ROLLING STONE (1990)
PRINCE TALKS
BY NEAL KARLEN
THE PHONE RINGS at 4:48 in the morning.
"Hi, it's Prince," says the wide-awake voice calling
from a room several yards down the hallway of this London
hotel. "Did I wake you up?"
Though it's assumed that Prince does in fact sleep, no
one on his summer European Nude Tour can pinpoint precisely
when. Prince seems to relish the aura of night stalker;
his vampire hours have been part of his mad-genius myth
ever since he was waging junior-high-school battles on
Minneapolis's mostly black North Side.
"Anyone who was around back then knew what was happening," Prince
had said two days earlier, reminiscing, "I was working.
When they were sleeping, I was jamming. When they
woke up, I had another groove. I'm as insane that way now
as I was back then."
For proof, he'd produced a crinkled dime-store notebook
that he carries with him like Linus's blanket. Empty when
his tour started in May, the book is nearly full, with
twenty-one new songs scripted in perfect grammar-school
penmanship. He has also been laboring over his movie musical
Graffiti Bridge, which was supposed to be out this past
summer and is now set for release in November. Overseeing
the dubbing and editing of the film by way of dressing-room
VCRs and hotel telephones, Prince said, has given him an
idea. "One of these day," he said, "I'm going to work on
just one project, and take my time."
Despite his all-hours intensity, the man still has his
manners. He wouldn't have called this late, Prince says
apologetically, if he didn't have some interesting news.
He'd already provided some news earlier in the week, detailing,
among other things, a late-night crisis of conscience a
few years back that led him not only to shelve the infamous
Black Album but also to try and change the way he wrote
his songs -- and led his life.
The crisis didn't involve a leap or a loss of faith,
Prince has said, but simply the realization that it was
time to stop acting like such and angry soul. "I was an
expert at cutting off people in my life and disappearing
without a glance back, never to return," he'd said. "Half
the things people were writing about me were true."
But what's never been true, he felt, was what people
have written about his music. Until, that is, just this
minute. It seems that a fresh batch of reviews of the soundtrack
of Graffiti Bridge were faxed from Minneapolis to the hotel
while Prince was performing one of his fifteen sold-out
concerts in England.
What Prince has read in the New York Times has astounded
him. "They're starting to get it," he says from
his phone in the Wellington Suite, which he has turned
into a homey workplace with the addition of some bolts
of sheer rainbow-colored cloth, film equipment, a stereo
and tacked-up museum-shop posters of Billie Holiday and
Judy Garland. "I don't believe it," he says again, "but
they're getting it!"
They, in this case, are members of the rock intelligentsia
who have alternately canonized and defrocked Prince. In
the past, he has derided his professional interpreters
as "mamma jammas" and "skinny sidewinders." Two days ago,
it became obvious that his epithets, but now his feelings,
had tempered concerning those who would judge him.
"There's nothing a critic can tell me that I can learn
from," Prince had said earlier. "If they were musicians,
maybe. But I hate reading about what some guy sitting at
a desk thinks about me. You know, 'he's back, and
he's black,' or 'He's back, and he's bad.' Whew! Now, on
Graffiti Bridge, they're saying I'm back and more traditional.
Well, 'Thieves in the Temple' and 'Tick, Tick, Bang' don't
sound like nothing I've ever done before."
But hadn't he been cheered by the album's almost uniformly
rave notices? "That's not what it's about," Prince had
said. "No one's mentioning the lyrics. Maybe I should have
put in a lyric sheet."
Now, in predawn London, he's called to say he was wrong. "They're
starting to get it," he says one last time, unbothered
by the fact that the Times article trashes his lyrics.
That's okay, he says, because "they're paying attention." Sounding
more amazed than pleased, Prince hangs up the phone and
goes back to his dime-store notebook.
FIVE YEARS HAVE PASSED since Prince opened the passenger
door to his 1966 Thunderbird and took me on a three-day
schlep around the hometown he has never left. When I finally
got out, I felt like Melvin Dummar, the doofus milkman
who claimed to have driven through the Nevada desert with
a surprisingly human Howard Hughes. No one had believed
Melvin, and no one, I thought, would believe Prince was
a being orbiting so close to planet Earth.
