I Would Die 4 U ~ Prince & the Revolution 11.28.1984
I Would Die 4 U is the seventh track on Prince's sixth album Purple Rain, (Prince.org correction the second album to be credited to Prince and the Revolution. Five months after the album's release, I Would Die 4 U was released as the album's fourth single. The track is also featured in the movie Purple Rain.
Prince and the Revolution recorded the song live on 3 August, 1983 at First Avenue, Minneapolis, MN, USA (at the same concert where Baby I'm A Star and Purple Rain were also recorded). The song dated back to at least 18 months earlier when it was tried out in soundcheck during a Controversy Tour show.
It was included as the seventh track on the 7 November, 1983 configuration of the album, and the sixth track on the 23 March, 1984 configuration, but became the seventh track on the final 14 April, 1984 configuration after some tracklist changes to the album. A tour rehearsal version of the song was recorded in late 1984 for release on the single's 12". The single version of the track was included as the eleventh track on the first disc of an early configuration of the compilation album Ultimate before the album was reworked for release. -PrinceVault
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I'm not a woman
I'm not a man I am something that you'll never understand I'll never beat you
I'll never lie And if you're evil I'll forgive you by and by 'Cause you, I would die for you, yeah
Darling if you want me to You, I would die for you I'm not your lover
I'm not your friend I am something that you'll never comprehend No need to worry
No need to cry I'm your messiah and you're the reason why 'Cause you, I would die for you, yeah
Darling if you want me to You, I would die for you You're just a sinner I am told
Be your fire when you're cold Make you happy when you're sad Make you good when you are bad I'm not a human
I am a dove I'm your conscious I am love All I really need is to know that You believe Yeah, I would die for you, yeah
Darling if you want me to You, I would die for you Yeah, say one more time
You, I would die for you
Darling if you want me to You, I would die for you Two, three, four you I would die for you
I would die for you You, I would die for you You, I would die for you Alternate versionsThe extended version of "I Would Die 4 U" is actually a rehearsal jam on the song with The Revolution and musicians from Sheila E.'s band, Eddie M (on sax) and Miko Weaver (guitar), along with Sheila E. herself ; This version was recorded sometime before the Purple Rain Tour. The jam features some overdubbing and fades at the end; a longer version, nearly 31 minutes long, was never released officially, but has been bootlegged. The extended mix was also used as the B-side of the 1989 "Erotic City" single (the artwork of which features the same image of Prince that was used for this single's cover).
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"I Would Die 4 U"Once again, this is all Prince. At first he wanted me to play the bassline on "I Would Die 4 U" manually. So we tried it during rehearsal first, which I could pull it off, but it was not easy. And sometimes I would get off rhythm a little bit because you had to be so spot on, and you had to play it with two hands! So Prince says, "Well, Matt, why can't you play it with one hand and play the chords with the other hand?" And I said, "You try it." But neither one of us could do it. So I told Prince, "I got an idea. Let's try to sequence this one." Unfortunately, nothing in our arsenal could sequence it properly, so we created a way to put that bassline part in the sequencer and then have it lock up to the Linn drum machine with MIDI. But the Linn drum didn't have MIDI so Prince's tech guy created a MIDI interface for it. So I would have the sequencer ready to go during the live show and then all Bobby Z would have to do is hit the play button. We did some groundbreaking technological things that day.
-Dr Fink
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8. I WOULD DIE 4 U (2:56) Without an experienced road crew on hand, I inherited the job of production manager by default. It was unusually hot and humid and the club was downright stifling by the time the curtain went up. Prince took to the stage like a boxer to a ring, jabbing, feinting and finally stunning the sweat-drenched audience with the most powerful of the new songs, the brazen I WOULD DIE 4 U and the spine-tingling PURPLE RAIN.
