independent and unofficial
Prince fan community
Welcome! Sign up or enter username and password to remember me
Forum jump
Forums > Prince: Music and More > Sign “☮” the Times era 1987
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Page 4 of 4 <1234
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
Reply #90 posted 10/03/10 5:57pm

OldFriends4Sal
e

FILM REVIEW

'Sign o' the Times':
Prince bounces back with bold concert movie

(no rating)

BY ANTHONY DECURTIS

After the abrupt sinking of Under the Cherry Moon, the movie Sign o' the Times has come along to restore Prince's luster as a formidable big-screen presence. Moreover, along with the double album that shares its name, the film blows away the haze of his last two LPs, Parade and Around the World in a Day, and demonstrates that Prince is still one of rock's most compelling performers and boldest visionaries.

Sign o' the Times is a first-rate concert film that captures Prince and a ten-piece band (including the redoubtable Sheila E. on drums) at the top of their form. The thirteen tunes on the film were culled from concert appearances in Holland and a performance in Prince's Paisley Park studio, in Minneapolis, with a good bit of overdubbing added to juice the sound up even further. Still, all the playing -- especially Prince's blazing excursions on guitar -- is joyous and rich in feeling.

Despite the inherent limitations of concert films, Sign o' the Times is conceptually strong and visually riveting. The musical performances are linked by stylized vignettes that combine street grit and freaky surrealism to dramatize a love triangle including Prince, a male background vocalist and the luciously erotic female singer Cat -- who is aptly summed up at one point in the proceedings as "a sweet, sticky thing." Admittedly, the story line is loose at best. But the theatrical pieces -- which take place on a neon-lit film noir set derived from the hallucinogenic Sign o' the Times album cover -- effectively evoke the interwoven themes of love, lust and spiritual questing embedded in Prince's songs.

After an opening skit that depicts the tension between possessiveness and trust in relationships, Prince stands center stage enveloped in smoke and cranks up a brittle version of "Sign o' the Times." As Prince, deadpan, sings his apocalyptic tale of AIDS, drug abuse and violence, Cat stands enshrouded in mist on a pedestal behind him, echoing his movements in a grim choreography that binds them as soul mates amid the wreckage of modern life. After the band marches onto the stage, each member carrying a drum and rapping out a martial beat to close "Sign," the mood lifts with a swinging version of "Play in the Sunshine." Prince repairs to the piano for a brief rendition of "Little Red Corvette" before tearing up the James Brown hommage "Housequake" with a series of splits, knee bends and twirls.

The next suite of songs constitutes the dramatic heart of the show. Prince and Cat turn in a steamy duet on the soul ballad "Slow Love," and after Cat has a falling-out with her other boyfriend, Prince romps through a horn-charged take on the irresistible "I Could Never Take the Place of Your Man." Cat's lubricious writhing prompts Prince to reconsider that position, however, and a burning "Hot Thing" ensues, during which Prince strips Cat down to a yellow bikini and the duo engage in a salacious bump and grind.

Following a lengthy version of Charlie Parker's "Now's the Time" that serves as an instrumental showcase for the band, Prince and Cat exchange fantasy segments. Prince is shown backstage in a reverie that dissolves into the "U Got the Look" video, and then Cat falls asleep to the dream vision of "If I Was Your Girlfriend" that concludes with her and Prince making love as the words LOVE and SEX flash on signs above them. The film's weakest point -- much-too-long versions of "Forever in my Life" and the party raver "It's Gonna Be a Beautiful Night" -- gives way to a rapturous finale: Prince's exquisite rendition of "The Cross."

Unfortunately, although Sign o' the Times is a thoroughly rewarding film, it's ultimate appeal is to the large corps of those already converted to Prince's cause. Prince is arguably the finest live rock act in the world today, and the hard fact is that if he's to reclaim the larger audience he gained with Purple Rain, he must actually tour. Sign o' the Times captures him nicely, but many more people deserve to confront the challenge and the playfulness Prince embodies in the flesh.

