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Purple Rain era 1983-1984 Prince & the Revolution And the MUSIC continues...forever...
* Purple Music, the Purple Rain album Bside long versions outtakes
Dig if u will the picture - of u and I engaged in a kiss. The sweat of your body covers me. Can u picture this, my darling? An ocean of violets engulf our persons. A bird screams. At 1st, I think it's u and u thought it was me. Oh, if only violets could talk. Insecurities. Do u know who u are? Then it doesn't matter who screamed 1st. Did it matter who ate of the apple 1st? The end result was negative. Can u pass me the pepper? Why, because u told me salt was bad 4 me. I thought u liked eggs. I thought u liked me. Well, eggs are the only thing I can make besides a baby. Why do u look at me like that? What are u thinking? I know u better than u think I do. There's this purple suspicion that lurks in the anals of my mind that u and I are alike in more ways than 6. Can u relate? oh yeah? Then what's the difference between a beautiful man and an ugly man with money? Nothing - as far as you're concerned. Do u still want 2 spend the night? Good. Come on. U said u would wash my hair. Shall we go swimming 1st? U can't swim. Wonderful. "I'll teach u 2 swim, I'll teach u 2 try, I'll teach u 2 laugh, but not 2 cry. I'll teach u 2 trust me when u think I lie, I'll teach u 2 love me until we die." It's from a song I wrote. Do u believe that? U do? Well, I lied. I just made it up. Pretty good, huh. It's not nice 2 lie. I think we're on the right track. Shall I wash u 1st or shall u wash me?
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"We were all such babies, so hungry for success. With Purple Rain it
P U R P L E R A I N
BEFORE HE CREATED THE MUSIC, HE LIVED EVERY BIT OF IT | |
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Dearly beloved If U don't like the world U're living in CHORUS: We're all excited, but we don't know why CHORUS Come on, baby Are we gonna let de-elevator bring us down? Dr. Everything'll Be Alright will make everything go wrong He's coming! Take me away!
© 1984 Controversy Music - ASCAP
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8 LET’S GO CRAZY (4:39)
Five weeks later, Warner shipped the album. Less whimsical and lascivious than his other work, the keenly focused PURPLE RAIN was the definitive Prince. The subsequent simultaneous release of the movie and LET’S GO CRAZY (a second No. 1 single) drove the package to the top of the charts where it remained for an astounding six months.-Alan Leeds | |
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What was a typical recording session with Prince like during the Purple Rain era? Susan Rogers: The only time we would remix something after the fact is when the original track was cut live like in the case of "Let's Go Crazy" and subsequent records like "Mountains." And of course we would remix tracks that were recorded live by the mobile truck. We would bring it back in the studio, fix it and mix it. That was the case with "Purple Rain" and a few other tracks on that album.
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You've said that Emancipation was created in a freer climate than that under which you recorded for Warner Bros. Yet there doesn't seem to my ears to be a significantly "freer" sound on the new album than in your earlier work. Well, when you're in the creative process, the first thing you naturally think about is the "bombs," the great ones that you've done before. You want to fill in the slots on your album with the songs that will make everyone the happiest: fans, musicians, writers, and so on. I used to try to fill those gaps first whenever I was trying something new, or wait to challenge myself to do another great one. This means that you think about singles: time constraints, for example, and the subject matter. [For that reason] my original draft of "Let's Go Crazy" was much different from the version that wound up being released. As I wrote it, "Let's Go Crazy" was about God and the de-elevation of sin. But the problem was that religion as a subject is taboo in pop music. People think that the records they release have got to be hip, but what I need to do is to tell the truth.
APRIL 1997 * MUSICIAN The Sound of Emancipation | |
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PURPLE RAIN
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Producer, Arranged By, Composed By, Performer– Prince And The Revolution
B side: Erotic City (USA) Take Me With U(UK) released JULY 18, 1984
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NEW MUSICAL EXPRESS
"Let's Go Crazy" opens with the self-deflating manifesto established on past outings, the end of the world is nigh so liberate your underwear and your ass will follow. It's a hot and juicy all-out rocker with an automated Ant beat and it sets me in mind of a pre-conversion electro-age Little Richard, though it's obvious from the way he wields his guitar and cocks his titfer that Prince would rather be compared to Hendrix.
