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Purple Patch [sundayherald.com - excerpt] http://www.sundayherald.com/41280
Purple Patch Rock and Pop CDs: Prince - Musicology (Columbia) Reviewed by Leon McDermott It's been, well, let's just say a long time, since Prince last released a good album. Arguably, he's released little of relevance since the late 1980s; thing is, the albums he released in the nine years between his debut, For You, in 1978, and his masterpiece, Sign O' The Times, in 1987, have been the blueprint for so many other artists since. Touted as a comeback album, after the name changes and the religious conversions (right now, he's a Jehovah's Witness, sometimes to be seen knocking on doors in his native Minneapolis), Musicology is no match for classic Prince – though, one might ask, what is? It is, however, a reminder that behind all the rumours and the fog of myth, there's a razor-sharp musical brain. It kicks off with the title track, a taut slice of funk that doubles as an ode to Prince's musical forebears ends with a radio dial passing briefly through previous Prince hits . Cinnamon Girl borrows its title from Neil Young and its political approach from a naive anti-war protester (not that Prince has ever done politics subtly, as anyone who remembers Ronnie Talk To Russia can attest), but there's a touch of Little Red Corvette in its multi- tracked, perversely upbeat chorus. Dear Mr Man, meanwhile, harks back to the conscious funk of Curtis Mayfield and Sly And The Family Stone, bemoaning the state of the nation, the lack of welfare and Aids assistance; Prince notes halfway through that he "Might not be in the back of the bus, but it sho' feel just the same". 18 April 2004 | |
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