07-06-1986 : Mazarati @ Detroit
♫ h Detroit Cobo Arena Birthday Concert (1:12 / 0:59)
* Advert. Start : 8:00PM / Tick. Price : $17.50
(A : Birthday Parade – 10/10 / Birthday ’86 – The Full Concert – 5/10 * V : Detroit June 7th 86 – 10/10)
Around The World In A Day / Christopher Tracy’s Parade / New Position / I Wonder U
Raspberry Beret / Alexa De Paris / New Position / Controversy / Mutiny (Incl. Dream Factory)
Happy Birthday / How Much Is That Doggie In The Window ? / Lady Cab Driver / Automatic / DMSR
The Dance Electric (w/ Andre Cymone) / Under The Cherry Moon / Anotherloverholenyohead
Soft & Wet / I Wanna Be Your Lover / Head (Incl. Electric Man) / Pop Life / Girls & Boys
Take My Hand, Precious Lord / Life Can Be So Nice / Purple Rain / Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On
Mountains / A Love Bizarre (Incl. Holly Rock) / Kiss (extended)
Prince spent his 28th birthday treating the fans at the Cobo Arena in Detroit to an inspired two-hour show. Several people guested on stage, including André Cymone, Sheila E., and opening act Mazarati. The rowdy and enthusiastic Detroit audience made its presence felt from the beginning, shouting “ happy birthday” and singing along at Prince’s urging. “ Happy birthday,” Prince said to himself before kicking off “Raspberry Beret.” “Controversy” started unusually, with Prince getting the crowd to repeat a line from “New Position,” “ do ya, do ya like a big man should,” over the funky rhythm guitar intro. Apart from the usual “Dream Factory” lines, “Mutiny” also included some “Holly Rock” chants and an inspired organ solo by Prince, who was clearly enjoying himself a lot on stage. “ Listen, this is a very special day,” Wendy said, taking the microphone after “Mutiny.” She led the crowd in a loud version of “Happy Birthday.” Then a grinning Prince took the microphone himself, “ Does that mean I can come back? Last year we had a party and it was fun, but it wasn’t as fun as this. Detroit is like my hometown, I mean that. I could’ve stayed in Uptown and partied, but I wanted to come down and party with y’all.” André Cymone appeared on stage for “The Dance Electric,” which featured extended bass and guitar solos before finishing with Prince’s exclamation, “ André Cymone !” “Head” included the “Electric Man” portion for the first time (at least on tape). Prince addressed the audience again over the “Pop Life” intro but it is very difficult to hear what he says on the existing tape recording of the concert (this part was edited out of the TV film). “Life Can Be So Nice” had an unusual, very long ending. After slowing down the tempo, Eric Leeds continued with an extended saxophone solo. The intro to “Purple Rain” was stretched out much longer than usual although the actual performance of the song was not different in any way. Sheila E. guested on “A Love Bizarre”, which included “Holly Rock” chants and Prince’s instructions of how to do the “Oak Tree” dance. The two Detroit concerts were filmed and an hour-long concert film was produced, Parade Live, which was broadcast in several European countries later in 1986. Detroit News’ Jim McFarlin thought the birthday show was “ everything a good party should be : loose and loud, with the guest of honour proving himself a merry and gracious host,” while Gray Graff of Detroit Free Press described the show as “ a slick, energetic, tightly choreographed eighties update of the old Jackie Wilson, James Brown, Ike & Tina Turner, and Sly and The Family Stone shows.” After the previous club and theatre “Hit & Run” concerts, the Cobo Arena was the first show in a larger, arena-sized venue. The remaining “Hit & Run” shows all took place in similar Purple Rain-tour-sized arenas. They sold out nearly as quickly as the smaller venues.
