Friday, January 30, 2009

Poll results

What do you think of the new Prince Songs?

This is what FDU members had to say about the new Prince songs on lotusflow3r...

Love Them = 76%
They R ok = 12%
Where is my SOTT CD? = 12%


New poll up! What's going on @ HouseQuake?

Scrooge-McPrince strikes again!

Prince is back to his old tricks again, fucking with his fans(ites). Housequake is now closed and in its place is the following message:

"Housequake.com is closed until further notice...
On 'request' by Prince I changed back the old Housequake header. Sorry people, but I can't afford to play any more games. Thanks to Prince & his staff for their "support" over the years. /Aaron"

Will this lead to the revival of the PFU website? We will keep you posted on the status of Housequake as the opening date for Prince's official site comes ever closer...


UPDATE: HQ Mod Gav sheds some light

"Damn, there's more conspiracy theories here than ever !

Firstly, the simple reason that nothing's been said is that as many of you know, I look after the Prince liaison and legal statements for Housequake and I've been snowed under with my day job - in fact I only found out HQ was closed by email from one of the other mods this morning.

As some have noticed, relations with official sources have been very good of late, however mostly because we've been "playing the game" and trying our best to not offend P. An example of this is how we've had a header that doesn't even mention Prince's name nor shows his photo.

A couple of weeks ago, one member put together some excellent lotusflower "inspired" banners that used a symbol that looked a bit like Prince's but with a flower modification. As they didn't infringe copyright, we took the decision to put these live, along with the official banners we were supplied directly by P.

Roughly 24 hours later, we got a very blunt email saying "this must be removed" from one of his team. We tried to discuss this explaining that it's very difficult to have a fan website that doesn't have a picture of Prince or even show his symbol, however P was adamant that we don't "imply official status".

As someone else noticed on this thread, this was quite frankly the straw that broke the camels back and Aaron came to the belief that this really isn't a fun thing to do any more. Please remember that this is just a hobby for Aaron. It costs him money to run (we can't take donations any more as it changes our legal status and this was used by Prince's legal representation to claim we were a commercial organisation - nice huh ?) and take up a great deal of his time. Would you spend time and money on something you didn't enjoy ?

Is HQ over ? I personally don't know but I've spent a great deal of time playing "united nations" to repair relationships between Prince and all the PFU members (I brokered the "ceasefire" between the PFU and Prince) so I'm not about to give up yet.

It Ain't Over !

ps - thanks for the notes of support for HQ. This isn't about Prince.org vs Housequake, this is purely about fans rights to support an artist in a reasonable manner."

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Prince of Darkness

The only thing more fleeting than fame in Hollywood is Prince. He always seems to slip away with nary a trace ... until last night! His Majesty, looking eerily like Batman, was driving himself to and from Chateau Marmont. It's a recession thing....

Prince: Click to watch
http://www.tmz.com/2009/01/26/prince-of-darkness/

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Prince, D'Angelo Pair Up


D'Angelo's first disc since 2000—reportedly due out this summer through J Records—is expected to include contributions from none other than Prince. Lindsay Guion, D'Angelo's manager, confirmed the collaboration as well as ones with Cee-Lo Green, Raphael Saadiq, Mark Ronson and Roy Hargrove. Some tour dates in Europe and the U.S. are also expected.

"He's able to smile again and he's ready to connect [with fans]," Guion said to Billboard last summer. "He's coming back. And he looks great, by the way."

http://www.artistdirect.com/nad/news/article/0,,4917474,00.html

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Miami Horror samples Prince's "Bambi"

In heavy rotation on JJJ radio:



what do you all think of it?

I like it.

Friday, January 16, 2009

lotusflow3r updates!

Prince LIVE in LA 1/31/2009 CONFIRMED!

New song: Chocolate Box streaming now!

Go there now!

EDIT: Dr.Funkenberry reports:
"Prince’s New Web Site Updated & Concert In L.A. Posted in Celebrity News, Entertainment, Music on January 16th, 2009 by drfunkenberry

As we told you right here FIRST last month about 777 Chick hearn Court, things were gonna be poppin in 2009 there.

Well, go to Prince’s new web site Lotusflow3r.com and enjoy some new songs like Chocolate box, and click on the ticket chillin on the other side of the tv screen. You will see a $77.00 ticket for January 31st for an event (perhaps the opening of the site with a charge of $77.00 or maybe a concert in L.A.? Only time will tell.)

Prince has been funkin’ it up with a pleathura of great musicans and it should be on fire. Shoot, we hear things are so hot, he MAY not wait until January 31st to kick things off.

Much love and enjoy your chocolate box.-Dr.FB"

Vault interview of the day: Prince

Digging in the vaults again, here's a sit-down with Prince during the Musicology tour. Hard to believe he hasn't been back here in five years.

PRINCE'S NEW POWER PARTY OVER? ROCK STAR SHOWS INDUSTRY HOW IT'S DONE

Date: Saturday, August 21, 2004

Source: By Mark Brown, Rocky Mountain News

MILWAUKEE

The lazy take on Prince in recent years was that his best days were behind him.

His sales were down, the media said. His music wasn't as good as it used to be. His behavior was erratic - the name changes, the record company wars. Game over.

He turned his back on opportunities other performers would sell their souls for. The term "difficult" got slapped on him. Still more jeers from the sidelines.

But the truth is more interesting than the fiction. The man who once was one of the biggest rock stars in the world saw years ago that the music industry couldn't keep doing business the way it had, so he went directly to his fans online.

And halfway through the most successful tour of 2004, in a summer when almost every other tour is tanking, Prince's concerts are a virtual coast-to-coast sellout, breaking records in major cities. One Pepsi Center show next week is sold out, and the other is close to it.

His new Musicology album is great and near the top of the charts. All the hot young artists in 2004, from Alicia Keyes to Outkast, bow to him. And it has finally dawned on the record industry that selling music online is the future.

It turns out Prince made the moves everyone else wishes they'd made. While the music industry flounders, Prince flourishes. Does he ever just want to say "I told you so?"

"No!" Prince says, shaking his head firmly, but smiling slightly during a rare interview before a recent concert here. To hear him tell it, no vision was needed, anyway.

"It's almost like hearing a weather report and knowing it's going to rain. You can tell people and they either believe you or not."

Rather, Prince says, he's disappointed the industry didn't come along for the ride sooner. His label, Warner Bros. Records, had put great faith in him early in his career, but wavered as the years went on. "It just means they weren't enlightened enough or had the same faith that I had. If you love somebody, you should always love them."

