ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY (2004)
Entertainment Weekly
April 23rd 2004
The Weird, Wonderful Return Of Prince
Prince, in an unusually revealing interview, talks about his wild and wicked
past, holding hands with Stevie Wonder, and why the music biz deserves
William Hung. BY JEFF JENSEN
THEY'VE BEEN ROCKED. THEY'VE BEEN FUNKED. THEY'VE BEEN WOOED.
Now it's time to show him the love. It's a manic Monday night in late March,
and 19,000 men, women and even children -- the largest crowd ever to see
a concert at Los Angeles' Staples Center -- are giving it up for Prince.
He has plied them with hits -- from "Let's Go Crazy" to "Kiss" to "U Got
The Look" -- but one song in particular has brought them thunderously to
their feet: an unplugged, stripped-down rendition of "Little Red Corvette."
It is the centerpiece of a solo acoustic set by turns warm, funny, and
riveting, and it earns him a standing ovation that goes on and on and on...
Prince beams. He covers his me-so-pretty face with his hands,
and the applause only gets louder. It's a big, messy, wet kiss and it clearly
means a whole lot to him. More than his fans might have considered possible.
More, perhaps, than he's willing to admit.
The last time we paid attention to Prince, it was as much
for his increasingly bizarre behavior as for the brilliant rock/funk/R&B
fusion that made him one of the greatest artists of modern pop. Changing
his name to an
unpronounceable symbol. Scrawling the word slave on his
cheek. Releasing half-assed albums like Come to burn off
his contract with
Warner
Bros. His most notable cultural contribution of the past decade?
Carmen Electra. Thanks, Prince. Thanks a lot.
Yet through it all, there still existed
the hope that a talent called ''genius'' time and again could return
to form. That moment finally
seems to have
arrived. In February, his electrifying Grammy duet with Beyoncé opened
the show, and stole it. That was followed by Prince's induction
into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame; his guitar heroics were the
highlight
of the
ceremony. His current tour -- on which he's allegedly playing his
hits for the last time -- is selling out across the country. Critics
are calling
his new CD, Musicology (in stores April 20), his best in years.
It's the kind of thing we media types like to call a comeback,
though according
to Prince, we media types, as usual, are mistaken.
Two nights after
playing to an ecstatic L.A. crowd, Prince is backstage
before
a sound check at the Glendale Arena outside Phoenix, a city named,
appropriately enough, after the fiery, feathered avatar of resurrection.
Clad in a black sleeveless tunic and cranberry pants, Prince takes a plate
from
his
bodyguard
and loads it up with fruit, pasta slathered in cream sauce, and
salad. Yes,
Prince eats. He also goes to the multiplex. Last night, after his
show in Bakersfield, Calif., he and his band unwound by checking out Kevin
Smith's latest flick, Jersey Girl, a so-so departure from his usual
lewd-and-crude comedies. Prince was unimpressed. Not that the 45-year-old,
happily married, devout Jehovah's Witness can't appreciate a cleaner act;
he himself has scrubbed from his set list staples like "Head" and "Jack
U Off." It's just that according to Prince, Smith didn't replace it with
nothing interesting. "We walked out after an hour," he sniffs. "Guess
that's what happens when the potty mouth doesn't work for you anymore."
Though 5 foot 2, Prince
does not radiate ''short.'' From his complicated poodle
haircut,
to his
dark
doe
eyes and
the
geometrically
groomed stubble along his razor-sharp features, to his toned
arms and quirky,
customized attire, Prince's carefully considered visage is a
superconductor for his considerable charm, and it tricks the eye. He even
has
a scent, though an elusive one. Not a perfume but a powder, like
he's
been dusted
with incense. Prince in the flesh is pop evanescence incarnate.
It's only when he opens his mouth that he resembles the rest
of us mortals.