Parade Live – long overdue a reissue. Although only featuring an hour of the show, along with the Dortmund Lovesexy show it’s the best video recording Prince has ever released. Only here can you get a full sense of the true power of a Prince and The Revolution show from this era. Prince on his checkerboard stage, dancing atop his piano, stripped to the waist, a show with none of the longueurs so familiar from Prince’s main shows over the past decade – no stop–starts, no dead spots: when he goes to the piano, it’s a dancing run to an upright organ, the whole band working as one of the most formidable machines popular music has ever seen. And while the set may be one of his more pared down, the show is still theatrical: there’s as much drama in Prince’s out-on-a-limb performance of ‘Head’/‘Electric Man’ as in any of his movies. (No less than 4 different versions of this show have in fact been sent to TV channels and aired in 1986 and later. The one listed above is the promo video that was sent to Detroit TV channel WGPR and constitutes the primary US broadcast. A slightly different edit has been sold to various European TV channels later in 86, which is similar except that it lacks Soft And Wet. The third version is the promo video that's been re-edited for the Japanese broadcast: it is significantly shorter, but I need to check whether it only lacks some songs or if it is, in any other way, a different version. Finally, it has been reported that the full Detroit show has been aired late at night by WGPR at some point in 1986 (or possibly even later). This last version was pro-shot and sent to the station either by Prince himself or members of his staff, and it's not clear whether Prince had authorized this broadcast and whether he was even aware of its existence. The exact content of this broadcast is uncertain as we don't know whether it has been edited or not at all. More info needed.)
A : This is the complete recording of the heavily circulating Birthday 1986 concert. This recording is an audience, as opposed to the edited version which is Soundboard (taken from the broadcast). It's a fairly average recording, and parts are faded in / out (Soft & Wet). The show itself is fantastic, and as it's Prince's birthday it goes without saying that he's in a great mood. Andre Cymone guests on stage for a fast, frantic 'The Dance Electric', and Sheila E pops her head in for 'A Love Bizarre'. There are MUCH better 'Parade / Hit & Run' shows circulating, but as it's a birthday concert - it tends to be a little more special, even WITH the audience wetting their pants every time Prince so much as MOVES.
V : Another surprisingly decent release from Ladybird, and it seems they have sourced a more complete video recording of the show - much to my surprise and delight. Thankfully they have released the 60 minute version which includes the performance of 'Soft & Wet' - that is the plus of this release. Unfortunately the minus is that the picture quality is less good than some other releases of the show (GSH / Pimpsandwich's 'Cobo Arena' being far superior quality). The colour is a little faded and overall the is picture is slightly flat. The show itself is an excellent Hit & Run / Birthday show with Prince (obviously) having a ball on his 28th birthday. I won't comment on the show as it is listed several times on this site already. The DVD is packaged in a tri-fold out sleeve with stunning artwork, however there is no information regarding the show itself. Confusingly the track-listing on the back sleeve does not quite match the track-listing on the menu - however considering the mess of Ladybird's recent releases, this small flaw is no biggie. I much rather prefer the GSH / Pimpsandwich release of the show as the quality is far better, but this is more complete, so for that reason it's a nice effort and a decent release.
Shot at the Cobo Hall and directed by Daniel Kleinman, Anotherloverholenyohead is the twenty-fourth Prince video to have been released for broadcast. Of note this is the last appearance of Bobby Z., Brownmark, Wendy Melvoin, Susannah Melvoin, Lisa Coleman and Jerome Benton in a Prince video.
Joe Louis Arena Afterparty
A birthday party was held at Joe Louis Arena Olympia Room after the Cobo concert. Prince and his friends, including Andre Cymone, and local celebrities, including basketball players Isiah Thomas and Magic Johnson, or Punch Andrews, Bob Seger's manager. George Clinton and Bob Seger attended the concert, but did not come out after. After singing "happy birthday", the evening ended early in the morning.
Detroit Free Press
Prince of the city
By Gary Graff
Prince is one guy who knows how to hit a town. He played the First Avenue club in his hometown of Minneapolis in March without any formal notice. In early April, a show at the Metro in Boston was announced that day. Fans in San Francisco had a day and a half’s notice for his surprise concert at the Warfield. The same happened eight days ago for a show at Los Angeles’ Wiltern Theatre. Detroiters should consider themselves lucky; they had two days to prepare for Friday night’s show at Masonic Auditorium and four days for his birthday concert tonight at Cobo Arena. Perhaps it was special consideration for the city Prince considers to be his “second hometown,” according to his managers. It was certainly a chance to see a looser, more relaxed Prince than the pop phenomenon who opened his “Purple Rain” tour with seven shows at Joe Louis Arena in November 1984. Since then, he’s had two more albums – “Around The World in A Day” and “Parade” – Another N°1 his single in “Kiss” and has expanded his band, the Revolution, from five to 11 members. Surprise gigs aside, his real tour is scheduled to begin about the third week of July, timed to coincide with the July 2 release of his second film, “Under The Cherry Moon”.
