Bangkok Post

ON PRINCE’S 60TH BIRTHDAY, A WILD TAKE ON A CLASSIC SPIRITUAL

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On the day that Prince would have turned 60, his label last week announced a posthumous album that features a frenzied improvisat­ional take on a popular spiritual.

The pop legend died in April 2016 from an accidental overdose of powerful painkiller­s, leaving behind a vast trove of songs that Prince had stored without any clear release plans.

Warner Bros Records, Prince’s label and sometime nemesis, with which he reconciled before his death, said it would release an album on Sept 21 of nine songs he recorded in 1983 at his home studio in Minnesota.

The album showcases Prince, better known for his theatrical guitar skills, singing as he plays a piano without accompanim­ent — a format he revived for his final tour before his death.

The songs on the album, entitled simply Piano And A Microphone 1983, range from a version of Prince’s signature hit Purple Rain to the never-released Cold Coffee And Cocaine.

A first song was released last week — Prince’s unique take on Mary Don’t You Weep, one of the most celebrated African-American spirituals, which has been recorded by artists from Aretha Franklin to Bruce Springstee­n. Originatin­g from the era of slavery and adopted by the Civil Rights movement, Mary Don’t You Weep emphasises the power of God to help his followers overcome adversity, including by guiding the Israelites out of Egypt.

In Prince’s version, which appears to be off the cuff, he employs his soaring and intense falsetto for lyricism that dwells more on relationsh­ips than on Biblical salvation.

“I got a bad, bad feeling that your man ain’t coming home,” Prince sings.

Toward the end of the track, Prince switches sharply in imagery to the modern day as he sings: “Oh Martha, girl, you cook the sweetest omelettes in the world” — which is a perhaps farcical reference to Martha of Bethany, the sister of the Mary in the song’s title.

Prince’s estate, which is controlled by his siblings, has been stepping up the pace of releases as it seeks to monetise his legacy.

Last year, Warner reissued Prince’s 1984 classic soundtrack album Purple Rain with 11 previously unreleased songs.

And in April came the release of Prince’s lighter original version of Nothing Compares 2 U, which became a hit for Sinead O’Connor in one of the many songs he wrote for other artists.

 ??  ?? Prince performs during half-time of Super Bowl XLI in Miami, in 2007.
Prince performs during half-time of Super Bowl XLI in Miami, in 2007.

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