Prince Dead at 57

Well, I'm going to reserve my "judgments" until I hear the official autopsy results. He really didn't seem to be the kind of person who would "share" his private medical problems with the world. We really don't know anything except rumors right now.
 
Never heard of him...

me either, i was listening to a local talk radio couple discussing him and one of them made the remark that most of his "music/songs" were unfit for radio play.., due to his filthy language, typical of a mexicanigger.

besides.., many of us have this to say....:gives:
 
Not so sure it was from any 'bad' lifestyle, but we'll see when the reports come in....

Close followers of Prince find it hard to believe that anything sinister could have played into his death. He was a Jehovah’s Witness and obsessively healthy eater. You couldn’t drink, smoke or even curse at his Paisley parties.



Clues to the Mystery of Prince’s Final Days

Clues to the Mystery of Prince’s Final Days 1 / 27

The New York Times

By JOHN ELIGON and SERGE F. KOVALESKI3 hrs ago


BB7Upr2.img
© Alex Brandon/AP Photo MINNEAPOLIS — The 1988 Dassault Falcon 900 was about an hour into its flight from Atlanta in the wee hours of Friday, April 15, when the pilot made a distress call to air traffic controllers in Chicago.

There was a medical emergency on board. A male passenger was unresponsive.

And so the Chicago airport officials diverted the flight for an emergency landing in Moline, Ill., just 48 minutes from its intended destination of Minneapolis.

As it turned out, the flight was carrying the musical genius Prince, who, a week later, would be found dead, collapsed in an elevator on the first floor of his suburban Minneapolis compound.

“We had an emergency unscheduled landing at 1:35 a.m. on April 15 for a medical emergency for an unresponsive person,” said Jo Johnson, the human resource manager for Quad Cities International Airport in Moline.

It remains unclear what caused Prince, 57, to become unresponsive on the flight last week. His publicist has attributed the crisis to the fact that the entertainer was “fighting the flu.”

But officials investigating Prince’s sudden death said Friday that the plane’s emergency landing, and what caused it, would be part of their sweeping inquiry.

Prince spent only a few hours at a Moline hospital before his private jet flew home here, and the entertainer resumed life at his compound in nearby Carver County. Just days before his death, he attended a show at a local jazz club, and playfully showed off his new piano and guitar at a party at his studio.

As law enforcement officials await the complete results of an autopsy performed Friday, they said they would be reviewing local pharmaceutical records as part of a broad effort to understand Prince’s full medical history. They declined to comment on reports that Prince had been taking pain medication, saying the investigation was continuing.

“This is a tragedy for all of us,” said Jim Olson, the sheriff of Carver County, where Prince’s estate, Paisley Park, was located in the town of Chanhassen. “To you, Prince Rogers Nelson was a celebrity. To us, he was a community member and a good neighbor.”

Prince was last seen alive at about 8 p.m. on Wednesday evening when someone dropped him off at his estate, where he lived alone, Sheriff Olson said during the afternoon news conference.

Unable to make contact with Prince on Thursday morning, Paisley Park staff members went looking for him in the sprawling compound. They found him unresponsive in an elevator and called 911 at 9:43 a.m., Sheriff Olson said.

“The person is dead here,” a male caller told the dispatcher, according to a transcript of the 911 call. Later, the caller added, “And the people are just distraught.”

Medics responding to the home could not resuscitate Prince, who was pronounced dead at 10:07 a.m. Thursday, Sheriff Olson said. He was not sure, he said, how long Prince, dressed in a shirt and pants, had been collapsed in the elevator.

There were no obvious signs of injuries, and Sheriff Olson said the death was not believed to be a murder or a suicide. Officials said the body had been released to Prince’s family but that it may be weeks before any details from the autopsy are released. Before that, further tests need to be completed and the medical history must be compiled.

There remain many questions around Prince’s health. Sheila E, a friend who collaborated with Prince, said during an interview with ABC’s “Good Morning America” that the star did have hip problems from his performances onstage. He has said in interviews that he struggled with epilepsy as a child.

The mystery of the end of Prince’s life has left is vast legion of supporters measuring their shock.

As they wait for answers, fans around the world grieved and celebrated his life with the frenetic energy with which Prince lived it — with dance parties and widespread tributes, from social media posts to impromptu Broadway performances.