Hearing him talk about ordinary things is almost a
shock. He speaks in hushed-voice gushes -- megabyte downloads of wit,
logic, and
Christian evangelism. In one rant about the nature of democracy,
how the media
shape perception, and the decline of morality in America, Prince
links terrorism-induced
regime change in Spain, Bowling for Columbine, The
Matrix, Adam
and Eve and the Fall of Man, the Jayson Blair/New York Times
scandal, Mariah Carey, MTV's Jackass, and Santa Claus. (We were discussing
whether
he thinks he's misunderstood.) Strangely, the whole thing makes
sense.
Of course, he does have his obsessions. Or perhaps obsession would
be more accurate. Nearly every answer to questions about Musicology or
his career is colored by his battle with Warner Bros. over ownership
of his master recordings and the pace of his output (beginning
with 1978's For You, Warner released 20 albums in 21 years).
Talking
to him can
be like chatting with a flashback-racked war veteran, or a heartbroken
ex dumped for no good reason.
Prince's attitude about the music
industry in a nutshell: He wishes it would go away. He hates how labels
have exploited our
warp-speed
culture
at the expense of nurturing long-term careers. ''It took me
four albums to get on the cover of Rolling Stone. Now it takes new
artists only
one. There should be rules for that kind of thing!''
His rhetoric is either deeply cynical or worldly-wise, depending
on your point of view; he is convinced record labels conspire to phase
out their most successful artists at their peak in order to avoid getting
locked into cash-rich deals. But occasionally, some grace breaks through.
His beef is with "the system," not the people who run it. "When I realized
that, that's when I took the word slave off my face," he says. "I realized
that they are as much slaves as I am."
That's why in 2001
Prince created the NPG Music Club, an online service that is now the
official outlet for most of his music. He's
giving Musicology away
to everyone who attends his concerts, an experiment he's
been itching to try since 1994 (the cost -- about $9.99 -- is included
in the
ticket
price).
With its focused songcraft and shout-outs to James Brown,
Earth, Wind & Fire,
and Sly & the Family Stone, ''Musicology'' has an old-school
vibe that reflects Prince's belief in old-fashioned musicianship.
If today's
young
artists just knew their stuff, Prince suggests, they could
have greater control over their careers and gain the clout
to transform the industry.
"I think of the music business as a city," he says. "You
tear one down, another whole city starts developing. But a city needs human
beings to run it. My whole point is that if the music came first, if the
city was run by musicians instead of people with MBAs, everything would
flip. This is what we need today. This is what I want to be -- a musical
mentor. To pass on the knowledge."
He doesn't find the current system completely useless: Columbia
Records is handling the traditional retail distribution of Musicology.
"I expect people will respond to it as a 21st-century Prince record," says
Sony Music U.S. president Don Ienner, who likens Musicology to Bruce
Springsteen's The Rising and Bob Dylan's Time Out of Mind: urgent (and
commercially successful) statements from supposedly dusty maestros. As
for Prince's desire for music-industry regime change, Ienner says: "There
are certain things we don't talk about. Obviously, he doesn't feel the
same way about us as he does about [his old label]. I hear what he's saying.
I don't necessarily have to agree with everything he's saying, but I hear
him.
Prince does see a place in
his new world order for the current power players. ''You
know that guy who dances funny
on American
Idol? The
Asian-American kid?'' He means William Hung. ''That works
for the record industry,'' he
says with a laugh. ''We need somebody to release those
kind of records.'' Does his implied critique include packaged
popsters like Britney
Spears, too? Prince begs off, not wanting to name names.
Kinda. ''I mean no
disrespect,'' he says. ''But I see it as my duty to school
young
people coming up.
Lip-synchers? What does a kid -- what do other artists
get out of that? I don't mind
if Mariah Carey hits bad notes.''
Being a role model doesn't mean Prince lacks mentors of his
own, like Stevie Wonder. "His insight is priceless," says Prince. It's
easy to see why he would connect with Wonder. Both are undisputed musical
geniuses who fought for -- and got -- total creative control over their
music. Prince Rogers Nelson was just 19 when he signed a multimillion-dollar,
three-album deal with Warner Bros. in 1977. A wunderkind from Minneapolis
who could play a dozen instruments by ear and wanted to combine James,
Jimi, and Sly into a single, idiosyncratic sound, Prince used his freedom
to create three albums of mounting brilliance that set the stage for his
'80s reign -- and, perhaps, for a profound sense of entitlement.
