đď¸ The Real Reality - Article: Jan. 1981
- Escape

- Jan 24, 1981
- 3 min read
Updated: Apr 16
Controversy â Princeâs controversial genius explodes!
âWith controversial lyrics, striking musical ability, and an eye-popping stage presentation, Prince is one of the most intriguing figures in pop music today. His latest Warner Bros. album, âDirty Mind,â cracked the Black Oriented Album top ten; the single âUptownâ reached #5 on the BOS chart, while also garnering considerable disco play.â
Nelson Georgeâs The âreal realityâ of Princeâs music, a one-page article in Record World, January 24, 1981.
More early Prince provocations added weekly.
Nelson George
âWith controversial lyrics, striking musical ability, and an eye-popping stage presentation, Prince is one of the most intriguing figures in pop music today. His latest Warner Bros. album, âDirty Mind,â cracked the Black Oriented Album top ten; the single âUptownâ reached #5 on the BOS chart, while also garnering considerable disco play.
âBut Princeâs appeal doesnât end on the dance floor. Critics from the Village Voice, Rolling Stone, the Soho Weekly News and the Real Paper have all praised him. A typical comment is that he is a mix of Smokey Robinsonâs falsetto, Jimi Hendrixâs rock sensibility, and Sly Stoneâs onstage outrageousness. Prince himself sees his music âas an expression of myself and my experiences. I always write truthfully about myself. Some donât understand what Iâm saying, but I find when I speak to people that Iâm saying things they think, couldnât say. It reflects what my generation is about, I think.â
âDespite his musical prowess (he plays 26 instruments), Princeâs lyrics, especially on âDirty Mindâ have attracted the most attention â and sparked controversy. For example, âSister, Sisterâ deals with incest, hardly an everyday topic for a pop songwriter. Prince says the song is âa plea to my sister to be my friendâ and it is âonly strange by weak peopleâs standards.â His position on all his material, be it the anti-draft âParty Upâ or the sexually explicit âHead,â is that as long as it deals âwith real reality and not some imaginary placeâ any song is right.
âMany of his lyrics are improvised in the studio. In fact his entire recording process is haphazard in comparison to many acts. âI just get a burst of energy and creativity and do it,â he says. His three Warners albums (âDirty Mind,â âPrince,â âFor Youâ) were recorded in an average of 12 days and mixed in about the same time. Because of this approach, he says he finds it easier to play all the instruments on his albums. Later he teaches his five-piece touring band the parts.â
âPrince grew up in Minneapolis, Minnesota. His father was a musician and Prince experimented on the family piano. Songwriting came easy to him and he slowly began learning other instruments. Minnesota radio âwas so slow weâd be six months behind the rest of the country,â so his musical taste became insular. âToday I really donât listen to anyone special. It keeps me from being influenced by others.â
âAt 18 he signed with Warners, becoming probably the youngest artist to ever produce his own album. His âPrinceâ album spawned the million-selling single âI Want To Be Your Lover.â Prince says he enjoys touring âbut we still havenât done enough. Touring is the difference between writing a letter and visiting someone in person.â When not on the road he lives in Minnesota. âI still donât have my own place,â he says. âI live with various people, free loading, and staying inside most of the timeâ.
Record World
24 January 1981




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