Not that Prince hadn't shown some signs of unease with
his still-new superstardom. Alone, he's been animated,
funny and self-aware. But out in public, even walking into
places as hospitable as Minneapolis's First Avenue club,
he would palpably stiffen at the first sign of a gawk,
his face set in granite, his voice reduced to a mumble.
Now Prince seems more open and comfortable, less likely
to slip into stridency. "You have a few choices when you're
in that position," he says, remembering the first year
after Purple Rain. "You can get all jacked up on yourself
and curse everybody, or you can say this is the way life
is and try to enjoy it. I'm still learning that lesson.
I think I'll always be learning that lesson. I think I'm
a much nicer person now."
This isn't to say that Prince has turned into Dale Carnegie
-- he still has the hauteur of a star. But something has
changed; his philosophy no longer seems to hinge on things
like the size of one's boot heels. "Cool means being able
to hang with yourself," he says. "All you have to ask yourself
is 'Is there anybody I'm afraid of? Is there anybody who
if I walked into a room and saw, I'd get nervous?' If not,
then you're cool."
Many things, however, have stayed the same. Prince is
still very funny. ("You can always renegotiate a record
contract. You just go in and say, 'You know, I think my
next project will be a country & western album.'")
He can still play the cocky rocker. "I don't go to awards
shows anymore," he says. "I'm not saying I'm better than
anybody else. But you'll be sitting there at the Grammys,
and U2 will beat you. And you say to yourself, 'Wait a
minute. I can play that kind of music, too. I played La
Crosse [Wisconsin] growing up, I know how to do
that, you dig? But you will not do 'Housequake.'"
His grasp of history and current events remains quirky.
Prince can cite chapter and verse from biographies of Little
Richard and Jerry Lee Lewis, but he seems genuinely unaware
that his own life story was turned into a book by an English
rock critic. He knows, blow by blow, the events in the
Mideast, relating the crisis to everything from the predictions
of Nostradamus to the drug-interdiction policy of George
Bush. But he hasn't yet heard of 2 Live Crew.
There is still some residue of emotional pain. "What
if everybody around me split?" he asks. "Then I'd be left
with only me, and I'd have to fend for me. That's why I
have to protect me."
Prince's detractors might diagnose these words as the
classic pathology of a control freak. His high-minded supporters
might say those are normal protective feelings for somebody
who was kicked onto the streets by his beloved father at
age fourteen. Prince himself, however, echoes Popeye more
than Freud as he analyzes just who he is. "I am what I
am," he says. "I feel if I can please myself musically,
then I can please others, too."
Finally, there is one more philosophy unchanged with
the years. "I play music," Prince has said. "I make records.
I make movies. I don't do interviews."
So what are we doing? "We're just talking," he says.
Hence, his decision not to be taped or allow notes to be
taken or even a pad of questions to be brought out. That
would inhibit him, he says; that would mean doing the thing
that he just doesn't do.
No, Prince vows, he isn't trying to be a purposeful pain.
What he says he simply wants to avoid is "that big Q followed
by that big A, followed by line after line of me either
defending myself or cleaning up stories that people have
told about me."
No matter what he might say in a traditional interview,
Prince continues, he'd only end up looking ridiculous. "Some
magazine a little while ago promised me their cover if
I answered five written questions," he says. "The first
one was 'What are your exact beliefs about God?' Now how
can I answer that without sounding like a fool?"
True. But isn't he afraid of being misquoted? No, he
says softly, staring at the holstered tape recorder on
the table before him. When Prince says no, with pursed
lips and a slight shake of the head, it carries a certain finality.
Still, in the coming days he addresses just about everything
short of Kim Basinger ("I really don't know her that well")
or anybody else he's dating ("I never publicize that. My
friends around town are surprised when I introduce them
to someone I'm seeing").
"And you really would feel better having your words taken
down the second you say them?"
"No."
Okay.