The multitalented performer knew when he started this fight - when he went after Warner to gain control of the music that had made hundreds of millions of dollars - that it would be a long road.

"You're just worried how you're going to get out of this and not look like exactly what I eventually ended up looking like - this spoiled, pampered baby," Prince says.

But the need to keep his music pure - and Warner's refusal to release it - left him with no choice. "Before I left Warner Bros., I had a big and successful career in all areas. If they wanna run (a single) up the chart, they'll do it."

He couldn't play that game anymore. "I grew up when albums came out every three or four months. I wanted to make a lot of music."

And he wanted ownership of the copyrights, but the label balked. "Whoever created it is the owner. Is that even a question?" he says incredulously.

But now, backstage in Milwaukee, he smiles and chats happily about his life and music. "I'm not bitter or mad. You've gotta tip your hat" to the music industry, he says, sarcastically, for making so much money off artists' sweat for so many years. "It worked great for them."

The man behind the myth

Prince talks in passionate italics and exclamation points, enthused with music and society, far removed from the man of few words you often see in TV interviews, but every bit as intense.

Before the interview he ran an hourlong sound check, personally tweaking the sound on every microphone onstage, including those deep in the saxes of Maceo Parker and Candy Dulfer.

They worked through I Feel For You, Controversy and more Prince classics as he directed sound changes via wireless mike from all over the venue, calling out the changes in precise decibel levels. Much is made of Prince's perfectionism, but it has its purpose. The sound at the beginning of the check was as good as any concert; by the time he finished, it was like sitting in front of an upscale stereo system.

Fans know that 2004 is anything but a comeback. For years Prince has been productive, more musically accessible than ever, and making more money than ever. He tours regularly and records constantly. He divides his music between pressed CDs (the jazzy NEWS and the latest return to form, Musicology) and online-only discs (The Slaughterhouse and a new classic, Chocolate Invasion). Much of that music is as strong as his best-known work, such as Purple Rain and 1999.

So while it's not a comeback, Prince has chosen 2004 to be more visible. He has undertaken his most extensive tour in years and grabbed high-profile opportunities he has shunned in the past, including agreeing to open the Grammy Awards after years of requests. He is also sitting for more interviews, including this one. He insists, though, that much of it is out of his control.

"You can't take anything away from the media. They pick and choose what they want to focus on," he says. "We're given pre-packaged pop stars every day. They control who's on heavy rotation."

Yet, he notes with satisfaction, "the album's in the top 10."

Yes it is, in part because of the controversial way Prince is getting it out - every concert-goer gets a copy of Musicology added to the price of their ticket. That has pushed sales to 1.3 million so far, and Prince makes no apology for it. It gets the music out there without the usual record-company nonsense, and concert-goers for the most part have been thrilled with getting something tangible to take home. It also has stirred debate in the record industry and media.

Billboard and Soundscan have revised their policies to disallow such a tactic, but Musicology is "grandfathered" in and each copy still counts. The album returned to the top 10 again this week.

Prince likes the controversy.

"There's something a little different now that they have to pay attention to - this bundling situation," says Prince, who remains indifferent to criticism that it's artificially inflating his figures. To him, all that matters is getting heard.

"I know it's getting to people."

Battling for musical freedom

Prince has been a prolific songwriter, with more than 30 albums in his 26-year career. Does he ever just put down the guitar for days or weeks on end?

"I hear music still, but I spend long periods when I don't actually play it." Inspiration comes, but he just retains it. "I was hearing a song today in my head. I'll be messing with that later."

It's not just his own music that entrances him. For years he has sung Joni Mitchell's A Case of You; last year, he finally released a version on a limited edition of his live album One Night Alone - Live!

People ask: "How did Prince get like this? What's his history?" he says. Besides his obvious funk, soul and rock influences, he figures they should know the more subtle stuff.

"I love all Joni's music," he says, adding that he does her songs "just to keep her name out there. Joni's music should be taught in school, if just from a literature standpoint."

The same goes for James Brown, Earth Wind & Fire, and Sly Stone. "Take Sly out of time! Bring him back like he's brand new."

He laughs a lot these days, but knows he has a serious image when it comes to his music.

"My life got real serious there for a second - getting out of the record industry. You have to realize that I was told I couldn't leave. Excuse me? What did you say? With the mergers and revolving door of executives, it was like musical chairs or something."

The fight with Warner (which eventually allowed Prince to leave the label, but he had to leave his classic albums behind) took on guerrilla tactics. Prince famously wrote "slave" on his face and changed his name to a symbol as a protest. He took other tacks as well.

When Warner balked at releasing The Gold Experience in 1995, Prince had his independent publicity firm send the video for the first single, Dolphin, to the press, ensuring that the song would be written about and that the music would leak. Warner caved and the album was released as Prince intended.

Musicology is being distributed by Sony Music, but under a vastly different agreement than he had with Warner. It's a one-off deal with Prince's NPG Records; Sony only distributes it. And Prince pockets $7 for every $10 disc sold.

"I'm the content provider, I don't feel any pressure from them. They don't have any power over me," says Prince, who has learned a lot from his contract battles.

"Going through 10 years of struggle makes my meetings now with the executives a breeze. They know straight in they're not owning anything. That's not even a question," he says gleefully.

Do other artists come to him for advice? Yes, Prince allows, "but what's more interesting is when the executives come to me for advice."

So what does he tell them? "You get the artist you deserve," he says.

To fix things? "Start from scratch. You like music, right? Me too. Remember when there were these hippies running the business?"

It's time, he tells executives, to get back to that. "You're gonna have more fun. You're gonna make a lot more money."

"We have more record companies and look at their (failure) rates. They're trying to make more and more money. We gotta maybe get back to making some good music."

What infuriates him is watching the industry prey on rappers, bleeding them dry the way they bled bluesmen decades ago, then discarding them. New artists are encouraged to be more outrageous than what came before, to shock for the purpose of making a quick money score.

"They're taking our kids out of our community and doing it to them. You disenfranchise part of the nation," he says. "That's the sad part. What can you say other than arrogance and greed? That's what you school people on."

The issues of Prince

Prince always has commented on social issues. On Musicology, the song Dear Mr. Man doesn't mention anyone by name, but pointedly lays out problems in our nation. On July Fourth, he released The United States of Division via his Web site. It opens: "2004 / still at war / and everybody hates Americans."

"Look at the reality and the truth," Prince says. "They're our supposed 'elected' officials who are supposed to take care of us. Some people are benefiting, and some aren't."

