time when the world was spellbound by this inventive musician. I start to smile and before I know it, I'm dancing. Thinking 'there is bound to be a camera around here somehwere which the sly dude uses to keep an eye on me from another room', I try to pull myself together.
And then, all of a sudden, Shelby is back, standing next to me. 'Come on', she says and leads me through a hall decorated with gold records, to a sort of salon. Surprise number 2. Prince is sitting behind a big black piano which looks futuristic and art deco all at once. Shelby seats me on a chair and walks over to stand next to two other women, dressed in black, next to the piano. No way! Yes! Prince starts to play and together they go through a loose rendition of Diamonds & Pearls. My jaw drops. Next is Nothing Compares 2 U. I have to pinch myself.
'What do you want to hear?', Prince suddenly asks. Blackout. Sometimes it Snows in April, I manage to remember. And I'm in luck: they haven't rehearsed this beautiful slow songs yet. It means that the ladies are silent and I've got Prince all to myself, searching, jazzy, improvising on the piano. Fcuz, he pulls it off. 'Thank you', I say once he's done. 'You're welcome', he says, smiling back at me. All of a sudden I'm seeing timid brown puppy eyes and a pouted, shy mouth.
'Shall we go outside and talk?'. He holds the door and once on the patio he slides two metallic chairs up to a table. Once again I'm thinking 'where are the managers and the pr assistants?'. Where is that eternal person with stopwatch in hand who's telling me that I've got fifteen minutes, starting now? Why is it that in this large building there is no one to be seen? Not even a secretary or a doorman? But at the same time I realize, 'This is my interview. Now. Here. What was it I wanted to ask him again? Which one of my 350 questions should I fire off first?
'sorry I'm making you write', he apologises, 'I don't mind talking to you but I'm not a big fan of quotes. If you record this conversation, it's all gonna be there, black on white. Then there won't be no quotes that will haunt me for years. When, what I'm saying now, is something I might feel completely different about in a few years from now'.
In the midst of all this anxiety I'm starting to think to myself that I like this Prince a lot. 'Wait', he says 'let me get you a bottle of water'. I choose to start with Belgium. I tell him about those moments that are etched into my brain. That first concert at Vorst National at the end of the 80s. That smoldering hot Sign O The Times concert at the Sportpaleis in Antwerp. Does her remember Belgium at all? 'The things I remember about Belgium, are things I can't tell you', he answers teasingly, only to realize instantly that it sounds to bragging. 'Which doesn't mean I'm trying to be mysterious on purpose'.
Why has he suddenly decided to come to Europe and Belgium for a short tour? 'Simple: because they made me an offer I could hardly refuse', he smiles. Ah, I see, so not entirely insensitive to the financial side of the business. Because I don't know how much time he will allow me, I just throw that unavoidable Michael Jackson question in the ring. Is it weird, without Micheal, the star people pitted him against so often? Michael: the angel. Prince: the little devil. Because at one time, they were, together with Madonna, the greatest. 'Next question', is his ultra short answer; smiling.
So I just compliment him on his new music. 'Old music', he smiles. 'Me, I'm already three albums ahead at this point. You know what angers me? People who say: “Prince, oh yeah, I remember him from when he was at his peak”. What a load of rubbish. Music is my life. It's a profession. I just continue working and getting better at it. Come see me on july 10th at Werchter and you will see: our shows are even better now. I've become a much better guitarist. When I listen to my old albums now, I'm ashamed to hear how I played guitar back then'.
'I remember my father, a musician himself, introducing me to the music of Duke Ellington. Duke was a long end into his career by that time. Well: I might not have seen the early, legendary Duke, but I did see the experienced Duke. I saw the whole spectrum of that great musician. My father raised me, as far as music is concerned. He showed me what someone like Ellington stands for. He showed me that, in the end, it's only about the music. So come see us and you will find just as wide a world'.
'I'm working with music all of the time. My head runs over with it. And I have to get it out. It's like cleaning up a room. Do you know that feeling? Only once everything is tidy, will you be able to breathe again. Music is a part of my DNA. And the weird thing is: if I don't get the things I come up with out of my head, I'm unable to function. If you tour too much as an artist, you will burn up all your energy. It works the same way for me when I'm not playing or recording. That's when a strange kind of fatigue sets in'.