A COUPLE OF NIGHTS LATER, Prince is dealing with the
painstaking minutiae of piecing together his almost-finished
movie. "People are going, 'Oh, this is Prince's big gamble,'" he
says, sitting on the floor of his London hotel room, fast-forwarding
a video version of his most recent cut. "What gamble? I
made a $7 million movie with somebody else's money, and
I'm sitting here finishing it."
Prince stops the tape at a point when gospel queen Mavis
Staples is leaning out of a window in Minneapolis's Seven
Corners, waxing wise on the night action down the street.
The movie appears to be set in the 1950s, when Seven Corners
was a Midwestern hotbed of clubs and hipsters. The Seven
Corners set, raised on the Paisley Park sound stage, resembles
the kind of backdrop used in Gene Kelly musicals. "Yeah,
cheap!" says Prince with a laugh. "Actually, that's okay.
It's like how we did Dirty Mind. But man, what I'd do with
a $25 million budget. I'll need a big success to get that,
but I'll get it, I will get it.
Film-speak is now part of his vocabulary; the first director
Prince mentions he admires is Woody Allen, "because I like
anyone who gets final cut." Movies have also worked their
way into his philosophical references. "If you're making
your moves in life because of money or pride," he says, "then
you'll end up like that dude who got beat up on the grass
at the end of Wall Street. He'd been wheeling and dealing,
then oomph! That's what time it was."
He's been studying, he says, and learning from his own
film failures. "I don't regret anything about Under the
Cherry Moon," he says. "I learned that I can't direct what
I didn't write." Participating in Batman, meantime, allowed
him to spy on the making of a megaton hit. Composing songs
on locations, Prince mostly stayed on the sidelines and
just watched. "There was so much pressure on [director]
Tim [Burton]," he says, "that for the whole picture, I
just said, 'Yes, Mr. Burton, what would you like?"
Burton had hired him on the recommendation of Jack Nicholson,
a longtime Prince fan. Prince, who'd never met Nicholson
before, found the inspiration for "Partyman" when he first
saw the actor on the set. "He just walked over, sat down
and put his foot up on a table, real cool," Prince says. "He
had this attitude that reminded me of Morris [Day] -- and
there was that song."
Prince says he'll survive if Graffiti Bridge is less
than a blockbuster. "I can't please everybody," he says. "I
didn't want to make Die Hard 4. But I'm also not looking
to be Francis Ford Coppola. I see this more like those
1950s rock & roll movies."
Unfortunately, rumors have swirled for months that better
comparison might be the 1959 howler Plan 9 From Outer Space. "I
don't mind," says Prince. "Some might not get it. But people
also said Purple Rain was unreleasable. And now I drive
to work each morning to my own big studio."
Originally, Graffiti Bridge was going to be a vehicle
for the reborn Time, with Prince staying behind the camera.
But Warner Bros. wouldn't go for it, so Prince wrote himself
into a new movie. Later, visitors to Paisley Park saw a
version of a script that was allegedly obtuse to the point
of near gibberish. "That was just a real rough thirty-page
treatment I wrote with Kim," Prince says. "Graffiti Bridge
is an entirely different movie."
As in Purple Rain, the plot features Prince as a musician
named the Kid. Willed half-ownership of a Seven Corners
club named Glam Slam, the Kid must share control with Morris
Day, once again playing a comic satyr combining Superfly
smoothness and Buddy Love sincerity. It's a fight of good
versus evil, and band versus band, for the soul of Glam
Slam.
Then there's the unknown Ingrid Chavez, Prince's first
female movie lead who doesn't look like she was ordered
out of a catalog. Throw in the talents of Staples, the
reborn Time, George Clinton, and the thirteen-year-old
Quincy Jones protégé Tevin Campbell, and
you've got, Prince says, "a different kind of movie. It's
not violent. Nobody gets laid."
It's impossible to judge Graffiti Bridge from just a
few selected scenes. Still, they were very good
scenes. Prince fast-forwards to a sequence in which Day
tries to seduce Chavez on the fairy-tale-looking Graffiti
Bridge.