The top 10 percent of the population controls most of the wealth in this country, Prince notes, "and it's not a rainbow coalition. Don't get me started on that."

But start he does. "What is democracy? What does that word mean?" he says with exasperation. He's also dismissive of those who won't speak up for fear of retribution. "Don't dare say anything about it or you're going to get your CDs smashed. What's so scary about that?"

Likewise, a thread of spirituality has always run through his work, be it subtle (Let's Go Crazy, Same December) or more overt (God, The Holy River).

"As you get older, you start to look at it. It's not even the age-old cliche of 'Why are we here?' There's right and wrong. And then there's the lie, an illusion so powerful people literally live in a collective hallucination. They see walls that aren't there," he says. "Sooner or later we have to . . . say 'When did we fall off track here? How are we going to fix this thing?"

His much-discussed path as a Jehovah's Witness has gotten too much sensationalized coverage, he says; he's interested in spirituality and answers, not strange ceremonies or theories. "I'm very practical. You go Trekkie on me, I gotta go."

Prince has made a tentative peace with Warner Bros.; there are rumors of a special edition of Purple Rain in the works. That may be merely wishful thinking; the new DVD of Purple Rain comes out Tuesday with no Prince involvement and thus no substantial upgrade.

An overhaul of his catalog is needed. Warner slapped substandard copies of his music onto CD years ago and has never upgraded them. Prince's best album, 1987's Sign O' the Times, sounds absolutely awful, with fluctuating volume levels and passable but muddy sound. Prince leaps to his feet in agreement when these issues are mentioned.

"Tell them that! We need to bring it up to the industry standard!"

He'd love to see remastered and expanded versions of his work and surround-sound versions of his classics, but with the master tapes in Warner's hands, he can't make that happen. "I can go re-record it and put it out - but should I have to?"

As well as looking forward, Prince has spent time looking back. The live show features his hits. Scattered through gigs this year - live and on TV - have been appearances with Prince alumni: Morris Day of the Time, drummer Sheila E, and most strikingly, an acoustic performance on TV with Wendy Melvoin of his most revered backing band, The Revolution.

When asked about that reunion with Melvoin, Prince grows wistful.

"She plays acoustic guitar with me better than almost anyone," he says quietly. "The opportunity came up and her name was the first to come to mind. I'm looking for things to juice me, too."

By the numbers

* 666,666: The number of CDs Prince had to sell under his old record deal to make $1 million.

* 142,857: The number of CDs Prince has to sell now, on his own, to make $1 million

* 13 million: The number of Purple Rain CDs sold since 1984

* $19.5 million: The money Prince made off those Purple Rain sales

* 1.3 million: The number of Musicology CDs sold this year

* $9.1 million: The money Prince made off those Musicology sales

* 30: Roughly, the number of studio albums Prince has released in 26 years.

* 24,800: The average number of people who see Prince in each city

* $1.5 million: The average concert gross in each city

* $63.26: Prince's average ticket price

* $143.60: Madonna's average ticket price

* $79.5 million: Madonna's tour gross

* $45.7 million: Prince's tour gross through June 30

* $100 million: Prince's expected gross at tour's end

Sources: Pollstar, Www.Riaa.Com, Sony Music, Www.Npgmusicclub.Com

Lack of airplay means a generation misses great music

Prince's newer music hasn't gotten the airplay it deserves.

Even though he took control of his musical life when he parted ways with his major record label deal, and even though he has done work as good as his biggest hits, much of it gets passed over by the mainstream.

Is being overlooked the downside of independence?

"Who overlooked it? You gotta sit in the creator's seat," Prince says defiantly, suggesting nothing is overlooked there.

Despite that, radio, video and the general public have, unfortunately, not had easy access to what easily ranks among Prince's best work. He may not much care, but we do. From the past decade, here are the 10 best Prince songs you may have never heard.

* THE HOLY RIVER

From 1996's Emancipation, it's one of Prince's most personal songs. The Holy River builds from a piano ballad to a rock rave-up, chronicling his disillusionment with fame and wealth ("putting your faith in things that only make you cry . . . the more they say they love you, the more you just wanna die").

But it's hardly rock-star moping. It has a gorgeous melody, self-deprecating lyrics, and a confessional story of spiritual redemption ("lookin' back, y'all, I don't miss nothin' except the time"). Just to prove his point, Prince finishes it off with a joyous guitar solo. One of his top five songs.

* DON'T TALK TO STRANGERS

From the 1996 soundtrack to the ill-fated Spike Lee movie Girl 6, this is an aching piano ballad as Prince says a forced goodbye to a child and urges them to have faith that somehow it's all going to be OK someday. A low-key tear-jerker.

* JUDAS SMILE

From the recent download-only album Chocolate Invasion, this funk-fueled morality tale was also reportedly intended for a Spike Lee movie, Bamboozled. It's a warning to not lose yourself and look for truth, warning "for every soul, there's a buyer."

* CALHOUN SQUARE

The 1998 Crystal Ball track has a loose tone set by the studio chatter that introduces the track, as Prince advises a musician: "You're listening to the drummer, but you still wanna have fun. It shouldn't be work." Languid, funky bass and guitar lines turn into a roaring guitar rock chorus, a melange of everything Prince does best.

* WHAT'S MY NAME

Another gem on the four-CD Crystal Ball set, this is three angry minutes of muttered vocals and despair. "Take my fame / I can't use it / My girlfriend calls me lame / The game was over yesterday." The popping bass funk disintegrates into swirling, scratching chaos, sounding unlike anything else Prince has ever done.

* DOLPHIN

The rarely seen, filmed-in-one-take video from the 1995 album The Gold Experience is a revelation in itself, perhaps the most fun visual Prince has ever presented. Spurred by his business dispute with Warner Brothers, Dolphin is a song about standing your ground, laced with a soaring melody and stinging guitar solo. A tad overwrought, but fun.

* GOLD

Another classic from The Gold Experience finds Prince explaining to fans why he's fighting so hard for his art in a sweeping anthem reminiscent of his Purple Rain heyday. He also decries culture's obsession with money and youth: "What's the use of money if you ain't gonna break the mold? . . . What's the use in being young if you ain't gonna get old?"

* SAME DECEMBER

The best song off the overlooked 1996 Chaos and Disorder album, it's a mini-suite of styles with surging dynamics and the feel of an epic.

* A MILLION DAYS

A solemn ballad off the new Musicology album, it's full of loss and ache, underscored by a menacing electric guitar: "It has only been an hour since you left me / but it feels like a million days." It treads much the same ground as Prince's classic '84 B-side, 17 Days, but filled with more humility: "I didn't have the heart to say I'm sorry / Now I haven't got a heart at all."