'Music can do a lot to a person. And I'm not even talking about the simple fact of electricity that goes through you body. A lifetime of playing electrical guitar does something to a person. I am convinced that all that electricity is the reason I still have so much hair'. I'm startled and look up. No trace of a smile. He's serious.
and true love lives on lollipops and crisps | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
i'm guessin/hoping he may have tied up a deal when he was in the uk the other week, as it was said that the x factor and j. ross stuff was something he was looking at 'whilst on a visit to the uk'...
mind u after the mail on sunday, where do u go ?
Sunday Sport ? BNP newsletter ? Chemtrail Gazette ?
| |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
We weren't talking about your guitar skills, Prince. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
People should really try to read better on this forum.
Let's avoid all making the same translation ! Oh well since he's propably already back on it, I'll post the translation I've already done on MoQuake | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
| |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU for translating this for us! So far, this is the best Prince interview/story I´ve read in years!!! [Edited 6/24/10 4:34am] See the man with the blue guitar, maybe one day he`ll be a star... | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
[Edited 6/24/10 4:37am] | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Wow, this is great so far. MUCH better than the Ebony one. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
ok, so someone already translated. didn't see that. oh well. here is the second part anyway
I do want to probe a bit deeper into the big mystery, regarding his career, to which he already referred just now. How can a gifted musician such as Prince continue to be so innovating all those years and effortlessly knock out classics, only to lose to plot completely a little further down the road? I use a quote from Sting “Once upon a time I felt like I had my finger at the pulse of Time. The hits just flowed out of me. Everything sat just right. And then everything seemed to shift, seemed as if I had lost contact and everything just became a lot harder”.
'It's only about the universe that you create', he answers, 'There is no Time. Hits, that's all about the machinery of music. If something is played on the radio often enough, it becomes a hit. Someone like Sting can have a hit at any moment in their career, just as long as his song is played on the radio often enough. Personally, I don't like the word Hit. It's not a word that gangsters came up with for nothing'. (laughs)
Ok, Today's music then. Once he said he wanted to create a bit of tension and danger in the dull world of music. What does he think when he sees the Lady GaGa's of today? Aren't we just back at where we were back then? Back at a music world without too much excitement? 'Well, there was indeed a bit of danger in the 80s. But consequently it became really dangerous, with just a little bit too much drugs and violence in the rap community. And now? Oh well. What it's all about it the music of nature. I'm trying to become one with that. This is, after all, the world of Jehova. You have to go where God is. And that is so powerful. There is an unbelievable calm in my world and that is what I'm trying to bring across to others.
So there we are. This is what has dominated the recent years of his life: his religion. Through his friend, musician Larry Graham, he was introduced to the JW religion. 'What has it taught you', I try to woo him. 'I don't want to say too much about that', he answers, almost shyly. 'If you want to, I can give you some books so you can figure it out for yourself. I could describe to you the street where I live. But no matter how accurate I do that, you won't fully know what it is like until you're standing on it and seeing it for yourself. You know?'
I try it along a different route. What does he think or feel when he looks at the cover of, say, his lovesexy album or when he reads back his sexual lyrics from back in the day? Does he wonder, 'what the hell was I thinking?'.
He smiles. 'I live in the here and now. You should do that too. You seem like a very nice person'.
Suddenly, out of the garden, as if out of thin air, two people appear at our table. An elderly Japanese woman and a man with a badge around his neck. 'Sir', he adresses Prince in a worried matter, 'Can you please help us. This woman came all the way from Japan to see a man who used to work here. Do you have his number? Could you please call him?'.
Prince gives me a sly look and whispers 'this could be fun'. The man turns out to be a taxi driver who drove the Japanese lady direct from the airport to paisley park. 'And what is the name of the man she's looking for?' Prince asks. “Prince”, the driver says. “Prince?”, Prince asks. “Indeed! Do you know him? Can you please call him?”
