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Prince's Infamous 1981 Rolling Stones Supporting Gig: He Didn't Sing In A Falsetto! I had a chance to hear a recording of the show. It's pretty crazy sounding, actually. Seems like the crowd was a big, rolling, hostile hot mess.
Biggest Surprise?
Prince sang in a lower register throughout. No falsetto!
This might have been the first time he did this live??
I guess he wanted to sound like more of a rocker this day. Not a high-pitched disco funk boy. | |
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Right - and he still got shit thrown at him. That could have ended a weaker persons career - a stadium of people booing and humiliating you Imagine all the music we would've lost. | |
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it was two gigs in the second he tried to sound less feminine ...to no avail "Whatever skin we're in
we all need 2 b friends" | |
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Doubt he was the first black artist to open for the stones So I wonder what really set them off The feminine appearance and demeanor? The gayness? The clothing,? The general weirdness? Who knows. Maybe all of it. At this point the stones prob had pretty conservative fans. I doubt they wanted any gay looking bands. If this took place in England it would have been a diff story, most likely. | |
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funkbabyandthebabysitters said:[quote]Doubt he was the first black artist to open for the stones So I wonder what really set them off The feminine appearance and demeanor? The gayness? The clothing,? The general weirdness? Who knows. Maybe all of it. At this point the stones prob had pretty conservative fans. I doubt they wanted any gay looking bands. If this took place in England it would have been a diff story, most likely.[/quote ...or the blackness???!! | |
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^ Read that first sentence again, champ. | |
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funkbabyandthebabysitters said: Doubt he was the first black artist to open for the stones So I wonder what really set them off The feminine appearance and demeanor? The gayness? The clothing,? The general weirdness? Who knows. Maybe all of it. At this point the stones prob had pretty conservative fans. I doubt they wanted any gay looking bands. If this took place in England it would have been a diff story, most likely. No, he wasn't. The Stones have had BB King, Ike & Tina Turner, Buddy Guy and others as support acts. But they all played blues that went down better with the Stones fans. If you take any of this seriously, you're a bigger fool than I am. | |
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I'm not discounting stones fans racism, but I think the music also played a part. Princes music def wasnt macho, despite heavy rock riffs on bambi. And it's also the look. This was princes weirdest look of his career. He also was somewhat demure at times, which they prob seized on. Who else was supporting the stones at this point? Any new wave bands? Cos that's who prince was closer t to at this stage | |
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From Bill Wyman's book Rolling with The Stones.
Support acts on the American tour of 1981: George Thorogood & The Destroyers J. Geils Band Heart Journey Van Halen Stray Cats Santana Bobby Womack Etta James Screaming Jay Hawkins And more, too many too mention, but a pretty diverse list, wouldn't you say? [Edited 4/24/21 2:03am] If you take any of this seriously, you're a bigger fool than I am. | |
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I guess you could argue that a weird looking black artist would be more offensive to conservative stones fans But I'm going to risk offending the daphne Brooks type prince fans and say if prince turned up with better hair and smarter outfits, the reaction might have been different Stones fans were NOT punk fans And they did not like any late 70s or early 80s developments like new wave, disco, post punk etc either Would stones fans have liked 'gay presenting' white rockers? Idk. I know Jagger could be quite camp, but he didnt look a mess like dirty mind era prince. Princes whole band looked like freaks. So I guess it's a combination of factors. Or maybe it's just petty racism and one rule for white camp artists and another for black ones. | |
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. In theory, I think the songs When You Were Mine [the part about the other man sheeping between Prince & his woman] & Sister [the incest theme] might have been half of it. The other half is the anti-disco attitude [which was borderline racist AND homophobic] that still exist within 1980-82. | |
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I don't think any of those Stones fans actually took the time to read/listen to his lyrics. | |
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Yeah I don't think they cared what they sounded like, and its obv the songs weren't the kind of thing stones fans liked to change their mind either.
