Im going to take a wild guess here:
The album is all the unreleased tracks from the aborted LoveSymbol SDE.
Then we’ll get a reissue of the LoveSymbol album in early Autumn.
Finally for RSD we’ll have the Act 2 Show from Sheffield 1993
FUNKY is my absolute favorite Prince and Miles collaboration
they were not in the studio 2gether it was more proof of CONcept
interesting 2 note Prince used that Chambers Brothers sample b4 ATCQ EL SEGUNDO was officially released
https://t.co/Gfl8KuHnng
#PRINCE#PRINCE4EVER
1/2
Lovesexy is a dichotomy, it should have been a double album with shelved The Black Album on one side and Lovesexy on the other. The duality of the tour should have manifested on the album as "BlackSexy" which Prince had built his entire career upon up until that point.
May 7, 1994
O{+>
was honored with the Living Legend Award at the 4th Annual Celebrate The Soul Of American Music Awards in Los Angeles
addressing Warner Brothers directly and HIS desire 2 release more music making mention of TMBGITW release
#NPG#PRINCE#PRINCE4EVER
Prince was thirteen years old when his father put him out of the house.
He spent weeks moving between relatives, couches, and corners of Minneapolis that offered no permanent place for him. Then his best friend Andre brought him home to a brick house at 1244 Russell Avenue North on the north side of the city.
The house was already crowded. Bernadette Anderson was raising six children alone, working long hours at the YWCA while trying to earn a degree she barely had time to study for.
She let him stay anyway.
She understood what it meant to have nowhere to go. Bernadette had been a foster child herself, separated from her sisters after her parents became ill with tuberculosis, moving between homes as a child. She had married at fourteen and had her first child at the same age. By the early 1970s she was a single mother of six, working constantly, building a life through determination and very little help.
She called his mother, talked it through, and made space.
He shared Andre’s bedroom for a few months. Then they cleared the basement, and it became his.
That basement had concrete walls, low ceilings, and little light. It had a stereo, a piano, and whatever instruments they could find. Two radio stations did most of the teaching. KQRS-FM played Joni Mitchell and Carlos Santana late at night, and KUXL-AM carried the funk and soul records that would shape his sound.
Bernadette had one rule. The same one she gave her own children. He had to finish school.
Beyond that, she let him be himself.
He was small, barely five foot two, with large eyes and a quiet presence that only changed when he picked up an instrument. In that basement, with Andre on bass, Linda on keyboards, and Morris Day on drums, the band that would become Grand Central practiced nearly every night. Bernadette would come home from work, hear the noise through the floor, shake her head, and start cooking.
"It sounded like a lot of noise," she later said. "But after a few years, I understood how serious it was."
Jimmy Jam came through that basement. So did Terry Lewis, Alexander O'Neal, and Morris Day, who would later lead The Time. That basement in North Minneapolis became the birthplace of what would be called the Minneapolis Sound, one of the most distinctive styles in American music.
In 1977, he left 1244 Russell Avenue with a Warner Bros. contract that gave him creative control over his first three albums and ownership of his publishing rights. He was eighteen years old. The deal was unheard of.
His debut album For You was released on April 7, 1978. He played all twenty-seven instruments himself.
Six years later, in the summer of 1984, Prince became the first artist in American history to hold the number one film, the number one album, and the number one single at the same time. All three were Purple Rain.
He was twenty-six.
By 1995, he was famous enough to challenge Warner Bros. publicly. He wrote the word SLAVE on his face and changed his name to a symbol, because the company still owned the master recordings of music that had begun on Bernadette’s basement floor. He spent two decades fighting for those rights. He won.
What the public did not fully see while he was alive was that the boy who had once been taken in spent his life quietly taking others in.
After Trayvon Martin was killed in 2012, Prince invited Van Jones to Paisley Park. From that came Yes We Code, a program to prepare low-income young people of color for careers in technology. Prince funded it quietly, asking that his name stay out of the spotlight.
After Freddie Gray died in Baltimore in 2015, Prince flew in and performed a Rally 4 Peace concert. He debuted a new song, "Baltimore," and used the proceeds to fund jobs for local youth.
He sent money to families in need. He supported organizations bringing solar energy to underserved communities. He helped musicians who had fallen on hard times. He made calls to people in trouble and never spoke about it publicly.
Nueve años en el gimnasio me enseñaron una cosa: la salud intestinal lo cambia todo.
Si quieres mejorar tu salud intestinal, aquí tienes mis mejores consejos:
1. Deja de beber agua del grifo.
Xabi llegó con 3 códigos de disciplina: Que llegasen puntuales por la mañana a los entrenamientos, que no saliesen la noche anterior a los partidos y que por favor prestasen atención solo 30 minutos a los vídeos tácticos de preparación al rival.
Los pesos pesados vieron esto como “demasiado exigente” y subieron a la oficina de Florentino a quejarse. Florentino habló con Xabi para que bajase la mano dura un poco y la respuesta de Xabi:
“Lo siento, no sabía que había venido a educar a una guardería de niños”
Remembering the Rock Star, Funk Lord, Provocateur and Genius
How Prince created a world – but, in the end, could only go it alone.
https://t.co/12ACIDaaPT
Un impresionante vídeo grabado en el Aeropuerto de Birmingham muestra al Airbus A380-800 de Emirates, el avión de pasajeros más grande del mundo, posicionándose detrás de un Airbus A320-200 de Aer Lingus.
📌 Café Central
Arrolladora (y emocionante) respuesta de l@s vecin@s de Madrid ante la desaparición de uno de los iconos de la ciudad y templo de la música jazz en el lugar que lo vio nacer
have U ever been 2 a Prince aftershow?
there is no other experience like it in the world
this night at THIS aftershow in NY even Prince knew HE was on fire
Scottie’s board mix went straight 2 release
moments like this don’t exist anymore
#NPG#NPGMC#PRINCE#PRINCE4EVER
2 mil millones de personas usan Google Maps.
Pero la mayoría aún no conoce todo su potencial.
Aquí tienes 12 cosas increíbles que puedes hacer con Google Maps: (🔖 Guarda para después)