* DEAR MR. MAN

Another Musicology track, one of the most political Prince has attempted since Sign O' the Times. "Ain't no sense in voting / Same soul with a different name / Might not be in the back of the bus / But it sure feels just the same."

http://blogs.rockymountainnews.com/rocky_mountain_music/2009/01/vault_interview_of_the_day_pri.html

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Prince's Sister Releases Gospel CD

The sister of award-winning artist Prince has released her first gospel CD.

Most, however, will be wondering what kind of gospel it is that Tyka Nelson looks to share in A Brand New Me.

"I'm not really any religion,” she told columnist C.J. of the Star Tribune shortly before Christmas last month.

Though Nelson says she attends a Pentecostal church, she also says she studies with Jehovah’s Witnesses, the self-described “Christian” movement that has been denounced by major Christian denominations as either a cult or heretical sect.

“[S]o I say I'm Apostolic Pentecostal Jehovah's Witness Seventh-Day Adventist Jew," said Nelson, whose brother, Prince, is a devoted and outspoken follower of Jehovah’s Witnesses.

Last month, Nelson’s new album was made available online at CDBaby.com, after about a month on ElectricFetus.com. Nelson also performed in Minneapolis with her band, The Word, to celebrate the release of her new CD.

Nelson is Prince’s only full sister and made her major label debut in 1988 with Royal Blue. Her second album, Yellow Moon Red Sky, was released on Ichiban Records in 1992.

http://christianpost.com/Entertainment/Music/2009/01/prince-s-sister-releases-gospel-cd-14/

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Wendy & Lisa's new album

In case you weren't aware, Wendy & Lisa have a new album on the way called "White Flags of Winter Chimneys".

w&l princeswomen.jpgAs Retro Active expands its purview from the '80s to the '90s, it's somewhat appropriate that this post remarks on some folks who became massively popular in the '80s but who, oddly enough, didn't truly find their voice until the next decade.

Prince cohorts Wendy & Lisa have just released their first new album since 1998's Girl Bros. LP. Written and recorded as a form of creative catharsis after the death of Wendy's brother Jonathan Melvoin (Smashing Pumpkins), Girl Bros. had a spare, unfussy approach that, despite the pallor of despair that hung over it, managed to finally bring the essence of W&L's popcraft genius into focus.

Of course, it was released under the name "Girl Bros." not Wendy & Lisa, and was distributed through World Domination, a label whose name was more reflective of its endless ambition rather than its capabilities, so it generally escaped notice.

Which was truly unfortunate.

w&l whiteflags.jpgWith its expansive and atmospheric acoustics-and-effects approach, Girl Bros. was decidedly adult-alternative in nature, but wholly blessed with an original sound that was far too quirky and dark for the Starbucks crowd, and closer in spirit to the mood set by artists like Lisa Germano. It was also, needless to say, light years away from "Raspberry Beret."

That approach continues on their latest album, White Flags of Winter Chimneys, exclusively via their Web site. (CDs and vinyl will be coming in March). Though - and thankfully for Wendy & Lisa - there's not quite as much sadness inspiring it, the new disc manages to take up nicely where the last one left off.

It's been said that the main thing Prince learned from Wendy & Lisa was how to "color" a song; maybe he could also stand to learn another lesson: when you wait a while between records - until you've actually got good songs that mean something to you - your albums come out of the oven sounding pretty fantastic. - Jason Ferguson

http://blogs.houstonpress.com/rocks/2009/01/flannel_file_girl_bros_wendy_l.php

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Jamie Foxx stand-up

Meeting Prince...(not new just hilarious if you haven't seen this)

a classic moment:


Watch more NETLOG videos on AOL Video

Prince - The truth


Prince



Is Prince still worthy of his royal tag? That's what we're asking after his sell-out 21-date shows at London's O2 Arena.
1Xtra's Jenna G looks back at the career of one of the most important black musicians of all time and asks what makes him tick.

We explore his turbulent personal life, discover why he changed his name to a wordless squiggle in the 90's and the hits and misses in his music.

Hear from Prince himself as he explains the source of his own deviant imagination.

A word of warning though, this documentary refers to the sexual nature of Prince's lyrics. As a result some listener


http://www.bbc.co.uk/1xtra/tx/documentaries/prince.shtml

Monday, January 12, 2009

Prince Throwing Golden Globes After Party Bash

As you read this, things at Prince’s Golden Globes after party should just be starting to get into swing.

The Emmy’s last year sucked, but the party at Prince’s more than made up for it. The purple host should be entertaining winners and presenters (there are no losers if you are partying with Prince.) and others.

Prince recently announced to the L.A. Times that he is releasing 3 new cd’s in 2009, Lotus Flow3r, Mplsound and the project with Bria Valente. (Anyone hip to this site knew stuff was brewing long before anywhere. Not bragging, just making sure you are paying attention to this site.) You should also pay attention to Lotusflow3r.com, Prince’s official web site.

Here is the L.A. Times Prince interview part 1 and part 2 with Prince again to hold you over.

As for the retailer that will most likely distribute the new cd’s ,we have a pretty good idea as well as some others, but rather wait to give you the news when it has been finalized. Don’t call me a tease, cuz you know in the end, I intend to please.

While that happens, here is hoping sometime today, we have some sort of review for you all about the party. You know one thing, I will try.-Dr.FB

http://www.drfunkenberry.com/2009/01/12/prince-throwing-golden-globe-after-party/

Friday, January 9, 2009

One night with Prince

Rockin' the limo, boudoir ballads, Prop. 8, Barry White, sex, faith, Pro Tools. Was it a dream?

Prince_ann_500

It was 11 p.m. on the night before New Year's Eve, and I was doing something I hadn't expected would crown my 2008: sitting in Prince's limousine as the legend lounged beside me, playing unreleased tracks on the stereo. "This is my car for Minneapolis," he said before excusing himself to let me judge a few songs in private. "It's great for listening to music." He laughed. "I don't do drugs or I'd give you a joint. That's what this record is."

That morning I'd received an e-mail inviting me to preview new music at Prince's mansion in the celebrity-infested estate community of Beverly Park, where he's currently keeping his shoe rack. The summons wasn't entirely unexpected. Prince, who's less reclusive than his reputation would indicate, has spent a year and a half consulting with culture industry leaders and occasionally entertaining media types, with an eye toward taking complete control of his own musical output.

