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The RBP Flashback: Prince At The Roxy, Los Angeles

Posted Mon Jan 12, 2009 11:47am PST by Don Snowden (1979) in Rock's Backpages
With Prince planning to release no less than four new albums this year, we thought it would be fun to relive one of the boy wonder's earliest gigs. Don Snowden was at the Roxy in LA to witness the miniature Minneapolitan's "jarring mixture" of styles, his review appearing in the Los Angeles Times on 29 November, 1979.--Barney Hoskyns, Editorial Director, Rock's Backpages

It must be a daunting prospect for anyone to make his or her performing debut, save for a couple of hometown Minneapolis tune-ups, before an industry-heavy crowd at the Roxy. That was the situation confronting Prince Wednesday night.

Prince, 19, is something of a wunderkind who produced, arranged and composed all the material and played all the instruments on his two Warner Bros. albums. His vinyl output, somewhat like Stevie Wonder's, is aimed squarely at the black-pop mainstream and crossover audiences but his live show is heavily influenced by hard-rock flash.

The result is a bizarre combination of musical and visual elements. Guitarist Des Dickerson (black leather jacket and leopard skin pants) and bassist Andre Cymone (legs encased in plastic wrap) both look more punk than funk. Prince largely sticks to guitar and throws enough pelvic grinds and phallic guitar poses at the audience to give most obnoxiously macho rock stars a run for their money.

Prince sings in a thin falsetto that recalls Eddie Holman (remember "Hey There, Lonely Girl"?), but his vocals lack the power to cut through the instrumental attack on the rock-oriented material that comprised half of the hour-long set. The largely black audience responded more favorably to the more restrained, carefully crafted funk exercises like "Sexy Dancer" and "I Wanna Be Your Lover." The latter is the nation's No. 1 soul single this week and also rising fast on the pop charts.

The slack pacing and Prince's uneasiness as a front man can be chalked up to a simple lack of stage experience, but a more pressing problem is his attempt to straddle two disparate musical worlds. That's not necessarily a bad move, but it is a jarring mixture at this point. Prince obviously is a talented new arrival, but he needs to reconcile those two musical instincts if he is to maximize his potential as a live performer.

Read dozens more Prince interviews and reviews at www.rocksbackpages.com. Over 13,000 articles by the greatest writers from the finest rock publications of the last 40 years.

12 Comments

1. Yahoo! Music User -
LOL...nice to see the little guys got his act together!

BTW, Prince is the best live performer of ours and previous lifetimes.

2. double o 520 -
can u relate?

3. __A_YAHOO_USER__ -
Sometimes it ticks me off that the main acts today are Hinder and ilk...

We need real music. NOW!

4. angie b -
I totally agree. Real music for Real music lovers. Prince is a true musician; you can't say that about many in the industry today.

5. Tracy -
I love Prince he is awesome!

6. Tracy -
Prince is one of the best...

7. Joy -
His live show is not to be missed!

8. Rockchic -
Prince is AMAZING! I got to see him twice at his 3121 club in Las Vegas.

9. Paxton -
The trick with prince is he is a naturally
gifted musician. not a talented singer though
I love his music. As for todays garbage coming
out of studios calling it music, I have a great disgust with it and I don't listen to them. And I Certainly don't buy there music or
more accurately put: noise. I fault the people
for there lack of taste for quality music and
can't they tell a rose from a weed? All these
plummers, truck drivers need to get in there
perspect field and let only the naturally gifted singer/songwriters, musician put out
music worthy of our and our childrens ears.
U go Prince....

10. Yahoo! Music User -
princce is a ledgen i love the hit puprle rain and he is fine as hell love prince

11. Yahoo! Music User -
I was blessed to see Prince perform at an after hours gig in Portland OR in 2002. so funky what a groove Iwas hi for days after thank you for so much dear Prince.

12. Christopher H -
In 1984 Prince came to Houston, Texas on the Purple Rain tour. While I did own 1999 and Purple Rain in my tape collection, I kept stuff like that to play for any girls I might be dating. I was really a rock n roll man so I wasn't interested in seeing the show, but this girl I was seeing at the time was a Prince freak and begged me to take her. So I did. Before the first number was over I was up and dancing in the aisles. I had no idea he could rock like that. After that night I realized what a musical genius he really was. One of the best shows I ever saw, and I currently have ticket stubs to at least 90 concerts over the years, not counting ones I lost.
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