-- Gavin Martin
*
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Prince - all vocals and instruments, except where noted Bobby Z. - drums and percussion Brown Mark - bass guitar and vocals Wendy Melvoin - guitars and vocals Lisa Coleman - keyboards and vocals Dr. Fink - keyboards and vocals
Before a studio recording was made, Prince and the Revolution recorded the song live on 3 August 1983 at First Avenue, Minneapolis, MN, USA
In October 1983, a studio version was recorded at the St. Louis Park Warehouse in St. Louis Park, MN, USA, which would be edited down for the album (the full version was released on the 12" version of the single), during the same sessions that produced an unreleased studio version of Computer Blue. -PrinceVault
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"Yeah um It was a lot of fun, a lot of people like to say did you collaborated with Prince in the studio -BrownMark 2015
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Make Love Not War, Erotic City Come Alive co-lead: Sheila E.
The song starts with a guitar string plucked and whammied, before dropping into the drum track. The experimental number relies on a strong bass line and a simple keyboard riff. The song features Prince's voice both sped up and slowed down at various times to sound like different singers. Also featured is Sheila E., in her recording debut,
Initial tracking took place on 30 December, 1983 at Sunset Sound (two days after In A Spanish Villa and Next Time Wipe The Lipstick Off Your Collar, the same day as She's Always In My Hair, and the day before We Can Fuck (later retitled We Can Funk)). It is possible that Sheila E. added her vocals sometime between 1-4 April, 1984, when Prince and Sheila E. worked on tracks for her album The Glamorous Life-PrinceVault
"Yeah, he said the “f word,” he was reading the lyric, and I said ‘I’m not singing that.’ He said, ‘Why not?’ I said, ‘Because I’m not going to say that word.’ I said funk, f-u-n-k, and he said the other word." -Sheila E.
All of my purple life CHORUS: Everytime I comb my hair CHORUS All of my hang-ups are gone CHORUS {x2} Uh, whoa whoa, whoa whoa, whoa whoa whoa (Mmmm) Baby, U're so creamy I... I... I... I... I... CHORUS If we cannot make babies If we cannot make babies (U and me) Whoa whoa I... I... I... I...
PrinceVault: Initial tracking took place on 30 December 1983 at Sunset Sound
It is possible that Sheila E. added her vocals sometime between 1-4 April 1984, when Prince and Sheila E. worked on tracks for her album The Glamorous Life, but this is uncertain.
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Prince has so many songs that were really raunchy — songs like “Darling Nikki,” that spawned a whole national movement spear-headed by Tipper Gore. What are your memories of that time or that song?
Sheila E: I loved it. Are you kidding? Back then?
Even though it was raunchy? Sheial E: Yeah, I mean, I didn’t know any better. That was the ‘80s. We were having a blast, I’m young. It’s like I walked around: ‘Hey, I’m naked. Look at me.’ Playing, just doing, having a blast. I had so much fun. And I loved the show that he put together. We all loved those songs. That thing was brilliant, then. And some of the songs are still great — just change the lyrics a little bit. I do “Erotic City” in my show. But I change the lyric.
http://time.com/3387754/s...view-book/
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Take Me With U PrinceVault: Initial tracking took place on 27 January 1984, at Sunset Sound, Hollywood, CA, USA (seven days after A Million Miles (I Love You), five days before Tricky). The track was initially intended to be credited to Apollonia 6 and it was included as the first track on a 29 February 1984 configuration of the Apollonia 6 album, before being added to the final configuration of Purple Rain, compiled on 14 April 1984 (its inclusion made it necessary for Let's Go Crazy and Computer Blue to be shortened). The recording used on both albums was the same (although edited for time restrictions on Purple Rain), and was always intended as a duet between Prince and Apollonia. Prince - all vocals and instruments, except where noted Bobby Z. - drums and percussion Brown Mark - bass guitar and vocals Wendy Melvoin - guitars and vocals Lisa Coleman - keyboards and vocals Matt Fink - keyboards and vocals David Coleman - cello Novi Novog- violin and viola Suzie Katayama - cello Apollonia - vocals
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MANIC MONDAY Initial tracking for Prince's original version took place on 4 February 1984 at Sunset Sound, Hollywood, CA, USA (the day before recording Ooo She She Wa Wa); the song was intended for Apollonia 6 (as a duet between Prince and Apollonia), and was included as the third track on the 29 February 1984 and Spring 1984 configurations of the Apollonia 6 album, but was withdrawn from the album prior to release.
