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A King And A Prince--An Oral History (VIBE)
Hey guys...Here's an excerpt from a piece I recently wrote on the relationship, rivalry and cultural connection between MJ and Prince. As I said on another site, this was a labor of love for me given that this week marks the 1st year anniversary of MJ's death. It also hits home because Prince is still among us....I'll say it again....Love and respect the greats while they are still here....
Please enjoy...And as always thanks for the support from my Org people....Peace....
Michael Jackson & Prince---An Oral History
“I heard you were looking for me,” said a deep voice on the other end of the phone. It was the fall of 1996, and Michael Jackson was holding court in a posh suite at the Four Seasons Hotel in New York. The King of Pop had instructed his handlers to contact his old peer and rival Prince for a planned collaboration. The prospect for such a headline-making union was indeed intriguing. For much of the ‘80s, Michael Joseph Jackson and Prince Rogers Nelson took turns ruling the musical landscape. MJ, the gifted Motown child prodigy who made good on his ambition to become the biggest pop star to ever walk the earth with the release of the record-breaking landmark Thriller. Prince, the at times outrageous, androgynous, one-man-band performer and producer who backed up his genius rep by pulling off one of the most unlikely coups in rock history after unleashing the multi-platinum 1984 Purple Rain soundtrack and Oscar winning film. A rivalry was born.
But more than a decade later, both had found themselves in a battle to save their respective careers. MJ struggled mightily to fight unproven child molestation accusations as the tabloid brigade hounded him relentlessly. Prince declared war against his longtime label Warner Bros. and changed his name to an unpronounceable symbol as he headed deeper into obscurity. Indeed, a team-up between the two icons would be perceived as a brilliant masterstroke. “I think it would be just great,” MJ told Prince. Yet, the collaboration to end all collaborations would never happen. Both aging legends would achieve comebacks on their own terms. With the untimely June 25, 2009 death of Jackson, their connection grows even more profound. The fact that the public is still enamored with MJ and Prince speaks volumes for their cultural impact and influential contributions to music. But what did these two titans really think of one another? Was there a true rivalry or deep respect? VIBE presents the Oral History of a King and a Prince.—K. Murphy
BATTLE FOR SUPREMACY (1983-1993)
ALAN LEEDS: Before we set out on the Purple Rain tour, it was a case of Prince wanting to see what Michael and the Jacksons were doing in terms of production, lighting, staging and everything with the Victory tour. We charted a jet with a couple of his bodyguards and Jerome Benton from the Time and Leroy Bennett, who was Prince’s lighting and production designer for his tours. We flew to Dallas to the old stadium where the Cowboys played. There was a feeling in our camp that while what they were doing was a very solid stadium production, there was nothing really cutting edge about the technology. The Varilites, which was a brand name for a type of computerized lighting, was the gold standard in the industry at that time. And we made sure we had all that shit. But the Jackson’s production didn’t. Prince had a lot of respect for Michael, but he was mildly impressed with the show.
QUESTLOVE: Michael attended many of the Purple Rain concerts. I have the four Purple Rain shows that were in Los Angeles in ’84. And now that I realize that Mike was in the audience, I often watch it to see if I can spot him [laughs]. But it makes you think. Why was Mike there four nights in a row? You have already created Thriller, you’ve done the Moonwalk, you’ve done the groundbreaking videos and you’ve sold a million a week. You are officially in the Guinness Book of World Records. For all intents and purposes, Purple Rain sold 15 million units, but it was hardly the 33 million that Thriller went on to sell. So why are you this curious to who is behind you? Then I realized that you can’t be that successful without being competitive. Michael knew Prince was a serious threat.
ALAN LEEDS: Quincy Jones organized a lunch that brought Michael and Prince together. At one point, they asked him to be a part of We All The World, but Prince respectfully declined and offered to give them a song [“4 The Tears In Your Eyes”]. All I remember Prince talking about afterwards is that he thought Michael was a little bit weird. And this is coming from a guy who wore high heels and pajamas to nightclubs [laughs].
QUESTLOVE: There’s the now-infamous story about a ping-pong match between Mike and Prince in 1986 while Prince was overdubbing Under The Cherry Moon and Mike was working on Captain Neo. And they were both vying for the attentions of Prince’s girl Sherilyn Fenn, who back then was the hot shit. It was a ping-pong game gone bonkers. He said that MJ played like Helen Keller. [Editors note: Prince’s drummer Bobby Z has gone on record about MJ’s and Prince’s good-natured showdowns in the Minneapolis Star Tribune. “They'd shoot hoops at [Prince’s] Paisley Park," Bobby Z said of the unlikely pair. “Prince had a deep-seeded competitive nature, so it's easy to see where he would measure himself against Jackson's success.”]
[Edited 6/27/10 7:26am] | |
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Wow - I love this! Thanks so much for sharing!!! Off to read the rest.
Thanks again!!!! "She made me glad to be a man" | |
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Thanks Murph, fantastic job.. | |
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Fantastic read! | |
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Great read! I wonder how ?uestlove has 4 Purple Rain LA shows on video when as far as I know, only the shows from Houston, Atlanta, and Syracuse are circulating on video. Hmmmm... | |
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WOW!!!! Great Read Murph! There's a lot great stories in there. I'd love to see Mike and Prince playing basketball together. That would be hilarious!