ROLLING STONE, DECEMBER 3RD, 1987

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #91 posted 10/03/10 5:59pm

OldFriends4Sal
e

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #92 posted 10/03/10 6:00pm

OldFriends4Sal
e



For Love
4 love I have given U the very best, yeah
Any woman ever can
4 love I would follow U everywhere U go
My friends don't understand

I would tie U with a chain
If that would put U in the frame of mind I think's so cool
I want U so badly
Don't U know I'd gladly give my life 4 loving U

CHORUS:
4 love
Do most anything 4 love

Listen 2 me

4 love I would suffer kisses from another
If that was what turned U on
4 love I have done less and still felt the best
When I'm with U, nothing is wrong

I would tie U with a chain
If that would put U in the frame of mind I think's so cool
I want U so badly
Don't U know I'd gladly give my life 4 loving U

CHORUS

Do most anything 4 love (4 love)

Baby, come and take me, any way U make me
I'll be good and that's 4 sure
Baby, if U love me
I'm the one and only doctor that's got the cure

Baby, I would tie U with a chain
If that would put U in the frame of mind I think's so cool
I want U so badly
Don't U know I'd gladly give my life 4 loving U

4 love
I'll do most anything 4 love

4 love {x4}
I'd do, I'd do
Do, I'd do, I'd do
Looka here
I will do anything, anything 4 loving U
Uh, kaleidoscope of musical colors, ooh, hit me!
Sounds so good, uh
Mmm (Coca-cola) Ha ha
Yeah!
(What's that?)

4 love, 4 love, 4 love

Hang on, uh
I gotta go feed the dog
Oh, oh, oh, yeah! {mimic dog barks}
Good dog


© 1987 White Fox Publishing - ASCAP


  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #93 posted 10/05/10 5:29am

OldFriends4Sal
e

Good Love

1988 Bright Lights, Big City (Warner Bros.)

Jill Jones: Backing Vocals (Uncredited) for Good Love by Prince

Good love, U got a...
Baby, in the heat of the night
U know what 2 do
Good love, U got a...
Cherry pie, apple kisses
Everything is cool

Technicolor children in Picadilly Square
Whisper words, erotica, when U kiss me there
Gustav Mahler #3 is jamming on the box
I'll have another glass of U, this time on the rocks

4th of July in every stroke
A symphony of light and sound
Oh, I want 2 die from all the smoke
Fire breaks out when U're around

Good love, U got a... yeah
Baby, in the heat of the night
U know what 2 do
Good love, U got a... yeah
Cherry pie, apple kisses
Everything is cool

It brings a flash 2 my heart just the thought of U
Plethora of euphoria in everything U do
Any place 2 zero, U are number 1
Baby, in the heat of the night, U're my favorite fun

U and I in each others arms (U and I - each others arms)
Here is another world (Here I'm protected)
Here I'm protected from all harm
Only the naked, boy and girl

Good love, yeah!
Baby, in the heat of the night
U know what 2 do
Good love, yeah (Ooh)
Cherry pie, apple kisses
Everything is cool, cool, cool (Cool)

Alright, we go'n say good love
Right here (Good love!)
Yeah
Gustav Mahler #3 jamming on the box
U wanna rock? (Why not?)

(Good love) - Yeah (Yeah, yeah)
Oh baby, in the heat of the night
U know what 2 do, don't cha?
Good love, yeah (Yeah, yeah)
Cherry pie, apple kisses
Everything is cool, cool
Every little funky damn thing is kickin'! (Good love)

Oh my Lord (Oh my Lord)
My Lord (My Lord)
(Good love, yeah)
Baby, U got the, U got the, U got the good love, yeah
In the heat of the night
U know it's alright (Yeah)
Good love, yeah
Good love, honey baby
Good love, yeah yeah yeah (Yeah)
Cherry pie, apple kisses
Everything is cool, everything is cool
Cool

Come on
That's how I like it, come on

Technicolor junkie in a funky square (Yeah)
Good love talkin' when U kissin' me there (Yeah)
Gustav Mahler jamming on the box (Yeah, yeah)
Teenage junkie got his foot on the rock... get off!
U gotta, U gotta get good love
Good love
U gotta, U gotta get good love
Yeah, good love
Gustav

© 1997 Emancipated Music - ASCAP

[Edited 10/15/10 22:19pm]