The Bangles' version of Manic Monday was mostly re-recorded (information on recording dates and location are needed), but it features some of Prince's original backing tracks (Brenda Bennett's background vocals can still be heard on the released version). Jill Jones- background vocals (uncredited, unconfirmed) -PrinceVault
6 o'clock already, I was just in the middle of a dream
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Bangles:Vicki Peterson – guitar, background vocals
Peterson explained in an interview with MTV UK in 1989 about why Prince gave them the song: "Prince really liked our first album. He liked the song 'Hero Takes a Fall', which is a great compliment, because we liked his music. He contacted us, and said, 'I've got a couple of songs for you. I'd like to know if you're interested,' and of course we were. One of the songs Prince brought to the group was 'Manic Monday', written under the pseudonym of Christopher."
Peterson talked about the evolution of what Prince brought them: "It was a Banglefication of a Prince arrangement. He had a demo, that was very specifically him. It was a good song, but we didn't record it like 'This is our first hit single! Oh my God! I can feel it in my veins!' We just did the song, and the album, and then sat back and thought about it."
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AVC: What was it like to have Prince say, “So, hey, I’ve got this song for you”? Susannah Hoffs: It was all very mysterious. I got a call… We were working with Peggy and David Leonard, a husband-and-wife engineer team who had done a lot of stuff with Prince in Minneapolis, and then I guess everybody came west, and they were working in studios in L.A. I think Peggy was working with us at the time, and David was working with Prince? Anyway, somehow word got to me to go to Sunset Sound and pick up the cassette from Prince. It was the old days of cassettes, you know. There were two songs on it, and one of them was “Manic Monday.” I didn’t actually see Prince that day, because… I don’t know, either he wasn’t there or he just wasn’t coming out of the studio or something. [Laughs.] But I just got the tape and played it on the way back to the studio where The Bangles were, and we immediately thought that “Manic Monday” was… [Hesitates.] I’ve got to look for that tape, ’cause there was another song on it, and… I have it somewhere—thank God I didn’t throw it out!—but I just haven’t had a chance to go through my old box of cassette tapes. I should probably do it soon, because that tape’s going to start degrading! [Laughs.] But it was cool. The title was really great. It just reminded me of “Manic Depression,” the Hendrix song, and had kind of a psychedelic thing. And then it had these great harmonies, and I don’t know, there were a lot of things about it where I just thought, “This is a really good fit for The Bangles. So I’m ever after grateful to him for giving us that song, because it ended up being our first radio hit.
. AVC: I’ve read both that he is singing background vocals on the song and that he is not singing background vocals. I mean, I can’t actually hear him, but… Susannah Hoffs: He is not singing background vocals. The tape that I had was more than a demo—it was a good sounding recording, and there was a woman singing on it, I’m pretty sure. I don’t think it was him singing. He was singing on the other song, but on “Manic Monday,” I’m pretty sure it was a girl’s voice. Gosh, time has passed since those days… [Laughs.] But at any rate, I think typically when he gave artists songs, which he was doing a fair amount of at that time, they would use his tracks. So I think when he came to the rehearsal studio when we were getting ready to go on the tour and he had finally heard our version of it, we were told—or maybe he said it at the rehearsal studio—that he was surprised that we had re-recorded it, because we could’ve just asked for the tracks and used his tracks. Maybe he even sent the tracks over. I’m trying to remember. But, anyway, he was really happy with how it turned it out. He was really happy with it, so that felt good. And after that, we ended up… He would show up at other concerts, and a couple of times we jammed with him. It was a lot of fun. He’s so great—such a great musician and writer and player and… everything!
http://www.avclub.com/art...les,63099/
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FADE IN: PR Outake:Wednesday ... I Don't Know What I'd Do...