His new mantra is "The gatekeepers must change," and he's refashioned his career to become one of them.

Since beginning his gradual relocation from the Midwest to the Left Coast, Prince has headlined the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival and 2007's Super Bowl halftime show. He sold out a 21-night run at London's O2 Arena and released an album, a high-end photo book and a perfume. Most recently, he's whetted fans' appetites with sneaks of songs from three upcoming releases, first on the popular "Jonesy's Jukebox" radio program on Indie 103 and then on two websites, the now-dark MPLSound.com and the still-evolving Lotusflow3r.com.

This flurry of activity has been characterized by what might be called methodical spontaneity. Everything happens quickly, whether it's a show that takes place only a few days after its announcement or an evening interview arranged that morning. But Prince's personality seems to be governed by two oppositional impulses: the hunger to create and an equally powerful craving for control. Intense productivity battles with meticulousness within his working process. Others might not anticipate his next move, but it is all part of the chess game for him.

That's why I was there, on the eve of a holiday eve, as the mainstream music industry was enjoying a break from its ongoing plunge toward insolvency. The turn of the year is a slow time for pop, not the moment blockbuster artists usually release material. But Prince has been hinting for a while that his upcoming recordings might not be tied to a conventional label. Abandoning that machine, including its publicity arm, requires other ways of getting the word out.

Prince began experimenting with new methods of distributing music more than a decade ago, and his early efforts with the now-defunct NPG Music Club paved the way for later bold moves by Radiohead and others. Most recently he's partnered with major labels to get copies into stores. Columbia handled the release of 2006's "Planet Earth," except in Britain, where copies were distributed free via a London newspaper, the Mail on Sunday.

Now Prince is about to unleash not one but three albums without major label affiliation, and talking to well-vetted writers is one part of the rollout. How well vetted? "You're blond," he said when we met. "I thought you were a redhead." (He'd done his research; I'd changed my hair color only the year before.)

When I entered the house, which has the vaguely European opulence of an upscale spa, I found Prince with designers Anthony Malzone and Scott Addison Clay, examining mock-ups for a "highly interactive" website. "It's a universe," said Malzone, showing how a mouse click could make the whole screen rotate. "There's a lyric in one of the new songs about an 'entirely new galaxy.' We took that cue, and from there on, we thought that everything would emanate from Prince."

The website, still under construction, revealed the recognizable logo of a major big-box retailer with whom Prince is finalizing negotiations to distribute the albums. The three will hit the Web and that retailer, the artist said, "as soon as the holidays are over."

I'd be hearing music from each of them.

"Let's go to my car," Prince said. "We'll listen to the first album there."

Prince_250 Religious perspective

Entering his garage, he ushered me into a low-slung black sports car that he's apparently named after his late friend Miles Davis. I strapped on my seat belt, but we didn't venture outside. Instead, Prince turned serious as he brought up a recent New Yorker article that had spun beyond his famously controlling grip.

"I want to talk about that interview," he said, gazing seriously over the steering wheel before turning on the music. He'd felt the writer had taken certain remarks he'd made -- particularly one about gay marriage that implied he was against it -- out of context. (The New Yorker stands by the story.)

"They try to take my faith. . . ." he said, his voice trailing off. "I'm a Jehovah's Witness. I'm trying to learn the Bible. It's a history book, a science book, a guidebook. It's all the same."

Prince's understanding of religion requires him to avoid political stands, including those that concern morality. "I have friends that are gay, and we study the Bible together," he said. He did not vote for Proposition 8, the referendum to make gay marriage illegal. "I don't vote," he said. "I didn't vote for Barack [Obama], either; I've never voted. Jehovah's Witnesses haven't voted for their whole inception."

Prince, who became a Jehovah's Witness in 2001 under the guidance of veteran bassist and songwriter Larry Graham, views everything through the lens of his religion. No topic -- sexuality, civil rights, his disdain for corporate pop -- comes up in which it doesn't play a role. Recounting a recent meeting with Earth, Wind and Fire singer Philip Bailey, for example, he commented that that group's penchant for Afrocentric garb revealed a lost history similar to the one uncovered in the Jehovah's Witnesses' version of the Bible.

Prince's statements can sound extreme to a secular listener. Some have accused him of trying to conceal his views to avoid alienating nonbelieving (and, particularly, gay) fans. But his desire to be tolerant seems sincere. His favorite television show, for example, is "Real Time With Bill Maher." Asked if the comedian's confrontational atheism bothers him, he harrumphed. "That's cool," said Prince. "He can be what he wants. I like arguments. Somebody saying I'm a terrible guitar player feeds me."

Prince's faith fulfills a yearning that his songs expressed long before he became devout: a need for some kind of ruling theory to explain the sorrow and violence that intertwines with life's joy. Songs as early as 1981's "Controversy" focus on a quest for God, and his catalog overflows with complex number and color systems, prophetic statements and disquiet about the fallen state of humanity. In his religion, he's found a code as inexhaustible as the one he was previously generating himself.

Which leads back to "MPLSound," the album Prince recorded by himself at Paisley Park studios mostly last year. "People ask me, 'Why don't you sound like you used to?' " he said by way of introduction. "But that music doesn't have any wave energy to it. It'll move a party, but that's not what I'm doing here."

These tracks did sound new in some ways: electronica-based, futuristic and subtly mind-altering. They also harked back to early Prince, including touchstones like "When Doves Cry" and "The Black Album." Some, like one about a "funky congregation," could become live show pieces. Others, like the playful "Hey Valentina," inspired by his friend Salma Hayek's baby, and the Space Age ballad "Better With Time" -- dedicated to another actress pal, Kristin Scott Thomas, who costarred in Prince's 1986 film, "Under the Cherry Moon" -- contained sounds that didn't seem possible to replicate anywhere but in Prince's imagination.

The key to this particular aural universe, it turns out, is the ubiquitous computer platform Pro Tools. Prince avoided the system for years. One thing he's truly moralistic about is the use of artificial vocal enhancement by subpar artists, which in his view has reduced mainstream pop to a "weak diet" of sugary junk. Yet he's unlocked new elements within the very control surfaces Pro Tools employs. Using both analog equipment and digital technology, Prince has come closer to the body-altering music he wishes to make.

"I'm interested in the inner workings of music, the effect on the body," he explained. "I'm trying to understand why we respond to beats differently." His former associate, the producer Terry Lewis, helped him realize Pro Tools might help. "Terry talked me into it. He said, 'Don't think of it as a digital machine,' " said Prince. " 'Don't play by its rules.' I just took it and started flipping things."