Billboard
A Prince-ly hometown tribute
By Gerry Wood
A prophet with honor in his hometown, Prince performed at the 1986 Minnesota Music Awards and received a special award. The princely tribute came from Gov. Rudy Perpich during the award ceremony May 20 at the Carlton Celebrity Room in Bloomington. Drawing some 2.000 music and civic personalities, the three-hour event was telecast live over KTMA-TV. Enough awards were doled out to put Minnesota mining into overtime – 62 in all, including 13 that were announced but not presented during the telecast. Plaudits ranged from “best world-beat/calypso band” to “best rock reed player,” and seemed intent on securing the Guiness world record for most obscure categories in an awards presentation. While categories ranged from the sublime to the more sublime, several important awards were presented, including best rock female vocalist. Melanie Rozales; rock male vocalist, Dale Goulett; r&b/funk/blues female vocalist, TaMara of TaMara & The Seen; r&b male vocalist, Alexander O’Neal; new rock/pop band, Great Nation; radio stations, WLOL-FM and KDWB-FM; best video, Prince’s Raspberry Beret; rock/heavy metal band, the Jets; rock/pop band, Unlimited Warranty; rock/pop recording, Unlimited Warranty’s This Is Serious; LP/EP, The Jets; country/bluegrass/folk female vocalist, Mary Jane Alm; and country/bluegrass/folk male vocalist, Michael Johnson. The Minnesota Music Hall of Fame Award went to Jeanne Arland Peterson. Entertainer/group of the year honors went to Unlimited Warranty. They coveted Connie Hechter Award went to Amos Heilicher, founder of the Great American Music & Wax Museum chain. As usual, the power of the event was demonstrated onstage with electrifying performances by Prince, the Jets, Mazarati and TaMara & The Seen. There also was a stunning duet by Mary Jane Alm and Michael Johnson. Earlier, Prince, demurely attired in a dark suit and tie, was honoured for his contributions to American, and Minnesotan, music. The creativity of the state that has produced Bob Dylan as well as Prince, has never been more dramatically showcased.
10-06-1986 : Louisville Freedom Hall
* Attendance : 13.000 / Sold Out
After the two Detroit shows, another “Hit & Run” concert followed at the 15.000-seat Freedom Hall in Louisville, Kentucky. Again, no tape recording is circulating.
??-??-1986 : Can I Play With U (4) (6:27) – Prev. Sunset Sound 27-12-85
Prince contributed additional material to the track to extend it in 1986, but neither Miles Davis nor Prince were very excited by the final result, and after hearing the rest of the finished album, Prince asked that his track be removed, as it didn't fit in with the style of the rest of the album. After Davis died in 1991, Warner Bros. asked Prince to add some post-production to this track (as well as Penetration, Jail Bat and A Girl And Her Puppy) to include on his first posthumous album, Doo-Bop, but Prince was not interested in contributing to tracks that he felt didn't show Davis at his best. The longer version of the track was planned for release (credited to "Miles Davis with Prince") as the twelfth track on a 2001 box-set of Miles Davis's Warner Bros. work, entitled The Last Word, but the track was not included on the eventual 2-disc 2010 release, titled Perfect Way.
12-06-1986 : Sunset Sound
Baby Go Go (1) (4:40) – Female Trouble
Baby Go Go
Ooh baby what can I do
You know I can't dance unless it's me and you
This feeling is much too strong
You and me gotta get it on
Whenever I see your body move
Ooh baby I lose my cool
Something about ya, I don't know
Makes me wanna go-go
My naked body on the floor
Is all you really need to know
Whatever you do just don't say no
Come on baby go-go
Ooh baby I really like your look
When you lay your eyes on me
You know I'm hooked
I'm waiting to feel your touch
Your body, your mind, and soul...is that too much ?