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #94 posted 10/05/10 5:30am

OldFriends4Sal
e

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #95 posted 10/05/10 5:32am

OldFriends4Sal
e







  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #96 posted 10/05/10 6:46am

OldFriends4Sal
e

JET No. 10
Sign O' Times' highlights his European Tour

While Prince fans across the nation may be saddened to know he may never take his Sign 0’ The Times tour on the road in the U.S., they can find comfort in knowing they can still enjoy the mesmerizing music and on-stage antics of the pop rocker in a recently released movie that highlights his widely-acclaimed European tour. Hailed as “the rock Mozart” in Germany, Prince also won raves from critics in Paris who touted the tour as “two hours of torrid perfection.” Even though Prince has put a U.S. tour on hold, devotees have the unique opportunity of being able to experience Prince’s performance from a unique vantage point in the new movie Sign O’ The Times. Sign 0’ The Times, Prince’s third foray into film making (Purple Rain and Under the Cherry Moon), gives movie goers an insider’s view of his performance that could never be experienced in a standing-room-only auditorium that seats 25,000 people. Written and directed by Prince, Sign 0’ The Times is a full-length concert movie that includes some oldies and tunes from his latest double album of the same name. Film footage was shot during performances in Rotterdam and Antwerp in the Netherlands and features such roof-raisers as U Got The Look, Play in the Sunshine, Hot Thing, Little Red Corvette and the movie’s title tune. For those who are often left in the dark by the cryptic messages in Prince’s music, the film also includes vignettes that lift the veils of mystery from some of his music. With the debut of his top-knotch, ten-piece band, with Sheila E. on drums, Prince and company are in rare form on the silver screen. Besides Sheila E., Prince is joined in the film by Sheena as on (she had a hit with the Prince-penned tune Sugar Walls), dancer extraordinaire Cat, Dr. Fink, Miko Weaver, Levi Spencer Jr., Wally Safford, Gregory Allen Brooks, Boni Boyer, Eric Leeds and Atlanta Bliss. Talented Sheila E., who made it big solo with Glamorous Life and Love Bizarre, said working with her mentor has been an experience like none other in that it was so emotional exhilarating. She told JET, “ music is really spiritual for me because it’s such a major part of my life. Prince may hit a certain note and I would get chills and start crying on stage.” She added, “When a musicians become one, there is a magic that just happens.”

'Spiritual' for Shelia E.
Working with him also gave her a chance to see a side of Prince she had never known. “I had heard all kinds of things through-out the years about what working with Prince was like, but all the negative things are lies. He’s the sweetest, nicest guy you’d ever want to meet.” Cat, the lithe dancer who hails from Chicago, exudes energy as she bumps, grinds, twists and twirls to the beat. For her, Sign 0’ The Times is a dream come true. “For years, I’ve been a solo dancer. I dance free-style.. .For years, the songs I’ve been dancing to have been by Prince. Dancing to his songs was my signature.” Recalling what it was like working on Sign 0’ The Times, Cat said, “We worked for two months putting the show together for the European to.... the film is not a standard concert picture. It’s more like a musical fantasy...”


  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #97 posted 10/05/10 8:03am

emesem

Good Times. I wish Prince would have stuck to this grungy ethos for a year or two more and not turned to the fey pastels of LoveSexy so quickly

[Edited 10/5/10 8:03am]

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #98 posted 10/08/10 8:46am

OldFriends4Sal
e

[img:$uid]http://d.yimg.com/kq/groups/21303846/sn/1351128884/name/n_a[/img:$uid]

Hot thing - barely 21
Hot thing - lookin' 4 Big Fun
Hot thing - what's your fantasy?
Hot thing - do U wanna play with me?

Hot thing - baby, U dance so good
Hot thing - baby, I knew U would
Hot thing - tell me what U see
Hot thing - when U smile, when U smile, when U smile
Are your smiles, are your smiles 4 me?

Hot thing - maybe U should give your folks a call
Hot thing - tell'em U're goin' 2 the Crystal Ball
Hot thing - tell'em U're comin' home late if U're comin' home at all
Hot thing - U can tell'em U found a brand new baby doll

Hot thing - I can't... I can't wait 2 get U home
Hot thing - where we can be alone
Hot thing - I could read U poetry
And then we could.. we could make a story of our own
(We could make a story of our own)

[Edited 10/8/10 8:50am]

[Edited 10/15/10 9:07am]

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #99 posted 10/09/10 8:31pm

OldFriends4Sal
e

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #100 posted 10/09/10 8:35pm

OldFriends4Sal
e

October 24. 1987
TV Sign O'TheTimes FilmPremiere
New York

@ Club 1018 after the premiere


  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #101 posted 10/12/10 5:43am

OldFriends4Sal
e

Forever In My Life
I wonder is there a long version to this, every song where the ending changes I'm expecting a long version