Here in his hometown, the famed First Avenue dance club held a free overnight dance party from Thursday into Friday, with more scheduled through the weekend. Makeshift memorials popped up outside of the club and in front of Paisley Park.

BBs8sZr.img
© Renee Jones Schneider/Star Tribune, via Associated Press A fence outside Prince’s home in a Minneapolis suburb has become the canvas for a purple-tinged memorial.
Billboards encouraged residents to wear purple, a major bridge was lit in the color and a purple orchid with a note that read “Rest In Peace Prince” lay on the four-seat table of the intimate Dakota Jazz Club where Prince sat when he attended a show there on Tuesday.

“It’s a very somber moment here, but his legacy will live on,” Kinneva Brown said as she visited Paisley Park on Friday.

Those who knew him and saw him in his final days said the master showman betrayed no sign that he was near death.

With his Afro picked out, Prince hopped on stage before about 300 revelers last Saturday — the night after his emergency landing in Moline — at one of the pop-up parties he was famous for throwing at Paisley Park. He banged out a quick performance of “Chopsticks” on his new purple piano, Scott Lawrence, who was in attendance with his son, said.

He then broke out a new purple-and-gold Gus Guitar, placing it on the piano and then moving away.

“It’s too cool to open up,” Prince joked, according to Mr. Lawrence.

But the cross-genre star also offered a few accidentally prescient words, Mr. Lawrence recalled.

“Wait a few days before you waste your prayers,” he told the crowd, referring to reports of his medical emergency from the previous day.

Close followers of Prince find it hard to believe that anything sinister could have played into his death. He was a Jehovah’s Witness and obsessively healthy eater. You couldn’t drink, smoke or even curse at his Paisley parties.

“Better eat your cheeseburger before you get to Paisley,” Van Jones, a political commentator and activist who was a friend of Prince’s, said he used to think before visiting Prince.

Last Saturday, Prince stopped by Electric Fetus, a Minneapolis record store, and bought about half a dozen CDs, said Bob Fuchs, the retail manager. Prince had been coming to the store for 30 years, Mr. Fuchs said, and nothing on this visit seemed out of the ordinary.

“Thanks for your support,” Mr. Fuchs recalled telling Prince, referring to something the musician had been helping the store with. “He smiled and said ‘Hello’ and ‘You’re welcome.’”

“He looked very alert and well dressed,” Mr. Fuchs added. “He seemed the same old. I did not think anything about the way he looked. Nothing suggested to me anything different.”
 
Not so sure it was from any 'bad' lifestyle, but we'll see when the reports come in....

Close followers of Prince find it hard to believe that anything sinister could have played into his death. He was a Jehovah’s Witness and obsessively healthy eater. You couldn’t drink, smoke or even curse at his Paisley parties.



Clues to the Mystery of Prince’s Final Days

Clues to the Mystery of Prince’s Final Days 1 / 27

The New York Times

By JOHN ELIGON and SERGE F. KOVALESKI3 hrs ago


BB7Upr2.img
© Alex Brandon/AP Photo MINNEAPOLIS — The 1988 Dassault Falcon 900 was about an hour into its flight from Atlanta in the wee hours of Friday, April 15, when the pilot made a distress call to air traffic controllers in Chicago.

There was a medical emergency on board. A male passenger was unresponsive.

And so the Chicago airport officials diverted the flight for an emergency landing in Moline, Ill., just 48 minutes from its intended destination of Minneapolis.

As it turned out, the flight was carrying the musical genius Prince, who, a week later, would be found dead, collapsed in an elevator on the first floor of his suburban Minneapolis compound.

“We had an emergency unscheduled landing at 1:35 a.m. on April 15 for a medical emergency for an unresponsive person,” said Jo Johnson, the human resource manager for Quad Cities International Airport in Moline.

It remains unclear what caused Prince, 57, to become unresponsive on the flight last week. His publicist has attributed the crisis to the fact that the entertainer was “fighting the flu.”

But officials investigating Prince’s sudden death said Friday that the plane’s emergency landing, and what caused it, would be part of their sweeping inquiry.

