Top 10 Prince Songs of All Time
If you happen to stop into a Target this weekend and see a preponderance of people clad in purple, don't be alarmed -- they're just Prince fans.
On Sunday, three albums from rock's reigning funk genius will go on sale exclusively at the retailer (though you can also get them by buying a membership to the artist's Lotusflow3r.com website).
As a Prince fan, I'm keen to hear the eccentrically titled albums (the guitar-heavy LOtusFLOW3R, electronic-oriented MPLSoUND, and pop-centric Elixer -- featuring Bria Valente on vocals), but I'm keeping my expectations low. Historically, the Minneapolis funkateer's best work doesn't come in big packages. I've listened to all of 1998's four-disc Crystal Ball. It's highly unlikely I'll do it again. 1996's triple-disc Emancipation is better, but you've got to a wade through a lot of unmemorable soul and pop before you get to a gem like "the Holy River."
So while we're hoping for three great new albums, I celebrate his Purple Majesty's return with his Top 10 Tunes of All Time.
10. "She's Always in My Hair"
A psychedelic rocker with a terse guitar riff and staccato keyboard
part, this 1985 song shows how Prince set the template for the kind of
rhythm heavy, futuristic rock that similarly forward-thinking artists
like Andre 3000, Janelle Monae, and MGMT would later follow.
9. "Controversy"
An epic disco hook, in-the-pocket chicken-scratch guitar, and a young
Prince asking the questions that he'd spend years struggling gloriously
to answer: "Do I believe in god? / Do I believe in me?"
8. "When Doves Cry"
From disparate parts -- Oedipal lyrics, a simple drum machine riff, a mechanical vocal performance -- Prince crafts something mysterious
and moving. Try to find the full-length album version, which features
a nicely haughty neo-classical keyboard interlude.
7. "Raspberry Beret"
Utterly charming Beatlesesque acoustic pop. "Sweet" is not a word
normally associated with Prince, but "Raspberry Beret" spends 3:31
reveling in the first blush of love.
6. "Sometimes it Snows in April"
Even though it spawned both "Kiss" and this ethereal ballad, 1986's
Parade is an often-overlooked jewel in Prince's crown. Seek it out for
"April" alone -- a heartbreaking goodbye to a recently departed friend
that sounds as if it was recorded in a heavenly cloud.
5. "Kiss"
A skittery rhythm guitar part + a hiccupping falsetto vocal + not much else = a No. 1 hit. It's hard to sound this simply awesome.
4. "Erotic City"
A b-side from the Purple Rain days, "Erotic City" is a prime example of
Prince's ability to blend danceable music with almost avant-garde
production techniques. Check out the way the song's fat backbeat is
surrounded by strange, high-pitched vocals and overdriven electric
guitar.
3. "I Could Never Take the Place of Your Man"
The sheer musical talent necessary to play a song that moves from folk
rock into a psychedelic Latin jam and then climaxes in a shredding
guitar solo is one thing. But Prince also had the creative imagination
to think to do it.
2. "When You Were Mine"
Built on a simple beat, dry rhythm guitar, and squiggly keyboard, this
minimal new wave rocker is as catchy as anything heralded bands
like the Cars or the Bangles ever put out -- and those groups never put
their go-go melodies to lyrics that allude to a three-way.
1. "Purple Rain"
This gorgeous gospel ballad is Prince's "Hey Jude," his "Stairway to
Heaven," his undeniable stadium-rousing anthem. It's also a rare
instance of an epic-length song where the come-down is just as
memorable as the build-up.
Listen to all 10 songs here! >>








