So, here we are folks. Another #PrinceTwitterThread interlude. We have had wonderful threads about side 1 to 3 of the “Sign O’ The Times” album the past couple of days. Before we continue with side 4 I want to take a side step and talk about the 1987 tour for a while.
Or actually, to properly tell this story we need to go back to 1986 for a while. As during the final Prince and the Revolution tour songs from the “Sign O’ The Times” era started to surface live.
For instance the “Hot Thing” lyrics were already cited in Osaka and Yokohama in 1986, as mentioned by @Neo_Manifesto a few days ago. https://twitter.com/Neo_Manifesto/status/1318614103666102272?s=20
Also some of thee “Sign O’ The Times” lyrics were incorporated into “Pop Life” in Osaka 1986.
And the most famous example of a “Sign O’ The Times” song making in onto a “Parade” era setlist is “It’s Gonna Be A Beautiful Night”. Or actually… we should say that the “Parade” era performance made its way onto the “Sign O’ The Times” album.
There is a lot to say about that performance and the way it eventually became the last time The Revolution got credited on a Prince album. But @polishedsolid will dive into that in her thread in a couple of days and I don’t want to steal her thunder.
I do want to say though that it is in that performance that you can hear that The Revolution as a live band has taken Prince as far as he can go with them. He needs to move on as they are unable to breathe life into the song. And that’s where the 1987 band comes in.
Actually, we have to step back to 1985 for its origins as Levi Seacer Jr. and Sheila E. started jamming with Prince as part of a possible new band (‘The Flesh’). Eric Leeds was part of that as well.
Sheila and Eric (both from the Bay area) had been part of Prince’s entourage for a while at that point, Levi had auditioned as guitarist for The Family, got the job, but eventually got sidetracked for future projects.
When the 1987 band was assembled, he brought Eric Leeds (sax), Atlanta Bliss (trumpet) and Miko Weaver (guitar) from the extended version of The Revolution, as well as dancers Wally Safford and Greg Brooks.
Also new in the band was dancer Cat Glover, who also played an important part in the 1987 visual style. @deejayUMB elaborated on that already. https://twitter.com/deejayumb/status/1313860964836671490?s=20
The only core Revolution member that was transferred to the new band was keyboard and synth wizard Matt ‘Dr.’ Fink. Sheila E. brought in Boni Boyer (keys and vocals).
Sheila herself had just finished her third solo album and she did not want tot tour as a solo artist at the time. Also she had the long wish of touring as a proper drummer for a while. So she was brought in on drums and as a band leader.
Sheila had been rehearsing with the band for some time early 1987, getting them ready before Prince joined them for rehearsals. The transition in bands went so quick that this was absolutely necessary.
Go figure, the new band debuted on March 21, 1987 at First Avenue. This was little over five (5!) months since The Revolution was disbanded. In such a short time that band had to be drilled to be as tight as The Revolution was, learn a gazillion songs and choreography.
That March 21, 1987 gig Prince introduced his band as ‘his new friends’. This new phase in his career actually also marked the last time he would be playing First Avenue for over two decades.
This is a show many fans have known and loved for ages as it has been circulating on audio and video since the late 1980s. What you can hardly see in the video is that the stage set also used the backdrop that is on the “Sign O’ The Times” album cover.
Also, the show signifies a ‘rebirth’. The ornament @deejayUMB already wrote about in a previous #SOTTDELUXE thread is fixed on Sheila’s drum set and the center point of the stage.
In April 1987 the production moved to Europe, where rehearsals began in Birmingham. LeRoy Bennett had designed a stage that resembled the album cover, making that album cover part of a larger cityscape.
The production was moved to Sweden late April 1987, where the tour premiered in Stockholm on May 8, 1987. Part of the band (Levi Seacer, Jr., Dr. Fink and Eric Leeds) also doubled as support act as (along with drummer Dale Alexander) they became the live incarnation of Madhouse.
If you want to know more about that, check this Madhouse roundtable segment of @polishedsolid’s #SOTTSDC event, in which @drfink1980 Dr. Fink reminiscences about those support act shows.
Fans were asked to wear ‘peach and black’ to the concerts. Check out this footage from Rotterdam in 1987. Some are dressed accordingly, some are not.
I especially like this older guy in the same broadcast. The reporter says ‘you are old enough to have seen The Beatles' and the man replies: ‘Exactly and that’s why I’m here. In ten years time I don’t want to say that I did not see Prince as well.’
The main shows opened with Prince emerging from the smoke on stage all alone and bursting into a guitar solo before the “Sign O’ The Times” beat started and he would start playing the song.
