MTV Sway interview on MTV.com
, 30th April 2004
Interview by Sway Calloway
I've interviewed everyone from 50 Cent to J. Lo, but I've never been as
nervous as I was with Prince. I consider him a true artist. So for me,
the assignment was a rise. Everyone was telling me what a difficult
interview he was going to be. Everyone said he either likes you or he
doesn't. When I finally caught up with him after his New York City
performance last week, I was told that I had 15 minutes to ask just
five previously discussed questions. I figured, "Well, if it stinks,
it'll only be 15 minutes of stink."
Prince greeted me backstage by putting his right hand on my left
shoulder and simply saying, "Hey." Just like that I turned into a
third-grade girl at Sunday school. We talked a minute about his bass
player, Rhonda, who I knew from way back in L.A., and his monitor guy,
Gordon, who could pass as my twin. It was a warm prelude. But once we
started, I met the man people had warned me about.
Prince was cooperative, but the air felt a little thick. I had 12
minutes left and I was running out of questions, so I started asking
things I wasn't supposed to ask. It seemed to catch him a little off
guard, but he paused and took my questions in. He gave it up talking
about the music.
Eight minutes later the interview was over. I thanked Prince, and he
said in that cool, low voice of his, "You're welcome." That's when my
nerves finally settled.
Sway: To see you out onstage with the new project, you don't look like
you've aged one day. You still have the same energy. Is it the funk
that gives you that energy?
Prince: Absolutely. Also, the wonderful people I have working with me.
They keep me energized.
Sway: I wanted to tell you this story first: I was watching the Dave
Chappelle show, and Eddie Murphy's brother Charlie Murphy does this
thing on it called "True Life Hollywood Stories," and he told this
story that he was hanging out with you at your house, and you guys were
listening to music, and then you came up with the idea to all go play
basketball. He said they didn't have any clothes, so you got them
shorts and T-shirts, but he said that your crew showed up to the
basketball court with the same wardrobe [as you wear onstage]. High
heels, suited and booted. Is that true?
Prince: That part's not true. But the whupping's true.
Sway: The whupping's true. So you've got basketball skills?
Prince: A little bit.
Sway: Yeah? What you got? A crossover dribble? Or a jump shot?
Prince: We didn't call it crossover back then.
Sway: What'd you call it?
Prince: Just speed.
Sway: Just speed? So you played when you were younger? And you still
play?
Prince: Sometimes. Not so much anymore.
Sway: OK. A lot of people see your work ethic, as far as the public eye
can see, as always in the studio, always writing and producing songs,
maybe even producing a movie, or on the road, but when you're not
working on a random Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, what is it that you
do to occupy your time?
Prince: One thing: I feel that music is a blessing. I don't feel like
I'm working. So when I'm not "working," I'm thinking about it, so music
takes up a good portion of the time.
Sway: Do you have homies? Do you kick it with friends?
Prince: Well, my musicians are my friends. I have family as well.
Sway: In terms of recreation, y'all go to the movies?
Prince: Yeah, we check out movies. Normal stuff.
Sway: Let's talk about the album, Musicology. All right, that term, I
play dominoes, and when you study dominology, that means you're a
master at dominoes, so Musicology, is that what that means? That you're
a master at music?
Prince: I'd like to believe that. I have it pretty well mastered. I'm
always learning, though. I like to believe that it's infinite, too, so
once one can do whatever it is that one desires with any one particular
art form, then I would suppose they would have mastered it. So in that
case, to answer your question, then yes.
Sway: I know you said don't call it a comeback, you've been here for
years, but I feel like you're coming back - maybe not coming back, but
you're re-entering the game in a storm, like almost as if there's a
void in music. Do you feel like there is a void in music?
Prince: Well, there was a void to me. I wasn't getting very inspired by
too many new things. I dig Outkast and Alicia Keys, folks like that,
but there's not a lot of musicians out there right now, and I grew up
listening to musicians like Return to Forever, James Brown, Earth, Wind
& Fire, and I kind of feel that's missing. So hopefully we can
interject a little noise in that area.