Prince spent only a few hours at a Moline hospital before his private jet flew home here, and the entertainer resumed life at his compound in nearby Carver County. Just days before his death, he attended a show at a local jazz club, and playfully showed off his new piano and guitar at a party at his studio.

As law enforcement officials await the complete results of an autopsy performed Friday, they said they would be reviewing local pharmaceutical records as part of a broad effort to understand Prince’s full medical history. They declined to comment on reports that Prince had been taking pain medication, saying the investigation was continuing.

“This is a tragedy for all of us,” said Jim Olson, the sheriff of Carver County, where Prince’s estate, Paisley Park, was located in the town of Chanhassen. “To you, Prince Rogers Nelson was a celebrity. To us, he was a community member and a good neighbor.”

Prince was last seen alive at about 8 p.m. on Wednesday evening when someone dropped him off at his estate, where he lived alone, Sheriff Olson said during the afternoon news conference.

Unable to make contact with Prince on Thursday morning, Paisley Park staff members went looking for him in the sprawling compound. They found him unresponsive in an elevator and called 911 at 9:43 a.m., Sheriff Olson said.

“The person is dead here,” a male caller told the dispatcher, according to a transcript of the 911 call. Later, the caller added, “And the people are just distraught.”

Medics responding to the home could not resuscitate Prince, who was pronounced dead at 10:07 a.m. Thursday, Sheriff Olson said. He was not sure, he said, how long Prince, dressed in a shirt and pants, had been collapsed in the elevator.

There were no obvious signs of injuries, and Sheriff Olson said the death was not believed to be a murder or a suicide. Officials said the body had been released to Prince’s family but that it may be weeks before any details from the autopsy are released. Before that, further tests need to be completed and the medical history must be compiled.

There remain many questions around Prince’s health. Sheila E, a friend who collaborated with Prince, said during an interview with ABC’s “Good Morning America” that the star did have hip problems from his performances onstage. He has said in interviews that he struggled with epilepsy as a child.

The mystery of the end of Prince’s life has left is vast legion of supporters measuring their shock.

As they wait for answers, fans around the world grieved and celebrated his life with the frenetic energy with which Prince lived it — with dance parties and widespread tributes, from social media posts to impromptu Broadway performances.

Here in his hometown, the famed First Avenue dance club held a free overnight dance party from Thursday into Friday, with more scheduled through the weekend. Makeshift memorials popped up outside of the club and in front of Paisley Park.

BBs8sZr.img
© Renee Jones Schneider/Star Tribune, via Associated Press A fence outside Prince’s home in a Minneapolis suburb has become the canvas for a purple-tinged memorial.
Billboards encouraged residents to wear purple, a major bridge was lit in the color and a purple orchid with a note that read “Rest In Peace Prince” lay on the four-seat table of the intimate Dakota Jazz Club where Prince sat when he attended a show there on Tuesday.

“It’s a very somber moment here, but his legacy will live on,” Kinneva Brown said as she visited Paisley Park on Friday.

Those who knew him and saw him in his final days said the master showman betrayed no sign that he was near death.

With his Afro picked out, Prince hopped on stage before about 300 revelers last Saturday — the night after his emergency landing in Moline — at one of the pop-up parties he was famous for throwing at Paisley Park. He banged out a quick performance of “Chopsticks” on his new purple piano, Scott Lawrence, who was in attendance with his son, said.

He then broke out a new purple-and-gold Gus Guitar, placing it on the piano and then moving away.

“It’s too cool to open up,” Prince joked, according to Mr. Lawrence.

But the cross-genre star also offered a few accidentally prescient words, Mr. Lawrence recalled.

“Wait a few days before you waste your prayers,” he told the crowd, referring to reports of his medical emergency from the previous day.

Close followers of Prince find it hard to believe that anything sinister could have played into his death. He was a Jehovah’s Witness and obsessively healthy eater. You couldn’t drink, smoke or even curse at his Paisley parties.

“Better eat your cheeseburger before you get to Paisley,” Van Jones, a political commentator and activist who was a friend of Prince’s, said he used to think before visiting Prince.

Last Saturday, Prince stopped by Electric Fetus, a Minneapolis record store, and bought about half a dozen CDs, said Bob Fuchs, the retail manager. Prince had been coming to the store for 30 years, Mr. Fuchs said, and nothing on this visit seemed out of the ordinary.