When Prince is amused, which is almost every time Morris
Day comes on the screen, he slaps his hands, shakes his
head and throws himself back in his seat. "I hope Morris
steals this movie," he says, recalling the charge made
after Purple Rain. "The man still thinks he can
whup me!"
Prince pushes rewind, searching for a scene with the
Time. Waiting, he reminisces about the old days, when he
oversaw the band. For a tutorial on the proper onstage
attitude, Prince remembers, he showed the Time videos of
Muhammed Ali trouncing, and then taunting, the old champ
Sonny Liston. "To this day," he says, "they're the only
band I've ever been afraid of."
At first it seems strange for to hear Prince talking
in such fond and nostalgic terms about Day and the band.
Day left the Minneapolis fold right after Purple Rain,
with some nasty words about the boss's supposedly dictatorial
ways. Now, Prince says, "I honestly don't remember how
we got it together again."
Day's old charge of overbossing, however, brings a quirkier
and crosser memory. "That whole thing came from my early
days, when I was working with a lot of people who weren't
exactly designed for their jobs," Prince says. "I had to
do a lot, and I had to have control, because a lot of them
didn't know exactly what was needed."
The most often-told tale involves Prince firing the then-unknown
Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis from the Time in 1982. Jam and
Lewis, all parties now agree, left a Time tour on a day
off to produce their first record for the SOS Band. A freak
snowstorm in Atlanta grounded them for an extra day, and
the two missed a gig. When Jam and Lewis returned, they
were summarily fired. Jobless, the two missed Purple Rain,
so they set up as producers and went scrounging for clients.
In the years since, they've produced everyone from Janet
Jackson to Herb Alpert, becoming the other superpower on
the Minneapolis music scene.
"I'm playing the bad guy," says Prince, "but I didn't
fire Jimmy and Terry. Morris asked me what I would
do in his situation. Remember, it was his band."
Despite the rap, Prince says, he harbors no ill will
toward the now-famous producers working across town from
Paisley Park at their Flyte Time studios. "We're friends," he
says. "We know each other like brothers. Jimmy always gave
me a lot of credit for getting things going in Minneapolis,
and I'm hip to that. Terry's more aloof, but I know that." And
their music? "Terry and Jimmy aren't into the Minneapolis
sound," Prince says. "They're into making every single
one of their records a hit. Not that there's anything wrong
with that, we're just different."
With this, Prince cues up the Graffiti Bridge movie to
the sequence in which the Time performs "Shake!" The scene
looks like something Busby Berkeley would have cooked up
if he had choreographed funk.
The Time, Prince says, is proof of the good that can
come from a group dissolving and eventually coming back
together. "They broke up because they'd run out of ideas," he
says. "They went off and did their own thing, and now they're
terrifying."
Prince said this formula was just what he had in mind
when, in short order, he broke up the Revolution. "I felt
we all needed to grow," he says. "We all needed to play
a wide range of music with different types of people. Then
we could come back eight times as strong.
"No band can do everything," he continues. "For instance,
this band I'm with now is funky. With them, I can
drag out 'Baby I'm a Star' all night! I just keep switching
gears on them, and something else funky will happen. I
couldn't do that with the Revolution. They were a different
kind of funky, more electronic and cold. The Revolution
could tear up 'Darling Nikki,' which was about the coldest
song ever written But I wouldn't even think about playing
that song with this band."
The breakup of the Revolution apparently didn't go down
easy. Today, Prince's relationship with his onetime best
friends Wendy Melvoin and Lisa Coleman is somewhere between
uncomfortable and estranged. "I talk to Wendy and Lisa,
but it's like this," Prince says, moving his hands in opposite
directions. "I still hear a lot of hurt from them, and
that bothers me. When I knew them, they were two spunky,
wonderful human beings. I honestly don't know what they're
hurt about."
So far, Prince says, the two women haven't listened to
the few tidbits of advice he has offered. For their first
video, Prince recommended that they try to announce themselves
by making a splash, by "doing something like jumping off
a speaker with smoke pouring out everywhere. Something." When
he saw the video, however, Wendy was sitting in a chair,
playing her guitar. "You can't do that when you're just
getting established -- kids watching MTV see that and they
go click,"Prince says, miming a channel being changed. "They'd
rather watch a commercial."
