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Reply #120 posted 07/05/13 8:10am

Zannaloaf

AkaBakaSodaKraka said:

Prince looks fantastic, the photos are incredible he looks so in the present and now. I love it.

Massive amounts of photoshop will do that for you.

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Reply #121 posted 07/05/13 8:23am

controversy99

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Please click on this link and read the article from the original source: http://www.vmagazine.com/...asting-now

Not to be a stick in the mud, but this thread is most likely illegal. I know it's standard practice here to copy and paste entire articles, but that undermines the publisher's and writer's ability to earn a living by doing work that we appreciate and want to see more of.

Should the Org have a policy of only allowing, say, the first three paragraphs of a story to be copied and pasted and then a link to the rest of the article?

I do appreciate Serpan99 for posting a link to how to buy the magazine, which is a great idea. But that doesn't excuse the copyright infringement.
"Love & honesty, peace & harmony"
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Reply #122 posted 07/05/13 10:37am

TikiColadas

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PRINCE looks "cool" in those photos. Another era to add to the pruple books.Can't wait to get a copy of this.
Dad. Cartoonist. Illustrator. TOPPS Star Wars and Walking Dead Illustrator. Film Illustrator. JEDI. PRINCE Fan. www.theartofprince.com

www.jonathancaustrita.com
www.theartofprince.com
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Reply #123 posted 07/05/13 11:41am

journey

kidmelody2012 said:

Kanye West killing prince in creativity now

Kanye West?........PLEASE!!!! lol That angry moron can't compare to Prince in creativity or any other thing, and never will.

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Reply #124 posted 07/05/13 12:30pm

Zannaloaf

journey said:

kidmelody2012 said:

Kanye West killing prince in creativity now

Kanye West?........PLEASE!!!! lol That angry moron can't compare to Prince in creativity or any other thing, and never will.

I REALLY don't like Kanye West. Really.
That said he is certainly taking more chances than Prince musically right now.
Maybe it's the case that the less talented work harder to acheive.
I know bright kids who end up with "C" for lack of effort and coasting on the built in skill. The less inherently bright kid works harder and gets an "A".

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Reply #125 posted 07/05/13 12:34pm

Zannaloaf

Zannaloaf said:

journey said:

Kanye West?........PLEASE!!!! lol That angry moron can't compare to Prince in creativity or any other thing, and never will.

I REALLY don't like Kanye West. Really.
That said he is certainly taking more chances than Prince musically right now.
Maybe it's the case that the less talented work harder to acheive.
I know bright kids who end up with "C" for lack of effort and coasting on the built in skill. The less inherently bright kid works harder and gets an "A".

PS- I wasn't maintaining Kanye acheives an "A". But the production is good at least...lol.

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Reply #126 posted 07/05/13 12:41pm

funkomatic

So where's the mind-blowing music? lol

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Reply #127 posted 07/05/13 5:11pm

Kobe

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I love his real hair... reminds me of Wanna Be Startin' Somethin'

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Reply #128 posted 07/05/13 6:13pm

ElectricBlue

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Prince has become a boring douche bag.He sounds like a brainwashed asshole with all that Larry Graham bullshit organized religion. Just a complete jerkoff who's songs a stale & boring for 90% of them UNTIL the guitar solo.The Guitar Solos are keeping from being a complete out of touch hack.

[Edited 7/5/13 18:16pm]

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Reply #129 posted 07/05/13 7:33pm

journey

ElectricBlue said:

Prince has become a boring douche bag.He sounds like a brainwashed asshole with all that Larry Graham bullshit organized religion. Just a complete jerkoff who's songs a stale & boring for 90% of them UNTIL the guitar solo.The Guitar Solos are keeping from being a complete out of touch hack.

[Edited 7/5/13 18:16pm]

Wow, really? And why is that, because Prince no longer uses profanity or sexually explicit lyrics that you prefer? Prince has always been about God, even when he used to use profanity and was very sexual. I guess him not doing those things have made him stale and boring in some folks eyes. The man couldn't stay in his 20's forever, nor would I expect him to be and do the same things now that he used to do then. He obviously has matured and changed, and at the point in his life where he's living it to please himself and not others such as yourself. If he's happy, that's all that matters.

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Reply #130 posted 07/05/13 7:52pm

purplesnowlove

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love the pics wen he was in his 20s

but he didnt changed too much.