– Alan Leeds, 1993
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Baby I'm A Star 1,2,3,4
Hey, look me over Tell me do u like what u see? Hey, I ain't got no money But honey I'm rich on personality Hey, check it all out Baby I know what it's all about Before the night is through U will see my point of view Even if I have 2 scream and shout Baby I'm a (star) Might not know it now Baby but I r, I'm a (star) I don't want to stop, 'til I reach the top Sing it (We are all a star!) Hey, take a listen Tell me do u like what u hear? If it don't turn u on Just say the word and I'm gone But honey I know, ain't nothing Wrong with your ears Hey, check it all out Better look now or it just might be 2 late (just might be 2 late) My lucks gonna change tonight There's gotta be a better life Take a picture sweetie I ain't got time 2 waste Oh baby I'm a (star) Might not know it now Baby but I r, I'm a (star) I don't want to stop, 'til I reach the top Sing it! (We are all a star!) Everybody say, nothing come 2 easy But when u got it baby, nothing come 2 hard You'll see what I'm all about (see what I'm all about) If I gotta scream and shout (if I gotta scream and shout) Baby baby (baby) baby (baby) baby (baby) Yeah Yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah (star) Might not know it now Baby but I r, I'm a (star) I don't want to stop, 'til I reach the top Sing it! (star) Baby baby baby Oh baby I'm a (star) Baby baby baby Somebody (We are all a star) (Baby I'm a star) We are all a star We are all a star Doctor! Baby, baby, baby, baby, Baby, baby, baby, baby We are all a star [Backwards talking in the background] "Like what the fuck do they know. All their taste is in their mouth. Really. What the fuck do they know? Come on baby. Let's go... crazy"
Prince first recorded a studio version of the song in late 1981-1982 at Prince's Kiowa Trail Home Studio, Chanhassen, MN, USA. Prince and the Revolution later recorded the song live on 3 August 1983 at First Avenue, Minneapolis, MN, USA (at the same concert where I Would Die 4 U and Purple Rain were also recorded). This live version was released with slight overdubs. It was included as the eighth track on the 7 November 1983 configuration of the album, and the seventh track on the 23 March 1984 configuration, but became the eighth track on the final 14 April 1984 configuration after some tracklist changes to the album. -PrinceVault
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 | |
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God ~ Prince & the Revolution
Why don't U, dance the Dance Electric?
the Dance Electric, the Sunday songs, the Love theme, the Temptation connection
18 GOD (4:02)
GOD turned out to be one of Prince’s more obscure flip sides. Released with PURPLE RAIN, engineer Susan Rogers remembers it as a “Sunday song.”
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Label: Warner Bros ASIN: B003NZBYQI
God:the Dance Electric 3:59min
In the beginning, there was God He made the earth, and the heaven He gave us light to rule the day And another light to rule the night He made the seas He made the fruit upon the trees When He saw that it was good He made a man, made a man Only He could, o nly He could God made me too He made us all Made us all equally
God made you God made me He made us all equally
Dance the Dance Electric
There isn't much time Who screamed? Was it you?
God was released as the b-side of Purple Rain, the third single from Prince's seventh album Purple Rain...other worldwide releases contained a completely re-recorded vocal version, simply titled God.
The vocal version, God, was recorded on 20 August, 1984, at the Flying Cloud Drive Warehouse, Eden Prairie, MN, USA.
The B-side, God, is a much more overtly religious number (Prince's most religious to date), recalling the book of Genesis. The song also features extensive vocal experimentation. Towards the end, Prince mentions "The Dance Electric", which was a song given to former band member André Cymone. | |||
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Purple Rain’ Turns 30: Prince’s Engineer Shares Majestic (And Maddening) Studio Stories Susan Rogers
What was it about Prince that made you want to work with him, and what was your role on the Purple Rain project? I knew I would do anything to work with Prince. So then in 1983 I heard through the grapevine that Prince was looking for a technician. And then I went right to Glen Phoenix, who is the President of Westlake Audio, the studio where Prince recorded, and told him I would be perfect for him. I’m female and Prince likes working with females. I am completely well-trained as a technician so I knew I could do the work and I was a huge fan. Glenn asked me a lot of questions and then he sent me over to Prince’s management. That had to be very surreal for you, right? Were you around when they initially recorded parts of Purple Rain at August ’83 First Avenue gig? “Darling Nikki” is a hell of a song to have as your first project. Did you press play and think to yourself, “What have I gotten myself into?” You talk about recording with Prince so nonchalantly, but from all the stories about his recording exploits he was known for wearing out engineers. How were you able to keep up? Show off…
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What was a typical recording session with Prince like during the Purple Rain era? 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. Did you have a hand at recording Purple Rain's film score as well? Was there a sense that you were working on a game-changing project? You engineered on the Purple Rain tour as well. What's your fondest memory? That had to be a humbling experience for everyone involved, right? That should have been a Dave Chappelle sketch.
