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In the fall of 1984 there was nowhere you could go in the United States without hearing something off of Purple Rain, the album and the motion picture from Prince and The Revolution. This album was the sixth studio album by Prince, and the first to also bill the band, The Revolution (although the band was hinted at on the album 1999, being written backwards on the album cover). Prince would become a superstar with this album and film.
Prince (aka Prince Rogers Nelson) was born into a musical family. His mother was a jazz singer and his father was a pianist in a jazz group called the Prince Rogers trio. His father, John Lewis Nelson, went by the stage name Prince Rogers, from which Prince got his name. Prince was a multi-instrumentalist, prolific singer-songwriter, producer, actor, and director. He signed his first music contract with Warner Brothers Records at the age of 19, and had achieved considerable success with his albums “Dirty Mind,” “Controversy,” and "1999,” the last of which was a commercial success with “Little Red Corvette” receiving considerable airplay on MTV.
Purple Rain would spend 24 consecutive weeks atop the Billboard 200 chart. Prince required his management to obtain a deal for him to star in a major motion picture in the early 1980's, at a time when he was relatively unknown outside of a few pop and R&B hits. The film is loosely autobiographical, and follows Prince's character, the kid, as his relationships, family, and band fall apart. Things turn around when the kid opens up to others and his career is resurrected by a song with lyrics from his father and music from his band members. Hit songs would include “When Doves Cry” and “Let's go Crazy,” both topping the charts, and “Purple Rain,” which would hit number 2 on the charts.
Prince would go on to be a music icon, and estimates of the number of complete songs written during his lifetime range between 500 and 1000. Prince tragically died of a fentanyl overdose in 2016 at the age of 57.
This is an historic album and a torchbearer of a R&B/rock fusion genre that was literally everywhere in the fall of 1984. We hope you will listen to this album in its entirety.
Let's Go Crazy
Take Me With U
I Would Die 4U
Purple Rain
ENTERTAINMENT TRACK:
Theme from the television series “Miami Vice” - Jan Hammer
STAFF PICKS:
The Bird by Morris Day and the Time
If This Is It by Huey Lewis and the News
New Girl Now by Honeymoon Suite
A Girl In Trouble (Is a Temporary Thing) by Romeo Void
INSTRUMENTAL TRACK:
Shortberry Strawcake by Sheila E.
Thanks for listening to “What the Riff?!?”
NOTE: To adjust the loudness of the music or voices, you may adjust the balance on your device. VOICES are stronger in the LEFT channel, and MUSIC is stronger on the RIGHT channel.
Please follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/whattheriffpodcast/, and message or email us with what you'd like to hear, what you think of the show, and any rock-worthy memes we can share.
Of course we'd love for you to rate the show in your podcast platform!
**NOTE: What the Riff?!? does not own the rights to any of these songs and we neither sell, nor profit from them. We share them so you can learn about them and purchase them for your own collections.
By Rob Marbury, Wayne Rowan, Bruce Fricks, John Lynch4.9
4747 ratings
In the fall of 1984 there was nowhere you could go in the United States without hearing something off of Purple Rain, the album and the motion picture from Prince and The Revolution. This album was the sixth studio album by Prince, and the first to also bill the band, The Revolution (although the band was hinted at on the album 1999, being written backwards on the album cover). Prince would become a superstar with this album and film.
Prince (aka Prince Rogers Nelson) was born into a musical family. His mother was a jazz singer and his father was a pianist in a jazz group called the Prince Rogers trio. His father, John Lewis Nelson, went by the stage name Prince Rogers, from which Prince got his name. Prince was a multi-instrumentalist, prolific singer-songwriter, producer, actor, and director. He signed his first music contract with Warner Brothers Records at the age of 19, and had achieved considerable success with his albums “Dirty Mind,” “Controversy,” and "1999,” the last of which was a commercial success with “Little Red Corvette” receiving considerable airplay on MTV.
Purple Rain would spend 24 consecutive weeks atop the Billboard 200 chart. Prince required his management to obtain a deal for him to star in a major motion picture in the early 1980's, at a time when he was relatively unknown outside of a few pop and R&B hits. The film is loosely autobiographical, and follows Prince's character, the kid, as his relationships, family, and band fall apart. Things turn around when the kid opens up to others and his career is resurrected by a song with lyrics from his father and music from his band members. Hit songs would include “When Doves Cry” and “Let's go Crazy,” both topping the charts, and “Purple Rain,” which would hit number 2 on the charts.
Prince would go on to be a music icon, and estimates of the number of complete songs written during his lifetime range between 500 and 1000. Prince tragically died of a fentanyl overdose in 2016 at the age of 57.
This is an historic album and a torchbearer of a R&B/rock fusion genre that was literally everywhere in the fall of 1984. We hope you will listen to this album in its entirety.
Let's Go Crazy
Take Me With U
I Would Die 4U
Purple Rain
ENTERTAINMENT TRACK:
Theme from the television series “Miami Vice” - Jan Hammer
STAFF PICKS:
The Bird by Morris Day and the Time
If This Is It by Huey Lewis and the News
New Girl Now by Honeymoon Suite
A Girl In Trouble (Is a Temporary Thing) by Romeo Void
INSTRUMENTAL TRACK:
Shortberry Strawcake by Sheila E.
Thanks for listening to “What the Riff?!?”
NOTE: To adjust the loudness of the music or voices, you may adjust the balance on your device. VOICES are stronger in the LEFT channel, and MUSIC is stronger on the RIGHT channel.
Please follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/whattheriffpodcast/, and message or email us with what you'd like to hear, what you think of the show, and any rock-worthy memes we can share.
Of course we'd love for you to rate the show in your podcast platform!
**NOTE: What the Riff?!? does not own the rights to any of these songs and we neither sell, nor profit from them. We share them so you can learn about them and purchase them for your own collections.

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