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Documentary - Purple Reign: the life, music and legacy of Prince

Prince performs during the 'Pepsi Halftime Show' at Super Bowl XLI between the Indianapolis Colts and the Chicago Bears on February 4, 2007 at Dolphin Stadium in Miami Gardens, Fla.
Prince performs during the 'Pepsi Halftime Show' at Super Bowl XLI between the Indianapolis Colts and the Chicago Bears on February 4, 2007 at Dolphin Stadium in Miami Gardens, Fla.Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images
  Play Now [56:59]

by Jill Riley

April 29, 2016

In this Jill Riley-hosted documentary, The Current explores his life and legacy through his music and memories of those closest to him. Hear interviews from Bobby Z, producer Susan Rodgers, Jimmy Jam, Wendy and Lisa and more.

Audio transcript


Prince was a multi-talented musician who came out of the Minneapolis scene and changed the world of music forever. Sadly, the world lost him too early at the age of 57 on April 21st.

One of the greatest stars in rock history, Prince bridged rock and R&B to fuse a "Minneapolis Sound" that helped define the music of the 1980s. With over 100 million albums sold worldwide, Prince is one of the best-selling artists of all time. He's also widely cited as an influence by pop, R&B, rock, hip-hop artists and beyond.

Over the next hour, we'll explore his life and legacy through his music and memories from those closest to him.

This is Purple Reign: The Life, Music, and Legacy of Prince.

Born Prince Rogers Nelson in Minneapolis in 1958, Prince remained a lifelong Minnesotan and had a profound impact on the community. With the hit movie and soundtrack Purple Rain, he turned Minneapolis' First Avenue from a hot local club to an international music landmark.

Artists including Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis went from Prince collaborators to performing and producing chart-topping hits that spread the "Minneapolis Sound" across the musical landscape.

Prince's genius seemed to arrive fully formed, almost as if by magic. In 1978, he released his debut album For You at the age of 19. With its eponymous follow-up, released the following year, he became a breakout success with instant classics like "I Wanna Be Your Lover" and "I Feel For You."

Prince wrote, played, sang, and produced the entire collection himself, adding to the sense that somehow lightning had struck in Minneapolis. It had, but recently released compilations like Purple Snow: Forecasting the Minneapolis Sound released on Numero Group and Twin Cities Funk and Soul released on Secret Stash Records shone a long-overdue spotlight on the small but tight-knit and inventive local R&B scene that spawned Prince.

Once Prince was out of the gate, there was no stopping him. Prince was made for the '80s, and the '80s were made for him. Seriously funky but also pop-friendly, Prince was at the forefront of artists who deployed synthesizers and samplers in conjunction with traditional rock instrumentation to create music that felt completely liberated -- sexy and fun.

"Sexy" was part of Prince's playbook from day one: he knew how to tease his fans into a frenzy on record, on stage, and, crucially, on screen.

His provocative antics earned priceless condemnation from the voices of conventional morality. His song "Darling Nikki" inspired Tipper Gore to found the Parents Music Resource Center, which led to the Parental Advisory labeling of music.

All the while, Prince -- dressing as flamboyantly as the decade demanded, with a regal flair he might have learned from James Brown -- played his bad-boy/pretty-boy role to the hilt.

Purple Rain represented Prince in full flower. While some fans and critics argue that Sign "O" the Times - released in 1987 - represents an even greater artistic triumph, Purple Rain's vast commercial success was not incidental to its epochal achievement.

"When Doves Cry" epitomized the unique power of Prince. At decade's end, critic Dave Marsh wrote that it "may have been the most influential single record of the 80s." A stripped-down, percussive track with a vocal that's so understated it's sometimes half-spoken. To the astonishment of music insiders who thought they knew how to make a record, it had no bass track. "When Doves Cry" seemed to break all the rules of pop songcraft, and yet Prince turned it into such an intoxicating single that it shot to number one for five weeks, holding even Bruce Springsteen's "Dancing in the Dark" at bay.

Simultaneously, Albert Magnoli's gloriously shameless film defined Prince's personal mythology and made him one of the greatest pop icons of a decade that had more than its share.

Set in Minneapolis, the film depicted First Avenue as a hot spot on the order of Studio 54. Instead of driving along Highway 1, as they might have done in an L.A. movie, Prince and his costar Apollonia hopped on a purple motorcycle and cruised out into the Minneapolis suburbs to get "purified in the waters of Lake Minnetonka."

To this day, touring acts are visibly thrilled to discover that First Avenue actually is a great club, that it actually does look like that. Well, except for the dressing rooms. And First Avenue remains the center of a thriving music scene.

Though he never had another smash album as big as the Purple Rain soundtrack, Prince remained a dominant commercial force throughout the '80s and early '90s. He produced #1 hits ranging from the hard-flirting "Kiss" in 1986 to the novelty "Batdance" from 1989 to the sparkling "Cream" released in 1991, all while cycling through various band configurations and sounds.

The 1990s


The early '90s marked a crucial point of transition in Prince's career. He formed a fresh band — the New Power Generation — and released music that increasingly delved into hip-hop, meeting with a mixed reception.