“Thanks for your support,” Mr. Fuchs recalled telling Prince, referring to something the musician had been helping the store with. “He smiled and said ‘Hello’ and ‘You’re welcome.’”

“He looked very alert and well dressed,” Mr. Fuchs added. “He seemed the same old. I did not think anything about the way he looked. Nothing suggested to me anything different.”


Prince was whacked because he was no longer bringing in big bucks and he was outspoken. His body is barely cold and AMC just announced that it is going to re-release "Purple Rain" on the big screen to cash in...people will be buying up his music after he had been off the radar for awhile...reminds me of the death of Robin Williams and Michael Jackson when their star had dimmed....people wax nostalgic and run to the stores to buy up their works which brings in big bucks....yep, something stinks here in Denmark, friends and neighbors.
 
Not so sure it was from any 'bad' lifestyle, but we'll see when the reports come in....

Close followers of Prince find it hard to believe that anything sinister could have played into his death. He was a Jehovah’s Witness and obsessively healthy eater. You couldn’t drink, smoke or even curse at his Paisley parties.



Clues to the Mystery of Prince’s Final Days

Clues to the Mystery of Prince’s Final Days 1 / 27

The New York Times

By JOHN ELIGON and SERGE F. KOVALESKI3 hrs ago


BB7Upr2.img
© Alex Brandon/AP Photo MINNEAPOLIS — The 1988 Dassault Falcon 900 was about an hour into its flight from Atlanta in the wee hours of Friday, April 15, when the pilot made a distress call to air traffic controllers in Chicago.

There was a medical emergency on board. A male passenger was unresponsive.

And so the Chicago airport officials diverted the flight for an emergency landing in Moline, Ill., just 48 minutes from its intended destination of Minneapolis.

As it turned out, the flight was carrying the musical genius Prince, who, a week later, would be found dead, collapsed in an elevator on the first floor of his suburban Minneapolis compound.

“We had an emergency unscheduled landing at 1:35 a.m. on April 15 for a medical emergency for an unresponsive person,” said Jo Johnson, the human resource manager for Quad Cities International Airport in Moline.

It remains unclear what caused Prince, 57, to become unresponsive on the flight last week. His publicist has attributed the crisis to the fact that the entertainer was “fighting the flu.”

But officials investigating Prince’s sudden death said Friday that the plane’s emergency landing, and what caused it, would be part of their sweeping inquiry.

Prince spent only a few hours at a Moline hospital before his private jet flew home here, and the entertainer resumed life at his compound in nearby Carver County. Just days before his death, he attended a show at a local jazz club, and playfully showed off his new piano and guitar at a party at his studio.

As law enforcement officials await the complete results of an autopsy performed Friday, they said they would be reviewing local pharmaceutical records as part of a broad effort to understand Prince’s full medical history. They declined to comment on reports that Prince had been taking pain medication, saying the investigation was continuing.

“This is a tragedy for all of us,” said Jim Olson, the sheriff of Carver County, where Prince’s estate, Paisley Park, was located in the town of Chanhassen. “To you, Prince Rogers Nelson was a celebrity. To us, he was a community member and a good neighbor.”

Prince was last seen alive at about 8 p.m. on Wednesday evening when someone dropped him off at his estate, where he lived alone, Sheriff Olson said during the afternoon news conference.

Unable to make contact with Prince on Thursday morning, Paisley Park staff members went looking for him in the sprawling compound. They found him unresponsive in an elevator and called 911 at 9:43 a.m., Sheriff Olson said.

“The person is dead here,” a male caller told the dispatcher, according to a transcript of the 911 call. Later, the caller added, “And the people are just distraught.”

Medics responding to the home could not resuscitate Prince, who was pronounced dead at 10:07 a.m. Thursday, Sheriff Olson said. He was not sure, he said, how long Prince, dressed in a shirt and pants, had been collapsed in the elevator.

There were no obvious signs of injuries, and Sheriff Olson said the death was not believed to be a murder or a suicide. Officials said the body had been released to Prince’s family but that it may be weeks before any details from the autopsy are released. Before that, further tests need to be completed and the medical history must be compiled.

