Prince's Sign O' the Times by Michaelangelo Matos
Author:Michaelangelo Matos [Matos, Michaelangelo]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: Social Science, Popular Culture
ISBN: 9781441191274
Google: ODn6U6aZg-gC
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Published: 2004-03-31T03:32:56+00:00
Lisa Coleman found herself playing the grand piano in the upstairs living room while the rest of the band huddled into the crowded basement studio. Connected only by mics and ear phones, the Revolution still managed to pull off the exquisite song in a single takeâeven the jazzy intro that Prince suggested just as the tape was ready to roll. âPower Fantasticâ also serves to introduce the newest dimension in Princeâs musicâthe only instrument that he couldnât play himselfâhorns.19
The most immediately striking thing about Sign âOâ the Times is the jazzy sensibility running through it. Princeâs father was a jazz musician, his mother a vocalist; heâd been a fan of chops-heavy jazz-fusion as well as rock and R&B growing up. But when Prince began recording for Warner Bros., he abjured the brass sections that dominated groups like Earth, Wind & Fire and Parliament-Funkadelic, opting instead for stacked synthesizer patterns and a spare, cold feel that markedly contrasted with lush, overarranged disco and the wild, thick underbrush of the eraâs giant funk ensembles; Rickey Vincent, author of Funk: The Music, the People, and the Rhythm of the One, dubbed it ânaked funk.â Getting away from traditional R&B instrumentation is an underappreciated aspect of Princeâs crossover success; Prince is also said to have actively disliked the sound of horns early in his career.
Like most things with Princeâhis musical direction, his name, the sense-to-words ratio of his public statementsâthis changed. His first significant dabbling with horns came on Sheila E.âs 1984 single, âThe Glamorous Life,â where they seem like a nod to Sheilaâs background in Latin jazz, where she, like her father Coke Escovedo, was a star percussionist, playing with Azteca and George Duke. But they donât feel tacked on: The horn figures are as Princely as the bounding synth runs and quirked-out lyrics, and fit the busy, hooky music like a lace glove. Ditto the sax/trumpet lines on Paradeâs âMountains.â Sign âOâ the Times is where he dives in completely, and he has continued using horns in his music: With the exception of Najeeâs treacly saxophone, which helps torpedo 2001âs already torpid The Rainbow Children, Princeâs writing for horns is probably the most consistently intriguing feature of his post-Sign work, particularly on 1996âs Emancipation and 1992âs Iâm Gonna Change My Name to the Title of This Album.
Eric Leeds and Matt Blistan appear on five Sign tracks: âHousequake,â âSlow Love,â âHot Thing,â âItâs Gonna Be a Beautiful Night,â and âAdore.â 15 years after first listening to the album, Iâd guessed the number was higher until I actually sat down and counted. But five songs are enough to color our perception of the rest of the album. Excepting âAdore,â where the trumpet and sax help thicken the overall sound without necessarily differentiating themselves from it, the Sign tracks with Leeds and Blistan feature horns as both foundation and icing: Itâs impossible to imagine âHousequakeâ or âItâs Gonna Be a Beautiful Nightâ without their stuttering James Brown-redux riffs; âHot Thingâ takes off during Leedsâs hot-and-sleazy soloing, and âSlow Loveâ is practically a duet between Prince and the horn charts.
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