Sunday, September 5, 2021

35. Purple Rain by Prince and The Revolution

 35. Purple Rain by Prince and The Revolution

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aXJhDltzYVQ&list=OLAK5uy_nZh8Bqp7b-jedaxIGOtSoNPwk_FnqtaCk

The summer between high school graduation and college was three glorious months of lifeguarding at Lava Hot Springs and driving tractor out in the fields. I didn't get to hang out with my friends as much as I wanted, but that's because we were all working on farms and making money for whatever was to come next in life. 

I remember that a lot of good music came out during that summer, but there was one album that I really found that I couldn't stand--Purple Rain. My friends and I had made fun of the Purple Pervert on his previous albums, so I was predisposed to dislike Purple Rain from the moment I first heard it. But it was impossible to go through that summer without hearing "When Doves Cry" and "Let's Go Crazy." And the album had hit its full stride by the beginning of my freshman year of college with "Purple Rain," "I Would Die 4 U," and "Take Me With You" dominating the airwaves. I remember that some of the girls I met at college REALLY liked Prince, and I just didn't get why. I mean, just look at the cover of the album! This doesn't look like any of the rock and roll singers that the girls in high school liked. 


I had not seen the movie, but I heard it was pretty bad, and I kind of figured that the rest of the album besides the hit songs played on the radio must really suck, so I never listened to it all the way through. And of all the videos I saw on MTV from the movie, the one song that I liked the most was actually by Morris Day and The Time's "Jungle Love"--oh-ee-oh-eee-oh!

https://youtu.be/N2FPQvwhSDY

Purple Rain also wasn't one of the albums that I got into after my mission, even though Prince had become a much bigger deal by then with lots of other hits. And I'm not sure why, but the producers of "Batman" decided that Prince would make the ideal artist to do the soundtrack. So we all had to endure hearing "Batdance" on the radio in the summer of '89, which turned me off to Prince even more. 

But about eight years later, I went to graduate school at Utah State, and I ended up buying Purple Rain because Julie said that she liked the album, and I was trying really hard to please her during that time, so I put aside my dislike of the Purple Pervert and gave the entire Purple Rain album a listen. And I was pleasantly surprised by how good all of the other songs on the album were, with the exception of Darling Nikki, which I still hate. But the rest of the songs grew on me so much that I got to the point that I even put "Computer Blue" on my Top 200 songs list. I also like "Baby I'm a Star" very much. Because I enjoyed Purple Rain so much, I ended up getting a Prince greatest his album, and I found that I liked even more of his music. Moreover, I found that I liked the music from his Purple Pervert days much more than the tamer music he put out once he got religion and joined the Jehovah's Witnesses in 2001. 

So this is one of those rare '80s albums that I hated in high school and college but eventually grew to appreciate much later on in life. Of course, I also rented "Purple Rain" the movie, and I discovered that my instinct that it would be a truly crappy movie was...absolutely dead on. It was about as bad as a movie can get--except for the music, which was very purple and very rainish. So it just goes to show that the old saying is true--you can't judge all perverts by their color.

Daren

1 comment:

  1. #35: Prince-Purple Rain. Yes, I too hated the Purple Pervert back in the high school days. I never understood what the girls saw in him—he was very physically unimpressive. (But, he obviously had something going for him, or at least Vanity, Appolonia, and Sheena Easton thought so.) I’m not sure why I disliked him so much, but looking back I’m sure there was some homophobia, racism, and just general mistrust of someone so unlike myself involved.

    But, over the years I’ve matured a bit from how I was as a sheltered Idaho teenager, and I hope I’ve dislodged most of those things out of who I am as a person. It didn’t hurt that Prince made some music that was just too darn difficult to dislike. “Let’s Go Crazy,” and “Delirious” were just too fun to hate. And by the time “Batdance” rolled around, I was intrigued enough that I actually bought the cassette single. (Yes, the cassette single.)

    I think that’s the only time I ever actually purchased any of Prince’s music, but I can certainly appreciate it a lot more than I did back in high school. In fact, when Prince performed at the halftime show at the Super Bowl in February of 2007, I thought it was one of the best halftime shows I’d seen. (I even liked it when he launched ”into a crunchy, soaring guitar solo, as a giant beige sheet blossomed in front of him, leaving just Prince’s shadow to look like it was manipulating a giant penis.” It’s something I would have found disgusting back in the day, but hilarious at the time.) (A photo, and the article that features the quote I just used can be found here: https://www.macleans.ca/culture/arts/why-the-2007-super-bowl-was-an-act-of-peak-prince/.)

    Also, I’ve come to realized that, damn, that dude could play the guitar! So, while “Purple Rain” doesn’t come anywhere near my Top 60 Album list, my attitude about Prince has certainly changed from revulsion to appreciation.

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