I love that ending



La da da da da da da da
La da da da da da da da
There comes a time, in every man's life
When he get's tired of foolin' around
Juggling hearts in a three ring circus
Someday will drive a body down 2 the ground
I never imagined that love would rain on me
And make me want 2 settle down
Baby it's true, I think I do
And I just wanna tell U that I wanna with U (baby, if U do 2)
And baby if U do 2
Forever, forever, baby I want U forever
I wanna keep U 4 the rest of my life (U can make right)
All that is wrong in my world (U are my saviour)
U can make right (U are my light)
U are my saviour, U are my light (Forever I want U in my life)
Forever I want U in my life

(La da da da da da da da)
(La da da da da da)

(Every man's journey)
There comes a road in every man's journey (don't be afraid)
A road that he's afraid 2 walk on his own (I'm at that road)
I'm here 2 tell U that I'm at that road (I'd rather walk it with)
And I'd rather walk it (U than walk it alone)
with U than walk it alone (U are my future)
U are my hero, U are my future (no past)
When I am with U, I have no past
Oh baby my one and only desire (make this feelin' last)
Is find some way in this doggone world (sugar it's true)
2 make this feelin' last (I know I do)
Oh baby it's true, I know I do (2 with U)
And I just wanna tell U that I
want 2 with U, yeah
And baby if U do 2
Forever, forever, I want U baby, baby forever (U can make right)
I wanna keep U 4 the rest of my life (U are my saviour)
All that is wrong in my world (U are my light)
U can make right (Forever I want U in my life)
U are my saviour, U are my light (La da da da da da da da)
Forever I want U in my life (La da da da da da da da)

La da da da da da da da
La da da da da da

Forever in my life

I forget if these pics he was performing IT or 4ever In My Life

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #102 posted 10/12/10 7:49am

OldFriends4Sal
e

OldFriends4Sale said:

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #103 posted 10/12/10 7:50am

OldFriends4Sal
e

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #104 posted 10/13/10 12:03am

remko

avatar

I forget if these pics he was performing IT or 4ever In My Life

Both!

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #105 posted 10/13/10 6:46am

XTinaaa

avatar

STILL my favorite album =]

*~In a room full of harlots & fantasies,
Destiny beckoned us there.
Curious Child on the balcony...We took the dare.~*
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #106 posted 10/14/10 7:51am

OldFriends4Sal
e

November 18. 1987
Paisley Park Chanhassen
Rehearsal for New Year Eve Gig

1.Sign'O'The Times
2.Play In The Sunshine
3.Little Red Corvette
4.Erotic City
5.Housequake
6.SlowLove
7.Do Me Baby
8.Adore
9.
I Could Never Take The Place Of Your Man
10.Hot Thing
11.Love Or Money/Data Bank
12.Let's Pretend We're Married
13.Delirious
14.Jack U Off
15.If I Was Your Girlfriend
16.Let's Go Crazy
17.When Doves Cry
18.Purple Rain
19.1999
20.U Got The Look
21.Kiss
22.
It's Gonna Be A Beautiful Night
23.The Ballad Of Dorothy Parker
24.Starfish And Coffee
25.Now's The Time
26.Strange Relationship
27.Forever In My Life

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #107 posted 10/14/10 7:55am

OldFriends4Sal
e

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #108 posted 10/15/10 9:02am

OldFriends4Sal
e

U Got The Look

Here we are folks, the dream we all dream of
Boy versus girl in the World Series of love
Tell me, have U got the look?

U walked in, I woke up
I've never seen a pretty girl look so tough
Baby, U got that look

Color U peach and black
Color me takin' aback
Crucial, I think I wantcha

U've got the look, U've got the hook
Sho'nuff do be cookin' in my book
Your face is jammin', your body's heck-a-slammin'
If love is good, let's get 2 rammin'
U got the look, U got the look

Looka here
U got the look (U got the look)
U must'a took (U must'a took)
A whole hour just 2 make up your face, baby

Closin' time, ugly lights, everybody's inspected (Everybody's inspected)
But U are a natural beauty unaffected (Unaffected)
Did I say an hour? My face is red, I stand corrected (I stand corrected)

U've got the look (U've got the look)
U sho'nuff do be cookin' in my book (Slammin'!)
Your face is jammin', your body's heck-a-slammin'
If love is good, let's get 2 rammin'
U got the look, U got the look

There's no jokin' U
Well, here we are
Ladies and gentlemen, the dream we all dream of (Oh please!)
Boy versus girl in the World Series of love
Slammin'!

