! Sheila E @ Wetten DaB (D – ZDF) – A Love Bizarre (Taped 10-04)
13-04-1986 : n Making Of Mountains (1:14)
Mountains is the twenty-second Prince video to have been released for broadcast. Of note this is the first appearance of Miko Weaver, Wally Safford, Greg Brooks, Jerome Benton, Eric Leeds and Atlanta Bliss in a Prince video.
n Mountains (0:04)
15-04-1986 : Return to MPLS
April 15, Prince returns prematurely to MPLS after having learned of the United States air attacks on Libya the night before. The attack was justified by Ronald Reagan as an act of peremptory self-defense against Libyan terrorism after discovering that Libyan personalities had played an important role in an attack on a nightclub in West Berlin earlier in April. Terrorism becomes a critical issue for the U.S. government, when the diplomats, soldiers and people outside the United States become targets of terrorists. Many American artists cancel their visit to Europe and differ their tour for fear of Libyan reprisals.
Home Studio - Dream Factory sessions
Witness 4 The Prosecution (2) (3:57) – Prev. Sunset Sound 27-03-86 – Roadhouse Garden
Moviestar (2) (4:25) – Prev. Home Studio 04-86 – Dream Factory #2
A Place In Heaven (2) (2:43) – Lisa version – Prev. Home Studio 04-86 – Dream Factory #2
Visions (2:11) – Dream Factory
Prince began “Witness 4 The Prosecution” on his own, but the track was finished by Wendy, Lisa, Susannah and Eric Leeds without him. While the track was not included on a late April, 1986 configuration of the Dream Factory album, it was included as the 17th track (15th song) on the 3 June, 1986 configuration, and as the 16th track on the 18 July, 1986 configuration. Further recording was done by Wendy Melvoin, Lisa Coleman, Susannah Melvoin and Eric Leeds on 15 April, 1986 at Prince's Galpin Blvd Home Studio while Prince was en route returning from France shooting additional scenes for Under The Cherry Moon. In late 1998 / 1999, the track was intended for inclusion on the Roadhouse Garden album of Prince and the Revolution-era tracks (indicating that it would have been the 15 April, 1986 version of the song) In keeping with the collective approach of the project, “A Place In Heaven” was written for Lisa to sing. “She is a good background singer, but she was just not comfortable with singing lead,” observes Rogers. “Prince went away, just took his car and went off for a day. Lisa came down and just she and I worked on it. It came out beautiful and he was very happy with it.” Lisa also recorded a two-minute instrumental piano piece entitled “Visions”, which Prince intended as the opening of Dream Factory. “It’s one of my favourite pieces of music that I’ve ever heard,” says Rogers. “Prince said he needed a short piece of piano music from Lisa. Wendy and I were downstairs in the control room and Lisa was upstairs at the purple piano. Prince wasn’t around. She spent a few minutes fiddling around. And she played this piece of music and Wendy and I just had tears. It was just so incredibly beautiful.”
Even if the ‘assemblies’ were put together without as much thought as some fans would like to believe, there’s no question about the quality of the songs themselves, and the period also saw Prince playing with different overarching concepts – like disguising himself as the hermaphrodite Camille. ‘There are loads of those [songs] sitting around, including “Go”, “Teacher, Teacher”, all those songs,’ Wendy told me. ‘That was the busiest time for the three of us, pounding away in the south of France. When Sign o’ the Times was almost done, that’s when he fired everybody. I don’t have any specifics other than this was a really busy time when we were constantly recording.’ Matt Fink agrees. ‘There were a few things that were worked on.’ Fink doesn’t remember all the stuff they recorded during this period, but he does say that it was another rumoured album, Roadhouse Garden, that they ‘were three-quarters of the way through. We were doing session work in the studios in his house. Paisley Park wasn’t built yet.’ And it was Roadhouse Garden – rather than Dream Factory – that Prince used as a title for a proposed box set of unreleased Revolution songs considered at the end of the 1990s but which ultimately never saw the light of day. This box set was eagerly anticipated by fans who wanted an official record of this period and who were eager to hear the songs in greater fidelity, but it abruptly disappeared from the schedule. Prince said anyone wanting to know what happened to the project should ask Wendy and Lisa. So I did, and they told me : ‘Because we’re gay. The Lord thinks we’re evil, and we’re damning The Revolution to hell.’ Fink also says that as much as he’d love for people to hear that stuff, Prince never discussed this planned later release with him. H. M. Buff, who worked on this later Roadhouse Garden project, says he’s glad it was never completed. ‘I’m glad it didn’t work out, to be honest with you. I was very excited about it, but he thought he could improve on things, so I would transfer the mix of what was there and he would add those keyboards he liked so much at the time. But we didn’t work on many songs. I remember “Splash” was worked on, “Roadhouse Garden” and “Wonderful Ass” once again came out of the Vault. Maybe there were a couple more that I don’t remember.’ Although there are no proposed track listings for the first version of Roadhouse Garden in circulation, there are a sizeable number of Revolution-connected songs that haven’t been linked to Dream Factory or any other immediately subsequent projects. If the album did indeed exist as a possible project, it has intriguing links with the Purple Rain era, and it seems it might have represented a deliberate step backwards to safer commercial-rock territory after the more experimental (and less popular) Around the World in a Day and Parade, working as a rock-orientated sequel to his biggest-selling album. Prince played ‘Roadhouse Garden’ at the live show at First Avenue on his twenty-sixth birthday, and twice in rehearsal for that performance. With its use of a mysterious location as the focus for its drama, it resembles ‘Paisley Park’, only with a harder and more cinematic focus than the latter song’s Haight-Ashbury fantasy. Prince would go on to write many songs about houses, real and imagined, and the parties within, but with its sense of lost pleasure, this is his most beguiling. Both during rehearsal and onstage, ‘Roadhouse Garden’ was linked with another song, ‘Our Destiny’. The show was only Wendy Melvoin’s second full performance with the band, and the song was her initiation : a duet about a couple unable to resist each other, featuring a spoken-word passage from Prince in which he offers a lighter variation on the erotic threat that he usually would make more blatant when recording songs alone. Given the apparent flirtation in this song, I asked Wendy if Prince knew about her sexuality. ‘He knew I was gay. I’m not a butch, but I’m not a super-femmy. I’m more androgynous.’ Wendy and Lisa later worked on both of these songs – it was for ‘Our Destiny’ that they originally wrote the string section that opens ‘The Ladder’ – but these revised versions are not in circulation. Even if Fink is right and Roadhouse Garden was nearly finished, we can only guess what else might have been on the album, although the proposed track listing for the 1998 box set included several Revolution tracks usually associated with Dream Factory (‘Witness 4 the Prosecution’, ‘All My Dreams’, ‘In a Large Room with No Light’), as well as two other well-known out-takes from this era (‘Wonderful Ass’ and ‘Splash’), and perhaps most enticingly, the original version of ‘Empty Room’. ‘A Place in Heaven’ also exists in two versions. Both feature piano and the harpsichord-sounding keyboard also evident on ‘Teacher, Teacher’. The ‘place in heaven’ is described as a suite with no room service, which feints towards the ‘it is easier to pass through an eye of a needle’ of the Synoptic Gospels, and Prince gives an example of a self-pitying woman frustrated by this, but then the song ends up suggesting instead that given the trickiness of finding comfort (or luxury) in heaven, we should concentrate on life on Earth.