Sway: So musicianship as a whole - because, you know, those people that
you mentioned, Alicia Keys, Andre, they all play instruments. So you
think that's important to bring back into the game?
Prince: Oh, absolutely. Otherwise we'll just be a computer in the
future, all of us.
Sway: One thing I've been interested in when it came to your music was
that you always found a way to touch on political issues, with songs
like "Sign 'O' the Times," "Ronnie, Talk to Russia," even "Pop Life,"
in a sense. Is there that song on this album, on Musicology, with all
the problems we're experiencing in the world today? Will you even go
there?
Prince: Well, what we're trying to do now is put the family first. When
you come to a certain age, you have certain responsibilities that you
have to deal with. When it comes to the video channels and the
programs, the radio stations, the music is geared towards kids, and
it's made by kids. So to really discuss some of these issues, with a
great sense of wisdom, is gonna be a little tricky. I mean, you gotta
live life before you can really talk too much about it. So, you know,
this record, remember, it's made by someone who's been there and back.
So hopefully people feel that and listen to it with that set of ears,
as opposed to looking for what is "a hit." Music is music, ultimately.
If it makes you feel good, cool.
Sway: I know the song "Dear Mr. Man," if I'm not mistaken, you start
off with what's wrong with the world today, how things have got to get
better. What are some of those things that you feel are wrong with the
world today?
Prince: Well, it's obvious that there's an agenda against the
disenfranchised and the uneducated, so ultimately, I think, to counter
that, we're gonna have to talk to one another. One of the ways we used
to do that was through our music, I grew up with the Staple Singers,
Curtis Mayfield, Marvin Gaye's "What's Going On," stuff like that and
that particular sound, you know. That sound of the people to voice our
concerns in those types of areas is gone now. Hopefully they'll allow
this voice to be heard a little more. We'll see.
Sway: You also touch on issues - like the post-September 11 era, the
war in Iraq - that are still important to you as an artist.
Prince: Well we've been at war since about 1914. The world's just been
chaotic. It's caused injury to man for a long time now. The only thing
that's gonna get us out of this mess is coming back to God. I like to
try to keep the focus there. Man hasn't really done too well, getting
us out of this predicament, so I think sooner or later we're gonna all
have to turn back to God.
Sway: OK, one thing I've always been fascinated with: In your early
music it was always self-contained - you played instruments, every
piece, every vocal, every background, wrote every lyric, and I always
wondered how that process is done. When you're recording a song, do you
come up with a melody first or record the drum track or write the
lyrics? I mean, how were you able to do that? How does it work?
Prince: One of the things that I think is important is that one learns
how to listen. So I never stop being a fan. Even if the music was
coming through me, I was still listening to it as an admirer of the
sound, so whatever I heard, be it a lyric or a melody line or a beat or
whatever, sometimes just the bass line, I paid attention to it, and I
would let that start the song first. Once you get that main thing down,
then that's the leader and that's gonna tell you what the next
instrument is supposed to be.
Sway: So you can go into a session and not even have the full picture
in mind, lay down the bass line, and then build around that?
Prince: I could. I've done it before, yes.
Sway: That's incredible. Has anything about you, as an artist, changed
that we'll discover in Musicology?
Prince: Yeah, I think that I'm constantly changing. One thing I notice
is that some people want me to play like I used to play, and what they
forget sometimes is that I was there, I did it, so for me to do it
again is not gonna be so exciting. If I'm going to play "Let's Go
Crazy," then I don't want another song that sounds like that, because
I've got that slot filled. I'm always trying to look for something new.
Sway: Is that one of the reasons you're choosing not to play some of
the classics on this tour?
Prince: That's one reason. And there's so much new stuff coming that we
gotta make some room, 'cause you know, most artists, they're not in the
game this long, and we don't have any plans to stop, so we gotta make
room for the new kids.
Sway: You've come a long way and you've accomplished a lot since you
came to New York and got your first record deal. Are you satisfied with
all your accomplishments up to this point?
Prince: Every day I'm satisfied. Every day I feel is a blessing from
God. And I consider it a new beginning. Yeah, everything is beautiful.