There remain many questions around Prince’s health. Sheila E, a friend who collaborated with Prince, said during an interview with ABC’s “Good Morning America” that the star did have hip problems from his performances onstage. He has said in interviews that he struggled with epilepsy as a child.

The mystery of the end of Prince’s life has left is vast legion of supporters measuring their shock.

As they wait for answers, fans around the world grieved and celebrated his life with the frenetic energy with which Prince lived it — with dance parties and widespread tributes, from social media posts to impromptu Broadway performances.

Here in his hometown, the famed First Avenue dance club held a free overnight dance party from Thursday into Friday, with more scheduled through the weekend. Makeshift memorials popped up outside of the club and in front of Paisley Park.

BBs8sZr.img
© Renee Jones Schneider/Star Tribune, via Associated Press A fence outside Prince’s home in a Minneapolis suburb has become the canvas for a purple-tinged memorial.
Billboards encouraged residents to wear purple, a major bridge was lit in the color and a purple orchid with a note that read “Rest In Peace Prince” lay on the four-seat table of the intimate Dakota Jazz Club where Prince sat when he attended a show there on Tuesday.

“It’s a very somber moment here, but his legacy will live on,” Kinneva Brown said as she visited Paisley Park on Friday.

Those who knew him and saw him in his final days said the master showman betrayed no sign that he was near death.

With his Afro picked out, Prince hopped on stage before about 300 revelers last Saturday — the night after his emergency landing in Moline — at one of the pop-up parties he was famous for throwing at Paisley Park. He banged out a quick performance of “Chopsticks” on his new purple piano, Scott Lawrence, who was in attendance with his son, said.

He then broke out a new purple-and-gold Gus Guitar, placing it on the piano and then moving away.

“It’s too cool to open up,” Prince joked, according to Mr. Lawrence.

But the cross-genre star also offered a few accidentally prescient words, Mr. Lawrence recalled.

“Wait a few days before you waste your prayers,” he told the crowd, referring to reports of his medical emergency from the previous day.

Close followers of Prince find it hard to believe that anything sinister could have played into his death. He was a Jehovah’s Witness and obsessively healthy eater. You couldn’t drink, smoke or even curse at his Paisley parties.

“Better eat your cheeseburger before you get to Paisley,” Van Jones, a political commentator and activist who was a friend of Prince’s, said he used to think before visiting Prince.

Last Saturday, Prince stopped by Electric Fetus, a Minneapolis record store, and bought about half a dozen CDs, said Bob Fuchs, the retail manager. Prince had been coming to the store for 30 years, Mr. Fuchs said, and nothing on this visit seemed out of the ordinary.

“Thanks for your support,” Mr. Fuchs recalled telling Prince, referring to something the musician had been helping the store with. “He smiled and said ‘Hello’ and ‘You’re welcome.’”

“He looked very alert and well dressed,” Mr. Fuchs added. “He seemed the same old. I did not think anything about the way he looked. Nothing suggested to me anything different.”


Prince was whacked because he was no longer bringing in big bucks and he was outspoken. His body is barely cold and AMC just announced that it is going to re-release "Purple Rain" on the big screen to cash in...people will be buying up his music after he had been off the radar for awhile...reminds me of the death of Robin Williams and Michael Jackson when their star had dimmed....people wax nostalgic and run to the stores to buy up their works which brings in big bucks....yep, something stinks here in Denmark, friends and neighbors.

That was also why he was anal about copyrighting his music. In some interview he had said he didn't want the industry to be making huge profits off him, while he got little $ for it. Not that he wanted the money, but the principal of it. I had also seen that he had a vault full of unreleased music that he'd done privately. It will depend on the conditions of his will if anyone will ever get to hear any of it.
 
I first heard Prince in 1979. A friend gave me a box of radio station demo 45s that had been discarded. One was by this guy, Prince Nelson and another fella, I can't recall his name. It was a catchy tune and I liked the way it seemed to blend funk and pop together. I thought... man, those guys are pretty good. About a year or so later I was watching American Bandstand and Dick Clark introduced "Prince" to the world. It blew my mind! I was, needless to say, a huge fan from then on.

