I first saw Prince live in 1984 during his Purple Rain tour. I was young, and I’m
sure I didn’t appreciate what an incredibly talented musician he was. I just
knew that I loved the album and the movie, and seeing him do all of those songs
live has always ranked right up there as one of the best concerts I have
experienced. Purple Rain is the only
album I’ve bought four times: on vinyl, cassette, CD, and as a digital
download.
1984 -- I'm on the left. My friend, Shelley, is on the right. |
Sunday night, I saw Prince for the third time since 1984 when he
played his third show of the weekend at The Palace in Louisville. When I told
my 23 year old son I was going, he said, “I thought that guy was dead.”
Sigh…. Somewhere along the line, I’ve failed as a parent. I have not, however, failed at choosing my friends. The
proof is in the convoluted way I found myself funking out at The Palace.Merely a week before, my friend, Linda, and I had a conversation about Prince playing in Louisville and expressed our sorrow that the tickets would sell out before we had a chance to get them. Linda’s husband overheard our conversation. He called a friend who also loves Prince and asked if he had a line on tickets. Coincidentally, his friend did. He had, just that very day, gone to have his teeth cleaned, a rescheduled appointment that he had missed a couple of weeks before. Thank god he missed that original appointment. His dental hygienist had, just that very day, talked to a friend with extra tickets.
So to recap: Linda’s husband’s friend’s dental hygienist’s
friend sold us his extra tickets.
31 years later -- still on the left. Linda on the right. |
Linda has made the comment before that being her friend is a
good gig. I can’t argue with her. She still hangs out with me even when I break her wine glass and spill her wine all
over the table and myself before the concert. If you know how seriously Linda takes her wine, this is no small thing.
My pants were black and the wine was white, so I had that
going for me. Not to mention that I was still way ahead of where I was in 1984.
Then, we “pre-gamed” in the dorm after eating dinner in the school cafeteria.
Being a grown-up means you get to drink good wine in a nice restaurant with
cloth napkins. When you spill it, they bring more.
The street outside The Palace was hopping.
The usual ticket scalpers were not as abundant since Prince has adopted the system where you have to present the credit card you purchased the tickets with to physically get them and get in the door. This meant we got to meet the dental hygienist and her friend. Lovely people, both. I see the benefits of this new system, but I saw some things at the entrance that would indicate there are some holes in it as well.
The dental hygienist’s friend did us right. The Palace is an
intimate venue, and there wasn’t a bad seat in the house. Our seats were great.
We were in the third row of the balcony and found ourselves looking almost
directly down on The Purple One himself.The usual ticket scalpers were not as abundant since Prince has adopted the system where you have to present the credit card you purchased the tickets with to physically get them and get in the door. This meant we got to meet the dental hygienist and her friend. Lovely people, both. I see the benefits of this new system, but I saw some things at the entrance that would indicate there are some holes in it as well.
I only took two pics. He made a plea at the
beginning of the show for the audience to be in the moment and not on their
phones, and that is exactly what most of us did. Midway through the show, he
told us to get out our phones. We did for several minutes, and then we were
directed to put them away. Again, most of us followed those directions
willingly. For those who didn’t, security was johnny on the spot and added some
extra encouragement.
I am as addicted to my phone as anyone, but for those two
hours, it was just fine in my back pocket. Prince had it right. Live
music is about being in the moment, and those moments were worth savoring.He did eventually move back around to his familiar work. The slowed down, funked-up version of “Let’s Go Crazy” was gritty and dirty and awesome. He played all the great ones. He would say, “Wait! I’m out of hits!” and then play the opening guitar lick to “Kiss.” With the older songs, he let the crowd carry the lyric, and buddy, we carried it.
He played the crowd like he played his guitar. He would stop, let the energy build and then yell, “I like this one!” and suddenly he’s playing Michael Jackson. I’m telling you right now. Prince covering Michael is something to behold. I might have screamed wildly in Linda’s face, “Oh my god, he’s playing Michael!” and she might have smiled blithely and kept dancing.
This pic came from the dental hygienist's friend. They had better seats. LOL! |
No one can stay mad when 2,600 people are singing “I don’t care where we go. I don’t care what we do. I don’t care pretty baby, just take me with you.”
No comments:
Post a Comment