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The Beautiful Ones

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article is about the song by Prince. For the single by Suede, seeBeautiful Ones.
1984 song by Prince
"The Beautiful Ones"
Song byPrince
from the albumPurple Rain
ReleasedJune 25, 1984[1]
RecordedSeptember 20, 1983[1]
StudioSunset Sound,Los Angeles[1]
Genre
Length5:13
LabelWarner Bros.
SongwriterPrince[3]
ProducerPrince[3]
Audio
"The Beautiful Ones" (2015 remaster) by Prince onYouTube

"The Beautiful Ones" is the third track onPrince andthe Revolution'ssoundtrack albumPurple Rain. It was one of three songs produced, arranged, composed, and performed by Prince, the other two being "When Doves Cry" and "Darling Nikki". The song was recorded atSunset Sound inLos Angeles by Peggy Mac andDavid Leonard[3] on September 20, 1983.[1] The song replaced "Electric Intercourse" on thePurple Rain album.[4]

The version on thePurple Rain album is slightly cut; a longer version of the song exists.Mariah Carey covered the song, as a duet with R&B groupDru Hill, for her sixth studio albumButterfly. In 2011, American singerBeyoncé performed a cover of the song during her historic headlining2011 Glastonbury Festival Performance.[5]

Content

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Inthe film, The Kid (Prince) sings the song directly from the stage toApollonia, who is sitting with his rivalMorris Day. The song is a direct and urgent appeal to Apollonia to choose Prince as her lover—and it is a direct challenge to Day. Ultimately, as the song ends and Prince lies, apparently spent, on the floor of the stage, Apollonia leaves in tears. (Later, she returns to the Kid when he is unlocking his motorcycle to leave the club.)

Origin

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"The Beautiful Ones" was originally said to be written forSusannah Melvoin[6] (Revolution band memberWendy's twin sister) to woo her away from her then-boyfriend.[7] The timeline fits, as Susannah was seeing someone else when she met Prince in May 1983. The notion that the song was written for her was also confirmed by engineer Susan Rogers. Melvoin has admitted that she isn't completely sure about the genesis of the song: "I can't say that the song was exactly our story, but he wrote it during that time," Melvoin says inLet's Go Crazy: Prince and the Making of Purple Rain. "He wasn't always specifically writing about what he was going through, because he also had to be consistent with thePurple Rain storyline, but he was drawing from things that had happened in his life."[6]

Only much later, during a 2015 interview withEbony magazine, did Prince finally identify who the beautiful one really was: Denise Matthews akaVanity, his one-time protégé and girlfriend. Both elements, the actual and the imagined, are at play in this layered triumph. "I was talking to somebody about 'The Beautiful Ones.' They were speculating as to who I was singing about – but they were completely wrong," Prince said. "If they look at it, it’s very obvious. 'Do you want him or do you want me,' that was written for that scene in Purple Rain specifically, where Morris would be sitting with [Apollonia] and there’d be this back and forth. And also, 'The beautiful ones you always seem to lose,' Vanity had just quit the movie."[6] The pair had met in 1980, with Prince bestowing the stage name Vanity, as he felt looking at her was like looking at the female version of himself. She would go on to inspire some of his biggest early hits. He also created a band around her,Vanity 6, for which he wrote songs and produced.[8]

Personnel

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Credits sourced from Duane Tudahl, Benoît Clerc and Guitarcloud[9][10][11][12]

References

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  1. ^abcdPrince (19 November 2018)."The Beautiful Ones". Prince Vault.
  2. ^abBreihan, Tom (November 15, 2022). "Prince - "When Doves Cry".The Number Ones: Twenty Chart-Topping Hits That Reveal the History of Pop Music. New York:Hachette Book Group. p. 165.
  3. ^abcPrince (and The Revolution). "Purple Rain" (Album Notes). Warner Bros. Records. 1984.
  4. ^"Everybody Want What They Don't Got",Uptown #44 (September 8, 2000).Archived December 4, 2008, at theWayback Machine Accessed December 22, 2008.
  5. ^Hopper, Alex (November 26, 2024)."Remember When: Beyoncé Blew her Audience Away With a Cover of Prince's "Beautiful Ones"".American Songwriter.
  6. ^abcDeriso, Nick.“Prince’s Girlfriend Inspires ‘The Beautiful Ones,’ But Which,”Diffuser (June 22, 2017). Accessed November 29, 2017.
  7. ^Nilsen, Per.Dance Music Sex Romance: Prince: The First Decade (SAF Publishing Ltd., 1999).ISBN 978-0-946719-64-8
  8. ^""Secrets Behind Prince's Last Australian Tour, A Year On From His Death" (April 20, 2017). Accessed November".
  9. ^Tudahl, Duane (2018).Prince and the Purple Rain Era Studio Sessions: 1983 and 1984 (Expanded ed.). Rowman & Littlefield.ISBN 9781538116432.
  10. ^Clerc, Benoît (October 2022).Prince: All the Songs. Octopus.ISBN 9781784728816.
  11. ^"Purple Rain".guitarcloud.org. Retrieved2023-04-10.
  12. ^"What synth presets did Prince use?".guitarcloud.org. Retrieved2023-04-10.

External links

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Side two
B-sides
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