[Edited 7/6/13 3:38am]

a prince news a day, keeps the doctor away prince
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Reply #131 posted 07/06/13 12:39am

Bluu

Serpan, thank you for posting the article. I’ll be ordering a copy of the magazine for myself.

The interview was very cool. I always enjoy it when he’s sharing his thoughts. You get to see where his head’s at and benefit by some bit of wisdom he is willing to impart.

The photos are something glorious. What a bold and audacious amalgam of styles that is equal parts Valentino, circa-1982-Prince, European master and commander, and Parliament Funkadelic. The first photo in particular immediately brought to mind Rudolph Valentino in the dramatic flourish of the Egyptian-style eyeliner.

Compare the cover shot to the 1999-era poster of Prince in his glittery purple trenchcoat, standing in the room with the sun and moon coming through the windows on either side of him. It’s nearly the same pose, and it looks like hardly a day has passed. Magazines airbrush/photoshop everyone as a rule, but Prince has been looking amazing all year in live appearances where there is no photoshopping (Grammies, Billboard). That brotha's doing something right and it shows.

As an aside, I really like that metal plate necklace he's sporting in the first photo, and he's been wearing variations of over the past few years. That's such a handsome look for him. Very becoming.

Big shout-out to Purplesnowlove for the best signature line I've seen here cool

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Reply #132 posted 07/06/13 2:38am

BartVanHemelen

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Gotta love that the author cannot manage to spell the word "different" or "difference" correctly.

Otherwise yet another long-assed article that desperately tries to avoid confronting Prince on the utter BS he's spouting.

© Bart Van Hemelen
This posting is provided AS IS with no warranties, and confers no rights.
It is not authorized by Prince or the NPG Music Club. You assume all risk for
your use. All rights reserved.
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Reply #133 posted 07/06/13 2:51am

XxAxX

avatar

BartVanHemelen said:

Gotta love that the author cannot manage to spell the word "different" or "difference" correctly.

Otherwise yet another long-assed article that desperately tries to avoid confronting Prince on the utter BS he's spouting.

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Reply #134 posted 07/06/13 8:13am

luvsexy4all

outside world?? who's IN his world besides him really...

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Reply #135 posted 07/06/13 2:54pm

KCOOLMUZIQ

Bluu said:

Serpan, thank you for posting the article. I’ll be ordering a copy of the magazine for myself.

The interview was very cool. I always enjoy it when he’s sharing his thoughts. You get to see where his head’s at and benefit by some bit of wisdom he is willing to impart.

The photos are something glorious. What a bold and audacious amalgam of styles that is equal parts Valentino, circa-1982-Prince, European master and commander, and Parliament Funkadelic. The first photo in particular immediately brought to mind Rudolph Valentino in the dramatic flourish of the Egyptian-style eyeliner.

Compare the cover shot to the 1999-era poster of Prince in his glittery purple trenchcoat, standing in the room with the sun and moon coming through the windows on either side of him. It’s nearly the same pose, and it looks like hardly a day has passed. Magazines airbrush/photoshop everyone as a rule, but Prince has been looking amazing all year in live appearances where there is no photoshopping (Grammies, Billboard). That brotha's doing something right and it shows.

As an aside, I really like that metal plate necklace he's sporting in the first photo, and he's been wearing variations of over the past few years. That's such a handsome look for him. Very becoming.

Big shout-out to Purplesnowlove for the best signature line I've seen here cool

clapping nod

eye will ALWAYS think of prince like a "ACT OF GOD"! N another realm. eye mean of all people who might of been aliens or angels.if found out that prince wasn't of this earth, eye would not have been that surprised. R.I.P. prince
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Reply #136 posted 07/06/13 10:03pm

PoplifeGeminEY
E

Graycap23 said:

These pics make Prince look like Lil Richard.

lol, you think so? & is that a good or bad thing?