Guess it's a compliment to prince that he could ruffle so many feathers quite so extensively lol [Edited 4/24/21 3:59am] | |
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The feminine/homophobic issue is an interesting one here. I think it could be part of the reaction given the early 80s backlash against gays, but Mick went through periods where he was every bit as androgynous and campy as Freddie Mercury. Moreover, he actually came out before almost anyone else as "bi", so it is ironic that the Stones fans turned so much on Prince. At some point, it seemed like the group dynamic took over and even potentially open minded Stones fans were identifying with their fellow Stones fans. In any case, it is a shame that this happened to Prince. | |
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I think its prob a reactionary hatred of anything disco and what that represented, I.e. camp, gay, black, latino
LOT of hate from rock fans at that time. Ppl like Tina Turner, or blues artists, they didnt have that association. [Edited 4/24/21 5:15am] That late 70s climate prince came out of is overlooked Disco, Sylvester, Donna summer, all of that helped shape him Understandable why it is overlooked too, as he claimed funk and soul, not disco Guess prince was a bit of a rockist too [Edited 4/24/21 5:17am] | |
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Black Uhuru, Stevie Wonder, Peter Tosh and Living Colour have also opened for the Stones....Never heard or read about audiences being unruly to them. | |
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I think one factor is the hot sun and early time of day. He was the first opening act and NOT what the Stones fans wanted. They didn't want to sit through THREE opening acts. [Edited 4/24/21 9:47am] Welcome to "the org", laytonian… come bathe with me. | |
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"Stones Fans"??? You mean hells angels, right? "Whatever skin we're in
we all need 2 b friends" | |
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laytonian said: I think one factor is the hot sun and early time of day. He was the first opening act and NOT what the Stones fans wanted. They didn't want to sit through THREE opening acts. [Edited 4/24/21 9:47am] That is absolutely true. If you're in the middle of that big crowd, you can hardly even see what the person on stage is wearing. It was the people closest to the stage who started this and they are of course the most fanatical. And those big crowds have a psychology of their own. And yes, the word spread and the next day people were planning to go in and abuse Prince. It is comparable to Bob Dylan's 1966 tour where people who hated him going electric went in with the idea of booing the electric part of the show. If you take any of this seriously, you're a bigger fool than I am. | |
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nayroo2002 said: "Stones Fans"??? You mean hells angels, right? Stop talking nonsense. If you take any of this seriously, you're a bigger fool than I am. | |
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Wow so many well know facts about the gig out there and yet soi many specualtions here. First you guys forgott Steve Wonder opened for The Rolling Stones in 1976. Second of all it's nonsense that Stones fans were anti new wave punk disco.Stones jumped on the punk and dsco bandwagon around Some Girls,does this sound like classic Stones sound? https://www.youtube.com/w...Yvy3kBYN4Q and did you forget that one of their most well known song is disco Miss You. Prince irritated the crowd with Jake u Off ,i think that song was what pissed the crowd.
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many stones fans did NOT like miss you or their disco period one bit some still dont like some girls
face it, they hated the sight of this effeminate guy in front of them, had no idea what to make of him, and decided it more fun to humiliate him rather than give him a chance
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. Mick Jagger's bromance moments: . w/Billy Prestion
. w/David Bowie
. Enough said! | |
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I doubt they heard the lyrics to Jack U Off, and based on the recording they were rowdy enough as it was. [Edited 4/26/21 2:43am] | |
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I'm (very much) guessing that in a massive venue, probably with less-than-ideal on-stage sound for the support act, Prince would have had to have sung in lower register in order to project his voice and be able to hear himself. PIPS! Eurgh... | |
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It's a pity he didn't play the same venue for the Purple Rain tour when he could've sold it out. I guess he was able to move past it pretty quickly but to go back with his crowd would've been a real triumph. | |
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- I remember reading that the quite conservative Stones-only-fans were waiting so long for their beloved band to perform, certainly those die-hards right in front of the stage. I think first and foremost that this is a very important and specific situation to start with... Anyone could be boed off stage. Though Van Halen also opened once for the Stones iirc, and they were nicely welcomed. - "The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves. And wiser people so full of doubts" (Bertrand Russell 1872-1972) | |
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- It would be intersting to know how the die-hard front rows Stones fans reacted to the other opening (black) artists. - "The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves. And wiser people so full of doubts" (Bertrand Russell 1872-1972) | |
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- Did you see how Mick was dressed ? Not very rock 'n roll either if you ask me... - "The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves. And wiser people so full of doubts" (Bertrand Russell 1872-1972) | |
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its mick jagger. mick fucking jagger. he could prob come on in his underwear and it would be okay, cos its mick jagger. i mean, little richard woudl prob have been okay too, cos its little richard.
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