As the music played, Prince singled out a few lyrics. "The songs we sing lift us up to heaven," he said as a song espousing "old-school ways" played. "This one's about Babylonian tricks." Then the music ended, and we moved on to the next offering -- one that took us into Prince's bedroom.

Celebrating pleasure

Before the New Yorker piece, the biggest question about Prince's spiritual conversion concerned its effect on his own sexual expressiveness. No one in pop has written more powerfully about the transformative power of sex. His sometimes perverse, often humorous fairy tales opened up worlds of pleasure and possibility to listeners. After finding Jehovah, however, fans worried that he would denounce his most fruitful subject matter.

But a really powerful code can unlock anything. "I've studied Solomon and David now," Prince said, referring to two famous Old Testament lovemen. "[In biblical times] sex was always beautiful. You come to understand that, and then you try to find a woman who can experience that with you."

Songs on all three of Prince's new projects celebrate carnal pleasures, but the album he played in his white-carpeted bedroom explores the topic from top to bottom. It's "Elixir," the debut of Bria Valente, Prince's latest protégée. Valente grew up in Minneapolis and attended parties at Paisley Park as a teen, but she registered on Prince's radar in Los Angeles. A tall brunet with a smooth, delicate voice -- "she knows how to use her breath like I do on my falsetto, to make it glide over the track," he said -- she is Prince's collaborator, along with keyboardist Morris Hayes, in reviving the quiet storm sound.

"This might be my favorite," he said, playing a steamy ballad. "Remember those old Barry White records? A whole lot of people are gonna get pregnant off of this! I gotta call her." With that, he left me to contemplate Valente's "chill" songs, the heart-shaped mirror over his round bed and the large Bible on the nightstand.

It never became clear whether Valente is Prince's partner in more than an artistic way. Since meeting him, she has become a Jehovah's Witness. She lives just down the hill from Beverly Park, and later in the evening, she joined us at a nearby nightclub -- she's a friendly young woman who held her own in conversation with the superstar directing her career.

At the club, Prince carefully sat me between himself and Valente, only touching her once, when he gestured for her to accompany him to the front of the club to check out the noisy blues band rocking the crowd. Later, she laughed when he sneaked away to play a quick keyboard solo with the band. "He's like Velcro," she said. "Stuck to the stage."

Beautiful women always have been important in Prince's life, both as musical collaborators and as prominently displayed companions. He has been married twice, separating from his second wife, Manuela Testolini, in 2006. Now he carries himself with the exacting self-sufficiency of a middle-aged bachelor. Often citing famous beauties as close friends, he never mentioned a sexual conquest.

Whether or not he needs a day-to-day companion right now, Prince does seem to require a muse. Valente's project has allowed him to make more openly sensual music than anything else he's re- cently produced. He even took the high-fashion-style photographs that will adorn the CD booklet.

As her album played, he spoke of other female musicians he currently admires. "Have you heard Janelle Monae?" he asked. "She is so smart. How about Sia, do you like her?" The jazz bassist Esperanza Spalding was due to spend a few days with him later in the week. The names of previous collaborators peppered his conversation: the singers Tamar Davis and Shelby J., his old companions Wendy Melvoin and Lisa Coleman.

For now, Valente is the conduit for Prince's female energy. Her music sounds contemporary but also connects to earlier Prince protégés like the Family and Taja Sevelle. Though he was quick to praise her songwriting abilities (and to point out that he helped her cement a good publishing deal), he spoke about her songs as they played, almost as if they were his own.

"The art of making records, I give it so much respect," he said as the album's final track, a New Age-flavored set piece about Valente's baptism, concluded. "But it gets trampled on for the sake of commerciality."

He led me back into the hallway. "Let's get in the limo to listen to the last one," he said.

An album's range

"Lotus Flow3r" will likely be greeted by Prince fans and the general public as the central product of his latest creative spurt. It's a full band album with a sound that ranges from cocktail jazz to heavy rock. The first track included the lyric his Web designer had mentioned about the expanding universe, while subsequent ones referred to traveling to other dimensions and transcending race.

Directing his driver to take us for a spin after leaving to change from black loungewear into a red suit, Prince explained that "Lotus Flow3r" began to emerge during the sessions for his 2006 album, "3121." Prince selected the best of his massive output for this release, delaying its finish until he was sure every element hung together.

"The thing that unites these songs is the guitar," he said. He'd fallen back in love with the instrument after playing in Davis' backup band during a 2006 tour. He singled out a vampy solo in the samba-influenced "Love Like Jazz." "When we do this live, that's going to go on forever," he said with a grin.

Positioning "Lotus Flow3r" as a rock record is a canny marketing move, given urban radio's current focus on hip-hop-defined samples and beats. This music sounds more organic, meant to be played live, and Prince is trying out players for a new band, ones who'll be able to grasp the tricky changes in the new songs. He makes decisions, he said, by "listening to the universe. If a name is mentioned to me three times, I know I need to check it out."

Whatever band he assembles will have to be able to leap from the light-stepping funk of the song simply titled "$," about "the most popular girl in the whole wide world," to the soul jazz of "77 Beverly Place," to the heavy-metal thunder of the album's title track. That song references both Carlos Santana and Jimi Hendrix, but asked about the influence of the latter rock god, Prince demurred. "I try to play guitar like singers I like," he said, later adding, "Don't you think journalists can be lazy, I mean, when they make comparisons?"

He delivered this criticism in a kind tone. Talk turned to the Internet and the need for musicians to claim a niche. "My audience is really big, though," he said. "And they're really easy to reach online. Everything has gone viral."

He continues to be firm on copyright issues -- "I made it," is his simple response to those who call him a hypocrite for restricting his material online even as he uses the Web for his own purposes -- but seems fairly open to trying new ways to promote his avalanche of music. "You can put in that I'd like to play the Troubadour," he said, though he hasn't made any arrangements for local club dates.

As the night wore to an end, the conversation turned free form, touching on topics ranging from Edie Sedgwick (he saw "Factory Girl") to Ani DiFranco (he loves her) to his favorite guitar (the blue and white Stratocaster he played during the Super Bowl, named "Sonny" after an early mentor). And then the limo pulled into the driveway.

He hugged me goodnight, and I got into my mud-stained Mazda Protege. Hugging the road down Mulholland Drive, I asked myself, "Did that really happen?" So many moments would seem fantastic in the retelling.