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Reply #137 posted 07/06/13 10:18pm

PoplifeGeminEY
E

serpan99 said:

EVERLASTING NOW

PHOTOGRAPHY INEZ & VINOODH
FASHION MELANIE WARD
TEXT Vanessa Grigoriadis

Jacket and necklace: Prince’s own. Shirt: Jason Wu


NEARLY 40 YEARS INTO HIS CAREER, PRINCE IS STILL CHURNING OUT MIND-BLOWING MUSIC. CURRENTLY PLAYING TWO SHOWS A NIGHT WHILE ON TOUR WITH HIS NEW BAND, 3RDEYEGIRL, THE ICON TAKES A MOMENT (AT 2AM) TO SERMONIZE ON SEX, RELIGION, AND ROCK AND ROLL



It’s no sweat for Prince to play two sets a night, as he does this evening at the 1,700-seat City National Grove of Anaheim California. He tells me that if anything he’s more energized after the second show, not less. Both shows stretch to a delicious two hours, as the crowd, in blowouts and Vegas-style cocktail dresses (it’s worth dressing up for Prince, even in California), screams and sings along with glee. The only tense moment comes when we file into the theater and a security guard says, “No cameras, no cellphones—don’t even take them out of your pocket. Tonight, we’re not asking, we’re just escorting.” I ask her what that means. “If we see you with your phone out, we’re not going to ask what you’re doing—you’re just gone.”

This demand might seem extreme coming from the Purple One—a very young-looking 55, with a tight Afro instead of his usual loose curls, clad in a black bodysuit with white lines that makes him look like a spider—but in fact it’s not out of character.

You could argue that Prince was an early adopter of phone-text-speak (“I Would Die 4 U” and all that), but he’s eschewed the PR opportunities afforded by the latest tech almost completely, refusing to put his videos on YouTube and offering new music mostly for sale on his websites. And in part by making himself so unavailable, he’s remained as mysterious as ever. Prince has always refused any label the world wants to slap on him. A devout Jehovah’s Witness since 2001, he writes music that is explicit about both Jesus and sexual desire. He’s a black man with light skin who usually dresses in clothes that seem inspired by female icons, from Twiggy to Marie Antoinette. A heterosexual man who deeply worships sexually confident women, he nonetheless wants to dominate them. Prince keeps his private life private: he’s usually either on the road or at Paisley Park, his $10 million compound in the suburbs of his hometown of Minneapolis, with multiple recording studios, wardrobe rooms, a video-editing suite, a sound stage, production offices, rehearsal areas, and “the vault,” which includes his extensive library of unreleased recordings.

Tonight’s show is a lot less about pop, R&B, and funk than his music has been in the past—in fact, he’s playing rock, like his new song “Screwdriver,” and doing guitar-heavy, stripped down versions of his old hits, including “Raspberry Beret,” “When Doves Cry,” and “Computer Blue,” for which the stage is suffused in blue light. For this tour he’s backed by 3RDEYEGIRL, a new rock band that he assembled himself. It’s made up of Danish bassist Ida Nielsen, wearing pigtails, blonde Chicago College of Performing Arts at Roosevelt University jazz performance major Hannah Ford-Welton, on drums, and Canadian Donna Grantis, with half her head shaved, playing a wild, shredding guitar. “I’m trying to get these women’s careers started, because they’re all so talented,” he tells me later. “It’s not even about me anymore.”

Playing with 3RDEYEGIRL, there’s lots of room for Prince, one of the world’s most celebrated guitarists, to show off his skills (though Ms. Grantis does keep up with him). The show feels like a gospel revival, with Prince as the groovy, feel-good pastor facilitating a release of energy for the crowd, which sings along and nods when he throws out lines about “compassion” or preaches “the only love we have is the love we make—we’ve got to take care of each other, everybody.” At the end of the show he says, “Thank each and every one of you for leaving your cell phones in your pocket. I can’t see your face when you’ve got technology in front of it.” At 1:30 am, as the lights go up after the second show, two MILFs chat by the stage. “He was gorgeous up there,” says one. Prince’s elegant manager, Julia Ramadan, appears quickly and whisks me through a clutch of roadies and onto Prince’s idling tour bus, where 3RDEYEGIRL is hanging out. I’ll do my interviews here, and per Prince’s usual demand of journalists, will conduct them without a tape recorder or notepad, though I am allowed to have a list of questions. When I ask him why he’s required this of journalists over the past decade, he says, “People have sold my interviews.”