The Japanese lady is coyly watching the scene. Then she manages to utter a single sentence. “I came all the way from Japan, just to see you”. With the snap of a finger Prince resolves the situation. He calls one of the backing vocalists to the scene, asks her to arrange a hotel and some food for the Japanese woman and hush, off they are. Another wink. 'Never a dull moment, here at pailsey park'. And once again I'm think about managers and pr assistants and in this instance, security.
However surreal and funny that situation was, I still curse them because it is apparent that this incident has put an end to our interview. I try another question but to no avail. Prince walks inside, to a kitchen with a large flatscreen TV. 'Come, I want to show you something'. He picks up the remote and searches for a fragment from a taped episode of David Letterman's talkshow. 'What do you think about this?' he asks. A young, unbelievably energetic black singer bounces off the screen. My mouth opens. It's Janelle Monae.
'Look, as long as there are singers like here coming up, I'm not worried. This is the music world of today, everyone can make it. On his or her own. It took me fifteen years to get my freedom and get out of the noose of my recordcompany. The Most Beautiful Girl In The World came in 1995 and was my first single as a free artist in all that time.
Why would you even try with a big company in 2010? You can do it all on your own. That's why I'm giving away my music with your newspaper. God is a generous, loving, giving being. Do as God, it is written. Opportunities abound'.
Yes, I say, but why then did he recently close down his own website? “The internet is over”, he replies. “Why would I give my new music to Itunes? They refuse to pay me an advance on it. And then they get mad because I won't give them my music. Do you remember when MTV was still hot? And then there came a moment when MTV was, all of a sudden, done? That is the same as the internet. It's over. Besides, all those computers and all that digital business, that's redundant. It only makes your head clog up with numbers. And that can't be good for a person. A while ago I had a studio technician over and all he could do was think in numbers. He didn't stick around for long. I can't talk to cats like that'.
Ok, so without the internet. He's giving his new cd away with newspapers now. So what does the rest of his new business plan or his vision of the future look like? He looks me right in the eyes, smiles widely and says “I could tell ha, but then I would have to kill ya”. Then he pats me on my shoulder and runs off, down the hallway. I watch him leave and have to think about all those gossip stories about his hip replacements. Something prince reportedly refused on ground of religion. But whatever happened, it worked. Because this is not a 52 year old man, this is a funny 18 yr old. Be it on flats, and not in the eternal heels.
I realize my head is running over. Too many impressions, too many thoughts. I walk out of the kitchen and see an immense symbol on the black and white tiled floor. I look up and see a door on the first floor with the word “knowledge” on it. It's the study where, reportedly, all of his JW books are kept. And then, suddenly, a different Prince walks up. “If you don't mind, I'd like to leave it at this. I have another interview a little later”. He says goodbye and as soon as I walked in, I'm walking out again.
In my hotelroom I play the movie again, in my head. Somewhere halfway through I must have fallen asleep because it is 10 pm when the phone wakes me and it's Shelby 'You have to come to the studio right now. Prince is throwing a party. It's gonna be fun”. Oh boy, what's going to happen next?
When I arrive at the Paisley Park parking lot a little while later, there is just one white stretched limo with shiny hubcaps to be seen. A party? So where are all the guests? The side door opens, and a ravishing, tall lady appears, decked out like she's going to the Oscars. “Please be patient a little while longer” she smiles, showing her teeth.
She steps into the car and speeds off. I sit down on the sidewalk. Another door opens. It's Prince himself. “this way”.
And through that other door, I find myself, all of a sudden, in a kind of nightclub. On two huge screens on the walls I see Prince performing. “my concert at the montreux jazz festival, last year. Bottle of water?”. A little later three singers enter the stage, with two big plateaus, one with raw vegetables and one with fruit. When I pick up a piece of mango, I see a bible on the table.
Next one to enter is a man who could be a taxi driver as well as a JV preacher and also entering is the long model from the parking lot. “this is Bria”, Prince introduces her. Fcuz, Bria Valente, the singer whose Elixer was included in Prince's Lotusflower package. The woman who is rumored to be his new girlfriend.