Philadelphia Daily News
An album of reasons to rain on Prince’s Parade
By Jonathan Takiff
Prince's career has been built on provocation - on challenging the values and expectations of the pop-music-buying public. So it shouldn't be any surprise that his new album, "Parade," finds the Minneapolis maverick on the move again - with an eccentric brew that is at turns minimalist and exotically lush, familiar and otherworldly, sometimes sublime and at other times pretty stupid. "Parade" is the soundtrack for Prince's next film, "Under the Cherry Moon," in which he not only stars but makes his directorial debut. But even with it's suggestive come-on - a half-naked cover photo of the androgynous poster boy - and at least one certified hit single in "Kiss," the score is not the sort that will send millions marching to their record counters or movie theaters, as the enormously popular "Purple Rain" soundtrack accomplished for His Royal Badness. That 10-million-selling LP represented Prince at his most commercial, churning out gallons of wham-bam thank-you-ma'am hyperkinetic funk rock. And, miracle upon miracles, the confessional, autobiographical thrust of the ''Purple Rain" score perfectly matched the "troubled child/troubled musician" film plot built around Prince's own life. So the "Purple Rain" lyrics functioned effectively as that film's script, carrying the tissue-paper-thin story along. But the introductory "Parade" now marching through for "Under the Cherry Moon" (not due to hit movie theaters until July, and sure to be featured in Prince's next stage show this summer) is a different, vague and ultimately unsatisfying work, that doesn't stand nearly so well by itself. Unconventionally conventional by current rock movie production standards, the "Parade" music is almost traditional movie scoring. It is largely background music that sets the scene, heightening the sense of atmosphere without intruding much. Especially color-coordinated is the French cafe sound of wheezing accordions, tinkling piano and drunken horns, placing Prince's film character in context. In "Under the Cherry Moon" he's playing a down-on-his-heels piano player on the French Riviera who crashes a party and puts the make on a French heiress. Oooh, la-la ! "It's a boy-meets-girl love story, a kind of Pygmalion in reverse. Instead of making a high-society dame out of a tramp, it's about a man trying to loosen up a high-society dame," explains Prince's backup singer Lisa in a Rolling Stone interview. The movie's theme song, co-authored by Prince and his father John L. Nelson, sounds like something out of a Marlene Dietrich picture from the 1930s or '40s. Very Euro. Very retro. Even more old fashioned is the vaudeville shuffle "Do U Lie," done up with wah-wah horns and Prince mouthing through an old-fashioned megaphone. It's so kitschy cute you could just frow up. Let's just pray the music serves a sarcastic point in the pic. The father-and-son Nelson team are likewise responsible (and to blame, I'm afraid) for the vapid introductory "Christopher Tracy's Parade," which sets up the picture as a poorer man's "Magical Mystery Tour." The overblown production on this track arranged by Clare Fisher in pseudo-George Martin fashion tries to make a mountain out of this molehill with watery strings and horns, discordant notes and backward tape loops, but the fussy effort backfires, badly. Other songs, by contrast, appear so minimally arranged that one might suspect they are rough rhythm tracks someone simply forgot to finish. On "New Position," Prince's voice is surrounded with nothing but female backup singers and percussion - a drum machine and tropical steel drums. "I Wonder U" threatens to go further with its African polyrhythms, bits of flute and plunkety guitar, but disintegrates too quickly, seeming only a song fragment. Things pick up when Prince falls into his more familiar (and still controversial) role of sexual provocateur, heating up his sound with the same old kick/jump hustle that's kept America dancing vertically and horizontally through the 1980s. "Girls and Boys" is a simple pickup bar scenario, modified here by Prince's use of Indian finger cymbals and hand claps as the sole rhythm section, and some hot spoken verbiage in French. "Kiss," the set's 600,000-selling hit single, kicks up a dust cloud with its odd lot of thwumps and squeaks, allusions to TV shows, rusty old comic put-downs, exotic Turkish and jazz allusions and especially Prince's squeally, ecstatic, little-girl's falsetto voice. But as hits go, "Kiss" is the only sure shot on this list. There's no lyric sheet with the "Parade" album, and I suspect it's because Prince is ashamed of most of the words. The lyrics seem even more of a rush job than the music, which is saying a lot. And meaning "a little." Consider these pearls from the Princely pen: "Life can be so nice, wonderful world, paradise. Kiss me once, kiss me twice." Pulitzer Prize material, this is not, but at least the ditty's got a good beat. And if we're lucky, somebody will be talking over it in the movie.
17-04-1986 : Home Studio
Crystal Ball (1) (9:51) – Dream Factory
“Crystal Ball” was recorded just after Prince’s return from France following the Libya air attack and the song expresses some of his fears of an impending war. One of the more obscure lines in the song referred to a mural of two full-sized naked nymphs, complete with nipples and pubic hair, that Susannah had drawn in a room that was adjacent to Prince’s studio. “Prince never expressed any appreciation or liking of the painting,” according to Rogers. “It offended him because [surprisingly] he was somewhat a prude. He had no frame of reference to a nude boy other than sexual. He was not tapped into the art community and he didn’t visit museums; he didn’t have time for that.” Although this track was not included on a late April, 1986 configuration of the aborted album Dream Factory, a full length version without Clare Fischer's contribution was included, on the 3 June, 1986 configuration and again on the 18 July, 1986 configuration, now omitting a minute and a half of the intro that was obsolete as in this incarnation without orchestration it was only a beat of the left channel.
Crystal Ball
Expert lover, my baby
U ever had a Crystal Ball ?
Expert lover, my baby
U ever had a Crystal Ball ?
Ooh, expert lover, my baby
Ever had a Crystal Ball ?
Expert lover, my baby
U ever had a Crystal Ball ?
As bombs explode around us and hate advances on the right
The only thing that matters, baby,
is the love that we make 2night
As little babies in make-up terrorize the western world
The only thing that matters, baby,
is love between a boy and girl
Oh, expert lover, my baby
U ever had a Crystal Ball ?
Undercover, no maybe
All 4 fun and fun 4 all
I can't remember my baby's voice
cuz she ain't talkin' no more
Only the sound of love and prayer echo
from the yellow floor,
yellow floor
Huh, she's sayin' – "Dear Jesus, save us from temptation
Dear Jesus, save us from hell
Save us from the madness that threatens us all
Can U hear us ? It's hard 2 tell
In your name we pray"
Expert lover, my baby
Ever had a Crystal Ball ?
Undercover, no maybe
All 4 fun, fun 4 all
As soldiers draw swords of sorrow
My baby draws pictures of sex (Yes, she does)
All over the walls in graphic detail - sex!
Everybody say it now
Expert lover, huh, my baby
Ever had a Crystal Ball ?
Under… undercover, ha, no maybe
All 4 fun and fun 4 all
Rip it, ouch ! Uh
Expert lover, my baby
Ever had a Crystal Ball ?
Uh, expert lover, my baby (My baby)
Ever had a Crystal Ball ?
Crystal Ball
Expert
My baby, my baby, my baby, my baby
Kiss me, lick me, trick me, whoa !
Oh yeah, yeah
Come on, come on, come on, won't U come on ?
Expert lover, huh, my baby
Have U ever had a Crystal Ball ?
Don't U wanna ?
What my drummer wanna say ? {x2}
Yeah ! Drummer
Tell me what the bass said
Yeah
Oh, ow !
Listen 2 my, uh, listen 2 my bass man play
(Alright) (Expert lover, my baby is alright)
(Alright) (Undercover, my baby is alright)
Listen 2 the guitar play
Hey ! Wait a minute now
It's groovy
Ouch ! Guitar, guitar
Come on now
Oh yeah ! My baby licked me fast
Her mama watch her gas
Come on, baby, do me fast
Come on, come on
Your mathematical gas
Uh ! Ooh wee !
Darlin, darlin, U know U want a Cry…Crystal Ball
Crystal Ball
I don't know, I have 2 ask my mommy first
As bombs explode around U and hate advances on your right
The only thing U can be sure of is the love we make 2night
Expert lover, my baby
Ever had a Crystal Ball ?
Take off your clothes, baby
Come on, get the Crystal Ball
Oh, expert lover, my baby
U ever had a Crystal Ball ?
Come on, take off your clothes, baby
Come on, get the Crystal Ball
Come on ! Expert lover, my baby
Ever had a Crystal Ball ?
Oh, my baby, my baby, my baby
Come on, get the, get the, get the Crystal Ball
Oh, U ever had a Crystal Ball ?
As well as the version released on the 1998 disc, which was heavily edited by engineer H. M. Buff, there were three alternative takes of ‘Crystal Ball’. These feature Wendy and Lisa on vocals, as well as Susannah (the released version is just Prince and Susannah). On the Wendy and Lisa versions, the intensity is increased by a spoken-word section panned across the speakers that addresses ‘sisters
and brothers of the purple underground’ and associates danger with blackness, a concept Prince would continue to pursue. This direct address recalls early band member Dez Dickerson’s claim that Prince was always looking for more than just a band, wanting to shape his fans into a movement, something that would become of even greater importance to him during the 1990s and early twentyfirst century before he would abruptly lose interest in the possibility of shaping mass opinion.
20-04-1986 : Starfish And Coffee (1) (2:46) – Dream Factory
The track was initially included as the ninth track on the late April configuration of the Dream Factory album. It was kept for inclusion as the eighth track on the first disc on the 3 June, 1986 configuration and the seventh track on the 18 July, 1986 configuration.
Starfish And Coffee
It was 7:45 we were all in line
2 greet the teacher Miss Cathleen
First was Kevin, then came Lucy, third in line was me
All of us where ordinary compared to Cynthia Rose
She always stood at the back of the line
A smile beneath her nose
Her favorite number was 20 and every single day
If U asked her what she had 4 breakfast
This is what she'd say
Starfish and coffee
Maple syrup and jam
Butterscotch clouds, a tangerine
And a side order of ham
If U set your mind free, baby
Maybe you'd understand
Starfish and coffee
Maple syrup and jam
Cynthia wore the prettiest dress
With different color socks
Sometimes I wondered if the mates where in her lunchbox
Me and Lucy opened it when Cynthia wasn't around
Lucy cried, I almost died, U know what we found ?