First, I talk to 3RDEYEGIRL, who are still flushed with excitement from the shows, about their experience with Prince. Nielsen, who has played with Zap Mama, was the first one he recruited. Prince’s manager found Ford-Welton. Grantis appeared when Prince told Ford-Welton and her husband to discover “the best female musician out there” (they found her videos on YouTube). We talk about what life is like at Paisley Park. “We practice all the time,” says Ford-Welton—it’s something like 12-hour days, six days a week. All the musicians in 3RDEYEGIRL have a background in jazz improvisation, so they’re able to react quickly to Prince’s lead when he’s composing, but they’re still astounded at how fast he is at songwriting and arranging. Grantis calls him the “best band leader in the world.” Nilsson nods. “There’s a special chemistry between us,” she says. Later Prince will ask DJ Rashida to play a banging song for me that he wrote for Ford-Welton and her husband at the after-hours party. I ask Rashida what Prince songs he doesn’t like her to play at his parties, and she says, “Well, not the ones with curse words, because he doesn’t curse anymore.”

Soon the door to the tour bus opens: it’s the man himself. He’s changed into a new outft of flared pants with primary color stripes, a large ring with a blue evil eye at the center of his right hand (“nothing evil about it,” he tells me) and a rhinestone-encrusted pimp cane in the other. The cane is just for decoration; he is clearly in amazing shape. Prince points at me and then at Richard Sanders, an executive at his label, NPG Records. Richard takes out a sheaf of paperwork and puts it on the bus’s kitchen table. It’s the contract for the new 3RDEYEGIRL record, which has been awaiting a final signature. Prince affixes with a fourish.

“That’s it,” he says, turning to Grantis, Ford-Welton, and Nilsson. “You’ve got a record deal. Now we just have to make some songs.” Everyone laughs at this joke—with Prince’s prolifc output as a producer, they’ve been recording so much for the past few months that they already have most of the album done. The women take their cue and leave the bus, with Richard hot on their heels. “Thank you so much for coming,” Ramadan says to him, graciously. “Oh, please,” he replies. “This is the fun part.” With everyone gone, Prince and Ramadan take seats on a low-slung black leather couch. I sit opposite and throw out my frst question: “I was just talking to the women about your new band, about how they met you. But what drew you to creating the band in the frst place?”

Prince rests his thin, elegant hands on top of the cane and speaks quietly—he expended his voice during the shows, and now he’s saving it—but never averts his gaze. Framed by thick lashes, his extremely large, liquid eyes seem to occupy half his face.

He takes a breath and then begins a long monologue: “This organization is diferent than most, in the sense that we don’t take directions from the outside world. It’s like a galaxy. The sun is in the center giving of energy, and everything revolves around it.” He talks about what it would be like if instead of the sun giving of energy, energy was trying to exert its force on the sun. That wouldn’t make a lot of sense. It would be, he says, like “meteors hitting a planet!” What makes much more sense is “a sun pulling everything around on its own axis, with information. The sun is information. Nobody really talks to me. Nobody talks to me a lot.” He points at Ramadan. “I talk to her. She talks to you. She talks to Richard. And so on and so forth. If I trust her, then you can trust her.”

Prince likes this system. “I directed a couple flms and it was taxing in that people were asking me questions about their jobs.” He much prefers peace and calm. “I have to be quiet to make what I make, do what I do.” He takes a breath. “Another thing that’s diferent about this organization is that time here is slowed down, because we don’t take information from the outside world. We don’t know what day it is and we don’t care. There is no clock.”

Living in the now, he says, makes the tour go by very quickly. Indeed he couldn’t tell me how long he’s been on tour because he only counts the hours he’s actually onstage when he thinks about it. So in the last month, “I’ve only been on tour for two days,” he says. “That’s the work.”

He seems to have come to the end of this thought, so I look down at my questions, unsure if I should ask the frst one again. Better not. “Your shows are wonderful, obviously, but known to be very unpredictable,” I say. “How do you decide what you are going to play?”

“I decide in the moment,” he says. “I change the set list right then and there.” He also takes into account the state of his guitar. “To play solos the way I’m playing them, the guitar goes out of tune sometimes. It’s just a piece of wood.”

“What happened with The Roots’ guitarist’s guitar, the one that you threw after your performance on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon?” I ask.

“What?” he says.

“Didn’t you borrow a guitar from him and then throw it after your set? It was all over the news.”

“No,” he replies, straight-faced. “Another thing that’s diferent about this organization is that we don’t think about that,” he says, pointing at the TV.

He returns to speaking about guitars. Sometimes, he says, he makes sure to include a song he can play on piano so the guitar can go ofstage and get tuned. In fact, he explains, this is why he added Gratis to the band—he needed a second guitarist for these moments. “But that guitarist had to be great,” he says. “She couldn’t be a punk.” How does he think female and male guitarists are diferent? “I don’t think women and men are diferent in that regard. Donna can whup every man on guitar, bar none.”