It is possible Prince took inspiration from the Talking Heads movie “Stop Making Sense”, in which David Byrne also starts the show all alone backed by a rhythm machine, while eventually the band members appeared on stage.
When the smoke cleared, Matt Fink turned out to be on stage as well, providing the “Sign O’ The Times” rhythm track, while Cat Glover danced in the clouds of smoke. As the opening song progressed the rest of the band entered the stage as a marching band, lead by Sheila.
You probably all know from the SOTT movie how that looks and you might have seen it happen during the MTV Awards 1987 performance. Here is a picture from Utrecht 1987, where you see the band entering the stage during the show performance.
As a kid I was lucky enough to see one of the shows in Utrecht. It later turned out to be the shortest concert in the tour (the weather was abysmal) but I was blown away by it. It changed my world forever.
Following “Sign O’ The Times” the band bursts into “Play In The Sunshine” and what follows is a concert that draws heavily on the “Sign O’ The Times” album, with only a handful of hits and covers thrown in between. A bold artistic statement.
As spectacular as the show was, one thing really stands out in all shows and that is the finale/encore: “It’s Gonna Be A Beautiful Night”.
Where the album version, recorded with the Revolution in 1986, feels stiff and forced, the 1987 band really makes the song pop, with Prince as a musical director using the band as an instrument and often stretching the song way beyond the 10 (sometimes even 15) minute mark.
Although there were some slight variations here and there, the setlist for the shows was pretty fixed. Some would say this tour was more like a stage play than an actual concert. I can see where they are coming from.
“The Ballad Of Dorothy Parker” (paired with Madhouse’s “Four”) or Sheila E’s “Soul Salsa” made rare appearances, but ‘different’ songs in the set were rare. The only time Prince and band would really stretch the musical muscles was during aftershow performances.
Prince had done an occasional aftershow with The Revolution, but it was with this band that the now famous aftershows that defined a large part of his career as a stage performer really took off. No less than seven were played during the 34 date European tour.
Quite often the aftershows were billed as a Madhouse performance, with Prince showing up after the Madhouse set . That must have been especially exhausting for the musicians that also played in Madhouse, as they were basically playing 4 shows in a row on those nights.
The European tour was a big success, Prince was at the peak of his popularity in that part of the world. The outdoor stadium shows were marred by bad weather though and eventually made him decide to cancel all remaining outdoor shows and cut the tour short.
More on that in the thread about the “Sign O’ The Times” movie, that will be posted in four days.
Most people involved say that Prince’s decision to cancel not only the remainder of the European tour but also the US leg of the “Sign O’ The Times” tour may have been the biggest professional mistake in his career. But some things don’t quite add up. Bear with me…
For starters, the American tour was supposed to start in August 1987. But when the European tour got cancelled it was already late June 1987. The final show was on June 29 in Antwerp, Belgium. How come no US dates had been announced (or even rumoured) by then?
I referred to the #SOTTSDC panels earlier in this thread, check out this one about the Utrecht show as well, in which @Princevault editor @jooZt_M states that he has never seen a 1987 US tour itinerary.
Some of the 1987 tour itineraries have surfaced in online auctions and none of them have mentioned a possible US tour. Did Prince ever actually plan to go on tour? Or has that entire tour been an urban myth?
I’m not in the position to say if it was a mistake or not, but we can also approach it in a different way. What if he had toured the US? What impact would that have had on his body of work?
Stuff that might not have been released would be the Kid Creole and the Coconuts single “The Sex Of It” and the second Madhouse album “16”, although you could argue these were recorded in (late) July 1987 and ‘the tour that never happened’ was supposed to start in August.
By the time he was supposed to be on tour, Prince started working on the draft of a new movie: “Graffiti Bridge”. Madonna was supposed to have a role in that (playing a character called Ruthie Washington) and she visited Minneapolis to talk things through.
That version of “Graffiti Bridge” eventually fell through, but one could argue that the movie we eventually got would not exist had Prince toured the US in 1987. Maybe I quite like the alternative timeline where that would have happened…
“Graffiti Bridge” is also mentioned in the song “Eye No” and that was recorded in December 1987, along with many “Lovesexy” songs. I won’t dive into that, but “The Black Album” as it was compiled and subsequently “Lovesexy” would not have existed either in this timeline.
But what keeps bugging is that Prince kept rehearsing for a concert tour, even when the “Sign O’ The Times” movie supposedly had already ‘replaced’ a US tour. Why would he do that?
On September 5th, 1987 Prince played at Rupert’s in Golden Valley (near Minneapolis) and he basically played the standard “Sign O’ The Times” show, with a few extra tracks (for instance “The Sex Of It” and James Brown’s “Mother Popcorn”) thrown in.
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