U walked in (I walked in), I woke up (U woke up)
I never seen such a pretty girl look so tough
Baby (Baby), U got that look (U got that look)
Yes U do (Yes U do)

Color U peach and black
Color me takin' aback, baby
Crucial, I think I wantcha

U've got the look, U've got the hook
U sho'nuff do be cookin' in my book
Your face is jammin', your body's heck-a-slammin'
If your love is good, let's get 2 rammin' ... now!
U got the look, U got the look

Here we are folks, the dream we all dream of

U got the look {x5}

© 1987 Controversy Music - ASCAP

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #109 posted 10/15/10 9:03am

OldFriends4Sal
e

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #110 posted 10/15/10 9:07am

OldFriends4Sal
e

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #111 posted 10/17/10 11:45am

OldFriends4Sal
e

SIGN O' THE TIMES

3 Stars (out of 4)

By Roger Ebert

Prince labors under the misfortune of having made one of the greatest rock movies of all time, "Purple Rain." Now his career is beginning to take on some of the same hint of nostalgia that dogged Orson Welles all of his days: If you start with "Citizen Kane," where do you go from there? "Purple Rain" contained not only great rock music but also a strong dramatic story and powerful performances by a whole crowd of unknowns. It was a great debut movie, and it made Prince into a sitting duck with whatever film he made next.

His next film was, of course, the disastrous "Under the Cherry Moon," an odd black-and-white exercise that seemed to owe something to old movies by Fred Astaire, Harold Arlen and even Rudy Vallee. He was paying tribute to a tradition that was not even a memory for his fans. Now comes "Sign O' the Times," obviously a more cautious and calculated film, in which Prince returns to his concert roots and tries to give his fans, if not "Purple Rain," then at least what they paid their money for.

This is a concert film, with all of the usual conventions of the modern rock concert film: the towering percussion section, the synchronized backup singers, the sweating superstar in sexual pantomime and, of course, the standard shot of the star leaning forward to tantalize his fans as the first row of the audience surges forward in orgiastic bliss.

To this basic mix Prince has added some adornments. He intercuts the concert footage with what look like glimpses of a dramatic story, in which sex, intrigue and a sense of danger are laid on heavily, although no coherent narrative emerges. These shots symbolize a night world of rock clubs, seedy saloons, hookers and players and johns. They burst out onto the stage in several musical numbers, including one steamy duet between Prince and Cat Glover, rumored to be his current squeeze.

Prince also shares the stage with various visitors, drop-ins and guest stars, notably Sheena Easton. But the person who literally steals the show is Sheila E., who plays percussion and then climbs down from the drums for a solo and a duet. Her energy level in this movie is awesome, and she looks great, too. She can also play drums. Sheila E. says she thinks of herself as a drummer first and a singer second, but on the basis of this movie she could flip a coin.

"Sign O' the Times" was directed by Prince, and he does a good, sound job without finding an answer to the problem of all directors of rock concert films: After you have exhausted the basic repertory of obvious shots and audience reactions, what do you do then? In "Purple Rain," Prince found an answer in his own life, and provided intercuts to an autobiographical story. This time, he lets the music simply speak for itself. It's fun as far as it goes, but "Purple Rain," of course, went further.

Date of publication: 11/20/1987

Sign O' the Times

Cineplex Odeon presents a film starring Prince, Sheila E., Cat Glover, Sheena Easton, Dr. Fink, Miko Weaver, Levi Seacer Jr., Wally Safford, Gregory Allen Brooks, Boni Boyer, Eric Leeds and Atlanta Bliss. Directed by Prince, and produced by Robert Cavallo, Joseph Ruffalo and Steven Fargnoli. Photographed by Peter Sinclair. Edited by Steve Purcell. Music by Prince. Running time: 90 minutes. Classified PG-13. At local theaters.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #112 posted 10/17/10 12:03pm

OldFriends4Sal
e

1 The H Man 5:13
2 Red Riding Hood 3:53
3 Fantastic 4:49
4 Crucial (Extended Version) 7:31
5 Break My Heart 3:04
6 Can't Stop 2:07
7 We Can Funk 5:30
8 Welcome 3:20
9 Witness 4:00
10 Crucial (Normal Version) 7:20
11 Sexual Suicide 3:37
12 Girl In My Dreams 1:27