What’s the diference between men and women generally?

“Well,” he says. “If we didn’t have to go to a party, we could talk about that.” I see him shifting around in his seat a little—he has planned an after-party in the venue’s VIP lounge—and I start to think he’s going to cut the interview short. So I ask my big question: “How do you, as a religious person, reconcile the religious impulse with what most of your songs are about, which is the sexual one?”

Prince bursts out laughing and points to Ramadan. “Ha!” he says. “Now we know what you’re going to write about. We were waiting for your thread.” He clears his throat. “First of all, do you see a diference in religions?” he asks. I say no, suggesting all religions are based on the same idea and then corrupted by their human leaders. “Then what are the wars about?” he asks, unhappy with my answer. “If one religion believes Christ is the king, and another doesn’t, then there’s a diference in religions.” He goes on for a bit, and adds, “we are sensual beings, the way God created us, when you take the shame and taboo away from it,” and continues that religion should be thought of like a force, an electro-magnetic one or like gravity, that puts things in motion. Then he says, “I don’t want to talk about this.”

I ask him if he believes in sin. “You have to look at the origin of the word,” he says. “Humans needed a language to describe a rule given from some group from…” He pauses, then says, and this is as I remember it: “Words are tricky. And plus these days I just talk to the folks in the outside world about music. If you were a student and I was teaching you something we could get into that. We can’t do this before a dance party.”

I begin madly crossing off my non-music questions and tell him I’m thinking of learning guitar so I can teach my daughter. “See,” he says, “if I discussed my past, your baby would never see you. And what a waste.”

We talk about how he seems to be operating on a business plan that requires him to do a lot of touring. “I love it,” he says. “What, this is so terrible? I’m sooo bored of it.” He gestures around his swank bus and laughs. We discuss which song in his vault he feels he should have released. “Which one of your children do you like the best?” he says. “Music comes from the same source. It’s all the same thing.”

What records does he listen to now? He mentions Lianne La Havas, KING (a female trio he’s worked with), Janelle Monáe, and Esperanza Spalding. “I listen to my friends’ records before they come out,” he says. “Feel me. A record nowadays comes out a year after it’s made. When we make music, we want it to come out right away. Because we’re going to have some new stuff right away.”

What does he feel about the return of vinyl? “It never left,” he says. “Think about a young person listening to Joni Mitchell for the frst time on vinyl. You know how fun that is? Whoa, we gonna be here a minute.”

I ask how tech-averse he really is; does he have an iPhone? “Are you serious?” he says. “Hell, no.” He mimics a high-voiced woman. “Where is my phone? Can you call my phone? Oh, I can’t fnd it.” He talks about people who come to his concerts all the time, akin to the Deadheads. “People come to see us fifty times. Well, that’s not just going to see a concert—that’s some other mess going on. This music changes you. These people are not being satisfed elsewhere by musicians, you feel what I’m saying? It’s no disrespect to anyone else, because we’re not checking for them. But we don’t lip synch. We ain’t got time for it. Ain’t no tape up there.”

He stands up, planting his cane on the foor. I ask how the music that he’s playing now, with 3RDEYEGIRL, has changed him. “I’m calmer now,” he says. “I’m rougher with men. I bring my tone down with women. If they make a mistake, I don’t look at them and go, ‘Seriously?!’” He talks about Ford-Welton missing a cue on one of their songs and how he simply gestured to her and told her just not to do it next time. “I explained that she had to pay attention. Stay in the moment.” Then he smiles. “Let’s go to the party.”

He looks good for hs age, ur right about that. I'm perplexed, for a man who stays awake half of the night, where are his undereye bags/circles?? I came upon this article on facebook the other day. I read the whole article. I like that he knows what not to discuss & especially when not to, that shows spititual maturity & good ole common sense. I remember reading that he said we humans are sensual beings. I am guessing that women are still a weakness for him.. as it is with most men...

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Reply #138 posted 07/07/13 10:51am

thedoorkeeper

SirLancelot said:

This man looks amazing unembellished. Why go so heavy on the makeup and photoshop? And even in B&W, you can clearly see that they got his skin tone wrong. As a photographer, this hurts. Ugh...

.

If you showed me these pics & said they were from a mannequin at a wax museum I would totally believe that. Ugh they are scary.

