ROLLING STONE (1981)
Will the little girls understand?
By Bill Adler
Snaking out from the wings toward center stage
at the Ritz, prancing like a pony with his hands
on his hips and then flinging a clorine kick with
a coquettish toss of his head, Prince is androgyny
personified. Slender and doe-eyed, with a faint
pubescent mustache, he is bare-chested beneath
a gray, hip-length Edwardian jacket. There's a
raffish red scarf at this neck, and he's wearing
tight black bikini briefs, thigh-high black leg-warmers
and black-fringed go-go boots. With his racially
and sexually mixed five-piece band churning out
the terse rhythms of "Sexy Dancer" behind him,
the effect is at once truly sexy and more than
a little disorienting , and his breathy falsetto
only adds to his ambiguity -- for sheer girlish
vulnerability, there's no one around to touch him:
not Michael Jackson, not even fourteen-year-old
soul songbird Stacy Lattisaw. At age twenty, Prince
may be the unlikeliest rock star, black or white,
in recent memory -- but a star he definitely is.
As quickly becomes apparent, Prince's lyrics
bear little relation to standard AM radio floss.
In addition to bald sexual come-ons and twisted
love plaints, he champions the need for independence
and self-expression. And one song, "Uptown," is,
among other things, an antiwar chant. Further complicating
the proceedings are the heavy-metal moans Prince
wrenches out of his guitar and the punchy dance-rock
rhythms of his band (bassist Andre Cymone, guitarist
Dez Dickerson, keyboardists Lisa Coleman and Dr.
Fink and drummer Bobby Z.), all of whom are longtime
cohorts from Prince's hometown -- Minneapolis,
of all places.
"I grew up on the borderline," Prince says after
the show. "I had a bunch of white friends, and
I had a bunch of black friends. I never grew up
in any one particular culture." The son of a half-black
father and an Italian mother who divorced when
he was seven, Prince pretty much raised himself
from the age of twelve, when he formed his first
band. Oddly, he claims that the normalcy and remoteness
of Minneapolis provided just artistic nourishment
he needed.
"We basically got all the new music and dances
three months late, so I just decided that I was
gonna do my own thing. Otherwise, when we did split
Minneapolis, we were gonna be way behind and dated.
The white radio stations were mostly country, and
the one black radio station was really boring to
me. For that matter, I didn't really have a record
player when I was growing up, and I never got a
chance to check out Hendrix and the rest of them
because they were dead by the time I was really
getting serious. I didn't even start playing guitar
until 1974."
With his taste for outlandish clothes and his "lunatic" friends,
Prince says he "took a lot of heat all the time.
People would say something about our clothes or
the way we looked or who we were with, and we'd
end up fighting. I was a very good fighter," he
says with a soft, shy laugh. "I never lost. I don't
know if I fight fair, but I go for it. That's what
'Uptown' is about -- we do whatever we want, and
those who cannot deal with it have a problem within
themselves."
Prince has written, arranged, performed and produced
three albums to date (For You, Prince and Dirty
Mind), all presenting the same unique persona.
Appearances to the contrary, though, he says he's
not gay, and he has a standard rebuff for overenthusiastic
male fans: "I'm not about that; we can be friends,
but that's as far as it goes. My sexual preferences
really aren't any of their business." A Penthouse "Pet
of the Month" centerfold laid out on a nearby table
silently underscores his point.
It took Prince six months alone in the studio
to concoct his 1978 debut album, because, he says, "I
was younger then." Prince required six weeks.
He controlled the making of both records, but notes
that they were "overseen" by record company and
management representatives. Dirty Mind,
however, was made in isolation in Minneapolis. "Nobody
knew what was going on, and I became totally engulfed
in it," he says. "It really felt like me for once."
The result of this increased freedom was a collection
of songs celebrating incest ("Sister") and oral
sex ("Head") in language raw enough to merit a
warning sticker on the album's cover. "When I brought
it to the record company it shocked a lot of people," he
says. "But they didn't ask me to go back and change
anything, and I'm real grateful. Anyway, I wasn't
being deliberately provocative. I was being deliberately me."
Obviously, judging by the polished eclecticism
of Dirty Mind, being himself is the best
course. "I ran away from home when I was twelve," Prince
says. "I've changed address in Minneapolis thirty-two
times, and there was a great deal of loneliness.
But when I think about it, I know I'm here for
a purpose, and I don't worry about it so much."
ROLLING STONE, FEBRUARY 19, 1981