NO ! Whenever I see your body move
Ooh baby I lose my cool
Something about ya, I don't know
Makes me wanna go-go
Naked body on the floor
Is all you really need to know
Ooh baby go-go
(In a man's work I can hold my own
I’m a super dense specimen - Full grown
It doesn't really matter
It doesn't really matter
It doesn't really matter
When you're all alone)
You need a pretty lover
Let me hear you say go-go
Ooh baby what can I do
You know I can't dance unless it's me and you
This feeling is much too strong
You and me gotta get it on, get it on get it on
Whenever I see your body move
Oh baby I lose my cool
Something about you I don’t know
Makes me wanna go-go
My naked body on the floor
Is all you really need to know
Whatever you do just don’t say no
Come on baby go go go
Whenever I see your body move
Oh baby I lose my cool
Something about you
Something about you
13-06-1986 : MAZARATI – 100 MPH Single Release n 100 MPH (0:03)
100 MPH (Edit) (3:09) / Don’t Leave Me Baby (4:11)
100 MPH was the second single to be released from Mazarati's first album Mazarati. It was released three months after the album. The single contained an edit of the track 100 MPH, not available elsewhere. 100 MPH featured Prince as writer and performer, although his performance input was uncredited. The b-side, Don't Leave Me Baby, was previously-unreleased, and did not involve Prince. The single reached number 19 on the Billboard Black Chart, and number 12 in the Billboard Hot dance/Disco - Club Play chart, but failed to enter the Billboard Hot 100 Chart.
??-06-1986 : MTV UTCM Contest (0:01)
14-06-1986 : City Limits (UK)
Billboard
Prince & The Revolution
Wiltern Theatre, Los Angeles – Tickets : $20
By Mark Rowland
Los Angeles’ renovated decor showpiece proved an appropriate setting for the May 30 Prince concert. The 90-minute “warm-up” engagement for his US tour – slated for September – suggested a spirited, if decidedly funky, update of the big-band era. A three-man chorus line, featuring Purple Rain co-star Jerome Benton, provided dapper choreography, and a trumpet/saxophone duo helped fatten the Revolution’s trademark dance grooves while complementing Prince’s more orchestral palettes. Through it all His Purpleness emerged as an ingratiating bandleader, whose range of musical invention was matched only by his variety of costumes. Drawing mostly from his last two albums, Parade and Around The World In A Day, Prince evidenced some attempt at career perspective by including one selection from each of his other six albums. Highlights of the older material ranged from audience sing-alongs to Head – Prince’s physical gyrations and falsetto ululations helped underscore the theme – and the anthemic Purple Rain, which featured supple vocals and a drop-dead guitar solo. The crowd danced and swayed through New Position and a disappointedly truncated medley of Automatic and DMSR before the band hits his groove on A Love Bizarre, a roiling jam replete with guest appearance by Sheila E. Prince allowed his bandmates generous solo space (usually while he was backstage changing clothes) at which point audience exuberance tended to flag. But he otherwise commandeered the stage with grace and authority. Guitar pyrotechnics were scarce, relative to previous tours, but Prince compensated with deft vocal phrasings on Pop Life and the cabaret ballad Under The Cherry Moon. He frequently propelled more uptempo numbers with greasy Hammond organ riffs worthy of Jimmy Smith – maybe he’s been listening to those Blue Note reissues. The concert climaxed with a rousing rendition of Kiss, after which the crowd chanted at length for encores. Keeping in character, Prince stuck to showbiz tradition and left his fans begging for more.