Starfish and coffee
Maple syrup and jam
Butterscotch clouds, a tangerine
And a side order of ham
If U set your mind free, honey
Maybe you'd understand
Starfish and coffee
Maple syrup and jam
Starfish and coffee
Cynthia had a happy face, just like the one she'd draw
On every wall in every school
But it's all right, it's 4 a worthy cause
Go on, Cynthia, keep singin'
Starfish and coffee
Maple syrup and jam
Butterscotch clouds, a tangerine
And a side order of ham
If U set your mind free, baby
Maybe you'd understand
Starfish and coffee
Maple syrup and jam
(starfish in your coffee, you will love it, told ya so)
(starfish in your coffee, you will love it, told ya so)
“Starfish And Coffee” was inspired by Susannah’s recollection of her schooldays and a retarded girl named Cynthia Rose whom she went to school with. Prince recorded an LM-1 drum machine track to the song and then flipped the tape upside down and played it through, thus reversing the drum track from beginning to end. “It was all part of the song being about opening your mind to other possibilities,” Rogers notes. I’d often wondered whether the character of Cynthia Rose in ‘Starfish and Coffee’ was a secret homage to Cynthia Robinson and Rose Stone of Sly and the Family Stone. But Susannah Melvoin told me the song portrayed a girl they knew. ‘We knew somebody named Cynthia Rose and [the song has] beautiful imagery, and we were at the house and he went downstairs and came upstairs a few hours later and there it was, “Starfish and Coffee”. I said, “It’s fantastic, it’s so sweet. Cynthia, if she really knew, she would love this.”’
23-04-1986 : Washington Post
Pop Tours Cancelled. Prince, Others Fear Terrorism Abroad
Prince and Manhattan Transfer will not tour Europe this summer for fear of terrorist reprisals in the wake of the United States' bombing of Libya. In addition, several other acts - including Lionel Richie and the Bangles -acknowledge concern about their safety in Europe and the Middle East. Prince's manager, Steve Fargnoli, said today they had been exploring summer European dates for the pop-rock star but that any further negotiations have been shelved because of "the recent Libyan conflict." Manhattan Transfer publicist Alan Eichler said the vocal quartet's cancellation of a 21-date European tour was the direct result of "tension arising from the current world situation." "They were just afraid to go, it's as simple as that," he said. "It was the group themselves that decided not to tour Europe, and we had to respect their wishes." Eichler added that the group, winner of three Grammys in February, is sacrificing about $500,000 in potential concert revenues by the cancellation. The tour was to have included stops in Rome, Vienna, Stockholm and the jazz festivals in Copenhagen and in Montreux, Switzerland. The group will instead concentrate on U.S. concert dates this summer. No U.S. dates have been added yet, he said. The Bangles will proceed with its European tour, which begins in June in West Germany, but the Los Angeles-based rock group has scrapped plans to shoot a promotional video in Cairo during the tour. "Even though I can't honestly say the Libyan-European situation hasn't been an issue for us, it hasn't caused us or the group to seriously consider canceling the tour, " said Mike Gormley of L.A. Personal Direction, the Bangles' management company. "We're concerned about their safety, but it's an issue of exposure versus risk, and we think the risk in the places they're playing England, the Netherlands and West Germany is less than it might be elsewhere." Gormley said that Wall of Voodoo, another of the rock groups handled by his company, has been touring in Europe for two months and has experienced "no trouble of any kind." "And we're still going ahead with plans for Oingo Boingo to tour Europe later this summer," Gormley added. Popdom's general mood regarding European appearances this year is one of caution. Vicki Rose, a publicist with the Howard Bloom Agency in New York, said Lionel Richie, who was considering a European tour later this year, had postponed such considerations indefinitely. "The whole Libyan thing has made Richie very nervous; he'll probably wait until things have cooled down a bit over there," Rose added. "I mean, Cambodia seems safer than southern Europe right now.”
24-04-1986 : Rolling Stone
Prince strips down
By Davitt Sigerson
Who but Prince fills us today with the kind of anticipation we once reserved for new work by Bob Dylan, the Beatles and the Rolling Stones ? Happily, following the commercial and creative letdown of Around the World in a Day (cleverly presented as his Personal Statement record), Parade: Music from 'Under the Cherry Moon' bears the weight of intense hope and scrutiny as lightly as its maker wears the satin capes he favors. Prince has made it his task to shock us: his work sounds so inevitable we can no longer identify what it was that first surprised us. He did this on "When Doves Cry." Was it simply the omission of bass guitar or the retention of a single line of melody for verse and chorus? The answer lies in the way it was assembled; the result is that most of us can remember where we were and what we were doing the first time we heard it. "When Doves Cry" and Purple Rain, the blockbuster it introduced, weren't even Prince's best work. That had been achieved one record before - on 1999. A febrile double album of extended dance pieces, it featured his best song, "Little Red Corvette," and an example of his musical wit, "1999." A lover of sixties pop, he built "1999" around the central riff of the Mamas and the Papas' "Monday, Monday." To complete this tribute-by-triangulation, Prince has now written for the Bangles "Manic Monday," which bears a melody almost identical to "1999" but omits the founding riff that would link it to its original source. This is the degree of energy and intelligence we have come to expect from Prince. This is the promise he has once again kept - on Parade. Like Purple Rain, the new album is a soundtrack (for the forthcoming Under the Cherry Moon) and is preceded by the stunning "Kiss." The single has been mistaken as a return to the music of his Dirty Mind period. In fact, it is made with a sparseness and - most surprising to the ear - an absence of reverb that bespeak years of learning. Rhythmically, "Kiss" is funk; harmonically, it is rhythm & blues; lyrically, it proves Prince is crossing yet another frontier, into emotional maturity. The petulant baby - first trumpeting a purported sexuality and then expecting us to care about a so-called spiritual rejuvenation - is no more. Not that Prince wasn't intelligent enough to say interesting things all along, between the nonsense. Usually, though, sex was his code word for a kind of achievement in which the gratification of voyeur and audience defined success. This explains the curious the curious lack of love, or even motivation, in Prince's sex songs. Dirty Mind's "Sister," for example, isn't a song about making love to one's sister; it's a song about making love in which the female seducer is cast as the protagonist's sister, much as a pornographer might create a fantasy to titillate his audience. "Sister" is not about what it claims to be about, and neither incites nor shocks. What really shocks, of course, is the aural landscape of records like "When Doves Cry" and "Kiss." We all may have dirty minds, but few of us are visionaries. In the arrangements on Parade, it is Prince's vision to that is paraded: a simple Weillen waltz like "Under the Cherry Moon" proves an excuse for all manner of orchestral invention ; when Prince says on "New Position," " You've got to try my new funk," believe him. In "New Position," on "Kiss" and above all in the sensational "Girls & Boys," Prince conceives a clean, diamond-hard style that could spawn years of imitations. Far from the funk of Dirty Mind, this style springs from an understanding f orchestration, rather than the innate ability to jam on rhythm instruments. On Parade, all sounds - snippets of guitar, horn, percussion, voice - are treated equally, erasing the line between "basic track" and "sweetening." Prince has achieved the effect of a full groove using only the elements essential to a listener's understanding - and so has devised a funk completed only by the listener's response. Thanks to Under the Cherry Moon, we get the title song, "Sometimes It Snows in April" and "Christopher Tracy's Parade"; thanks to shooting in France, we get the French touches in "Girls & Boys" and "Do U Lie ?" But the growth in Prince's lyrics isn't because maturity is written into the film script. On Parade, sex and love sound real, and perhaps for the first time, they sound related. He's made the adult discovery - or is it an admission ? - that the people you care about can be the people who turn you on the most. "Kiss" even offers something of a manifesto : in lines like " Women not girls rule my world," " U don't have 2 watch Dynasty 2 have an attitude" and " U can't be 2 flirty mama I know how 2 undress me," Prince smiles at his old ways. On another track, he serves notice that he's " got 2 try a new position." If Parade harks back to Dirty Mind, it is less in the surface similarities of the falsetto funk style than in its freedom from thematic pretensions. Prince has given us three successive concept albums - first the unintended masterpiece 1999; next the Cinerama extravaganza Purple Rain, where his exertions occasionally drowned out his intentions; and finally the con job Around the World in a Day, when he summoned craft and packaging to bridge the creative chasm he faced. Having gathered enough laurels on which to rest comfortably forevermore, Prince wants to have some fun with music, or as he puts it, to " go fishing in the river, the river of life." What better time for a new baptism ?
