Montreal Gazette

Prince defined an era with landmark album

Purple Rain, released three decades ago, accompanie­d film

- JIM REYNO

He had the look.

Prince Rogers Nelson, just 5-foot-2 and the secondmost f amous musician to come from Minnesota, had a unique and captivatin­g appearance on both the big and small screens in the summer of 1984.

With his thin moustache, Jheri curl ’ do, frilly white shirt, purple jacket and comehither glare, the artist better known as Prince was both impish and imposing.

And inescapabl­e, thanks to Purple Rain.

Prince and his band, The Revolution, released the soundtrack album 30 years ago, on June 25, 1984. The semi-autobiogra­phical 1984 Warner Bros. movie grossed $80 million, but it’s Prince’s soundtrack that has had the lasting impression. It’s sold more than 20 million copies worldwide.

Purple Rain is the first album where Prince credits a band. He expanded his approach on the soundtrack, incorporat­ing pop, rock, R&B — even a dabble of psychedeli­a — into the funk. While this accessible musical hybrid helped expand his audience, Prince didn’t tone down his raunchy lyrics for commercial appeal.

Already known for his explicit sexual depictions (check out 1980’s Dirty Mind), Prince added to his repertoire on Purple Rain with Darling Nikki — and in the process, became a different kind of innovator. The song, about a sexually enthusiast­ic woman, helped inspire Tipper Gore to create the Parents Music Resource Center in the U.S. The lobby group pressured the Recording Industry Associatio­n of America, and Purple Rain became one of the first albums to bear the now-commonplac­e “parental advisory explicit content” warning.

But Purple Rain isn’t about stickers, it’s about songs.

Dig, if you will, the picture: When Doves Cry, Prince’s bouncy, bass-less love lament, hit No. 1 in Canada, the U.S. and Australia. And who could forget the era-defining music video (directed by His Purpleness himself): Where else can you get Prince, doves, a bathtub and dancing?

The other big hit from Purple Rain is Let’s Go Crazy, party anthem for the ages. Brilliantl­y kicked off with a funereal organ part, the entrance of drum beat and punchy guitar to start the party is one of the most memorable transforma­tions in pop music history. It’s enough to make party people go crazy.

 ?? WARNER BROS. PICTURES ?? Singer/musician/actor Prince in the film Purple Rain. The semi-autobiogra­phical movie grossed $80 million.
WARNER BROS. PICTURES Singer/musician/actor Prince in the film Purple Rain. The semi-autobiogra­phical movie grossed $80 million.

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