17-06-1986 : New Eden Prairie - Broadway-style musical session
Data Bank (1/2) (8:24/7:46) – Corporate World
Can’t Stop This Feeling I Got (2) (2:09) – Prev. Home Studio Summ 82 – Graffiti Bridge
We Can Funk (prev. We Can Fuck) (3) (5:29) – initial raw take – Prev. Sunset Sound 01-01-84 – Graffiti Bridge
Can’t Stop This Feeling I Got (3) (2:07) – Graffiti Bridge
We Can Funk (4) (5:33) – overdubs – Graffiti Bridge
From June 17 to 18, the full, expanded line-up of The Revolution recorded four songs at the Washington Avenue warehouse. With characteristically sudden passion, Prince had lit upon the idea of doing a musical (which could have been called Dream Factory). “He talked a lot about doing a Broadway play,” Bobby Z recalls. “He was writing a script and he really wanted to take it to the stage,” says Eric Leeds. “We were literally going to do a Broadway-type musical… I think it was a fairly short-lived idea, though.” Prince and the band taped three songs in quick succession : “Data Bank,” “Can’t Stop This Feeling I Got,” and “We Can Funk”. “It was almost a medley and the whole band really killed on that,” recalls Eric.
Data Bank
So, look here mama, umm
I'm feelin' like I, umm
I, umm, kinda want them numbers
So, umm, I don't know
Could I ... could I call U sometime ?
Ooh, ooh !
Data bank
I'm feelin' like I wanna put U in my data bank
If U got the love, I got the time (Data bank)
Just give me your phone number, I'll drop a dime on ya
(Data bank)
Think I won't ?
Hurt me !
On the phone, I may be shy (Data bank)
I don't know, U wanna ...
U wanna go on a picnic or somethin' ?
But in living color, I'm a real neat guy (Data bank)
Oh !
When the other brothers tell U they are better
U better look real close, they might be a bedwetter
Hey !
Dig this...
6 feet tall, skinny legs and all
All they really know is basketball
Then I say, give me that phone number
Mama, we can pop all night (doo waa)
I might be small, but so is dynamite
Hey !
Ouch ! (doo waa, doo waa)
And then I say...
Hey U, am I gettin' through ?
Ha, ha, oww !
Data bank
I'm feelin' like I wanna put U in my data bank
Data bank {x2}
Ooh ! (doo waa, doo waa)
School's in
The teacher got a guitar
If U didn't come 2 turn it out
Might as well get yo ass in your car
And get on down the road
Get on down the road, yeah
{"Data bank" repeats in BG 'til end}
Keep goin', right there, don't...
See if ... see if the trumpet work
Does it work ?
Well, come on
Play !
Yeeaahh !
I'm feelin' like I wanna put U in my data bank
Brass !
Oww !
Yeah !
Can... can U play it again ?
Oww !
Ow Ow Oww !
Listen...
School's in
The teacher got a saxophone
If U didn't come 2 turn it out
U might as well leave it alone
Eric.. Leeds, that is
Kid, Movie Star
Funky, nasty
Drives an ugly car
Hold up, hold up
Mark, come on
U're in the wrong key cousin
No, no, wait
Oww !
I'm feelin' like I wanna put U in my data bank
What happened 2 that melody we had ?
What if...
We just gonna groove ?
Fine
We just gonna groove or what ?
Well, somebody got 2 solo or somethin'
Hmm, I don't know
12 inch
Think it ain't ?
Mark
School's in
The teacher got a funky bass
If U didn't come 2 turn it out
Get your frail ass out my face
I'm feelin' like I wanna put U in my data bank {x2}
I didn't ... I didn't call the horns
I didn't call the horns
Why y'all got 2 play 'em ?
It's cool, OK, alright, Lisa
I don't wanna hear no horns, I just wanna hear Lisa
Oh, oh, that's dog, that's dog
I didn't call that either
OK, I quit
No, I'm quittin'
Lisa, stop !
OK, wait a minute
Susan, fade ... fade the shit out
See, I know, yeah OK (doo waa, doo waa)
Fade it out
(Data bank)
We Can Funk
2, 3
Ow ! Ow !