Though few working the greenroom seem to know it, Prince is standing in a hallway not five feet away. After Sheila’s final encore, he and the Revolution — now twelve members strong — are scheduled to sign in for a still undetermined number of songs. Prince, you remember, said last year that he might never again play live, that he was going to “ look for the ladder.” There haven’t been many miracles in Los Angeles lately, and his surprise performance will be hailed by the committed as a return from the Other Side. For the rest of the audience, the evening promises to provide a damn nice show. Most of Hollywood still seems to be sipping lunch at Musso & Frank’s, but Wendy checks her watch and realizes it’s time for the sound check. The bill is paid, and everyone clambers back into Wendy’s rented BMW for the trip to the Universal Amphitheatre. Clean-cut, dressed in a resplendent black suit and a white ruffled shirt, Prince faces the band and orders up a tune. The Revolution begins hammering. “ Okay,” says Prince, “ Sheila comes in here.” Cut. “ Is Sheila here yet ?” he asks. Momentarily, Sheila E. strides in, stage left, in sunglasses and a trench coat. She and Prince huddle for a second, then the meastro barks, " 'Controversy' ! Ready !" The band is pounding again. “ Come on, stay in beat,” says Prince. “ I’m listening.” Perfection is found in a few measures, and the band carries on with the song. Prince then announces, “ End of ‘A Love Bizarre.’ Check it out.” He jumps offstage and runs up an aisle, both listening to the sound and practicing an audience run he will perform that night. “ Can we lose that low range somehow ?” he asks. “ Let me hear the bass out.” Perfection again, then into the Revolution’s new single, “Kiss.” Prince pauses. “ I think finger cymbals would be better. Now when we film videos tomorrow, we’re going to drag it out so everybody will get their chance to be in it.” With that, he heads offstage. Wendy unstraps herself from the guitar, Lisa unplugs from the keyboard, and they head back upstairs for dinner. Like Tom Landry checking out field conditions ten minutes before the season’s opening game, a quietly wired Prince roams the grounds backstage. Walking down the corridor, he pays as little attention to the greenroom dollies as Landry does to the Dallas Cowboys’ cheerleaders. Prince disappears through the wings and heads anonymously into the audience to watch Sheila pound out her tunes. The walls are shaking out there; the crowd is swaying, its eyes centered on Sheila and her neon drumsticks. No one pays heed to the clean-cut guy in the nice black suit who has melted into their midst. While Prince cases the joint from the bleachers, the Revolution is upstairs getting made up in its two dressing rooms. Sheila is finishing up onstage now, whipping the crowd out of its seats as she beats a first encore. The entire Revolution meets for a moment, agrees on the key for the first song, “A Love Bizarre,” then hustles downstairs, just offstage. Huddled in the darkness like a high-school basketball team about to take the court, the musicians fidget and limber up. One encore for Sheila. Another. One more. The curtain comes down again, and the crowd sees the shadow of scurrying feet. Something is happening. The curtain goes up, the Revolution is in place, and the disbelieving screams start. Prince smiles, Wendy smiles next to him, and in her apartment, Lisa cocks her head, finally relents and smiles, too. The first chord is an A, and the unceasing screams leave no doubt that the real king, his queens and the purple court have finally returned.
Ladies In Waiting
Wendy, Lisa and Prince : a musical love affair
by Neal Karlen
Minutes from now, Sheila E. will begin pounding her magical drumsticks for 6200 howling fans inside the Universal Amphitheatre. Though showtime is imminent, the backstage greenroom at this Universal City concert hall remains packed elbow to elbow with assorted kings, queens and court jesters of the Los Angeles music kingdom. Rock& roll Annies, pressed between the walls and their escorts, nurse their complimentary drinks and grind out Gitanes at their painted competition’s feet. Funkified Barbie, Ken and Mr. T dolls fight for air space and each other, while a quickly panicking backstage guard shields the door with her body and announces, “No more, no room, no air, nobody else !” Though few working the greenroom seem to know it, Prince is standing in a hallway not five feet away. After Sheila’s final encore, he and the Revolution — now twelve members strong — are scheduled to sign in for a still undetermined number of songs. Prince, you remember, said last year that he might never again play live, that he was going to “look for the ladder.” There haven’t been many miracles in Los Angeles lately, and his surprise performance will be hailed by the committed as a return from the Other Side. For the rest of the audience, the evening promises to provide a damn nice show. Upstairs from the stage, Revolution keyboard player Lisa Coleman and guitarist Wendy Melvoin are waiting in their dressing room. Both are Los Angeles natives and the only members of the Revolution who commute to Minneapolis. They are also the Revolution’s only women and the only faces in the band that carry brand-name recognition. But they aren’t feminine adornments, tambourine-banging mannequins brought in to leaven Prince’s macho onstage swaggering. Above all else, Lisa and Wendy are wicked musicians, the only ones to whom Prince gives carte blanche in the private music-making regions of his head. No, they both assert, Prince isn’t their boss; he’s their best friend and collaborator. “We don’t want to leave and start our own thing,” says Lisa softly, “because this is our own thing — I don’t feel like we’re just hired musicians taking orders. He’s always asking for our ideas.” And more. The group’s latest album, Parade : Music from 'Under the Cherry Moon,’ contains two songs — “Sometimes It Snows in April” and “Mountains” — co-written by Lisa and Wendy. They have also begun writing songs for Prince’s third movie. They’re not sure what it’s about, but Prince has let it be known he’ll shape his film to suit their songs. Together, says Wendy, the triad makes music no one can beat “I’m sorry,” she says with conviction, “but no one can come close to what the three of us have together when we’re playing in the studio. Nobody !”
Wendy makes me seem all right in the eyes of people watching. She keeps a smile on her face. When I sneer, she smiles. It’s not premeditated, she just does it. It’s a goad contrast. Lisa is like my sister. She’ll play what the average person won’t. She’ll press two notes with one finger so the chord is a lot larger, things like that. She’s more abstract. She’s into Joni Mitchell too.
— PRINCE
A lot has happened to the purple clan in the months that have preceded the Resolution’s surprise Los Angeles appearance. For lunch on the day of the show, Lisa and Wendy pick the Musso & Frank Grill as an appropriate Hollywood spot to talk. While would-be and real movie agents and producers drink their lunch at nearby tables, the two order salads and mull over the recent events. The Family, a band Prince godfathered through its first album, has just fallen apart in the wake of singer Paul Peterson’s walkout. Among those left stranded is Susannah Melvoin, the Family’s other exsinger, Prince’s current beloved (though, contrary to rumor, not his fiancée) and Wendy’s forever identical twin sister. Then there’s Parade, the Revolution’s new record, and Under the Cherry Moon, Prince’s new movie, which he directed and which will be out in a few months. According to Lisa, the film is a “ boy-meets-girl love story, a kind of a Pygmalion in reverse. Instead of making a high-society dame out of a tramp, it’s about a man trying to loosen up a high-society dame.” Right around the time the movie opens, Prince and the Revolution are planning to take off on a nine-month world tour, their longest ever. So now it’s time to start getting the live kinks out : except for a three-hour performance earlier this week at Minneapolis's First Avenue club, neither Prince nor his band has played a note in public in a year." I'm not ,” says Wendy, ‘ and I don’t even want to guess what’s going to happen. All I know is that this band is going to be together a long, long time.” Lisa nods in agreement. Superficially, the two women’s offstage personalities seem very similar to their onstage auras. Wendy, in front and extroverted, embellishing whatever’s been said with a cracking verbal riff or some funny dialect. Lisa, hanging back, talking slowly, adding grace notes of reflection or perfectly timed tiny gibes to keep the two different story lines in electric rhythm. That they talk the way they jam, says Wendy, makes perfect psychological rock-band sense. “ There are actually different attitudes for different positions in a band," she explains. “ Keyboard players know when they join a band that they’re going to be in the second line. And guitarists know they’re going to be in front. So they get that guitarist’s attitude of being in front. When you’re up there, you know you can’t just stare down at your instrument and pretend you’re not there.” Long pause. Lisa reflects, takes a drag on her cigarette, adds her chord: “ I like it in the second line. I feel comfortable there. I call it my apartment.” Half-beat pause, Wendy adds a hearty riff via a deepthroated laugh. “ She calls it her apartment !” Lisa says she doesn’t mind that “ Lisa and Wendy” are a single entity in the rock public’s eye. She laughs shyly — her most frequent kind of laugh — as she remembers a solo shopping trip she took this week. “ I was at the market," she says, “ and these two little girls, all decked out, walk by. They went past me, turned around, and yelled, ‘It’s Lisa and Wendy ! It’s Lisa and Wendy !’ I had to stop and count how many of myself there were. Let’s see. One.” Wendy has more trouble with the commingling of their public personas. “ It’s hard,” she says thoughtfully. “ It’s weird.” The two then engage each other in a dialogue that is one part Abbott and Costello to two parts longtime best friends busting each other’s chops. LISA : It’s fine. I couldn’t think of a better person to be linked with. Wendy : ( Laughing) I could. LISA : ( Laughing) Yeah, Me. Like Prince, Wendy and Lisa grew up in families headed by fathers who were professional musicians and who eventually were divorced from their wives. Jazz keyboardist Mike Melvoin and percussionist Gary Coleman are seasoned studio musicians and best friends. Their credits include Barbra Streisand’s “Evergreen” and Frank Sinatra’s “That’s Life”: they appeared together on the Beach Boys’ “Good Vibrations” and on several early Jackson 5 albums; and they were the ones who played the instruments for half of the Partridge Family. “ Our parents were total beatniks, then hippies, and we turned into twelve-year-old hippies ourselves,” says Wendy, who’s now twenty-two. ‘ They used to joke that to rebel we’d have to turn into staunch Republicans,” adds Lisa. who’s twenty-five. “ But we just rook their lives and went a step further.” In 1971, all six Melvoin and Coleman kids joined together to cut a kiddie-hippie-bubblegum album. “ But we weren’t the Partridge Family,” chortles Lisa, “ we all actually played our instruments.” The name of the album ? “ I forget,” feigns Wendy. “ I think it was... Geek City.” “ Yes, I’m sure that was it,’ says Lisa, mock soberly. Both earnestly agree that their birthright as spectators into rock-business reality has helped them keep that ever - diminishing industry resource - perspective. “ Growing up the way we did,” says Wendy, “ really gave us an edge on people who were just starting in music. We know how to get around all the games.” She pauses. “ There’s so much ego in the music business, especially when you first get started. The people who grew up around the business are more relaxed with it.” And fantastic success, Wendy says, hasn’t changed her a bit. “ I never think about it. I have a few friends and a few things I like to do. I never go clubbing. I’d rather just go home and play my guitar. Sometimes I can’t believe how boring I must seem to my friends.” “ A lot of people have this real glamorous vision of what it means to be a musician,” adds Lisa. “ Sometimes it’s true, but what I learned as a kid is that there’s got to be a whole lot of work behind it. You have to practice, you have to have your chops, you have to know your music perfectly.” Sometimes it hits her that she’s Lisa - but never in public. Alone, at home, she occasionally thinks about it. Then she usually goes to bed. Lisa began studying classical piano at an early age. Three years older than Wendy and Susannah Melvoin, she remembers the twins when they looked like “ plucked chickens in diapers.” Wendy got her first guitar for her sixth birthday; Susannah received toe shoes. Surrounded by musical relations, Lisa and Wendy kept practicing. In private. Even after their bubblegum record, they refused to play in front of their classmates. Says Wendy, “ People who went to junior high school with me at Cal Prep in Encino still come up and say, ‘I didn’t even know you knew how to play the guitar.’ The instrument was still so personal to me that I didn’t want to share it with anyone.” In Hollywood, Lisa suffered similar junior-high phobias. Once, the drama department at her school needed a pianist to accompany a dance routine. Lisa was called out of class, placed on a piano bench and ordered to play “ Mr. Bojangles.” Lisa shudders as she recalls the experience : “ I don’t know what happened, but I sat down at the piano and couldn’t play. I mean I could play, but I pretended that I couldn’t. I was really depressed all day, then went home and sat back down at my piano. You know, that night I played the shit out of ‘Mr. Bojangles.’” She got through Hollywood High through the good graces of an English teacher named Judy Coleman, who gave Lisa ample independent-study credits for her music and Joni Mitchell-style lyrics. “ I basically just stayed home from school and wrote songs," she says. “ Every once in a while I’d call up Judy and say, ‘Come on over and give me some credits.’” After graduation, she enrolled at Los Angeles Community College as an English major, pulled down a 4.0 average, “ read everything from Vonnegut to Hayakawa” and dropped out. Lisa then started work as a grunt on the shipping dock of a documentary-film company in Los Angeles. In 1979, a friend working for Prince’s L.A. management company heard that His Royal Badness - who was still a couple of years away from his big commercial breakthrough — was looking for a keyboard player. Lisa made a tape, sent it in and was quickly summoned to Minneapolis for a private audition. “ When I got to Prince’s house,” Lisa remembers, “ he sent me downstairs and said he was going to change clothes. There was a piano down there, and I just started playing, trying to relax. I got the feeling he was eavesdropping at the top of the stairs, so I whipped out my best Mozart. He finally came back downstairs, picked up his guitar, and we started jamming. From the first chord, we hit it off.” Hired on the spot, she moved to Minneapolis. Wendy, meanwhile, was gritting her way through high school in North Conway, New Hampshire, her divorced mother’s new home. She liked the country but felt marooned. “ No one understood what I liked,” she says, “ and no one knew I played the guitar.” Foiled romance finally gave her the gumption to get through. “ I was sixteen and madly in love with a senior named David Merrill. I finally went up to him and said, ‘I can’t stand it anymore, I just have to let you know that I’m attracted to you.’ He just looked at me and said, ‘There’s a whole bunch of other guys in the school.’ After that, I said, ‘Forget it, I just want to get out of here.’” Wendy graduated, then headed back to L.A. to waitress and play secretary while she figured out which music college to attend. In 1983, she went to visit Lisa in New York. The band was on the 1999 tour, and Wendy holed up for a few days in her friend’s hotel room. Down the hall, Prince heard someone playing a guitar. He knocked on Lisa’s door and found Wendy practicing. He asked her to play more, liked what he heard and later asked her to fill in at a sound check that guitarist Dez Dickerson had missed. Soon after, Dickerson quit to form his own band, and Wendy was in. How does it feel being the only women in a twelve-member band ? “ It’s a little weird,” says Lisa, “ but not really. When I first joined the band, I got solace from the fact that here were some other people so different that they only fit in there. That’s the thing — they’re all nice guys, and we all fit together.” What about the explicitly sexual content of Prince’s lyrics ? “ Like ‘Head’ ?” Wend says, laughing. “ People do it. It exists." " It's all in the name of good music," adds Lisa. And what about romance ? “ I like to keep my personal life personal,” says Lisa with an air of distaste. “ I love Bugs Bunny," says Wendy, ever in front with a lick. “ I’d marry him if he were alive. He’s just so Hollywood.” Most of Hollywood still seems to be sipping lunch at Musso & Frank’s, but Wendy checks her watch and realizes it’s time for the sound check. The bill is paid, and everyone clambers back into Wendy’s rented BMW for the trip to the Universal Amphitheatre.
As they wait for the afternoon call to the stage, Wendy and Lisa relax in their dressing room. On the couch lies a paperback of hard-to-do crossword puzzles and a copy of The Twilight Zone magazine. Wendy is musing over a piece of plastic that looks just like an American Express platinum card. Shaking her head, she points out the words HARD ROCK CAFE where the American Express legend should be. The embossment on the bottom left of the card says WENDY, just WENDY. “ This was just sent to me, unsolicited, in the mail,” she says. “ This card allows me to butt in front of anybody in line at the Hard Rock Cafe. Can you imagine the kind of person who would use this ?” Wendy drops the card and lights some incense to chase out the room’s sweat-sock smell. Lisa lights a Merit. On a table sits an uneaten basket of strangely colored and oddly shaped cookies baked by a fan who spied them shopping for books the day before. “ Give some to Prince," pleads the note that accompanied the questionable edibles backstage, “ please.” An aide walks in and announces, “ Prince wants you onstage ASAP.” As Lisa walks down the stairs and through the wings, she says, “ I nicknamed Prince ‘Fearless: as in ‘Fearless Leader.’" As in Rocky and Bullwinkle. On the stage, Lisa and Wendy strap and plug themselves into position — Lisa back in her dark apartment with a little smile and her head cocked slightly; Wendy in front with a wide grin, next to Prince in the fully lit, empty auditorium. Gone are the days when Fearless Leader put his friends through all-afternoon sound-check jams that could last as long as that night’s concert. Clean-cut, dressed in a resplendent black suit and a white ruffled shirt, Prince faces the band and orders up a tune. The Revolution begins hammering. “ Okay,” says Prince, “ Sheila comes in here.” Cut. “ Is Sheila here yet ?” he asks. Momentarily, Sheila E. strides in, stage left, in sunglasses and a trench coat. She and Prince huddle for a second, then the meastro barks, " 'Controversy' ! Ready !" The band is pounding again. “ Come on, stay in beat,” says Prince. “ I’m listening.” Perfection is found in a few measures, and the band carries on with the song. Prince then announces, “ End of ‘A Love Bizarre.’ Check it out.” He jumps offstage and runs up an aisle, both listening to the sound and practicing an audience run he will perform that night. “ Can we lose that low range somehow ?” he asks. “ Let me hear the bass out.” Perfection again, then into the Revolution’s new single, “Kiss.” Prince pauses. “ I think finger cymbals would be better. Now when we film videos tomorrow, we’re going to drag it out so everybody will get their chance to be in it.” With that, he heads offstage. Wendy unstraps herself from the guitar, Lisa unplugs from the keyboard, and they head back upstairs for dinner.
