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Thread started 08/06/03 7:33am

livewire

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Real people referenced in a Prince song

I was watching the Isaac Mizrahi documentary "Unzipped" last night and saw Cindy Crawford. "Oh, look," I said to myself, "there's Cindy C."

This got me to thinking: What other real people have been referenced in a Prince song? To my surprise, I was able to come up with a few right away. Here's the list off the top of my head.

(Note: I'm limiting this to references found on released tracks only. And I'm not including references to associated artists.)

---

* Cindy Crawford - "Cindy C"

* Ronald Reagan - "Ronnie Talk To Russia"

* Joni Mitchell - "The Ballad Of Dorothy Parker"

* James Brown - "Gett Off"

* Bonnie and Clyde - "The Other Side Of The Pillow"

* Jesus - "4 The Tears In Your Eyes" (Jesus is referenced in a few songs, but this track addresses the historical figure most directly -- "Long ago there was a man" -- while others are more about the mystical Christ.)

* Clara Bow - "Condition Of The Heart"

---

Okay, that's what I've got.

Help me make this list definitive. It'll be a cool resource for the FAQ.

Peace, David
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Reply #1 posted 08/06/03 7:34am

Handclapsfinga
snapz

you forgot the 2nd reference p made to reagan (in "annie christian", along with john lennon)...dorothy parker wuz a real person as well, so there's another reference.... wink


nuts all your edits are belong to us
[This message was edited Wed Aug 6 7:44:41 PDT 2003 by Handclapsfingasnapz]
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Reply #2 posted 08/06/03 7:40am

summerdawn

'Style' (from Emancipation)

1. Style is more like Jackie O.
2. Style is the face U make on a Michael Jordon dunk
3. Style is Ali's jab
4. Style is Mayte in the shower


Hope these work
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Reply #3 posted 08/06/03 7:41am

Serious

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Dorothy Parker
With a very special thank you to Tina: Is hammer already absolute, how much some people verändern...ICH hope is never so I will be! And if, then I hope that I would then have wen in my environment who joins me in the A....
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Reply #4 posted 08/06/03 7:42am

stymie

Face Down...just like Elvis.
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Reply #5 posted 08/06/03 7:42am

livewire

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Nice work, summerdawn. That one song nearly doubles the list by itself! smile

Peace, David
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Reply #6 posted 08/06/03 7:48am

livewire

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Unless I'm wrong, there is no reference to the writer Dorothy Parker in "The Ballad Of..." It only references a fictional "waitress on the Promenade" with the same name.

Peace, David
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Reply #7 posted 08/06/03 7:49am

soulse7en

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I always thought that 'Mad Sex' on the New Power Soul album was a reference to Mel B. Everything about the song, bushy hair mulatto...tattoo's dizzy...stud in your mouth turns gold...same damn bird from London. I know that she isn't orginally from London but I'm sure she lived in London.

Let me know what you think.
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Reply #8 posted 08/06/03 7:55am

livewire

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soulse7en said:

I always thought that 'Mad Sex' on the New Power Soul album was a reference to Mel B. Everything about the song, bushy hair mulatto...tattoo's dizzy...stud in your mouth turns gold...same damn bird from London. I know that she isn't orginally from London but I'm sure she lived in London.

Let me know what you think.


Although many fans think that "Mad Sex" is about Mel B. -- and it very well may be -- for the purposes of this list I'm going to veto it as too vague. Thanks for participating though! smile

Peace, David
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Reply #9 posted 08/06/03 7:57am

Handclapsfinga
snapz

livewire said:

Unless I'm wrong, there is no reference to the writer Dorothy Parker in "The Ballad Of..." It only references a fictional "waitress on the Promenade" with the same name.

the reference is in the title itself, not within the song.
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Reply #10 posted 08/06/03 8:00am

Serious

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Handclapsfingasnapz said:

livewire said:

Unless I'm wrong, there is no reference to the writer Dorothy Parker in "The Ballad Of..." It only references a fictional "waitress on the Promenade" with the same name.

the reference is in the title itself, not within the song.


So does it count then, I think it does lol
With a very special thank you to Tina: Is hammer already absolute, how much some people verändern...ICH hope is never so I will be! And if, then I hope that I would then have wen in my environment who joins me in the A....
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Reply #11 posted 08/06/03 8:05am

MrGoldstruck

Abraham Lincoln - "Avalanche"

Gustav Mahler - "Good Love"

Macey Gray - "Mellow"

Common - "Mellow"

John Lennon - "Annie Christian"

William Shakespear - "I Like It There"
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Reply #12 posted 08/06/03 8:10am

JDINTERACTIVE

Maceo Parker~G Spot

Just telling him 2 blow his horn of cause.
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Reply #13 posted 08/06/03 8:10am

livewire

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Handclapsfingasnapz said:

livewire said:

Unless I'm wrong, there is no reference to the writer Dorothy Parker in "The Ballad Of..." It only references a fictional "waitress on the Promenade" with the same name.

the reference is in the title itself, not within the song.



Hmmm...We'll have to defer to the other Orgers on this one.

I agree that Prince uses the name Dorothy Parker because of its association with the writer, but it is not a direct reference to her. The "Dorothy Parker" of the song and title is a witty waitress, nothing more.
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Reply #14 posted 08/06/03 8:12am

imnotsayinthis
just2bnasty

livewire said:

Unless I'm wrong, there is no reference to the writer Dorothy Parker in "The Ballad Of..." It only references a fictional "waitress on the Promenade" with the same name.