I could tell U things that get U excited
I could play with your mind
But U'd probably say that I was a liar
So I won't waste your time
I'm scared, cuz though we just met
There's this energy between us
Let's just go somewhere we can funk
I could say I'm sorry all of my life
But that wouldn't be true
I only say and do the things that I do
Cuz I'm not U
I'm scared, cuz if I don't kiss ya
I'm gonna go mad, baby
Let's just go somewhere we can funk
Ooh baby
(We can funk) {x2}
I could teach U things about your b-b-body, baby
Things U never heard
Ooh, U know the Kama Sutra, I could re-write it
With half as many words
Eric, come blow your horn
(We can funk)
Ooh Lord, ooh (We can funk)
I'm scared, cuz though I just met U
There's this energy between us
Let's just go somewhere we can funk
Ooh, c'mon baby, uh (Yeah)
(We can funk) {x2}
Don't ya wanna funk with me ?
(We can funk) {x5}
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah
(We can funk)
Baby, we can funk
Miko (We can funk) {repeat 2 fade}
18-06-1986 : Girl O’ My Dreams (2) (1:26) – Prev. Home Studio Summ 82 – True Confessions
We Can Funk (5) (5:53) - “Finished” 86 version – Graffiti Bridge
They returned the next day to cut “Girl O’ My Dreams,” which saw Prince making a rare appearance on harmonica.
The highlight of this era for me is the session that produced four songs over two days in June 1986, which represents the last time the band sound untroubled. It has been suggested that the songs were recorded for a planned Broadway musical, although details on this are vague, and it was a project that never came to fruition. Another idea in the air at the time, Lisa Coleman told me, was a concept record about an imaginary nightclub, on which at least two of these songs would fit, as well as several others from this period. This concept seems to have been folded into the Graffiti Bridge project, on which two of these songs (in considerably different versions) later appeared. Three of the tracks Prince took into Minneapolis’s Washington Avenue Warehouse for this midweek session were old : he’d first committed ‘Can’t Stop This Feeling I Got’, ‘Girl o’ My Dreams’ and ‘We Can Funk’ to tape in the early 1980s, during the period while he was working on 1999 and before he’d started on Purple Rain , and all of the songs would undergo further reinvention before they were released. ‘Can’t Stop This Feeling I Got’ and ‘Girl o’ My Dreams’ are short, funny, rockabilly freak-outs, and the released versions of the songs are both disposable. On Graffiti Bridge , ‘Can’t Stop This Feeling I Got’ is Prince solo (although surrounded by crowd noise and encouragement), as it was when he first recorded it in 1982, and despairing – the song is still in the same style, but drawn out and much more of a genuine lament. But in the Warehouse, playing with a line-up of The Revolution that had swollen to nine members, Prince performed the song with infectious joy. ‘Girl o’ My Dreams’ is a short throwaway with a funny cinephile lyric about how his favourite women are oldtime movie stars like Marilyn Monroe and Lauren Bacall. Prince can’t resist making a joke about Bacall being old and wrinkled (at the time he wrote the song she was sixty-two), but the song is redeemed by a member of The Revolution (or Prince himself putting on a funny voice) taking him to task for his chauvinism. Prince would never release the song himself, instead giving it to Paisley Park-signed rapper T. C. Ellis. It can sometimes seem as if Prince is either genuinely perverse about deciding which unreleased song goes to which artist (or perhaps, in most instances, he simply doesn’t care), but giving T. C. Ellis ‘Girl o’ My Dreams’ was a truly baffling move. It’s not that the song is a lost classic, and the Paisley Park album on which it appeared (True Confessions) is long forgotten, so it would be easy for him to put it out again, but I can’t help wondering whether he was having a little joke or conducting deliberate sabotage by deciding that an aspiring rapper should be singing about Lena Horne. But it’s the other two songs recorded during this session that really show The Revolution as a live unit at their very best. ‘We Can Funk’ is one of those songs through which it’s possible to trace ten years of Prince’s development. Prince has recorded at least eight versions, and it resurfaces at various points in his career, leaking poison along the way. The song began as a track on a 1983 tape called ‘We Can Fuck’ and ended up as a somewhat tepid PG-rated George Clinton duet on Graffiti Bridge . When Prince finally decided to ready the song for release, he took as the basis his original tape rather than the Revolution recording, which seems surprising given that Wendy and Lisa also played on this early 1983 version (as well as Susannah, Jonathan Melvoin and David Coleman). Wendy remembers the song with particular fondness, preferring its original title. While it’s hard to fathom why Prince gave ‘Girl o’ My Dreams’ to T. C. Ellis, I wonder whether ‘Data Bank’ might always have been intended for its eventual recipients, The Time, and if The Time might always have been part of whatever project Prince was working on then, the musical or the nightclub record. In the lyrics he mentions ‘ the time’, ‘Movie Star’ (the title of a song Prince wrote for Morris Day a couple of months earlier) and ‘The Kid’, and although there are shout-outs to Eric and Lisa, the song’s subject – getting women’s numbers – makes it an obvious sequel to ‘777-9311’.