Wendy is fighting for terms to describe her and Lisa’s relationship with Prince. They aren’t his toys or minions; he’s not their boss or master. Together they form a musical ménage that has alchemized new multiracial forms of funk rock out of both talent and (they say) deep-dish love. ‘ We tell Prince we love him all the time,” says Wendy. “ He always gets all embarrassed and doesn’t know what to say. We tell him to tell us the same thing so he goes, ‘Uh, okay, yeah, I love you too.’ It’s silly, us all being so intense about it and swooning over each other, but it’s meaningful. Not that the rest of the band doesn’t understand Prince — they do. We’re just a bit more spiritual with him.” The three have a silent language, adds Lisa. “ When Prince says something funny at rehearsal," she explains, “ he knows who will understand and where to look for the smile. And it’s always there. And we know where to look for that smile too.” Like Tom Landry checking out field conditions ten minutes before the season’s opening game, a quietly wired Prince roams the grounds backstage. Walking down the corridor, he pays as little attention to the greenroom dollies as Landry does to the Dallas Cowboys’ cheerleaders. Prince disappears through the wings and heads anonymously into the audience to watch Sheila pound out her tunes. The walls are shaking out there; the crowd is swaying, its eyes centered on Sheila and her neon drumsticks. No one pays heed to the clean-cut guy in the nice black suit who has melted into their midst. While Prince cases the joint trom the bleachers, the Revolution is upstairs getting made up in its two dressing rooms. The men’s quarters are crowded with faces both familiar and new. In recent months, Prince has added six new members to the band : Eric Leeds on sax, Matt Bliss on trumpet, Mico Weaver on guitar and three guys whose job it is to work to the side of Prince as a Pips-like dance line. They are Greg Brooks, Wally Safford and Jerome Benton — Morris Day’s hilarious valet and mirror holder in Purple Rain and the only Revolution member to appear in Under the Cherry Moon. “ We’ve got a much bigger sound now," says Lisa. “ And we’re a lot more funk oriented, that’s for sure.” In one corner, Revolution drummer Bobby Z and keyboardist Matt Fink, tied for second in the race for Most Famous Jewish Rock Star Ever to Come Out of Minnesota, are discussing whether the Yiddish word for “gizzard” is pipik or pupik. In the shtetl the chicken gizzard was a delicacy saved for the head of the household on Friday night. In suburban St Louis Park, Minnesota, however, the word now generally is spoken by parents wondering why their son has hair down to his pipik. Or is it pupik ? Matt, in his green doctor’s scrub suit, thinks it’s the latter. Bobby Z finally agrees. While the guys get made up, dope smoke wafts down the hallway. “ You know how much trouble we’d get in if we did that ?” one new member of the honest-to-God drug-free Revolution says, laughing. Across the hall, Wendy explains the band’s pharmaceutical habits. “ There is absolutely no person in this band involved with drugs," she says vehemently. “ We’re real militant about that. Fortunately, it happens that everybody in the band got together and felt the same way. There are a few people in the organization who are into the drugular lifestyle, but you can’t help that.” “ This band’s going to last a long time because we’re all going to live a long time," Lisa adds softly. “ The headline KEYBOARD PLAYER FOUND DEAD OF DRUG OVERDOSE sounds boring and pathetic to me.” Sheila is finishing up onstage now, whipping the crowd out of its seats as she beats a first encore. The entire Revolution meets for a moment, agrees on the key for the first song, “A Love Bizarre,” then hustles downstairs, just offstage. Huddled in the darkness like a high-school basketball team about to take the court, the musicians fidget and limber up. One encore for Sheila. Another. One more. The curtain comes down again, and the crowd sees the shadow of scurrying feet. Something is happening. The curtain goes up, the Revolution is in place, and the disbelieving screams start. Prince smiles, Wendy smiles next to him, and in her apartment, Lisa cocks her head, finally relents and smiles, too. The first chord is an A, and the unceasing screams leave no doubt that the real king, his queens and the purple court have finally returned.
??-04-1986 : Big Tall Wall (1) (5:40) – Dream Factory #1
“Big Tall Wall” is a minimalist funk/rock song, with Prince's vocals accompanied only by a Linn LN-1 drum machine. The track was recorded around the time when Prince's then-girlfriend Susannah Melvoin had moved out of Prince's house and the lyrics, including " I'm gonna build a big tall wall, stone circle so you can’t get out”, are a direct reference to the round apartment building in Lake Calhoun to which she moved. The song includes the line " I've got more holes than a golf course" which Prince later reused in the party intro to The Ball (heard both in the intro to both Joy In Repetition and Eye No). The line " pretty little baby, you're so glam, every time I see you I wanna slam" also inspired Glam Slam. While the lyrics in the initial version were focused on a negative, possessive relationship, the revised version reframed the lyrics to depict a positive, loving relationship.
Big Tall Wall
Hey sugar
Come here
I got something 2 lay on your mind
I'm gonna build a big tall wall
Stone circle so U can't get out
Big tall wall
True love is what it's all about
If I see U in a restaurant
Ooh, baby, U're all I want
Your sexy body, your curly brown hair
Try 2 run if U want 2, I don't care!
I'm gonna build a big tall wall
Stone circle so U can't get out
Big tall wall (Sugar darling)
True love is what it's all about
If I see you walkin' down the street
(See you walkin' down the street)
You better go on, cause you're the one I wanna meet
(You're the one I wanna meet)
You dress so smart
(You try so smart)
You talk so neat
(Talk so neat)
You look so fine
(So fine)
It's hard not to eat 'cha baby
Big tall wall
Stone circle so you can't get out
(I'm gonna build a)
Big tall wall (Oh yea, ooh)
True love Is what it's all about
B-is for bold, girl that's how you make me feel
I-is for ignorant, this situation's real (so real)
G- is for my girlfriend, yah you know
(She is not my girlfriend)
I got another one
But that ain't gonna stop me and you
From having fun (Stop me, stop me)
Big tall wall
I see you in a restaurant
I don't want nothing else
You're all I want (You're all I want)
Big tall wall
Oh baby I'd kiss you for Uncle Sam
Pretty little baby you're so glam
Every time I see you I wanna slam
Big tall wall
Stone circle so you can't get out
(You can't get out)
Big tall wall
(yea, yes I am)
True love, true love is what it's all about
Big tall wall
B is for bold, that's how you make me feel
Oooh big tall, big tall wall
Don't leave me like this, that's so cold
Sexy body, your curly brown hair
Ooh pretty baby you really take me there
Beautiful goddess so glam
Every time I see you I wanna slam (ooow, uh !)
If I see you in a restaurant
(Don't want nothing else)
Ooh baby baby you're all I want
(You're all I want)
Sexy body, your curly brown hair
(girl girl girl girl)
Really take me there
(yeah)
I'm gonna build a big tall wall
Stone circle so U can't get out
(Build a big tall wall
(I'm gonna build a...)
(Ooh, I'm gonna build a...)
True love is what it's all about
I'm gonna build a big tall wall
(Tall wall, tall wall, tall, baby, sugar)
Stone circle so U can't get out (Get out)
Big tall wall (I'm gonna, I'm gonna, yeah)
True love is what it's all about (True)
Stone circle so U can't get out
True love is what it's all about
{lines are repeated in foreground and background}
(Big tall wall)
I'm gonna
I'm gonna build a big tall wall
Baby doll, U're so glam
Every time I see U I wanna slam
Can you ever walk on my street ?
Didn't anybody tell you that
My modus operandi left a lot to be desired
I got more holes than a golf course
Oh yeah
You're hot company
Take your time cause in the back room
I'm building a place to put your soul see
Every time I see you I wanna sc-sc-sc-sc-scream
Oh yeah your body's like that
You wanna rap ?
You dress so smart
You talk so neat
You're just my style girl (tall wall)
You wanna see my... (tall wall)
You wanna see my walls ? (tall wall)
(I see you walkin down my street)
(let me put you behind my big tall wall)
You wanna see my bridge ?
(I just wanna eat'cha, honey)
Well whatcha want, whatcha wanna see ?