Notes

The track "Red Riding Hood" is also known as "Can I Play with U?" and "The H Man" is actually the Miles Davis track "Amandla". "Can't Stop" is a shorter version of Prince's "Can't Stop This Feeling I've Got" on the album "Graffiti Bridge", issued in 1990.
THE WHOLE MILES DAVIS & PRINCE THING:

1986:
Prince recorded the basic tracks for "Can I Play With U" and sent them to Miles and his band to finish. The track was going to be released on Miles's Tutu album but was pulled at the last moment (apparently because Prince didn't think his song was up to scratch with the rest of the Tutu material).

Prince attended Miles's 60th birthday party in NY.

1987:
Miles guested on stage for the New Years Eve benefit concert at Paisley Park. He played 5 min solo on "Beautiful Night". The show is widely circulating on bootleg (Miles At The Park).

1988:
Miles overdubed a trumpet solo on a Prince/Chaka Khan collaboration "Sticky Wicked" released on Chaka's CK album (they were never in the studio together though).

Miles is interviewed for Albert Magnoli's Prince Portrait documentary.

1988-91
Miles played a few Prince covers, "Movie Star" and "Penetration", at many of his gigs.

1991:
Miles died and Prince announced that his next album would feature a 20 min section devoted to Miles. Nothing more has ever been heard about this project, however the silent track on Rave Un2 The Joy Fantastic is said to be in memory of Miles.

Although there are plenty of other rumors about recording sessions and midnight jam sessions etc, this is the only confirmed stuff they ever did. Miles praises Prince many times in his autiobiography, and Prince has spoken many times in concert about his love for Miles's music.
From the liner notes of the unreleased Miles Davis Warner Box set "The Last Word"

...In addition, another artist offered his services to Miles without being invited. Sometime in late 1985/early 1986, Miles received a package from Prince. According to Miles it contained a letter that read, “If this tape is of any use to you, please go ahead and play whatever you feel over it. Because I trust what you hear and play.” The enclosed track was called “Can I Play With U,” and consisted of some frantic playing and singing by Prince, with horn overdubs by Eric Leeds.


With a body of unrelated tracks in diverse styles accumulating, yet no clear focus in sight, the then head of the jazz division of Warner Bros., Tommy LiPuma, became concerned. LiPuma was a big-name producer who had worked with Barbra Streisand and George Benson, and he suggested to Miles that he produce the project. Perhaps becoming aware that producing wasn’t really his métier, Miles agreed to LiPuma’s involvement. The producer immediately steered things in a new direction. He’d heard the “Rubber Band” sessions, but concluded, “I wasn't too impressed with what I heard. I wanted to take a different direction.” This left only the Prince and Duke tracks as serious contenders for the new album. LiPuma wondered where he was going to get more material and found the answer in Marcus Miller, with whom he had already worked on David Sanborn/Bob James and George Benson/Earl Klugh albums, and who had played in Miles’s live band 1981-83...

LiPuma now had five tracks: one track by Prince and Duke each plus the three tracks by Marcus Miller. Since it was “Tutu” that had the greatest sense of hitting bull’s eye, LiPuma asked Miller to write additional similar material to fill out the album. In New York, with Jason Miles assisting on synthesizer programming, Miller wrote and recorded “Tomaas,” Don’t Lose Your Mind,” and “Full Nelson.” The latter, with its staccato, hiphop-like rhythm was deliberately designed by Miller to be “a bridge with the Prince track”—the title was a reference to both Miles’s 1950s song “Half Nelson,” and Prince’s last name, “Nelson.” Inspired by the success of Miles’s treatments of “Time After Time” and “Human Nature,” LiPuma had also been looking for a pop song to cover, but it was Miles himself who came up with Scritti Politti’s “Perfect Way,” and the idea that it was made the title song of the album.

LiPuma instead suggested calling the finished album Tutu. Prince was responsible for the omission of his track; apparently he felt that “Can I Play With U” did not fit with the rest of the music on the album. The playful, almost throwaway energy and lyrics of “Can I Play With U” are indeed of a very different nature than Miller’s material. Miller had taken his inspiration for his harmonies and arrangements from the voicings that Gil Evans had used on The Birth Of The Cool, and that Herbie Hancock had applied with the second great quintet. Combined with Miller’s eminently hummable melodies these roused Miles to some of his most lyrical and melodic playing since the 1960s...

