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Prince designed the concept outfits for the band members on & off stage | |
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Lovesexy is the only Prince era I'm not really into. I do like the music a lot but cannot for the life of me appreciate the style & clothes they wore then. It's like they ran out of ideas or something & just stuck loads of crazy colours on equally crazy looking clothes. It's a complete mish mash. Mind you who am I to talk, at 12/13 I was probably kicking about town in a rotten neon-pink shell suit! | |
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[Edited 7/10/12 6:18am] | |
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A rebirth masterpiece.............. will ALWAYS think of like a "ACT OF GOD"! N another realm. mean of all people who might of been aliens or angels.if found out that wasn't of this earth, would not have been that surprised. R.I.P. | |
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OldFriends4Sale said:
March 2. 1988 never seen this picture before. didnt realize he wore a Lovesexy outfit to the Grammys. i could have sworn he was wearing a turtleneck, more SOTT looking to the Grammys that year. | |
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can someone post that picture of him in the white polka dot suit in that strange pose asif hes going to sit on an invisible chair? Bogey and Bacall, peanut butter and jelly, Wall being on fucking point, is "classic" dipshit. An iphone is top shelf technology. Get it straight. This thing is 4g. -Wall the great | |
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can't find my pic of the invisible seat
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So, U found me [black album]
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maybe that was a bad description lol. hes in the polka dot suit on the lovesexy stage doing a weird squat maneuver with his hands in front of him Bogey and Bacall, peanut butter and jelly, Wall being on fucking point, is "classic" dipshit. An iphone is top shelf technology. Get it straight. This thing is 4g. -Wall the great | |
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This is not music, this is a trip
Alphabet St. Riding in my Thunderbird on the freeway
Talk 2 me lover, come and tell me what U taste
DON'T BUY THE BLACK ALBUM ... I'M SORRY
Alphabet St. Released April 23, 1988 "Alphabet St." was the first single from Prince's 1988 album, Lovesexy, and the album's only top 10 single, reaching the top-10 in both the UK and U.S.. The song includes a rap by Cat Glover and is full of samples, and generally repeats themes from Lovesexy. Within the context of the album Lovesexy (which only contained one track containing all the songs featured within the work), "Alphabet St." is meant to stand in contrast to the gospel of "I Know" which plays off of the Christian ethics describing Prince's personal belief in Christian concepts of Heaven, Hell, the Devil, and God; emphatically stating "No" to the previous stated praise (and laud of a preacher's voice in the background) and launching into the sensual, provocative lyrics of "Alphabet St."
I'm goin' down 2 Alphabet Street Yes she will Yeah Uh
I'm gonna drive my daddy's Thunderbird (My daddy's Thunderbird)
Tennessee
Excuse me, baby - I don't mean 2 be rude Ow! Can I? Ow! (Yeah, yeah, yeah)
We're goin' down, down, down, if that's the only way Maybe it's the only way Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah! (Put-put-put your…) Cat, we need U 2 rap (No!) Put your love down
And while U're at it, tell your pop about this! Put your love down, baby, when your money get shot Yeah, ho - Alphabet Street (No!) A B, C, D, E, F, H
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This is not music, this is a trip
Then Prince dropped another bombshell: He didn't want to shoot any videos for the album. He boldly claimed to Warners' incredulous marketing team that the absence of a video would distinguish him from other pop stars, as well as create a sense of mystery about the album. No one accepted the argument, but the label couldn't force an artist of his stature to go in front of a camera. There would be no videos.
Chapter 10: Black March 20, 1988: Alan Leeds' residence, Eden Prairie, Minnesota p 125 Possessed: the Rise & Fall of Prince
Alan Leeds was among those beginning to harbor doubts about the direction of Prince's career. After working for many years with James Brown, Leeds accepted inconsistent behavior, arbitrary demands, and frequent bouts of hubris as part and parcel of a brilliant artist's character. And yet, Prince's actions were in some respects even more erratic and unpredictable than Brown's.
On a gray late-winter day, as a snowstorm gained force and began coating the Minneapolis suburb of Eden Prairie, Leeds was happy to have a day off from the hectic and exhausting routine of catering to Prince's every whim. It was warm inside, an NFL game was on, and Leeds was home with his family.
Then the phone rang.
As always, there were no pleasantries, no introductions. "I want to shoot a video," Prince said in a quiet, clipped voice. Leeds had to press to find out exactly what this meant. Did he want to make a clip for Alphabet Street, after all? Prince said yes, and Leeds asked if he had spoken to Fargnoli about this. No, Prince responded, he wanted to shoot without meddling from the managers or Warner Bros. They would just screw things up. Leeds cautioned that this meant the budget for the video would come out of Prince's pocket-didn't it make more sense to contact Warners, which would readily approve financing for the video?