There was recently a thread at USMB about the most influential artists of our time... Top 5... I listed Prince in my Top 5 because he was solely responsible for the Minneapolis Sound, the blend of funk and soul with pop and traditional rock with a dance beat. Several other artists copied this style and set the stage for much of the 1980s dance music. People like Micheal Jackson were influenced by Prince. His music rescued us from Disco and saved us from grunge and punk.

In his performance with Tom Petty, Steve Winwood, Jeff Lynne and others, he blew some of the greatest guitar players in the world off the stage with an epic solo in a tribute to George Harrison on While My Guitar Gently Weeps. He was in that rare class with Jimi Hendrix.... and there aren't many you can say that for.

There are certainly people who didn't care for his music... understandable. But he was a music legend and all across America, cities are being illuminated in purple to pay homage. I had a chance to see him in Atlanta a few weeks ago and turned it down... now I wish I had gone. R.I.P. Prince... you were great!
 
Not so sure it was from any 'bad' lifestyle, but we'll see when the reports come in....

Close followers of Prince find it hard to believe that anything sinister could have played into his death. He was a Jehovah’s Witness and obsessively healthy eater. You couldn’t drink, smoke or even curse at his Paisley parties.



Clues to the Mystery of Prince’s Final Days

Clues to the Mystery of Prince’s Final Days 1 / 27

The New York Times

By JOHN ELIGON and SERGE F. KOVALESKI3 hrs ago


BB7Upr2.img
© Alex Brandon/AP Photo MINNEAPOLIS — The 1988 Dassault Falcon 900 was about an hour into its flight from Atlanta in the wee hours of Friday, April 15, when the pilot made a distress call to air traffic controllers in Chicago.

There was a medical emergency on board. A male passenger was unresponsive.

And so the Chicago airport officials diverted the flight for an emergency landing in Moline, Ill., just 48 minutes from its intended destination of Minneapolis.

As it turned out, the flight was carrying the musical genius Prince, who, a week later, would be found dead, collapsed in an elevator on the first floor of his suburban Minneapolis compound.

“We had an emergency unscheduled landing at 1:35 a.m. on April 15 for a medical emergency for an unresponsive person,” said Jo Johnson, the human resource manager for Quad Cities International Airport in Moline.

It remains unclear what caused Prince, 57, to become unresponsive on the flight last week. His publicist has attributed the crisis to the fact that the entertainer was “fighting the flu.”

But officials investigating Prince’s sudden death said Friday that the plane’s emergency landing, and what caused it, would be part of their sweeping inquiry.

Prince spent only a few hours at a Moline hospital before his private jet flew home here, and the entertainer resumed life at his compound in nearby Carver County. Just days before his death, he attended a show at a local jazz club, and playfully showed off his new piano and guitar at a party at his studio.

As law enforcement officials await the complete results of an autopsy performed Friday, they said they would be reviewing local pharmaceutical records as part of a broad effort to understand Prince’s full medical history. They declined to comment on reports that Prince had been taking pain medication, saying the investigation was continuing.

“This is a tragedy for all of us,” said Jim Olson, the sheriff of Carver County, where Prince’s estate, Paisley Park, was located in the town of Chanhassen. “To you, Prince Rogers Nelson was a celebrity. To us, he was a community member and a good neighbor.”

Prince was last seen alive at about 8 p.m. on Wednesday evening when someone dropped him off at his estate, where he lived alone, Sheriff Olson said during the afternoon news conference.

Unable to make contact with Prince on Thursday morning, Paisley Park staff members went looking for him in the sprawling compound. They found him unresponsive in an elevator and called 911 at 9:43 a.m., Sheriff Olson said.

“The person is dead here,” a male caller told the dispatcher, according to a transcript of the 911 call. Later, the caller added, “And the people are just distraught.”

Medics responding to the home could not resuscitate Prince, who was pronounced dead at 10:07 a.m. Thursday, Sheriff Olson said. He was not sure, he said, how long Prince, dressed in a shirt and pants, had been collapsed in the elevator.

There were no obvious signs of injuries, and Sheriff Olson said the death was not believed to be a murder or a suicide. Officials said the body had been released to Prince’s family but that it may be weeks before any details from the autopsy are released. Before that, further tests need to be completed and the medical history must be compiled.