Wednesday (sometimes erroneously known as There's No Telling What I Might Do) is an unreleased track recorded on 24 October 1983 at Prince's Kiowa Trail Home Studio, Chanhassen, MN, USA (five days before Father's Song). It was intended to be sung by Jill Jones in the movie Purple Rain and was included as the fifth track on a 7 November 1983, configuration of Purple Rain . Although it is likely that the recording is a performance by Prince with Jill Jones, it is listed here as a Prince and the Revolution recording as this is most likely how it would have been credited upon release on the Purple Rain album. The track remains unreleased. -PrinceVault
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" eslE dluow a nediam hsulb tniapeb ym keehc / roF taht hcihw uoht tsah draeh em kaeps thginot "
I Want 2 B A Modernaire "Else would a maiden blush bepaint my cheek / For that which thou hast heard me speak tonight",
Dez Dickerson - lead vocals Prince - guitars, synthesizers and background vocals Unidentified female (possibly Jill Jones) - reversed background vocals
Modernaire (a.k.a. (I Want 2 B A) Modernaire) was performed (in part) by Dez Dickerson in Prince's first film Purple Rain. Over 20 years later, Dez Dickerson released the full song as the first track on his limited edition compilation A Retrospective (from his own tape copy of the track, rather than the master copy). Three years later, Dez Dickerson released the single Modernaire, including the original version of the track and multiple cover versions of the song by dance artists (labeled on the single as "remixes"). Specific recording dates are not known, although it is believed that the track was recorded in mid-to-late 1983 at Prince's Kiowa Trail Home Studio, Chanhassen, MN, USA (credited as "the Purple House basement studio"), after Dickerson left Prince's band. Some reversed background vocals by an unidentified female (possibly Jill Jones) include the lines "Else would a maiden blush bepaint my cheek / For that which thou hast heard me speak tonight", taken from William Shakespeare's play Romeo and Juliet (Act 2, Scene 2). This recording was later used in Intermission. -PrinceVault
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The song is dedicated to James Brown
Prince I'm possessed, ooh
Initial tracking took place on 24 May 1983 at Prince's Kiowa Trail Home Studio, Chanhassen, MN, USA, two months after the song's first live appearance. He recorded a new version on 17 March 1984 at Sunset Sound, Hollywood, CA, USA for use in Purple Rain. A short instrumental portion plays in the movie in the background of a scene in which Morris Day tries to seduce Apollonia. The song is dedicated to James Brown in the credits of the Prince And The Revolution: Live VHS. Prince and the Revolution: Live version
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Album Credits Lisa & Wendy, Bobby, Mark & Matt: The Revolution, Big Chick: the protector, Steve, Bob & Joe: the producers, Albert Magnoli: the director, Peggy Mac: the patience, Fred Moultrie: the money, Lee Phillips: the brains Warner Bros. Records & Film: belief, God 4 the "rain", Sandy: the case, The Time: “chicken grease”, Apollonia 6: Susan, Brenda & Apollonia: patience, wisdom & beauty, Jill: love, Roy Bennett: loyalty, David Leonard: the blade, Susan Rogers: energy, C arol McGovney: devotion, God: 4 the rainbow William Blinn: the story, Alan Leeds: the expert. Thanks 2 Don Thorin and all the cast & crew of Purple Rain Clarence Williams, Olga Karlatos, Kim: hi, Morris & Jerome, Katy, Billy Sparks: what up ‘tho? Richard Arrington, God: 4 the sun, Wally, Gator, Dez Dickerson & the Modernaires, Steve & everybody at 1st Avenue, all the extras & anybody else we foolhardedly forgot 2 mention. Thanks 2 all, may u live 2 see the Dawn.
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The CLUB erupts in CRIES! Prince hits
F is 4 frustration
G-spot, G-spot A is 4 America Y is 4 my yearnin'
G-spot, G-spot
G-spot G-spot
While specific recording dates are not known, initial tracking for Prince's original version took place between January and August 1983, most likely at Prince's Kiowa Trail Home Studio, Chanhassen, MN, USA. It was originally intended for Vanity 6's second album (which became Apollonia 6's first and only album Apollonia 6 when Vanity left the band). The song was then considered for Purple Rain, but was replaced on the album and in the movie by Darling Nikki in August 1983. -PrinceVault
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G-SPOT 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
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Suddenly "G-Spot" comes to a rousing
I feel some kind of love 4 U Cuz baby, U shock my wild I feel some kind of sexual courage Electric is my body, baby Electric intercourse, electric intercourse
Don't U wanna? Mash it Electric is my body, baby Electric intercourse, electric intercourse
Electric intercourse, electric intercourse Yeah Electric intercourse, electric intercourse Don't U wanna?
the BEAUTIFUL ONES replace GSPOT & ELECTRIC INTERCOURSE
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