Still, Prince's pronouncements seem proffered more in
mourning than in malice. "Wendy and Lisa are going to have
to do some more serious soul-searching and decide what
they want to write about," he says sadly and shakes his
head. "I don't know what Wendy and Lisa are so hurt about.
I wish I did, but I don't."
IT'S A BROILING SUMMER AFTERNOON IN NICE, FRANCE and
Prince is performing before an almost completely empty
soccer stadium. It's a sound check, and Prince and his
band have been going for over an hour, segueing from John
Lee Hooker's "I'm in the Mood" to the freeform jamming
in "Respect."
After the check, Prince retreats to the bowels of the
stadium to wait for night. Camped out in his dressing room
under a gaucho hat, Prince plugs in a tape bearing some
early versions of some songs he's written on tour. Prince
says the first song, called "Schoolyard," is about "the
first time I got any." Funny and funky, the song is an
inner-city Summer of '42 that tells the story of a fumbling
sixteen-year-old-boy trying to seduce a girl to the strains
of a Tower of Power album. "I think that's something everybody can
relate to," he says.
Still, that probably wouldn't prevent the song from getting
a parental-warning sticker. "I don't mind that," Prince
says. "I think parents have a right to know what their
children are listening to."
At first it seems an unlikely sentiment coming from the
man who once wrote about the onanistic doings of a woman
sitting with a magazine in a hotel lobby. But Prince hasn't
turned into a bluenose, he insists -- he's just changed
his outlook on how to present his still eros-heavy creations.
The change, he says, came soon after he finished the
Black Album, in 1987. The reason the album was pulled from
release had nothing to do with record-company pressure,
he insists, or with the quality of the songs. Rather, Prince
says, he aborted the project because of one particular
dark night of the soul "when a lot of things happened all
in a few hours." He won't get specific, saying only that
he saw the word God. "And when I talk about God," he
says, "I don't mean some dude in a cape and beard coming
down to Earth. To me, he's in everything if you look at
it that way.
"I was very angry a lot of the time back then," he continues, "and
that was reflected in that album. I suddenly realized that
we can die at any moment, and we'd be judged by the last
thing we left behind. I didn't want that angry, bitter
thing to be the last thing. I learned from that album,
but I don't want to go back."
By the time of the album Lovesexy, Prince says, he was
a certifiably nicer human being -- and a happier creator. "I
feel good most of the time, and I like to express that
by writing from joy," he says. "I still do write from anger
sometimes, like 'Thieves in the Temple.' But I don't like
to. It's not a place to live."
He's been angling for a different effect on each album
he has made in the last few years. "What people were saying
about Sign o' the Times was 'There are some great songs
on it, and there are some experiments on it.' I hate the
word experiment -- it sounds like something you
didn't finish. Well, they have to understand that's the
way to have a double record and make it interesting."
Lovesexy, Prince says, was "a mind trip, like a psychedelic
movie. Either you went with it and had a mind-blowing experience
or you didn't. All that album cover was, was a picture.
If you looked at that picture and some ill come out of
your mouth, then that's what you are -- it's looking right
back at you in the mirror."
The Graffiti Bridge soundtrack, a couple cuts of which
have been floating around for a few years, "is just a whole
bunch of songs," he says. "Nobody does any experiments
or anything like that. But I still want to know how it
stands up to the other albums. I'm always going forward,
always trying to surprise myself. It's not about hits.
I knew how to make hits by my second album."
Not that Prince is above appreciating a good old Number
One with a bullet -- especially when he wrote it. "I love
it, it's great!" he exclaims when asked about Sinead O'Connor's
version of "Nothing Compares 2 U," which Prince wrote in
1985 for the Paisley Park act the Family. Is he sorry he
didn't get to sing the song before O'Connor? "Nah," Prince
says. "I look for cosmic meaning in everything. I think
we just took that song as far as we could, then someone
else was supposed to come along and pick it up."