There remain many questions around Prince’s health. Sheila E, a friend who collaborated with Prince, said during an interview with ABC’s “Good Morning America” that the star did have hip problems from his performances onstage. He has said in interviews that he struggled with epilepsy as a child.

The mystery of the end of Prince’s life has left is vast legion of supporters measuring their shock.

As they wait for answers, fans around the world grieved and celebrated his life with the frenetic energy with which Prince lived it — with dance parties and widespread tributes, from social media posts to impromptu Broadway performances.

Here in his hometown, the famed First Avenue dance club held a free overnight dance party from Thursday into Friday, with more scheduled through the weekend. Makeshift memorials popped up outside of the club and in front of Paisley Park.

BBs8sZr.img
© Renee Jones Schneider/Star Tribune, via Associated Press A fence outside Prince’s home in a Minneapolis suburb has become the canvas for a purple-tinged memorial.
Billboards encouraged residents to wear purple, a major bridge was lit in the color and a purple orchid with a note that read “Rest In Peace Prince” lay on the four-seat table of the intimate Dakota Jazz Club where Prince sat when he attended a show there on Tuesday.

“It’s a very somber moment here, but his legacy will live on,” Kinneva Brown said as she visited Paisley Park on Friday.

Those who knew him and saw him in his final days said the master showman betrayed no sign that he was near death.

With his Afro picked out, Prince hopped on stage before about 300 revelers last Saturday — the night after his emergency landing in Moline — at one of the pop-up parties he was famous for throwing at Paisley Park. He banged out a quick performance of “Chopsticks” on his new purple piano, Scott Lawrence, who was in attendance with his son, said.

He then broke out a new purple-and-gold Gus Guitar, placing it on the piano and then moving away.

“It’s too cool to open up,” Prince joked, according to Mr. Lawrence.

But the cross-genre star also offered a few accidentally prescient words, Mr. Lawrence recalled.

“Wait a few days before you waste your prayers,” he told the crowd, referring to reports of his medical emergency from the previous day.

Close followers of Prince find it hard to believe that anything sinister could have played into his death. He was a Jehovah’s Witness and obsessively healthy eater. You couldn’t drink, smoke or even curse at his Paisley parties.

“Better eat your cheeseburger before you get to Paisley,” Van Jones, a political commentator and activist who was a friend of Prince’s, said he used to think before visiting Prince.

Last Saturday, Prince stopped by Electric Fetus, a Minneapolis record store, and bought about half a dozen CDs, said Bob Fuchs, the retail manager. Prince had been coming to the store for 30 years, Mr. Fuchs said, and nothing on this visit seemed out of the ordinary.

“Thanks for your support,” Mr. Fuchs recalled telling Prince, referring to something the musician had been helping the store with. “He smiled and said ‘Hello’ and ‘You’re welcome.’”

“He looked very alert and well dressed,” Mr. Fuchs added. “He seemed the same old. I did not think anything about the way he looked. Nothing suggested to me anything different.”


Prince was whacked because he was no longer bringing in big bucks and he was outspoken. His body is barely cold and AMC just announced that it is going to re-release "Purple Rain" on the big screen to cash in...people will be buying up his music after he had been off the radar for awhile...reminds me of the death of Robin Williams and Michael Jackson when their star had dimmed....people wax nostalgic and run to the stores to buy up their works which brings in big bucks....yep, something stinks here in Denmark, friends and neighbors.
Who gets Prince's fortune? Who owns all his songs?
 
I first heard Prince in 1979. A friend gave me a box of radio station demo 45s that had been discarded. One was by this guy, Prince Nelson and another fella, I can't recall his name. It was a catchy tune and I liked the way it seemed to blend funk and pop together. I thought... man, those guys are pretty good. About a year or so later I was watching American Bandstand and Dick Clark introduced "Prince" to the world. It blew my mind! I was, needless to say, a huge fan from then on.

There was recently a thread at USMB about the most influential artists of our time... Top 5... I listed Prince in my Top 5 because he was solely responsible for the Minneapolis Sound, the blend of funk and soul with pop and traditional rock with a dance beat. Several other artists copied this style and set the stage for much of the 1980s dance music. People like Micheal Jackson were influenced by Prince. His music rescued us from Disco and saved us from grunge and punk.