So what is he learning from Stevie these days? "I just learn
by watching him," he says. "One day, he wanted to show me what it's like
for him to experience the world, to actually feel a piece of music, so
he held my hand. Here, hold my hand." Prince extends his palm, and I take
it. It's warm and dry, and his nails are exquisitely manicured. "Now at
first, it's like 'Whoa, I'm holding hands with a man!'" He quickly released
his grip and throws his hands up. "Now, those thoughts and feelings are
mine, and we all have to work those things out for ourselves. But then
I started thinking what it means for Stevie to be able to hold someone's
hand -- anyone's hand, even a man's. He's telling me he respects me. And
by extension, he's teaching me that I have to have that same respect for
everybody in life."
THERE ARE TWO THINGS PRINCE DOESN'T TALK ABOUT. The first
is his personal life, which means that we
won't be chatting
about his wife, Manuela Testolini, whom I meet briefly
in Prince's candlelit dressing room after the sound check. She
shakes my
hand and tells me
it's a pleasure, all without breaking stride as she
leaves the room. Her husband
looks longingly toward the door, then invites me to
sit on a small sofa. Musicology is steeped in the pining of
a man
not only
in love but
in love with fidelity. Yet when I ask him about this
seemingly more mature Prince -- a man almost as infamous for his
romantic conquests
as his
music
-- he shuts me down. ''That's for all of you to decide.
I don't intellectualize my music.''
The second off-limits topic is Prince's
past...which rules out almost everything else you'd want to discuss with
him. ''I've
changed. I'm
a different person.
I'm about the present and moving forward. New joke,
new anecdote, new lesson to be discovered,'' he says. ''You
know that old
lady in Sunset
Boulevard,
trapped in her mansion and past glories? Getting ready
for her close-up? I don't run with that.'' Even so,
Prince begins
concerts
with a self-venerating
video quoting extensively from a speech by Alicia Keys
at his Hall induction.
Much of what has changed in
Prince's life has occurred in the several years since he committed to
the Jehovah's
Witness
faith.
His music
has always
wrestled with Christian-tinged spirituality, but
Prince says he didn't start reading the Bible until he'd become
a Witness.
His
religious
fervor was evident in the 2001 concept album The
Rainbow Children, which
was roundly knocked by critics. (Prince also attempted to produce an
evangelical video based on the album directed by...Kevin Smith, whose surreal
tale of working with Prince can be found on the DVD An Evening With
Kevin Smith. "I'm cool with him not liking Jersey Girl,"
says Smith. "I f---ing hated his album Crystal Ball, so now
we're even.")
As a result of his
faith, Prince has developed an uncharacteristic modesty. In concert,
he's taken
to changing ''I'm your
messiah and you're the
reason why'' in ''I Would Die 4 U'' to ''He's your
messiah...'' Still, it appears
he has some kinks to work out in squaring his dogma
with his golden-god persona. Asked if he feels
he's alienated
his fans
over the years,
Prince says: ''No. The love has never left. I've
always felt that there were
people in my corner. It's a gift, that God gives
us the chance to feel such love.
And it's all for His glory: I don't believe in
idol worship. That's why I don't sign autographs. When
I get asked
for my autograph, I say no
and tell them why, because I'm giving them something
to think about.''
This
from a man who often prompts his concert audiences
to scream his name. Ironies, contradictions, and
exceptions escape
Prince like
doves from
a cage.
There is also the predicament of his own
potty-mouthed past -- the one where he sang of erotic cities
and a love that
is soft
and wet.
But Prince
has this problem solved as well. He doesn't perform
those songs anymore. The founding father of the
warning label
freely concedes
he's come
full circle since he scandalized Tipper Gore
with the word ''masturbating'' in ''Darling Nikki.''