What happens next, is once again hard to fathom. Under a flight of stairs, in a corner, Prince gets behind a small stack of machinery and VJ's for us. He choses fragments from old legendary shows like Soul Train. When Marvin Gaye starts to “sing” he immediately stops the tape. “Playback! Boo!” When Sly appears in a much to tight outfit he jokes “I invented those clothes”. The ladies start to dance. I rub my eyes. Is this what happens when the huge star Prince throws a party? Where are all the people?
But Prince is clearly having fun. “Come I want you to hear some stuff” and hop hop, there we go, through the dark hallways of the empty building. Before I know it, I'm back in the studio where I started out this afternoon. He puts on some music. And while we listen he starts to improvise, along with the music, on the electrical piano in the studio. Song after song. He closes with the song that already seemed bizarre to me when I heard it this morning “I love everybody and everybody loves me”. It's surreal. Him in the middle, us huddled around like his disciples. And then those words. “I love everybody, everybody loves me”.
It gets even more surreal. He wants to play more music and gathers his entourage in the salon with the black piano. But he can't get the lights to switch on. “oh well, in that case we will be heading for the large concert hall”. A few minutes later we are in the large hall with a stage full of instruments. “this is what i've always dreamed off, as a beginning artist, tinkering away in my basement”, he confides to us. Bria is ordered behind the mixingdesk, we are ushered onto the stage.
The small magician sits down at the piano, the backing vocalists behind their microphones. For a few songs they exercise loosely. Then Prince says “Everyone picks an instrument”. I find a couple of drumsticks. He starts playing Come Together by the Beatles. I tap a bit along on drums and cymbals and think “this is beyond cool. An interview with Prince, that was already too much to dream for. But I don't stay afloat for too long. Three words bring me crashing down:
“you are fired!” Prince yells, laughing.
And then it happens again, as soon as it did that afternoon. All of a sudden the party is over, it's been enough. Galantly Prince and Bria escort everyone out. I want to shake his hand but he puts his hands around my shoulders and gives me a big hug. “I really can't take a picture?” I try one last time. “it's better in the memory bank” prince laughs.
And there I am, in the dark, on an empty parking lot, besides that big white building. No pics, no voice on tape. Only a head full of memories and a bottle of water. No one is gonna believe this. and true love lives on lollipops and crisps | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
sorry, but you only translated a little bit as of yet and i had the time to do it all at once, didn't mean to offend you by trying to let people read the article.
and true love lives on lollipops and crisps | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Prince just keeps on getting him bottles of water! | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Did anyone notice what he is wearing on page 8 ?
WTF ? | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Thanks to everybody translating the interview..much appreciated!
Prince sounds likes like a total crazy in some of those quotes. Love it.
He needs to open up Paisley Park and throw a real party soon though... | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
What. The. Fuck. Was that bit about a Japanese woman??? Thanks for translating! blah blah blah | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
LMAO prince is a funny dude. he seems like a good dude | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
At fucking last, someone speaking shitting English. I was getting worried that it was just a free compilation of mince from the last 10 years or so.
| |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Thank You IstenSzek!
wow! Love it! Prince is the man! I would love to have a few minutes to talk to him.... LOL! though I've been in a room with him for almost 4 hours and I didn't dare say a word. "not a fan" yeah...ok | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Prince said:
I knew from the start that I loved you with all my heart. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
How can one in Germany get their hands on the album included in the French newspaper? | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Damn, I dunno if the album will be any good... but I like this interview. Prince comes off very cool, nice and... yes, weird. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
In almost the same way as geeting hold of the Belgian newspaper.
(Wait untill a deal is made for Germany) | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Album will be given away in the UK in the same manner, as i reported about a month ago...:
http://prince.org/msg/7/3...?&pg=8 Reply #224 posted 05/27/10 9:16am 1) Album is now ready for release and will be given away with a newspaper at the UK (dunno about other places) | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
So you think get a newspaper in Germany to release it for the Berlin gig? | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
I wonder when / if this stuff will come out in the US. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Thanks IstenSzek, much appreciated!
Hope everything goes OK at the vets (it's not for you, but a pet right?! ) | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
This is a "featured" topic! — From here you can jump to the « previous or next » featured topic.