(B is for bold, baby)
(let me put u behind my big tall wall)
(How you make me feel)
(I just wanna eat'cha, honey)
(I is 4 ignorant - this situation's real)
G is for my girlfriend, you know I got another one
(I'm gonna do ya)
But that ain't gonna stop
Me and you from having
Me and you from having fun
I felt embarrassed about bringing up ‘Big Tall Wall’ in front of Susannah Melvoin. It was as if I’d dug out an intimate love letter Prince had written her, filled with private detail, and asked her what she’d done to inspire it. Talking to Wendy and Lisa previously, I’d discovered that they’d heard outtakes, but didn’t necessarily have copies of them. And although I assumed that Susannah would have wanted to hear every song Prince had allegedly written about her, I had no idea if he’d played them to her at the time, and if not, whether she would have tracked them down. Susannah told me he hadn’t played her ‘Big Tall Wall’ at the time – and she hadn’t heard it in many years – but it was clear from her reaction that she still remembered the impact the lyrics had made on her. It’s easy to understand why, and also to appreciate why Prince has – to date – kept it from official release. Stylistically, it’s among his most important out-takes – you can hear in it the seeds of many of the songs on Sign o’ the Times, The Black Album, Lovesexy and Graffiti Bridge – but lyrically it’s unbelievably reactionary, a throwback to the lock-her-up-in- a-trunk misogynist crap of Cliff Richard’s ‘Living Doll’. The song is from the perspective of a possessive lover overwhelmed by a girlfriend – with a sexy body and curly brown hair – who decides to respond to her challenges by imprisoning her inside a circular stone wall, while continuing, it seems, to see another girlfriend on the side. This, the singer maintains, is true love. It would be a mistake to take the song too seriously: it’s a definite exercise in black humour, but by the end of the song he’s fully inhabited the persona of a psychopath.
Rock & Soul
The Prince interview
Mr. Purple Discusses His Movies, His Music, His Musicians And More, More, More.
By Michael Shore
Prince's next feature film, Under the Cherry Moon - and the much-anticipated followup to his smash debut, Purple Rain - should be out in theaters in three or four months. It's even more eagerly awaited because it's also Prince's feature-film directing debut. Originally, the film was to be directed by Mary Lambert, a premier music-video director who has overseen Madonna's "Borderline" and "Material Girl," Sheila E.'s "The Glamorous Life," and the Go-Go's "Yes Or No." But in mid-September, about a month or so into the movie's two-month shooting schedule, Lambert abruptly walked off the set and handed the directing reins to His Royal Badness. Lambert issued a statement which read, in part, " I'm leaving under totally amicable circumstances. It's just become quite apparent that Prince has such a strong vision of what this movie should be, a vision that extends to so many areas of the film, that it makes no sense for me to stand between him and the film anymore. So I'm going off to work on my own feature and letting him finish his." Lambert's was not the first departure from the set of Under the Cherry Moon. Just days into filming, veteran British actor Terrance Stamp walked off the set, allegedly due to " scheduling conflicts," which may or may not be public relations' diplomacy. In any case, Stamp was replaced in short order by Steven Berkoff, who played the heavies in both Beverly Hills Cop and Rambo. He'll be seen as the father of Prince's love interest in the film. Under the Cherry Moon is a love story, set in the 1940s and shot in black and white. Word from the set has it that the plot is more or less spelled out in the lyrics to "Condition of the Heart" on Around the World in a Day, which appears to be about a musician falling in love with a woman too rich and worldly for his own lifestyle. In Under the Cherry Moon, Prince's love interest is a rich girl named Mary Sharon who, according to one cast member, " wears miniskirts and pigtails." Prince plays Christopher, a piano player in a casino-style lounge in a place similar to the French Riviera, where the film was shot. One unconfirmed story was that Prince wanted to shoot some scenes in Monte Carlo but Prince Rainier wouldn't grant permission. Guess he felt one prince on the premises was enough. While the plot may come from a Prince song, don't expect much Prince music in Under the Cherry Moon. Another unidentified crew member says the Revolution was on the set only to shoot the video for "America," that there's no band music in the film at all, and that the only Prince music in the film is His Royal Badness at the acoustic piano. So there may or may not be soundtrack album. Another crew member confirmed, though, that there is one actual "song," and it's called something like "Snowing in July." You'll recall that when Prince announced he would stop touring late in the Purple Rain tour, one of his cryptic reasons was, " Sometimes it snows in July." The rest of the cast includes little-known British actress Kristen Scott-Thomas as Mary Sharon; Jerome Benton, Morris Day's former valet in the Time and now a member of the Family, as Prince's "partner"; veteran British actress Francesca Annis as an older woman with whom Prince's character reportedly has an affair; and Victor Spinetti, whose career as a supporting player in rock movies goes all the way back to the Beatles' A Hard Day's Night and Help ! So what'll the movie be like ? Your guess is as good as ours or anyone else's at this point. But consider another hot report from one crew member. In order to complete the film on time after he took over from Lambert, Prince shot the remaining scenes in one take. Maybe that's a good sign. After all, His Royal Badness did all right making records by himself for a long time, and surprised a lot of supposed experts with the success of Purple Rain. Somehow, it's hard to believe Prince is finished surprising us. Late in 1985, Prince broke his self-imposed silence and spoke to the public for the first time in almost four years. First came an interview for Rolling Stone magazine. Later came an interview for MTV. Prince's agreement to be interviewed took MTV so suddenly that the staff at the cable network were unable to arrange to conduct the interview in person. Consequently, the Music News staff resorted to simply providing a list of questions to be read to Prince by his manager and answered by Prince on videotape. MTV elected to broadcast only parts of the interview. The full interview was then offered to other broadcasters. The videotaped interview was conducted in France, where Prince was shooting his forthcoming motion picture, Under the Cherry Moon. He first took a break to film the video for America, the third single from the Around the World in a Day LP, before 2,000 kids at the Theatre de la Verdure (translation : Greenery Theatre), which is a huge tent on the Promenade des Anglais in Nice. Once the video shoot was completed, Prince & the Revolution treated the audience to a 90-minute concert. Afterwards, Prince sat with a few of the young people in attendance and answered the questions prepared by the MTV Music News staff. It marked the first time in his career that Prince had said more than two sentences on TV. Unfortunately, in many cases, he didn't answer the questions posed, as you'll see. Although Prince is very good at many things, his inexperience with interviews shows greatly.
Unknown newspaper
Prince has been pilloried and praised, called everything from genius to madman. But whatever your opinion, a Prince movie is a Hollywood event. Under The Cherry Moon, his latest opus, is a pure Prince fantasy set in the Forties. His first movie, Purple Rain, was a box-office smash ($80 million), and there’s no reason to expect anything less of his latest. This time, he not only stars, but also directs and wrote the film’s title theme, several original songs and the score. Purple Rain drew on elements of Prince’s own life and was shot in Minneapolis, where he grew up. Under The Cherry Moon was shot in luxurious oceanfront villas in glittering Nice, France, with Prince attired in some of the most elegant clothing designers could drum up. The singer plays a slick American musician who goes to the French Riviera to get rich quick. “ I grew up adoring those romantic films of the Forties,” Prince, 26, explains, “ and that’s why I chose to set my new picture in that era.” Prince has a head start with this movie : The album, Parade : Music from Under The Cherry Moon, was released in early April, and one of the singles, Kiss, zoomed to the top of the charts in six weeks.
