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Satellite concert shows Prince can still strut his stuff http://www.startribune.co...94655.html
Last update: March 30, 2004 at 8:24 PM Satellite concert shows Prince can still strut his stuff Chris Riemenschneider, Star Tribune March 31, 2004 With a look and energy reminiscent of Elvis' legendary 1968 "Comeback Special," the live satellite broadcast of Prince's Los Angeles concert Monday night to 31 movie theaters nationwide was a production fit for a king. Go ahead and call it a comeback. The unstoppable momentum inside L.A.'s Staples Center, where the singer began his heavily hyped "Musicology" tour, was not lost on the Twin Cities fans watching from 1,500 miles away. The Regal Cinema 20 in Brooklyn Center -- just a few miles from the north Minneapolis neighborhood where Prince grew up -- showed the two-hour, 15-minute concert on two screens to about 700 sold-out seats. Prince was not the first artist to take advantage of this new satellite technology, but he's undoubtedly the first to use it so successfully. Playing on an in-the-round stage, with his musicians and fans surrounding him, the 5-foot-5 singer loomed large on screen the same way he did 20 years ago when "Purple Rain" hit theaters. Broadcasting it from L.A. had its benefits, too. The cameras panned the audience preshow and came up with a rather telling array of celebrity fans, including Eddie Murphy, Tim Allen, Hilary Duff and Stevie Nicks. The concert's set list and staging were so well paced and executed, it would be tragic to give away too much and risk spoiling his three St. Paul concerts, June 16-18, at the Xcel Energy Center. Suffice it to say that the in-the-round setting perfectly suits the guy. At 45, Prince still struts around tirelessly and eats up the spotlight like a 20-year-old glutton. It wasn't a perfect concert. Some of the instrumental solos were too long, including a couple by Prince on guitar (although his lead in "The Question of U" was amazing). Also, the restless rocker still has an annoying habit of cutting songs short, which he did to "When Doves Cry." But the scant missteps were made up for by the fact that Prince also didn't make the oldies-laden show a walk in the park. He made many of the old hits feel original with either new arrangements (unplugged versions of "Little Red Corvette" and "7" worked magically) or with fresh passion ("Purple Rain" and "Sign O' the Times" sounded better with nostalgia). Obviously, the purpose of Monday's live satellite broadcast was to promote the $45 to $75 tickets on sale for the rest of the tour. The theater show cost a reasonable $15, which included a free copy of Prince's new "Musicology" CD (in stores April 20). If hype was what Prince was pulling, then that's just one of his many talents that the satellite broadcast proved he hasn't lost. Chris Riemenschneider is at chrisr@s.... | |
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5-foot-5... oh boy that's funny. all can do, is just offer U my love... | |
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twin663 said: 5-foot-5... oh boy that's funny.
co-sign! I have stood next to Prince and there is no way he is 5'5. | |
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