No, Prince said. He wanted to do it on his own. "Ok, when?" Leeds asked. "Today."
Incredulous, Leeds did everything he could to dissuade Prince from making the video. It was mid-afternoon on a stormy Sunday. No respectable team of filmmakers could be assembled, particularly in Minneapolis where, as Leeds reminded Prince, there was not a film crew on every block as in Los Angeles. Even if a crew agreed to do the shoot, it was unlikely that adequate equipment could be rented and that everyone would make it through the snow to the set. How could this possibly be pulled off?
"Sounds to me like that's your problem, not mine," Prince retorted.
Leeds realized that, at the very least, he would have to placate Prince by placing some phone calls. Although the local community was not large, Leeds knew several skilled directors. Predictably, they refused the assignment. Working through his Rolodex, Leeds called filmmakers whom he considered B-List, and began to worry that even if someone agreed to take the job, the end result wouldn't be worth the time, effort, or money. As Leeds waited for callbacks, Prince continued to hector him by phone, "When are we shooting?" he asked repeatedly, undeterred by Leeds' warnings that no top-flight filmmakers were available. Prince told him to keep trying.
By eleven p.m., with most of the city under snow, film was rolling. Prince had rounded up Sheila E and Cat Glover to participate. The video was shot against a blue screen, with the result that the footage looked startlingly amateurish and homemade. During the post-production process, Prince had Barnard jazz up the video by having various textual phrases dart across the screen, including "Don't buy The Black Album, I'm sorry," and "Ecstasy."
Talk 2 me lover, come and tell me what U taste
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( LoveSexy Tour )
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Overproduced? Really? It's very layered but I can't believe someone would think that to be the same as overproduced. It's actually quite a raw sounding album.
Overproduced could be aimed at 3121 however. But not in a bad way. | |
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SUCH AN AWESOME STORY! No wonder why it looks the way it does..lol It's Button Therapy, Baby! | |
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When I first saw it also thought it looked 'cheap', especially for someone of his stardom at that time and then the Glam Slam video follows and it's hi tech | |
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Lovesexy:
[img:$uid]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v67/ecnirp2004/Prince/AlphabetStreet-Gif-1.gif[/img:$uid] Prince 4Ever. | |
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Glam Slam:
[img:$uid]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v67/ecnirp2004/Prince/GlamSlam-2.gif[/img:$uid] Prince 4Ever. | |
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I think this has got to be one of my fave shots ever, all eras included! | |
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I LOVE the Glam Slam video, he really should have done a B side Escape video to go along with it | |
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Interesting Review of 1988 Lovesexy Tour Aftershow @ Paisley Prince yields to Miss Piggy, parties in his studio parking lot
Jon Bream, Star Tribune September 16, 1988 PRIN0916 The eight spinning searchlights probably weren't essential. But Prince never skimps when it comes to a party - or a concert production. After the opening show in his Lovesexy Tour at Met Center Wednesday night, Prince and 600 people adjourned to his Paisley Park Studios in Chanhassen for food, fun and another concert that was a bit more intimate than the $2 million arena production. Actually, the party was not inside Paisley Park but rather in a couple of huge tents set up in the parking lot. The soundstage, the logical site for the party, had long ago been rented for rehearsals for the Muppets stage show, and Miss Piggy and friends weren't about to pack up and move for the night because of Prince. His people made the best of it, sprinkling synthetic flower petals on the asphalt and decorating the tents with "Lovesexy" posters. Frankly, by Prince standards, the party decorations were understated. Anyway, the important thing was the music. At 2:20 a.m., the rock star and his band took the stage. "Now we're going to wake up the farmers across the street," Prince said with an impish smile. (An hour or so later they did receive complaints from as far away as Hennepin County and Paisley Park was subsequently issued a citation for disturbing the peace.) Prince then led his troupe on a free-wheeling jam with the accent on blues and jazz. Funk master George Clinton and veteran R&B vocalist Mavis Staple, both of whom have albums coming out on Prince's Paisley Park Records, made cameo appearances. Guitarist Wendy Melvoin and keyboardist Lisa Coleman, members of the now-defunct Prince and the Revolution, sat in for a bit. But it turned out to be the Boni Boyer Show. She's a keyboardist and backup singer in Prince's current band. At the Paisley concert, she showed why she belongs front and center. She brought the house down with a version of James Brown's "Cold Sweat" and with an improvised blues medley, during which she did some gravelly scat singing creating the effect of a muted trumpet. Somebody give Boyer a recording contract! Even though it was rather low-key, the Paisley performance had more