Recuperating from the strains of touring in 1990, Miles was absent from the live stage from November 17, 1990 to March 13, 1991. He did, however, begin work on a new studio album during this period, which was to be his most ambitious for Warner yet. One of his aspirations was to engage with the latest black music, hiphop and rap. Matt Pierson, Warner’s current Head of Jazz, and at the time head of A&R, remarked, “Miles was planning a 2-CD set of urban music and funk and hip-hop and jazz. It was to contain collaborations with Prince, John Bigham, and two different hip-hop producers, Sid Reynolds and Easy Mo Bee.” ...

Although the planned collaboration between Miles and Prince came to nothing, Prince did send Miles eight instrumental compositions in the beginning of 1991. Miles played three of these, “Jail Bait,” “A Girl And Her Puppy,” and “Penetration,” during his 1991 tour. Some of these live performances found their way onto bootlegs, but what was hitherto unknown is that Miles went into the recording studio during the German leg of his 1991 tour, and laid down these three tunes with his live band. One of these recordings was complete enough to be mixed and released, and is included on this set. “Jail Bait” is a fine blues, with excellent solos by Miles and Deron Johnson on organ.

The magnificent “Penetration” is also included here, but taken from one of the two extraordinary retrospective concerts Miles played during July 1991. The first took place in Montreux where Miles and Quincy Jones re-created some of the classic orchestral works Miles had recorded with Gil Evans (released by Warners on video and CD under the title Live At Montreux). The other, much less publicized concert, from which “Penetration” is taken, was arguably more impressive and musically superior. The place was La Villette in Paris, the date July 10, 1991, and the performance featured many of the jazz luminaries that had played with Miles during the previous quarter century: John McLaughlin, Herbie Hancock, Joe Zawinul, Wayne Shorter, Chick Corea, Dave Holland, Al Foster, John Scofield, and many others. They were all present on Miles’s personal invitation, and deeply touched by the occasion.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #113 posted 10/19/10 3:22pm

OldFriends4Sal
e

SIGN o the TIMES era OUTTAKE

The Sex Of It
Played live a couple of times in 1987, Prince recorded this track in July after the Sign 'O' The Times tour. It's about a two-way relationship wherein he loves her but she wants him for the sex. It was eventually given to Kid Creole & The Coconuts for their 1990 Private Waters In The Great Divide album. Also in circulation is a 45-minute rehearsal of Prince teaching the song 2 his band.

The Sex Of It

U say U want simplicity
U don't like love complex
I got a spooky feeling
U just want me 4 the sex

The thrills of it
The chills of it
The spills of it
U just want me 4 the sex
The sex of it {x2}

I gave U a diamond ring my friend
That didn't get U off
French cologne a hundred bucks an ounce (Ooh)
All U did was cough
U say U want simplicity
U don't like love complex
But I got a spooky feeling
U just want me 4 the sex

The thrills of it
The chills of it
The spills of it
Baby, baby, U just want me 4 the sex
Just want me 4 the sex
The sex of it {x2}

Don't open that window
I told U not 2 open that window!

The sex of it {x2}

How can I make U understand that's all I wanna do?
Damn my life, I'd rather spend it all with U
I couldn't love U anymore, I guess I'll hate U next
Confess U bitch! (What?)

The thrills of it
The chills of it
The spills of it
U just want me 4 the sex {repeat verse}

The sex of it (Hey)
The sex of it

Get away from that cage
The sex of it
Get away from the.
Oh girl

August /Septmber 1987
"Paisley Park"(?) Minneapolis
Band Rehearsal
"The Sex Of It"
The Sex OF It
"SignO'TheTimes Rehearsal Sessions

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #114 posted 10/19/10 3:30pm

OldFriends4Sal
e

OldFriends4Sale said:

November 18. 1987
Paisley Park Chanhassen
Rehearsal for New Year Eve Gig

1.Sign'O'The Times
2.Play In The Sunshine
3.Little Red Corvette
4.Erotic City
5.Housequake
6.SlowLove
7.Do Me Baby
8.Adore
9.
I Could Never Take The Place Of Your Man
10.Hot Thing
11.Love Or Money/Data Bank
12.Let's Pretend We're Married
13.Delirious
14.Jack U Off
15.If I Was Your Girlfriend
16.Let's Go Crazy
17.When Doves Cry
18.Purple Rain
19.1999
20.U Got The Look
21.Kiss
22.
It's Gonna Be A Beautiful Night
23.The Ballad Of Dorothy Parker
24.Starfish And Coffee
25.Now's The Time
26.Strange Relationship
27.Forever In My Life

New Years Eve Party 12.31. 1987 Paisley Park

New Years Eve Party December 31. 1987 "Miles 2 Nowhere"
"Paisley Park" Chanhassen

TLM: On New Year’s Eve 1987, you finally got to play on the same stage as Miles, during a Prince benefit event at Paisley Park studios.