19-06-1986 : RDL (SP)
21-06-1986 : Lisa Barber
Lisa Barber, a 20-year-old hotel worker, is the 10,000th caller in a contest sponsored by MTV and Wamer Brothers. She won the premiere of Under The Cherry Moon for her hometown Sheridan, a small town of 10,000 habitants in north-central Wyoming.
Chicago Tribune
Prince Dethroned In Minnesota
Edited by Howard Reich.
Prince, one of the most successful rock acts to come out of Minnesota (where he still lives), was recently clobbered by local acts at the sixth annual Minnesota Music Awards. Though Prince has won 18 awards from the Minnesota Music Academy over the past three years, the recent edition awarded him only three: for best film/video score (for his album Parade), best video (for Raspberry Beret) and best original r&b music (for his band Prince & the Revolution). The big winner was Limited Warranty, which won 11 prizes. The band has been gaining acclaim ever since it was named best new musical group last year on TV’s Star Search.`Also beating out Prince were the Jets, an r&b band composed of eight brothers and sisters; and jazz artist Jeanne Arland Peterson, who also performs with her family.
06-1986 : SHEILA E LIVE IN ROMANCE 1600 US VHS Release
Sheila E. : Romance 1600 Live is the first Sheila E. home video to be released. It has a guest performance by Prince and the Revolution who perform A Love Bizarre. The footage comes from a live show by Sheila E. and her band on the 'Romance 1600 Tour' and was recorded on 8 March, 1986, directed by Danny Kleinman. It lasts 57:41 minutes. It was first released on VHS and Betamax cassette in the USA and later also in the UK. In Japan it was released on laserdisc. The video was produced by Limelight. The original retail price was $ 29.98. The video was re-released in the UK on 1 July, 1991
Summer 1986 : Electric Ladyland - Jill Jones sessions
Rivkin and Jill continued work on the album in the summer of 1986 at the Electric Ladyland studio in New York, to where Jill had moved. Using seasoned New York studio musicians and Steve Stevens, guitarist with Billy Idol, they recorded a version of Prince’s “With You” and two songs that Jill wrote herself that became single B-sides, “77 Bleeker St.” and “Baby Cries (Ay Yah).” “That was great,” says Rivkin of recording in New York. “I got all the players. Steve Stevens was a friend of Jill’s and he was terrific. He came in and played anything you wanted him to play. He was really terrific !”
Unknown newspaper
Valentino Prince of pop
The pop poseur of raunch’n roll turns Prince of Romance for his latest movie. Prince has switched back the clock in Under The Cherry Moon – a love story set in the South of France due for release this month. And he’s drawn the inspiration for his screen character from one of the cinema’s greatest ever sex symbols, Rudolf Valentino. Said an aide : “Prince was addicted to old romantic movies as a child. They made a lasting impression on him because of their timelessness. That’s the feeling he’s trying to create in Under The Cherry Moon.” Prince plays a slick American musician called Christopher. His extravagantly nostalgic costumes are based on the wardrobe created for Valentino’s role as a bullfighter in the 1922 smash hit Blood And Sand. They’re suitably updated, of course, to reveal the trim, taut torso which has become the Princely hallmark... and to ensure that the Matinee Idol Mark Two is still much ruder than Rudi.
??-??-1986 : h Club Gig Mazarati & Sheila E (0:18)
America
! Mazarati @ San Francisco (Inc.) (0:24)
Intro / Prelude / Player’s Ball / Suzy / Lonely Girl On Bourbon Street
Stroke / 100 MPH / She’s Just That Kind Of Lady
America / Encore / Head
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