In his performance with Tom Petty, Steve Winwood, Jeff Lynne and others, he blew some of the greatest guitar players in the world off the stage with an epic solo in a tribute to George Harrison on While My Guitar Gently Weeps. He was in that rare class with Jimi Hendrix.... and there aren't many you can say that for.

There are certainly people who didn't care for his music... understandable. But he was a music legend and all across America, cities are being illuminated in purple to pay homage. I had a chance to see him in Atlanta a few weeks ago and turned it down... now I wish I had gone. R.I.P. Prince... you were great!
Michael Jackson is 1 Prince 2. Whose 3-5? Or 3-10? It's hard to even think of anyone even close to Mike & Prince.
 
What a super talented guy. I hope it wasn't drugs but it is seeming more likely. Lots of great music, wow. Michael, Whitney and Prince gone too soon.

Just guessing but it sounds more like a reaction to a combination of flu drugs and pain killers, really. Mixing stuff up can cause all kinds of havoc. So, yes, it could be 'drugs' in that sense, but doubtful if it was just abuse for the sake of getting a buzz.
 
What a super talented guy. I hope it wasn't drugs but it is seeming more likely. Lots of great music, wow. Michael, Whitney and Prince gone too soon.

Just guessing but it sounds more like a reaction to a combination of flu drugs and pain killers, really. Mixing stuff up can cause all kinds of havoc.
When I find out someone is religious I become more suspicious not less. Wasn't Michael a jehova? And he was addicted to prescription drugs. Guys like Prince might not do heroine or coke but pain killers yes
 
What a super talented guy. I hope it wasn't drugs but it is seeming more likely. Lots of great music, wow. Michael, Whitney and Prince gone too soon.

Just guessing but it sounds more like a reaction to a combination of flu drugs and pain killers, really. Mixing stuff up can cause all kinds of havoc.
When I find out someone is religious I become more suspicious not less. Wasn't Michael a jehova? And he was addicted to prescription drugs. Guys like Prince might not do heroine or coke but pain killers yes

My mother has had two hip replacements. She was in agony for years before it got so bad she finally had the surgeries.

You just want to perpetuate your sociopathic hatred of Xians, that's all.

Grow up.
 
What a super talented guy. I hope it wasn't drugs but it is seeming more likely. Lots of great music, wow. Michael, Whitney and Prince gone too soon.

Just guessing but it sounds more like a reaction to a combination of flu drugs and pain killers, really. Mixing stuff up can cause all kinds of havoc.
When I find out someone is religious I become more suspicious not less. Wasn't Michael a jehova? And he was addicted to prescription drugs. Guys like Prince might not do heroine or coke but pain killers yes

My mother has had two hip replacements. She was in agony for years before it got so bad she finally had the surgeries.

You just want to perpetuate your sociopathic hatred of Xians, that's all.

Grow up.
You got me all wrong. I don't even know what a Xi'an is.

Best memory of Prince was on American idol. He came out and blew me away. Ryan seacrest came out to shake his hand and interview him after and Prince just walked away.

I'm just speculating. He was too young to just die. You telling me you aren't anxiously waiting for the official autopsy to come back?

They said something about his family. Who just inherited all that? Wow! No kids. So sad. Even though I didn't love Prince like other people I still realize his greatness. Genious.
 
.
So anyway, rumor has it that Prince is not really dead, and is just hiding out in Ireland to avoid taxes and record label contract commitments.
 
What a super talented guy. I hope it wasn't drugs but it is seeming more likely. Lots of great music, wow. Michael, Whitney and Prince gone too soon.

Just guessing but it sounds more like a reaction to a combination of flu drugs and pain killers, really. Mixing stuff up can cause all kinds of havoc. So, yes, it could be 'drugs' in that sense, but doubtful if it was just abuse for the sake of getting a buzz.
He never had the flu.
 
And for some of you, haven't you ever heard the expression that if you don't have anything nice to say, keep your big giant pie hole shut?

No offense but...fuck you parroting some faggot saying....

"Nominated" for basically means the faggots who created this douchebag's "celebrity" had to reward it. There is not one song of his that even approaches anything of interest.

Not a single one ? Was he in your age group ?
 

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