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What do great songs sound like the first time we hear them? Can you remember that feeling? When Bob Dylan heard The Animals’ version of House of the Rising Sun, he got out of the car and ran around it again and again he was so excited. The first time you hear a great song is so rare, and it can never be repeated; watching the crowd during this first performance of Purple Rain, I see that look on a few faces, a silent shocked awe. On the twenty-seven other recordings of Purple Rain in my iPod, the moment the first chord is strummed, the crowd cheer, acknowledging the anthem. They become a congregation, keen to be guided through the Purple Rain, and that has its ecstasies, even if it involves cigarette lighters held aloft, and hands waved in the air. But to hear silence flowing back from the audience, no singalong because they don’t know the words, is to eavesdrop on the shock of the new.
The lyrics of Purple Rain suggest the singer has wronged someone, harmed them inadvertently. In the context of the Purple Rain film that someone is Prince’s girlfriend; in fact, in a rather literal outtake from the film, Prince and his girlfriend have sex in a barn at dawn, and the water streaming down from the roof sheathes her naked skin, which is then struck by the dawn rays, so that she appears to be bathing in a kind of purple rain. Music video directors in the 1980s could be very literal; if Bonnie Tyler sang “turn around bright eyes”, then we would see a boy with very bright eyes turning around.
What does purple represent to Prince? Purple is a gateway colour, a transition from one stage to the next, the colour of dusk and dawn, magic hour between day and night. Purple is also a mix of pink and blue, a boy and a girl. I’m not a woman, I’m not a man. I am something you will never understand. Prince casts himself as androgynous as a tactic of seduction, a conventional hetero offer with a side order of feminine sensitivity, or at least, what a twenty three year considers to be sensitivity. Purple is also the colour of royalty, and he is a Prince. The sub-editors of the Sun will pun Purple Rain into Purple R.e.i.g.n. Or is it the purple of Jimi Hendrix’s Purple Haze? All of these possible meanings are burnt away by the guitar. The solo is a messianic ejaculation, an absolving, annihilating ecstasy. The sky was all purple and there were people running everywhere, sang Prince, predicting the millennial panic of 1999. He even wrote a song called Ronnie Talk To Russia Before It’s Too Late, a trite bit of rockabilly agit-pop that called for Ronald Reagan to negotiate with the Soviet Union, a sentiment he was to express more succinctly in the high-pitched childish voice in 1999 that asked, “Mommy, why does everyone have a Bomb?” The sky is all purple because it is on fire, and what follows is a quenching of that destruction.
Purple Rain is the redemptive baptism on the night of the apocalypse, forgiveness for the terrible sins committed by the singer and by us. Prince is clear that we are all implicated. Times are changing. It’s time we all reached out for something new, and that means you too. He is our messiah, so he tells us in another song on the album, I Would Die 4 U. You say you want a leader but you can’t seem to make up your mind I think you better close it and let me guide you to the Purple Rain. | |
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I never meant to cause you any sorrow
Prince and the Revolution recorded the song live on 3 August 1983 at First Avenue, Minneapolis, MN, USA (at the same concert where Let's Go Crazy, Electric Intercourse, I Would Die 4 U and Baby I'm A Star were also recorded). This live version was worked on further between late August and September 1983, at Sunset Sound, Hollywood, CA, USA, where the track was edited to omit a verse and a solo, and a new string section was overdubbed over the finale of the track (during the same set of sessions as The Beautiful Ones, a studio version of Computer Blue, a re-recording of Irresistible Bitch and Sugar Walls). It was included as the sixth track on the 7 November 1983 configuration of Purple Rain, before becoming the eighth and final track on the 23 March 1984 configuration. It became the ninth and final track on the final 14 April 1984 configuration after some tracklist changes to the album.
Prince - all vocals and instruments, except where noted Bobby Z. - drums and percussion Brown Mark - bass 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-PrinceVault | |
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WENDY MELVOIN: Everybody was coming up with their own parts. By the end of the day, it was pretty much solid. I remembered this woman walked in with her bicycle. She was like a bag lady. She sat down on a chair in front of us while we were playing. Really quiet, very demure, really sweet. And she just started crying while we played “Purple Rain.” She was bawling. | |
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