''Look at this situation
with the FCC after
Janet: We've gone too far now. We've pushed the
envelope off the table and
forgotten
there was a table. You can't push the envelope
any further than I pushed it. So stop! What's
the point?''
But the more Prince talks about the sign of the
times, the more he ends up talking about his
past -- and
defending it.
''We've
all used
shock
value to sell things,'' he says. ''I used shock
to get attention. But back when
I was doing the freaky songs in the freaky
outfits, we were exploring ideas. I wanted my band to
be multiracial, male
and female, to
reflect society.
The song 'Sexuality' was about education and
literacy. 'P Control' and 'Sexy MF' were about
respect for
women. Go and
listen to
the verses. All people focus on is the hooks.''
Of Prince's many contradictions, perhaps the strangest is
this: Here at the white-hot moment of his revival, the singer still simmers
over small flash points of insult. By and large, he's flattered when told
that his influence can be seen in everyone from Beck to OutKast, whose
Andre 3000 describes Prince as "the total package. To me, he's the best
of our generation -- a total musician making almost otherworldly music."
But ask him if he's heard the Foo Fighters' version of "Darling
Nikki" and Prince, who a minute earlier said he never listens to the radio
("When I want to hear new music, I go make some"), replies by describing
a Hawaii DJ's response to the Foos' cover. The DJ wondered if Prince had
heard it -- then said he couldn't care less if he had. "Just no respect,"
says Prince. "I wonder if that's the kind of thing the FCC would like to
clean up, too."
So...does he like the cover? "No! I don't like anyone covering
my work. Write your own tunes!" He says he got up in R&B singer Ginuwine's
face for bungling the lyrics in a 1996 version of "When Doves Cry." "I
was just busting on him to bust him, but I was a little serious: Have some
respect, man. If anyone tried to cover 'Respect,' by Aretha? I would shoot
them myself!"
Of course, the Queen of Soul was herself covering an Otis
Redding tune, but his point is clear: Young artists, respect your elder
betters. Which is a savvy position for Prince to adopt in our '80s-crazed
moment. It's the kind of thing a marketer might call "repositioning your
brand" -- as in angling for renewed relevancy while never admitting you
lost it in the first place. Whatever you call Prince's resurging popularity,
don't use the C-word. ''People are calling
this my comeback.
Comeback?
I never
went anywhere!''
Prince, in fact, denies that his Grammy appearance,
his oldies-packed tour, and the nationwide
movie-theater simulcast of his Staples
Center concert
were part of an orchestrated effort to kick-start
his career. ''I never stopped playing and
recording. Never
had a problem
filling
arenas.
My appearance on Ellen wasn't part of some
master strategy.
She asked if I would perform;
I said yes.'' Then, quoting from another man's song, Prince says, "Don't
call it a comeback. I've been here for years."
When I joke that he'd better be careful or LL Cool J may
come looking for him, Prince smirks: "I was about to say the same thing."
THE PHOENIX CONCERT STARTS AN HOUR LATE, due, perhaps, to
a certain interview ending right at
showtime. As a
result, Prince
has
to cut
the acoustic set, which means no ''Little
Red Corvette'' -- the song that
brought the Staples Center crowd to its
feet. But don't worry, Phoenix: You should
take the whole last-time-for-the-hits thing
with a grain of salt. ''Well, it is called
the 2004ever
tour,''
says
Prince when pressed
on the subject.
''And time is forever.'' So...probably
not the last time? ''Probably
not.''
Earlier, I asked Prince what the
''Little Red Corvette'' ovation at Staples meant
to him.
''What I was thinking
in that moment
was, Without
any real
sacrifice, there's no reward. The affirmation
of the Staples show was a blessing from
God. You've
read the
magazines,
the gossips.
I'm not
supposed
to be here. But here I am.'' Guess that's
what happens when the potty mouth don't
work for you anymore.