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The Rise of Prince: 1958-1988
- Narrated by: Rob Saladino
- Length: 10 hrs and 24 mins
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Summary
The Rise of Prince: 1958-1988 is the definitive account of the formative years of this iconic artist. More so than any previous book, this volume provides a dramatic, compelling narrative of Prince's rise to fame. The prologue provides a gripping, day-to-day account of the events that unfolded between November 2015 and April 21, 2016, when Prince tragically died at Paisley Park. The great distance traveled by Prince during his final months of tours of Australia and New Zealand, a funeral in the Bay Area for former muse and lover Denise Matthews, a tour of Canada, and a final return home mirrored Prince's nomadic childhood, to which the book returns after detailing the events of 2016.
Hahn, writing in collaboration with veteran author Tiebert, brings his extraordinary experience to this book, which includes fully updated and expanded elements of his controversial 2003 biography Possessed, a sought-after collector's item that remains a classic of Prince literature. The Rise of Prince provides a complete reordering of what is known about Prince's formative years based on previously unavailable documents and persons never before interviewed. It provides newly unearthed information about early relationships and collaborations; a detailed account of the no-holds-barred competition with Rick James on the 1981 tour that set the course for Prince's meteoric rise; a vivid depiction of the recording of Prince's album at Sunset Sound, including a little-known encounter with Sly Stone; and much more.
Ultimately, The Rise of Prince tells the very human story of how Prince overcame adversity to achieve one of the greatest runs of creativity in pop history, creating an unparalleled universe of side projects, alter-egos and lovers along the way.
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- K H Pang
- 11-09-21
Best Prince Biography
This is terrific - unfortunately it only details his first decade's worth of albums (even with a painfully sad account of his last days).
They must work on a full expanded edition, or a multi-volume series much like Simon Callow's masterful Orson Welles biographies.
Yes, Prince is THAT worthy an artist.
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- Andy
- 12-04-18
Detailed insight into prince’s work and band
Very detailed. Many times during this book you’ll initially be shocked at his awkwardness, arrogance and power freakery. The fact is, he only had a band because he couldn’t play all the instruments himself in a live show. To me this book shows the wacko side of Prince, but show me a genius that wasn’t a little bit nuts. In contrast to any thoughts the reader may have of Prince being an arrogant control freak, I think the band members lost sight of what they New from the start. Like a conductor in an orchestra, they all had a part to play when he needed them. From the start, he set out to be the star. They knew this, they were just tools to aid the craftsman in the creation of his work. He never changed in this respect. It was ALL about the music and perfection. Everything else in his life cane second.
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- Paul Kimberley
- 28-02-18
Great insight to an incredible talent.
Brilliant story of a very prolific artists who had so much self belief, but so much self doubt. Tortured soul is an overused term, but it does seem like Prince was constantly trying to be the best at all cost, then having moments of solace.
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