While being so productive on his own, Prince has also
found time to produce such disparate talents as Mavis Staples,
George Clinton and Bonnie Raitt. "The best thing about
producing is that there are so many really talented people
who just never got that push over the top," he says. "Without
that push, they just get lost."
Raitt was perhaps his most talked-about reclamation project. "Oh,
those sessions were kicking!" Prince says. But nothing
was ever released -- a fact which Prince takes the blame
for. "There was no particular reason it didn't come out," he
says. "I was just working on a lot of things at the same
time, and I didn't give myself enough time to work with
her. I used to do that a lot -- start five different projects
and only get a couple done. That's the biggest thing I'm
working on: patience and planning."
What Prince listens to on his own time is a grab bag.
He likes rap: he's recently signed rappers T.C. Ellis and
Robin Power to record on his Paisley Park label but denies
that he'll be producing songs for M.C. Hammer. "I like
his stuff a lot," Prince says. "We've talked but not about
working together." He also gives highly favorable mentions
to the likes of Madonna, Michael Jackson, Patti LaBelle
and Bette Midler. "I'm not real into Bruce Springsteen's
music," he says, "but I have a lot of respect for his talent."
Prince and Springsteen occasionally exchange notes; in
recalling a Springsteen concert he saw from backstage a
few years back, Prince displays the respect of a general
reviewing another man's army. "I admire the way he holds
his audience -- there's one man whose fans I could never
take away," he says with a laugh. And how does he compare
their stage tactics? "I'm not sure," says Prince. "But
at one point, his band started going off somewhere. Springsteen
turned around and shot the band one terrifying look. You know they
got right back on it!"
For his own enjoyment, however, Prince just relies on
himself. "I like a lot of people's music, and I'm interested
in what's going on," he says, "but I don't listen to them.
When I'm getting ready to go out or driving in the car,
I listen to my own stuff. Never the old stuff. That's the
way it's always been."
Prince walks back over to the stereo and plays with the
cassette of his latest creations until he finds a number
featuring Rosie Gaines, the band's unknown keyboardist
and vocalist, who may be the next big star to come out
of Prince's camp.
"Terrifying," says Prince, shaking his head. "Simply terrifying."
IT'S ANOTHER SWELTERING AFTERNOON in another soccer stadium,
this time in Lucerne, Switzerland. It's as tame as a church
picnic in the dressing rooms; drugs have long been a firing
offense, and even cigarettes have been forbidden from the
entire area.
Killing time in the hallway, the members of Prince's
band seem more like the kind of winning, good-natured characters
in a script for the television show Fame than jaded road
warriors. Gaines is doing her imitation of Daisy Duck as
a soul sister. "Be quiet, boyfriend!" she quacks. "What's
happening, baby?" goes a squawk directed at fellow keyboardist
Matt "Doctor" Fink.
Fink, the only member of the Revolution still playing
with Prince, has just read in the USA Today of a 2 Live
Crew parody made by a group called 2 Live Jews. Shticking
in his own estimable Jewish-man voice, Fink begins rapping: "Oy,
it's so humid!" Over in the corner, Michael Bland is poring
over a purple copy of The Portable Nietzsche. A corpulent
twenty-year-old drummer, Bland is probably the most fearsome-looking
band member. Actually, he's a scholarly innocent who still
lives with his parents in Minneapolis and still plays drums
in his Pentecostal church. "Nietzsche's cool," Bland says,
putting down his book. "But Schopenhauer -- now there's
a brother with no hope!"
Also lolling in the hall are Miko Weaver, a hunkish guitarist,
and Levi Seacer, Jr., a thoughtful bass player, who has
been entrusted with speaking to the European press about
this roadshow. The Nude Tour is a greatest-hits production
with lean arrangements and none of the Liberace-on-acid
costumes and special effects of the Lovesexy tour.
Prince, hanging out behind a closed door a few feet away
from his band, makes no apology for the show's programming. "Kids
save a lot of money for a long time to buy tickets, and
I like to give them what they want," he says. "When I was
a kid, I didn't want to hear James Brown play something
I never heard before. I wanted to hear him play something
I knew, so I could dance."