26-04-1986 : NME (UK)
The vision of excellence
Little Richard’s niece stripping off her Beatles T-shirt, preparing to get dirty with Jimi Hendrix’s ghost… Prince wants to be alone, provided we all know about it; wants to be nobody by being everyone. Stuart Cosgrove strips away the masks…
It was late December, the arse end of Christmas, and not quite New Year. Prince came staggering through the lounge-bar and swung a punch at Lord Nelson. A nun with only half a habit was showing too much thigh and throwing lager in the air. Nana Mouskouri was still slumped in the corner necking with Frankenstein. Happy new year. Would you suck a bolt ? Russ Abbott, complete with kilt and paint-brush, was trying to calm things down but the bouncer was going locomotive near the bar door. “ You better make yourself scarce son. The polls are coming.” Prince picked up his wig, grabbed his lilac jacket and did a runner. Let’s face it, even the famous must resist arrest. From Scotland to Santa Monica, we know them well, because fancy dress more than drugs or sex is the first friend of the pop star. Imitation is a sure sign of flattery, but no one imitates the real Prince, whoever or whatever that is, they imitate an image of Prince, a momentary pause in the life, loves and shifting personae of Prince Rogers Nelson. The one that escaped the long arm of the law was regency Prince, the Prince Regent, born in 1983, soaked in purple rain and strutting on the sexual side of psychedelia. When the world decides you’re worth imitating, your fame or notoriety are nearly secure. Fancy dress is our revenge on the famous, a shaky step on the winding road of stardom, a route even the most quiet of us have thought about. The Purple Prince shall be your guide, follow his journey with care, grasshopper. Prince, the master of 20 musical instruments, began his journey in earnest at the age of 17, when he left his native Minneapolis for New York, carrying a demo tape and making the unprecedented demand that he, and he alone, should produce his debut album. He allegedly turned down three companies and several more showed him the door. A year later Warner Brothers signed him to an exclusive contract. Prince became the youngest artist in the company’s history to be granted sole control of his own music. By the age of 19, Prince, playing every instrument, released his first platinum album. It wasn’t until the release of the motion picture Purple Rain that he found success in Britain. His first two albums threatened to break out of the club scene and into a wider market but Prince’s perpetual search for a form of music that was neither soul nor rock left him out in the British cold, unwelcome in the company of the soul tribes, too black and too feminine for the male cathedrals of white rock. Then the rain came. Propelled by a royal ego, Prince had distanced himself from his own past, giving his friends from home an inelegant elbow when they threatened to obscure his action. Andre Cymone, Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis, and finally Morris Day were all ditched on the way. Like most stars, Prince is consumed by the need to stand alone, unsided by competitors, and like all stars he had to admit, at least to himself, that nothing he does, nothing he plays and nothing he says is truly unique. On the contrary, Prince’s stardom is the construct of stars that went before, a re-writing of pop’s history that pulls together musical elements that were never meant to meet. So who and where ? Bowie is undoubtedly there ghosting around on Controversy and Sexuality; partisan punk provides the soundtrack for Ronnie, Talk To Russia and Jack U Off; Rick James grunts his way through most of Dirty Mind and everyone’s favourite reference point, The Beatles, the guru boys of Penny Lane, pepper the identity of Around The World In A Day. Like he always threatened to do, Prince has paid homage to Joni Mitchell on his current album Parade, particularly in the modern folk song Sometimes It Snows In April, and the onlookers still argue whether it was The Doors, Hendrix or Alice Walker who first showed Prince the colour purple. “ His eyes would always turn to the sky, as if trying to discern some light, and the colour for him that became the true colour of his existence… was that weird purple, before the advent of the night. The extreme side of the spectral haze, purple into the nights, the endless nights of his life.” (The Life Of Jimi Hendrix, David Henderson, 1981) But Hendrix is a generational god, mythologised by the tragic self-destructiveness of rock. Prince is a star, a self-made star, maybe even a commodity star, the kind of star whose discontentment with the limits of pop makes him look to cinema, and very soon to literature, anything that will broaden the possibilities of his stardom. In Hendrix’s life the colour purple was “a spectral haze,” a way of denying black and white and a way of summarizing ‘expanded consciousness,’ the ideal present, ‘scuse me while I kiss the sky. For Prince the colour purple is just another part of rock’s past, another part of his wardrobe, a way of incorporating and consuming the manners of psychedelia without really having to confront either its meaning, its lifestyle or its challenging madness. Prince will never commit suicide, nor die self-destructive death. No OD. No Silver Porsche. No blood stains on the bed-linen of next year’s Chelsea Hotel. Prince’s self-love and his controlled understanding of rock history could never allow it. This boy is here to stay. Prince Nelson Sinatra will always be up for another come-back concert. And no matter what image he manufactures in pursuit of the next step forward, it is that purple regency jacket, the one that punched Lord Nelson, that made Prince a star. Freeze frame. That was his Ziggy Stardust and this is how he pulled it off. “ I went through a lot when I was a boy. They called me sissy, punk, freak and faggot. If I ever went out to friends’ houses on my own, the guys would try to catch me, about eight or 20 of them together. They would run me. I never knew I could run so fast, but I was scared they would jump on me, you know, ‘cos they didn’t like my action. See the girls loved you, but the boys hated you… Sugarfoot Sam from Alabam was a minstrel show. It was quite something. That was the first time I performed in a dress. One of the girls was missing one night and they put me in a red evening gown. I was the biggest mess you ever saw. They called me Princess Lavonne.” (The Life And Times Of Little Richard, Charles White, 1984) Is Prince a princess too ? A man wearing feminine robes, a boy the other boys allegedly hated and a male the schoolgirls flock to ? More than anyone else, including Bowie, The Beatles and Jimi Hendrix, it is Little Richard Penniman, peacock cool in perfumed pompadour haircut and eye-line make up, who exerts the biggest visible influence on Prince. Little Richard trod a similar path years before Prince, straddling the division between black and white music and living between the sexual categories unsure where and if he really belonged. In our urgency to place Prince in a rock tradition – the little red corvette of white America – we should look beneath the surface of the extravagant guitar image he adopted in Purple Rain and look beyond the trappings of psychedelia. Prince has a voice, several voices, but the one that he always returns to is the dominant voice of Kiss, a voice that kneels at the same altar as Curtis Mayfield, the same kind of high, sensuous, almost forced register that The Stylistics perfected in the ‘70s. Prince’s voice is the androgynous voice of R&B. Kiss, widely acclaimed as his best ‘soul’ record for years, and its accompanying video, clearly demonstrate Prince playing with gender. The video shows him flaunting and cavorting around a studio space, lined in mascara and singing in an unusually high pitch. He plays the role ‘conventionally’ given to women in pop videos, a sex object undressing for the camera. The guitarist Wendy, a woman, fully clothed throughout, play the role ‘conventionally’ taken by the male, she looks on, playing the only instrument visible in the video, a semi-acoustic guitar. The Kiss video extends Prince’s games with gender. A fascination that stretches back to his very first set of albums. He has been seen naked on a white horse, undressed as a rude boy wearing only a coat and a pair of bikini pants, overdressed on a purple motorbike wearing an extravagant coat and a white brocade shirt, and of course, the clothes regularly harp back to the anthem of Controversy, “ Am I black or white ? Am I straight or gay ? Controversy.” Ironically, his own career has provided very clear answers. Unlike Little Richard, Prince’s sexuality is only ambiguous in theatrical sense. In reality – if that can ever be known – he is as straight as funk stars come. The verbal showdowns with Rick James about who was the horniest kid in black America; the svengali hold he exerted over Vanity 6; the way he gave Apollonia her name and the screenplay he sanctioned for Purple Rain (one of the most heterosexist films of the decade) all point in the same direction. Prince is a heterosexual male but he’s a man with at least the beginning of a conscience. Kiss is his public apology for Purple Rain. The narcissism is still there, maybe he’ll always love himself above all else, but the selfish man-child on a motorbike has been laid to rest. Ah man, --- MISSING SCAN ---
Late 04-1986 : Exit Susannah Melvoin
In late April, Susannah Melvoin and Prince split a few months after having lived in Prince’s house. Prince rented a condo in the District of Lake Calhoun, MPLS and persuaded Susannah to live there. Prince did not mean to break the engagement, but he clearly admitted the difficulty of living with him daily. Prince was dating other women, and it seemed so obvious that his relationship with Susannah wouldn’t last. Without being overtly discreet, he flirts with young actresses Sherilyn Fenn and Troy Beyer, Jackie St Clair’s model, and had a brief love affair with Carole Davis, a New York girl with musical ambitions. Cheerful and outgoing, Carole Davis encouraged Prince to expand its horizons beyond a controlled environment.
While Prince has written plenty of songs inspired by the end of a relationship, he’s never written an out-and-out break-up album in the manner of Bob Dylan’s Blood on the Tracks, Marvin Gaye’s Here, My Dear or Nick Cave’s The Boatman’s Call . Some fans consider Rave Un2 the Joy Fantastic the closest he came to this, but this relies largely on speculation. For me, it’s the songs he wrote during his relationship with Susannah Melvoin that give the closest sense of what such a record might sound like. I got to talk to Susannah Melvoin about these songs, and what they meant to her. Like her sister, Melvoin is an extremely intellectual and artistic woman, although she is slightly less direct and has a more abstract way of expressing herself. It was intriguing to discover that the subject of these songs felt the same way about them as the fans do. ‘ Some people say I was his muse, and I don’t know if
that’s what it was, but I can say I did inspire a certain kind of writing. There was a part of him that wanted to express himself in a deeper way, and I think our relationship was an opportunity for him to do that at the time. So if that’s what being a muse is, that’s what it was. I think Wendy and Lisa had the same effect.’
Dream Factory 1 st configuration
A) Visions (Instrumental) (2:11) - composed & performed by Lisa Coleman
Dream Factory (3:07)
It’s A Wonderful Day (3:40)**
The Ballad Of Dorothy Parker (4:04)
Big Tall Wall (5:50)**
And That Says What? (Instrumental)**
B) Strange Relationship (4:14)*
Teacher Teacher (3:05)**
Starfish And Coffee (2:50)*
A Place In Heaven (2:43)**
Sexual Suicide (3:39)*
28-04-1986 : Jet
Prince plays surprise gig at Boston club
Prince gave an impromptu concert at a nightclub in Boston recently for 1.250 fans while hundreds more clamoured outside, offering up to $300 for $12.50 tickets to get inside the club. He gave 48 hours notice that he was going to appear at the Metro Dance Club in Boston and gave those lucky enough to get in all he had.
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