But then, as Beverly Hills became the Valley, I realized how carefully executed this visit had been. Each listening environment had been ideal: the close confinement of the sports car for the intense "MPLSound," the boudoir for "Elixir" and the classic rock star ride for the far-reaching "Lotus Flow3r." And though Prince had been open about many things, he's also an expert at wielding the phrase "off the record."

What I'd experienced was like a dream -- a dream Prince had designed just for me. Which is what he's been doing for his fans for 30 years.

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/music_blog/2009/01/one-night-with.html

Thursday, January 8, 2009

lotusflow3r.com updates...

Opening sooner?

Looks like there is some work going on at Prince's official homepage, the text is usually rotating, now its a static image along the bottom of the page...while not a big update (and one you may have missed if i didn't point it out), it begs the question..will we see the site opening sooner than we all thought?

I certainly hope so!

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Prince = Greatest Performace in Coachella's History

(The Doctor’s words on this performance, added for the blind.) These are the many reasons Prince’s Coachella performance still should and needs to be released on DVD. The greatest performance in Coachella history. Prince has rocked every stage from a bowling alley to the Super Bowl stage. His performance at Coachella, no one could hold a candle to or even a lighter at the end of a “Purple Rain” solo. Prince proved on that night, under those stars, his star still shines bright, and perhaps somewhere, that maybe there is a planet Prince, because his performance was not of this world.

We share with you one of our all-time favorite reviews below (I did not write it) and it is with my deepest regret that I did not attend Coachella (ducks Prince’s cane) and may never live it down.

Enjoy the review regardless:

The superstar’s tremendous performance now stands as the greatest in Coachella history.

If you weren’t there – if you stayed home because the lineup just didn’t seem so great, because the triple-digit temps would just be too much, because you curiously lack an appreciation for what a masterful showman Prince continues to be 30 years on – well, this all may seem like hyperbole.

Continue reading...

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

How Much Prince Is 2 Much?

No one could ever accuse Prince of being lazy. The ultra-talented funkateer recently told the Los Angeles Times that he plans on releasing three albums in 2009, all of which will explore different musical ideas and all without any major label help. Two of the discs will be Prince affairs (the pop-oriented MPLSOUND and the guitar-heavy Lotus Flower), while the third, Elixir, is a Svengali job for some singer named Bria Valente.

Now I'm the kind of person who has seen Under A Cherry Moon multiple times and paid big money for both Crystal Ball and One Nite Alone...Live! (never heard of 'em? Exactly)--yet I find myself worried rather than excited about Prince's upcoming output.

His purple majesty has always been prolific. During the height of his popularity in the '80s, he was putting out an album a year when sales rivals like Michael Jackson and Bruce Springsteen were taking three and four years between studio releases. But that fecundity came with a cost. While Prince's music is never less than interesting, it isn't always great. The guy, it turns out, is human. By the mid-'90s, his flood of new material had drowned out casual listeners. Slowly but surely, the artist once known as TAFKAP became an underground phenomenon, his descent fuelled by rote R&B, hectoring lyrics, and jazz fusion excursions.

Then he was quiet--no new studio material arrived in the three years between 2001's The Rainbow Children and 2004's Musicology. But the latter, straightforwardly funky album was exactly what the mainstream wanted. Unsurprisingly, the ensuing tour and his induction into the Rock Hall of Fame helped transform Prince from gifted weirdo in the basement to beloved icon. Two more well-regarded albums (3121 and Planet Earth) followed in 2006 and 2007. And last year, Prince basked in the adoration of the indie crowd, blowing minds with an epic set at Coachella.

What all this means is that Prince has some goodwill capital to spend. I'd hate to see him blow it on genre exercises. Even if the music on the new albums is great, its impact will be blunted by its quantity. Unfortunately, when Prince competes against himself, there's a good chance no one will win.

http://new.music.yahoo.com/blogs/spin/4068/how-much-prince-is-2-much/?page=3#comments

SPIN Review: Prince's 5 New Songs

His last album, 2007's Planet Earth, was bundled for free with Sunday papers in London (the first single, "Guitar," was a Verizon exclusive). It's something of a shame that this is the only thing the album is remembered for because it was as good -- as distinctly Prince-like -- as he's sounded in years, stacked with languid funk jams and, like the song says, guitar.

So it's with equal parts surprise and, well, not, that the artist formerly known as the Artist Formerly Known As Prince picked ex-Sex Pistol Steve Jones' radio show on L.A.'s 103.1 to debut four tracks that may or may not appear on his next album, which he may or may not release himself.

And fitting, then, that the songs generally skew towards the rock end of the Prince spectrum. Most notable might be the frisky cover of Tommy James' "Crimson and Clover," which opens with the familiar chords in that warm, "Purple Rain" tone before getting thick and crunchy, with a dash of "Wild Thing" in there just to bring back those long-dormant Hendrix comparisons. The frenetic, "Crosstown Traffic"-biting "Wall of Berlin" should keep those coming.

"Forever" -- sorry, "4ever" -- is pure mid-tempo pop that doesn't really stick to the ribs after a few, admittedly perfunctory listens.

"Colonized Mind" is the resident slow jam, pondering spirituality and the skewering the music industry in the same verse, then climaxing in a frenzy of overdubbed guitar solos.

A fifth subsequently leaked track, the six-minute "There Will Never B Another 1 Like Me," is solid dance-funk Prince, although the line "checked my e-mail to see where the party be" might be the most patently unsexy of his career. The mundane vision of our purple minx logging into gmail is countered by the revelation of his hair-grooming secret. (Olive oil!)

Worth noting: This sneak preview comes courtesy of Jonsey's on-air cohort Mr. Shovel, and there's no official word as to where these songs might eventually materialize beyond the low-fi radio rips floating around right now.

All in all, these feel like refreshing throwback tracks -- but that's what we said about Planet Earth and even Musicology before that. There's something about Prince's willful iconoclasm that seems to get in the way of his reaching the Revolution-era glory we all seem to want from him. As if it were what we wanted that counts.

http://www.spin.com/blog/review-princes-5-new-songs

Prince One Step Closer to Over-Saturating the Internet with New Music

We may have already fudged up our New Year's resolutions by napping through spin class and substituting pudding for dinner for the last four out of five days. Prince, however -- being the magical, too-rad-to-be-human pop icon that he is -- is already making good on his.

Fresh from announcing plans to self-release three whole new albums in 2009, the Purple One has launched a new website, LotusFlow3r.com. The site features streaming tracks (which you may remember from a few weeks ago), a wee Purple Rain screencap and Prince's usual disregard for the fact numbers are not, in fact, interchangeable with the alphabet. And, in time, the site promises to become the go-to spot for purchasing his three new albums (and not healing runes and guardian angel bookmarks as the iTunes-meets-new-age-bookstore artwork might suggest).