Peace, David

it is a direct reference to dorothy parker. the song is prince at his metaphorical best. the waitress is providing to prince what dorothy parker provided to her circle of male friends at the infamous algonquin.
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Reply #15 posted 08/06/03 8:23am

livewire

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imnotsayinthisjust2bnasty said:

it is a direct reference to dorothy parker. the song is prince at his metaphorical best. the waitress is providing to prince what dorothy parker provided to her circle of male friends at the infamous algonquin.


By using the name "Dorothy Parker," Prince is obviously telling us something about the sharp wit of his waitress, but the song never addresses the writer so is it really a direct reference like the others we've listed?

* I knew this one would be a sticking point before I even posted this thread. lol

Peace, David
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Reply #16 posted 08/06/03 8:26am

hazel

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isn't lennon too on annie christian?
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Reply #17 posted 08/06/03 8:27am

roverlo

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What about Jim Crow (I put my foot in the ass of Jim Crow) in a song called (maybe contains a reference to a real person as well, who knows lol ) My Name Is Prince...?

(edit to make the obvious person referenced in a song clearer...)
[This message was edited Wed Aug 6 8:45:24 PDT 2003 by roverlo]
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Reply #18 posted 08/06/03 8:28am

Handclapsfinga
snapz

hazel said:

isn't lennon too on annie christian?

awready mentioned this one wink
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Reply #19 posted 08/06/03 8:28am

LittlePill

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Face Down-He references Prince
Kiss-He mentions Wendy (and her parade)
Mountains-He mentions Bobby (Z)
Mellow-Macy Gray and Common
Avatar by Byron rose

prince Proud member of Prince's cult for 20 years! prince
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Reply #20 posted 08/06/03 8:30am

imnotsayinthis
just2bnasty

livewire said:

imnotsayinthisjust2bnasty said:

it is a direct reference to dorothy parker. the song is prince at his metaphorical best. the waitress is providing to prince what dorothy parker provided to her circle of male friends at the infamous algonquin.


By using the name "Dorothy Parker," Prince is obviously telling us something about the sharp wit of his waitress, but the song never addresses the writer so is it really a direct reference like the others we've listed?

* I knew this one would be a sticking point before I even posted this thread. lol

Peace, David

he never said the waitresses name was dorothy parker, only dorothy. when he says "this is the ballad of dorothy parker" he is referring to the actual person, dorothy parker, who provided an outlet to the men of the algonquin round table. much like this waitresss provided an outlet to prince during a hard time in his relationship with another woman.
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Reply #21 posted 08/06/03 8:31am

roverlo

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LittlePill said:

Face Down-He references Prince
Kiss-He mentions Wendy (and her parade)
Mountains-He mentions Bobby (Z)
Mellow-Macy Gray and Common


Tommay Barbarella and Levi in Sexy MF...

But those refernces don't count I guess?!
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Reply #22 posted 08/06/03 8:34am

paintsprayer

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[/quote]
it is a direct reference to dorothy parker. the song is prince at his metaphorical best. the waitress is providing to prince what dorothy parker provided to her circle of male friends at the infamous algonquin.[/quote]

I've always Taken this song to be mostly taking place in Prince's mind. he has a witty waitress. but I think actually going home with her is imagined. The "violent room"
is just him getting worked up thinking of past girlfriends and he needed to get out for a while. So I would say he's talking about Dorothy parker as much as he's talking about a waitress.
Now I'm older than movies, Now I'm wiser than dreams, And I know who's there
When silhouettes fall
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Reply #23 posted 08/06/03 8:41am

loveroflife71

Henry Mancini in "Dionne"
Erykah Badu and Common in "Mellow"
John Kennedy, Jr. in "White Mansion"
Martin Luther King, Jr. in "We March"
D'Angelo and NPG in "Get Yo Groove On"
Vanity 6 in "D.M.S.R."

That's all I can think of right now...
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Reply #24 posted 08/06/03 8:41am

LittlePill

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roverlo said:

LittlePill said:

Face Down-He references Prince
Kiss-He mentions Wendy (and her parade)
Mountains-He mentions Bobby (Z)
Mellow-Macy Gray and Common


Tommay Barbarella and Levi in Sexy MF...

But those refernces don't count I guess?!


Why not, they're real people.
Avatar by Byron rose

prince Proud member of Prince's cult for 20 years! prince
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Reply #25 posted 08/06/03 8:42am

loveroflife71

Macey Gray - "Mellow"

I thought it was Erykah Badu, since she and Common are an item...

I could be wrong...
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Reply #26 posted 08/06/03 8:43am

livewire

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Okay, Dorothy Parker is in, but the bitch gets an asterisk! evillol

Dorothy Parker* - "The Ballad Of Dorothy Parker"

*This entry has been deemed inconclusive.

Peace, David
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Reply #27 posted 08/06/03 8:43am

loveroflife71

Henry Mancini in "Dionne"
Erykah Badu and Common in "Mellow"
John Kennedy, Jr. in "White Mansion"
Martin Luther King, Jr. in "We March"
D'Angelo and NPG in "Get Yo Groove On"
Vanity 6 in "D.M.S.R."

That's all I can think of right now...
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Reply #28 posted 08/06/03 8:45am

organgrinder

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lovin is truth (thinks that rite) like Miles loves jazz "Miles Davis"
~ "don'tcha wanna see my 'Tootsie Roll?' Baby I'm sho' you would!" ~
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Reply #29 posted 08/06/03 9:01am

imnotsayinthis
just2bnasty

organgrinder said:

lovin is truth (thinks that rite) like Miles loves jazz "Miles Davis"

"lovin' this truth like miles loved jazz" wink
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