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Reply #139 posted 07/07/13 1:20pm

PoplifeGeminEY
E

Stymie said:

I read that 3 times and still don't understand any of it.

wow, lol....

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Reply #140 posted 07/07/13 1:25pm

PoplifeGeminEY
E

G3000 said:

I LOOKED INTO PRINCE's EYES!!

[Edited 7/3/13 11:59am]

[Edited 7/3/13 12:00pm]

LOL what the ?? hmmm what state?

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Reply #141 posted 07/07/13 1:35pm

PoplifeGeminEY
E

hyperpessimist said:

Photoshop, make-up, plastic surgery... yawn. There is somehting called "ageing gracefully", and these pop stars ain't having none of it.

[Edited 7/3/13 12:48pm]

I know my Prince BET NOT get any plastic surgery!! Hope he doesn't anyway..

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Reply #142 posted 07/07/13 1:46pm

purplethunder3
121

avatar

PoplifeGeminEYE said:

G3000 said:

I LOOKED INTO PRINCE's EYES!!

[Edited 7/3/13 11:59am]

[Edited 7/3/13 12:00pm]

LOL what the ?? hmmm what state?

lol

"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #143 posted 07/07/13 3:18pm

PoplifeGeminEY
E

LadyZsaZsa said:

"we are sensual beings, the way God created us, when you take the shame and taboo away from it,” and continues that religion should be thought of like a force, an electro-magnetic one or like gravity, that puts things in motion. Then he says, “I don’t want to talk about this."
Too late. horny

Ha! That's kinda what I was thinking too..

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Reply #144 posted 07/07/13 3:38pm

PoplifeGeminEY
E

journey said:

serpan99 said:

U can order the magazine with the FULL STORY now:

.

arrowhttp://shop.vmagazine.com/

.

[Edited 7/3/13 10:58am]

That man just gets more handsome as the years go by, and still makes my heart beat faster just looking at him. biggrin

Do you like his hairstyle? I do, it's cool, but I think it's a bit too high at the top. I agree, he has always had a cute face.

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Reply #145 posted 07/07/13 3:40pm

PoplifeGeminEY
E

G3000 said:

confuse

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Reply #146 posted 07/07/13 3:59pm

PoplifeGeminEY
E

journey said:

Stymie said:

It is considered a curse word by some and JWs don't believe in Hell.

Now that, I don't understand. JWs live by the Bible don't they, and Hell is clearly written and spoken about therein, so I don't get how they don't believe in Hell if they believe in God and the Bible?

thumbs up! thumbs up!

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Reply #147 posted 07/07/13 4:03pm

PoplifeGeminEY
E

rudeboynpg said:

billymeade said:

You spelled "Little Richard" wrong.

Well, Little Richard was a inspiration on Jimi Hendrix.

Although Prince has made bullshit denials of it because Prince wants to be viewed as original, the Jimi inspration on Prince has been pretty obvious to Jimi Hendrix fans, not only musically, theme, image, look, style. Hair, mustashe, clothes with frilly shirts.

Paisely flowery clothes.

Even a shirt with eyeballs on it.

Etc.

[Edited 7/4/13 13:34pm]

I see Jimi was a dresser too... I'd like to know if Jimi has had an influence on Prince. I'd be surprised the answer is no. Prince ever speak on that, any1 know?

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Reply #148 posted 07/07/13 4:17pm

PoplifeGeminEY
E

kidmelody2012 said:

Kanye West killing prince in creativity now

I aplogize in advance for doing this 2 u,, fishslap.. please spare urself from future punishment.. I really do not want to read anything about Kanye on here!!, unless he has done a project with P. I see & hear his name enough !!

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Reply #149 posted 07/07/13 7:23pm

journey

PoplifeGeminEYE said:

journey said:

That man just gets more handsome as the years go by, and still makes my heart beat faster just looking at him. biggrin

Do you like his hairstyle? I do, it's cool, but I think it's a bit too high at the top. I agree, he has always had a cute face.

I think his fro is cool also, reminds me of his younger years when he wore one. Prince does not look like he's 55 at all.

[Edited 7/7/13 19:25pm]

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Forums > Prince: Music and More > V MAGAZINE: EVERLASTING NOW... NEARLY 40 YEARS INTO HIS CAREER, PRINCE IS STILL CHURNING OUT MIND-BLOWING MUSIC