Recently, Prince revealed to the L.A. Times that two of the upcoming records are under the working titles MPLSOUND and Lotus Flower. MPLSOUND -- a vowels-optional reference to the star's Minneapolis turf -- is said to be "electro-flavoured" Prince. As for Lotus Flower, the Times says that the purple-hazy guitar tracks leaked in late December -- including "Crimson and Clover," "Colonized Mind" and "Wall of Berlin" -- are expected to appear on that disc.

No word yet as to when the full albums will surface, but new songs "Crimson and Clover," "There Will Never B Another 1 Like Me" and "Here Eye Come" are currently streaming online at LotusFlow3r.com

http://www.dose.ca/music/story.html?id=44da23e5-e54b-4767-a236-f7ecf06184b5

Two new articles on upcoming albums

MTV.CO.UK: Prince Launches Protege

Rolling Stone: This music is nasty, but it’s not dirty

Monday, January 5, 2009

Face Down Under 09'

We're back!

After a little while in the internet wilderness we are back online and ready for Prince 09!

I've personally relocated to Italy (ironic how im running an aussie fansite lol, but somebody's go to do it), and now that im getting my internet sorted out here i'll be able to update regularly.

While the site layout may have changed (blogging), its still the same friendly site you know and love. And if you miss the old site its still here...link to your right!

Dont forget to join our forums and comment on the stories!

Thanks Aussies!

New Site...new song

Another song has surfaced, entitled: "HereEyeCome".

Its streaming right now on LotusFlow3r

Prince opens brand new official website (finally)


Well folks after years in the wilderness our favourite purple man has finally decided to open an official website in preperation for the upcoming new albums.

Dont get your hopes too high though, its mearly an opening teaser page, streaming a few tracks (posted one story under)....

While the teaser is sparse at the moment it promises sevral important features...
  • NEW Music
  • Pre-order concert tickets (!!)
  • Buy/watch videos
Well if those features aren't enough to wet your whistle i dont know what will.

Keep an eye on our site for updates!

New Prince Songs from forthcoming triple album release...

Ok boys and girls, the floodgates are opening for the new Prince album...and here is a special sneek preview...of 5 (yes five) new tracks...will they or wont they all appear on the new albums?

Wall Of Berlin:


Crimson & Clover:


(There'll Never B) Another Like Me


4ever


Colonized Mind

Prince convicted, found guilty of plagiarism!

Making headlines (well in the music press) here in Italy is the sensational news that Prince has been convicted of plagiarisim. His huge hit "The Most Beautiful Girl In The World" from his album, "The Gold Experience" has apparently borrowed heavily from the track "Takin' me to paradise", a recording from 1983 mind you.

A link to the track in question is posted below, and i can tell you it sounds nothing like TMBGITW.

Original article:

Roma, 23 dic. - (Adnkronos) - Prince messo alle corde da due autori italiani. Dopo il caso clamoroso della causa di Al Bano a Michael Jackson, stavolta e' uno dei musicisti piu' apprezzati del mondo a finire nell'occhio del ciclone dei plagi. Il genio di Minneapolis e' stato dichiarato colpevole di plagio ai danni di due autori italiani: a darne notizia in esclusiva e' il numero di "Musica & Dischi", la 'bibbia' della discografia italiana, dove viene riportato il testo della sentenza della Corte d'appello di Roma, in cui il brano "The most beautiful girl in the world", firmato da Prince e pubblicato nel 1993, viene dichiarato plagio del decisamente meno noto "Takin' me to paradise", composto 10 anni prima da due autori italiani, Bruno Bergonzi e Michele Vicino e regolarmente depositato presso la Siae.

Anche le edizioni Chappell sono state riconosciute vincitrici della vertenza. Il brano di Bergonzi e Vicino era stato inciso, senza grande esito commerciale, da Rainard J. Pur non essendo ancora nota l'entita' dei danni che dovranno pagare la star, al secolo Roger Nelson, e gli editori del brano, si tratta comunque di una vittoria su tutta la linea per i due autori italiani: i giudici hanno riconosciuto come fondata la richiesta avanzata di risarcimento, poiche' il pezzo di Prince "affida quasi esclusivamente il proprio dato caratterizzante ad un'unica melodia ripetuta numerose volte", ed il refrain di "Takin'me me to paradise" e' effettivamente identico alla melodia di "The most beautiful girl in the world".

http://www.adnkronos.com/IGN/Spettacolo/?id=3.0.2845048053


here is a link to the track in question:
http://mediaplayer.yahoo.com/contplay/index.php?url=http%3A%2F%2Fprince.org%2Fmsg%2F7%2F292658%3F%26pg%3D3

Prince plans three albums in 2009

Rock star Prince says he wants to release three albums in 2009 - without the help of a record label.

The musician told the LA Times he was in "final negotiations" with a major US retailer to distribute the music, which will also be made available online.

Four guitar-heavy new songs were premiered on Los Angeles radio station Indie 103 shortly before Christmas.

They included a cover of Tommy James and The Shondells' Crimson and Clover and a blues jam called Colonized Mind.

These tracks will form part of an album called Lotus Flower, according to LA Times journalist Ann Powers, who was summoned to Prince's mansion to hear the new material.

"Needless to say, it was an amazing experience," she wrote on the newspaper's website.

Sade influence

Powers said Prince's second album marked a return to the electronic sound of When Doves Cry.

Called MPLSOUND - a reference to the star's hometown of Minneapolis - it includes a duet with A Tribe Called Quest rapper Q-Tip and Prince experimenting with "new ways of recording".

The 50-year-old said his third record of 2009, a seductive collection with vocals by new protege Bria Valente, was recorded because "we got sick of waiting for Sade to make a new album".

However, fans know that Prince's ambitious plans often get discarded or forgotten about as his attention wanders.

The prolific musician's career is littered with unfinished, abandoned and radically altered records - most famously 1987's Black Album, which was withdrawn just weeks before its release.

Sign O' The Times, considered by many to be Prince's career highpoint, was itself a compilation of tracks intended for three separate projects - Dream Factory, Crystal Ball and Camille.

His last album, Planet Earth, was given away free in the UK with The Mail On Sunday newspaper in 2007.

Some of the new recordings have been previewed on a characteristically mysterious website called mplsound.

He told Powers he was pressing ahead without the support of a record label because "the gatekeepers have to change".

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7808098.stm