Written by Jason Hillenburg, posted by blog admin
The first of two albums preceding his 2016 death, Prince’s two volume HITnRUN Phase One release more than qualifies as a major final statement from, inarguably, one of the most important recording artists and songwriters active during the second half of the 20th century. The two albums are brimming with wild and free-ranging musical events; if Prince felt constraints of any sort in his everyday life, his music remained as iconoclastic as ever while still mining and refurbishing long standing traditions.
The first of two albums preceding his 2016 death, Prince’s two volume HITnRUN Phase One release more than qualifies as a major final statement from, inarguably, one of the most important recording artists and songwriters active during the second half of the 20th century. The two albums are brimming with wild and free-ranging musical events; if Prince felt constraints of any sort in his everyday life, his music remained as iconoclastic as ever while still mining and refurbishing long standing traditions.
“Million
$ Show” features the guest vocals of Judith Hill and reflects increasing self-referential
inclinations in Prince’s songwriting. Sampling “Purple Rain” and “When Doves
Cry”, however, isn’t enough to redeem a track essentially intended as a
showcase for vocal pyrotechnics and a little too frantic to capitalize on its
clear promise. The second track “Shut This Down” is akin to a clinched fist and
the hard electro-funk highlights impressive bass playing, an overall keystone
for both albums. Prince unleashes his best hard rock voice here, a visceral
yowl quite appropriate for the song. “Ain’t About 2 Stop” has a dense musical
attack in keeping with other efforts on Hit
‘n’ Run Phase One, but there’s an undeniably dark undercurrent fueling both
the song and performance – the song’s confident surface ultimately sounds
desperate instead of boisterous.
Prince’s
guitar playing provides an incandescent glow for “This Could B Us”. The track
mixes a traditional soul template with Prince’s restless creativity and the
blend produces a signature variation on those respective formulas. It’s odd,
but gloriously so. We’ve heard this sort of re-invention from Prince before,
but he makes it sound fresh each time. “Fallinlove2nite” is a hit that never
was, a sure smash if released during Prince’s late eighties/early nineties commercial
peak, and reaffirms traditional and abiding strengths. “It’s Face” has an
autobiographical suggestiveness that may prove interesting to some, but the
immediacy of his vocal coupled with its range, the hard electronic funk driving
it forward, and visceral lyrical content make this one of the more gripping
moments on either release.
No comments:
Post a Comment