Do you think BET/Stephen Hill will give P his props Sunday night or do you think it will turn into a Mikelovefest like last year?
Oh, and thanks for the burning that midnight oil for these stories man. Great stuff! | |
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Fun read. Ὅσον ζῇς φαίνου
μηδὲν ὅλως σὺ λυποῦ πρὸς ὀλίγον ἐστὶ τὸ ζῆν τὸ τέλος ὁ χρόνος ἀπαιτεῖ.” | |
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Laura Flynn Boyle? That doesn't sound right time wise. Laura would have been, what, ten? Space for sale... | |
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Yeah...lol...that was a typo....It was supposed to be the actress he was dating in the early '80s...The same woman that wrote a series of blog posts about her relationship with Prince...
What was her name again? | |
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QUESTLOVE: You recall that ill-fated duet Eddie Murphy did with Michael called “Whatzupwitu?” I have five hours of raw footage during filming for that video. Michael and Eddie had a green screen behind them, so somewhere in that second hour, the conversation turns to Prince. And Eddie is like, “Yeah man…Prince is a bad motherfucker. I’m glad I’m working with you, but another dream I have is working with him too.” And I don’t even think that Mike knew the camera was on him and he goes, “Yes, he’s a natural genius.” And then four beats later, Michael says, “But I can beat him [laughs].”
yea so btwn this and those 4 purplerain tapes he has...i think i need to make friends with mr ? !! Yesterday is dead...tomorrow hasnt arrived yet....i have just ONE day...
...And i'm gonna be groovy in it! | |
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omg ! imaine this as the cover for bad if pri nce had stayed onboard
Yesterday is dead...tomorrow hasnt arrived yet....i have just ONE day...
...And i'm gonna be groovy in it! | |
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Agreed. Wonderful job, murph. Good night, sweet Prince | 7 June 1958 - 21 April 2016
Props will be withheld until the showing and proving has commenced. -- Aaron McGruder | |
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Dude also mentioned he had reels of The Jacksons Triumph tour that was used on the Live album
I emailed dude begging him to share "We may deify or demonize them but not ignore them. And we call them genius, because they are the people who change the world." | |
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By the way, Murph, a nice follow-up to the other MJ article you posted on Vibe! | |
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Yeah, she was visitng Prince at the studio and Michael was flirting with her "We may deify or demonize them but not ignore them. And we call them genius, because they are the people who change the world." | |
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I would have loved to have seen that ping pong match....lol | |
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Oh we're back. | |
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So Purple Rain was Michael's favorite Prince song. Interesting. | |
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CYNTHIA HORNER: Both Michael and Prince had their problems later in the ‘90s. I used to see and talk to Michael a lot, but he started to change. I didn’t have very much contact with him; my contact was with all of his relatives. Michael had all these people that surrounded him that kind of prevented his old friends and business peers from having any contact with him because they wanted to control what was going on with him. His own family didn’t really have a lot of contact with him. And Prince was dealing with his own issues. He woke up one day and realized that some of his business decisions with Warner Bros. had not worked out in his favor. He began to protest the music industry. Everyone remembers when he wrote the word slave across his face. He didn’t feel like he got his just due financially and artistically. Both Prince and Michael became very inaccessible.
http://www.vibe.com/content/michael-jackson-prince-oral-history-pg-4 | |
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Michael flirting with any woman is a huge surprise to hear. | |
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It would def be a sight....That whole scene is just too surreal to me.... | |
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i think there is a huge diffference in why they were inaccssible though, in the 90's no one wanted to get near Prince for fear of being lumped in with a plight against labels, Michael was inaccessible because of the allegations against him, the changes in appearance, and just plan weird things that were going on, he was not about music anymore, he was becoming a side show. Prince to me has always been about the music which is why i cant lump these two together in any way but the fact that they were iconic at the same time in the same mainstream. "We went where our music was appreciated, and that was everywhere but the USA, we knew we had fans, but there is only so much of the world you can play at once" Magne F | |
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Prince's problems was really with "music business", NOT music itself. So his situation was very understandable to me.
But Michael's problems ran a lot deeper. He really could NOT trust anyone at 100% anymore. And some of those people Michael had surrounding him did NOT have his best interest at heart. [Edited 6/26/10 16:30pm] | |
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very true, Prince realized these issues after resigning and what that "all" meant. Michael was on a different path that obviously we will never know but he was closed off from reality, that i can only imagine the nightmare world he was in alot of the times, scary to think, but he had so many corrupt people around him and him being an addict didnt help, because he needed NO people around him, not "Sure I'll get that for you,just sign my check first" "We went where our music was appreciated, and that was everywhere but the USA, we knew we had fans, but there is only so much of the world you can play at once" Magne F | |
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Great piece!
I know folks may consider it redundant at this point esp after Per Neilson's hard work, but fuck it anyway, I would LOVE it if Alan Leeds wrote a book about Prince. The man is always intriguing, I don't think I EVER lost intrest in any of his interviews,,,whether in print, web or documentaries. I love his stories. | |
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2009
This Just Proves the tremendous resepct and love that Mj had for prince MICHAEL JACKSON
R.I.P مايكل جاكسون للأبد 1958 | |
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Yep....So true...
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Yeah...Alan is a wealth of info...He had me going with his stories.... | |
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It's so regrettable that Prince is neither able to find in himself to acknowledge Michael's demise nor willing to talk about his impact on popular culture. | |
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