Eric Leeds 🎷
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Eric Leeds 🎷
The 90's of some veteran musicians did not follow a set of rules they have actually established with their own work from that period, so what went wrong? I mean, Prince had the right path, but he didn't follow that through completely. Still, Diamonds And Pearls can be seen as him understanding the 90's more than some of his peers. I mean, sure, the disc is way overproduced – this is not a record, this is a military plan –, yet you notice he observed the scene at the time. Still, Prince makes the sounds of the era his own. The tune on the link, for instance? I understand why the song climbed the charts, this is a certified dancefloor piece. However, Prince couldn't hold still, which sadly meant this was one of his last hurrahs.
Prince And The Revolution
When Prince put together his backing band in Minneapolis, Minnesota after the release of his first album “For You”, he brought about a multi-racial, multi-gendered band which consisted of André Cymone on bass guitar and vocals, Dez Dickerson on guitar and vocals, Bobby Z. on drums, Gayle Chapman on keyboards and vocals, and Matt Fink on keyboards. In 1979, material was recorded with the band, acting as a side project known as The Rebels. The recordings were a group effort with lead vocals by Cymone, Dickerson or Chapman. The project was shelved for unknown reasons. The band underwent two line-up changes. Gayle Chapman quit the band in 1980 and was replaced by Lisa Coleman. André Cymone would leave the band in 1981 and was replaced by Mark Brown, renamed BrownMark by Prince. The words "and the Revolution" can be seen printed backwards on the cover of Prince’s fifth album 1999. The Revolution served as his live and studio band after making its studio album debut on 1999 (1982). The Revolution rose to international fame with the movie Purple Rain (1984) and the soundtrack which reached number one on the Billboard 200 and became certified 13× Platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America. The Revolution consisted of various band member line-ups from 1982 - 1986 consisting of: Dez Dickerson on guitar and vocals, BrownMark on bass, Bobby Z. on drums and percussion, Lisa Coleman on keyboards, piano, and vocals, Dr. Fink on keyboards, Jill Jones on vocals, Wendy Melvoin on guitar and vocals, Miko Weaver on guitar, Susannah Melvoin on backing vocals, Eric Leeds on saxophone, Matt "Atlanta Bliss" Blistan on trumpet and (known as The Bodyguards) Jerome Benton, Wally Safford and Greg Brooks as dancers, vocalists and comic foils. The group disbanded after the Parade Tour in 1986.
Rest In Peace Wally Safford.
Gangster Glam (1991)
Prince and the SOTT band, 1987. ✨
Photo by Jeff Katz. ♡
Musical Birthday Notes - January 19th
Musical Birthday Notes – January 19th
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Prince - The Cross