For now, Prince has no plans to bring his tour to the
states, The main reason, he says, is that he wants to get
back to Minneapolis and the studio. Prince also says that
Warner Bros. is pouring increasingly large amounts of cash
into Paisley Park Records, which means he must "put in
some serious time behind the desk." It was only a couple
of years ago that Prince was rumored to be in financial
straits. But Forbes magazine that in 1989, Prince earned
$20 million in pretax profit, and the New York Times recently
reported that his Paisley Park empire was quite solvent. "We're
doing okay" is all that Prince will say.
He has other reasons for wanting to get back home. Prince
wants to get rolling an a screenplay he has been working
on with Gilbert Davison, his best friend, his chief adjutant
and the owner and proprietor of the soon-to-open Minneapolis
nightclub Glam Slam.
Prince has lent the club his full endorsement as well
as its name, the motorcycle from Purple Rain and some of
his more-historic guitars. "Glam Slam's gonna kick ass," Prince
says. "It'll be one of those joints that's remembered!
I've always just wanted to have a place where I knew I
could just show up and my stuff would be there, so I wouldn't
have to jump onstage with equipment meant for Dwight Yoakam."
The point of helping Davison, Prince says, goes far beyond
nepotism. "Glam Slam will be another thing to center Minneapolis
in the national eye," he says. "People talk about the Minneapolis
sound or the Minneapolis scene, but they don't really know
what the place looks like or means. I want it to mean something."
For Prince, the place still mostly means home. "It feels
like music to me there," he says. "You don't feel prejudice
there. I know it exists, but you don't feel it as much.
I can just drive around the lakes or go into stores without
bodyguards or just hand out."
Nursing a cold and chewing on Sudafed, Prince excuses
himself to rest up for the show. The next time he appears
in the doorway, his intimidating game face is on. The band
comes in for a last-minute huddle; Paisley Park costume
designer Helen Hiatt fixes a crucifix necklace big enough
to scare off Nosferatu.
"It's raining," Davison says to Prince. "It's raining" is
Prince's mumbled reply, accompanied by a thousand-yard
stare. Moments later, an army of damp and screaming Swiss
teenagers hear the first beats of "1999."
The oldies come, as do some nifty hommages beyond the
requisite James Brown footwork. Prince sings "Nothing Compares
2 U" with a Wilson Pickett wail, the song ending with him
crucified on a heart. "Blues," sung with Rosie Gaines,
hearkens to Otis Redding and Carla Thomas doing "Tramp." "Baby
I'm a Star" last twenty-four minutes, and after two encores,
Prince is whisked to a backstage BMW that is gone well
before the fans stop screaming for more.
Soon after, the band bus is being rocked in the parking
lot by highly non-neutral Swiss. "We're the Beatles!" says
Michael Bland, giggling and waving to the fans.
"Oy, it's so humid," raps Dr. Fink.
AT FOUR IN THE MORNING, flying into their third country
in the past twenty-four hours, the band and the entire
entourage of about thirty are sacked out in what looks
like the sleep of the dead. Everybody's unconscious on
this charter, including one of the flight attendants.
There's movement, however, up in row 1. Prince's headphoned
head is bopping against the back of his seat, his arms
pounding the armrests. From the back, it looks like a prisoner
is being executed in an upholstered electric chair.
Earlier in the day, Prince had refused to make any predictions
about his future. "I don't want to say anything than can
be held against me later," he'd said with a laugh. "Mick
Jagger said he hoped he wouldn't be singing 'Satisfaction'
at thirty, and he's still singing it. Pete Townshend wrote,
'Hope I die before I get old.' Well, now he is old, and
I do hope he is happy to be around."
And himself? "When I pray to God, I say, 'It's your call
-- when it's time to go, it's time to go.'" Prince had
said. "But as long as you're going to leave me here" --
he slapped his hands -- "then I'm going to cause much ruckus!"
Now, while his band mates and support staff snooze around
him, Prince keeps air-jamming beneath the glare of his
seat's tiny spotlight. Listening to a tape of his own performance
that day, Prince stays up all night, all the way to London.
(RS 589)