Eric Leeds: I always regret one moment. There was just one moment when I wanted to nudge the trumpet player Matt [Blistan, aka Atlanta Bliss] to go into a melody line in "Agharta" and the moment came and went by so quickly that I wasn’t able to grab it. I always regretted that because I really wanted to see the look on Miles’s face! The whole affair lasted for all of five minutes but it was cool.

TLM: Wasn’t Prince perplexed because the band was forgetting all the cues?

Eric Leeds: He gave us one of his hand cues to hit a riff and as I remember it, no one hit the cue, because they were all grooving on what Miles was doing and Prince was kinda taken aback! He yelled “Hey, I’m still the boss up here!”
TLM: I was saying to Alan that it was strange that the concert was never released, although there is a bootleg audio and Video CD, Miles From The Park.

Eric Leeds: The anticipation was a lot stronger than the actual event. It was a very fast funk groove that we were doing and it wasn’t anything that Miles was going to do anything other than just basically do his stick.

TLM: Miles appears on Prince’s song “Sticky Wicked”, along with Prince Chaka Khan. But I gather the song wasn’t written with Miles in mind.

Eric Leeds: When Prince had the track up and Matt Blistan and I did the horn parts I can’t recall Prince making any mention about Miles, although he did say he’d written it for Chaka. Interestingly enough, the title “Sticky Wicked” had been applied to a different song, which was actually the title song of my first album Times Squared. I heard the track and asked Prince if I could work on it for my album and he said yes. And then a couple of weeks later, we were working on this track for Chaka and I asked what the name of it was and he said “Sticky Wicked!” Later on when we were on the road he said “Listen to this.” It was the finished track and Miles was on it. That was the song that got me officially into the Miles Davis discography! It was a much better track and much better utilisation of his horn than on “Can I Play With U?” It was a cool little song.

TLM: There’s a lot of controversy surrounding whether Miles and Prince ever worked together in the studio. In one interview Prince has suggested that they recorded together, but Alan is convinced that they never did.

Eric Leeds: I have to agree with Alan on that. I don’t know what Prince was thinking or whether it was something that Prince said that was taken out of context. But I find it almost impossible to figure out how that could have happened, because Alan was still around running the record company and I was still around, although not a member of Prince’s band, I was working on my own albums at the time. Unless it was somewhere on the road that Prince and Miles met in the studio, but anything they would have done, Alan would have heard and I probably would have heard it too. It would have had to have gone through Alan’s desk. I know of no one else who has made mention of it. So I don’t know what Prince was talking about [TLM note: if Prince or anyone from his organisation would like to clear this up, we’d happily report your comments on this website!].






1.Sign O The Times
2.Play In The Sunshine
3.Little Red Corvette
4.Housequake
5.Girls And Boys
6.Slow Love
7.I Could Never Take The PlaceOf Your Man
8.Shela Drum solo
9.Hot Thing
10.If I Was Your Girlfriend
11.Let's Go Crazy
12.When Doves Cry
13.Purple Rain/Auld Lang Syne
14.1999
15.U Got The Look
16.It's Gonna Be A Beautiful Night/Six
17.Miles Davis solo
18.Chain Of Fools/Cold Sweat
19.Interlude/Take The A-Train
20.Funky Man/Alphabet St
/Cold Sweat
/Float Like A Butterfly. Sting
Like A Life
21.It's Gonna Be A Beautiful Night








  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #115 posted 10/22/10 5:29am

OldFriends4Sal
e

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #116 posted 10/24/10 11:00am

OldFriends4Sal
e

June 7. 1987
( Sign 'O' The Times Tour )
"Palatrtussardi" Milan, Italy

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Page 4 of 4 <1234
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Forums > Prince: Music and More > Sign “☮” the Times era 1987