If some fans started to sense an identity crisis, they were affirmed by Prince's 1993 decision to change his name to the unpronounceable glyph, the Love Symbol number two. That symbol had served as the title to his 1992 album ironically containing the single "My Name is Prince."

The 1993 release of a two-disc greatest hits collection also served to cap a remarkable run on the charts. That run ended with 1994's number 3 hit "The Most Beautiful Girl in the World," which was Prince's last single to date to crack the American top ten.

The mid-90s marked the end of Prince's relationship with his label Warner Brothers. After releasing a quick series of low-selling albums to fulfill his contractual obligations, he broke from the label in 1996.

1996 also happened to be the beginning of his famously tumultuous relationship with the internet. The iconoclastic perfectionist saw the Internet's potential as a tool to allow him to independently manage his own fandom and distribute his own music, but he also grew increasingly concerned about the danger of having his material freely bootlegged.

Prince was the first major artist to release an album on the Internet. It was 1997's Crystal Ball. From 2001 to 2006, he ran the pioneering NPG Music Club to sell his music online by membership.

But following the closure of that site, he became increasingly negative about the internet, complaining that other sites — most notably, YouTube — were benefiting by unauthorized circulation of his material.

In an infamous 2010 statement, the online pioneer declared that "the Internet's completely over."

In the late '90s, Prince was releasing music both independently and through various short-term deals with major labels.

By the first decade of the 2000s, Prince released a flood of new material ranging from the obscure like 2003's instrumental album N.E.W.S. to 1999's consciously commercial Rave Un2 the Joy Fantastic as well as 2006's 3121.

Prince was notoriously guarded as a celebrity, but in one revealing moment on his 1996 album Emancipation, he included a recording of his then unborn child's heartbeat on the song "Sex in the Summer," originally titled "Conception."

He reclaimed his given name when his Warner Brothers publishing contract ended in 2000.

Then in 2007, his Super Bowl halftime show received wide praise and proved to the largest possible audience that he was still a fiery live performer.

The 2010s


In the 2010s, Prince stepped back into the public eye in a way rarely seen since the '90s. He formed another new band — the all-female 3RDEYEGIRL — and played rapturously reviewed shows with them at venues ranging from Minnesota casinos to London living rooms. He "took over" an entire episode of Arsenio Hall's talk show, and duetted with Zooey Deschanel on a new song he premiered on a post-Super-Bowl episode of New Girl.

Perhaps most surprisingly, Prince re-signed with Warner Bros. Media coverage of the deal focused on the promised new music and Purple Rain reissue, but a telling detail of the press release is that the deal gave Prince ownership of his Warner Bros. masters.

The artist who wore the word SLAVE on his cheek during a 1993 legal battle with his label was a free man.

Most recently, Prince released a pair of HITNRUN albums recorded at Paisley Park,

He was performing solo "Piano & a Microphone" shows at venues around the world. He debuted the format with two intimate performances at Paisley Park in January. "I forgot," he said as he momentarily became overcome at one show, "that sometimes music is emotional." He was writing a memoir, which was expected to be published next fall.

Artists associated with Prince are still active. Revolution drummer Bobby Z holds an annual benefit concert at First Avenue.

Childhood friend and collaborator André Cymone just released his first new music in decades, NPG drummer Michael Bland is a busy performer and producer...the list goes on.

A new generation of local Minneapolis and St. Paul performers are exemplifying the '80s-era spirit of cross-genre fertilization and collaboration, now with a strong and adventurous hip-hop scene that's produced the area's best-known current artists including Lizzo, who worked with Prince and 3RDEYEGIRL on the track BOY TROUBLE.

Prince remained aware and supportive of what's going on. In a classic Prince moment, he showed up backstage when the local supergroup GAYNGS played First Ave in 2010. Prince picked up a guitar and played a little, but ultimately declined to take the stage; some reported hearing him make a comment to the effect of, "Looks like they've got it under control."

Prince's legacy in Minnesota is multilayered -- from his early collaborations with neighborhood bands, to his towering hits that put Minneapolis on the world's music map, to the venues he founded (Paisley Park and the former downtown club Glam Slam), to the enduring contributions of musicians he played with, to the example the Minneapolis Sound set for the dynamic scene of today.

Perhaps most importantly, though, Prince's music is evidence — to the world, and to Minnesotans — of the diversity of our state, and of our music. When you listen to Prince, you hear the influences of all the artists he grew up with: black, white, funky, rocking, groovy, prickly. It's not the sound of Minnesota's lonesome prairie, it's the sound of our dense cities. This utopian artist proved that music truly can break barriers — if u want it 2.

As evidence of his connection to his community, he shared a live performance exclusively with The Current from his 2014 Paris concert. Called "Crazy 2 Cool," it features some of his most popular songs and covers of artists like Michael Jackson.

Purple Reign: The Life, Music, and Legacy of Prince was produced by Derrick Stevens, Jay Gabler, and Lindsay Kimball and hosted by Jill Riley. Brought to you by The Current and American Public Media.