challenging and intriguing musicality than the arena concert, especially for splendid saxophonist Eric Leeds and fine trumpeter Matt Blisten. On the big theater-in-the-round stage, the arrangements and the movements are tightly choreographed a la a frenetic Broadway musical such as the Roller Derby-styled "Starlight Express." There isn't room for crisp changes and other forms of musical spontaneity that were part of the Purple Rain Tour and have been the hallmark of Prince's nightclub performances. The music at Paisley seemed so organic that, given the way they were interpreted, such familiar pieces as the Temptations' "Just My Imagination" and a rockabilly-styled "Housequake" were not immediately recognizable. Near the end of the post-concert concert, Mattie Baker, Prince's mother, said, "This is his best concert ever. That's because it's free - improvisational. He was always able to take an idea and use his imagination and just go with it." Prince, who tickled the ivories and played some striking jazz guitar, also showed a bit of humor, an element that had been missing in his arena extravaganza. At 3:45 a.m. when he finished, he said, "Thanks for coming out. You're welcome any time." He then introduced each member of his band and added, "I'm Prince Poindexter the Third." Earlier, he had inserted a few musical jokes - playing a couple of bars from Madonna's "Material Girl" in the middle of a jam. Prince mingled with the partygoers before his impromptu performance. He had arrived in the same 1967 white Thunderbird that he'd driven around the stage at Met Center. The Paisley Park parking lot also featured a healthy contingent of limousines, those eight searchlights, a few photographers and TV camera operators, and a dozen or two gawking fans. Many of the partygoers were Warner Bros. Records employees, music industry executives or radio disc jockeys from around the country. The celebrities included jazz giant Miles Davis (he called Prince "the best"), rocker Taylor Dayne and women's pro wrestling champion Madusa Miceli. Former Prince employees Jimmy (Jam) Harris, Terry Lewis, Bobby Z, Brownmark, Jellybean Johnson and Jerome Benton were among the local music celebs. Paisley Park Records artists Taja Sevelle, Jill Jones and the Three O'Clock jetted in for the party. Other recognizable faces were Minneapolis soul singer Alexander O'Neal, MTV reporter Kurt Loder and WCCO-TV anchor Don Shelby. It was the first visit to Paisley Park for Grammy-winning producers Harris and Lewis, who work at their own Flyte Tyme Studios in Minneapolis. Bobby Z, drummer for Prince and the Revolution, said "I got a lump in my throat" when Prince and his new band performed the songs from "Purple Rain" at Met Center. Brownmark, who had played bass alongside Bobby Z, said it was "incredible" to finally see Prince perform all those songs they had played together for years. Benton, who starred opposite Prince in "Under the Cherry Moon," recently signed a movie contract with Triad Films. A Hollywood camera crew filmed Prince 's party for a documentary motion picture. Meanwhile, the singer and his band had to return to Met Center at 11 a.m. Thursday - just seven hours after the party ended - to shoot some footage for the music video of the forthcoming single "I Wish U Heaven."
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Absolutely love this album. Was 16 when it came out and remeber seeing the Alphabet Street video on The Chart Show on C4 in UK, which was a cool music show that played new and more diverse music than Top of the Pops.
I loved When Doves Cry and followed the singles as they came out and SOTT was and still is one of my favourites. But by the time Lovesexy came out I had started going out drinking and clubbing and hearing Alphabet Street when pissed back then was great. Could never dance to it though! After Lovesexy I worked my way through the back catalogue and have been a big fan ever since and seen plenty of live shows.
Am not a religeous person at all, in fact I am an atheist now and have little time for religeon. But Lovesexy is the only thing that has made me really think about religeon and spirituality as I thought if someone this clever believes, maybe its worth investigating.
Anyway, I think it still sound great today and is a great reminder of what Prince was all about around the time. Just wish I had got to see the tour live but like many others, I had to make do with the legendary Wired screened gig from Dortmund.
Happy times indeed. | |
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OldFriends4Sale said:
Seriously though, have u ever seen a more handsome man in ur life? Ah, there goes my wee heart again...broken in2 a million smithereens!! | |
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Cat said in an interview this dress looked so much better backwards
July 25. 1988 ( LoveSexy Tour )
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July 27. 1988
another Lovesexy era song, I still remember when I 1st saw Prince of Paisley Park (which was basically a videography of the Lovesexy era) and Mavis talking about how this recording came about
It was performed live during some LS aftershows, and during a few concerts
****** ****** Flash, flash! CHORUS: News is comin' like a hurricane CHORUS News is comin' like a dog in heat CHORUS All of His children come take a blissy ride Live, live! One step at a time, we need a new rhyme (Alive) CHORUS Live, live! (CHORUS) {repeat parts in BG} Whoa, oh
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