Matt Thorne

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Matt Thorne



Average rating: 3.3 · 942 ratings · 121 reviews · 22 distinct worksSimilar authors
Prince

3.51 avg rating — 574 ratings — published 2012 — 21 editions
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Eight Minutes Idle

3.14 avg rating — 86 ratings — published 1999 — 6 editions
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Child Star

3.18 avg rating — 60 ratings — published 2003 — 2 editions
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Dreaming of Strangers

2.79 avg rating — 67 ratings7 editions
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Pictures of You

2.94 avg rating — 53 ratings — published 2003 — 5 editions
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Tourist

3.18 avg rating — 33 ratings — published 2001 — 3 editions
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The White Castle

3.25 avg rating — 8 ratings — published 2005 — 2 editions
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Kingmaker's Castle

3.14 avg rating — 7 ratings — published 2005
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Faber Faber Prince Updated ...

liked it 3.00 avg rating — 3 ratings
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Famous: Ego, Envy and Ambit...

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 1 rating
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More books by Matt Thorne…
Quotes by Matt Thorne  (?)
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“Bob Cavallo remembers early on in the process, ‘We were at odds with each other. Our contract was up; five years had gone by since Purple Rain. We met at the Four Seasons with his lawyer and his accountant, me and Steve Fargnoli to discuss some kind of rapprochement because he had fired us. Basically he said, “I’ll work with you again but you’ve got to help me make this movie.” I read the treatment and said, “This could be an interesting thing,” and I said, “I’ll try to put you together with some young hip writers and maybe we can come up with a script quickly, ’cause this is pretty detailed.” And he went, “What are you talking about? That is the script.” It was thirty pages. And he said, “I’m going to shoot it, I know exactly how to do it.” So I said, “Maybe we could get this on Broadway for you. Would you be interested in that?” And he said, “No.” Now he was pissed that I didn’t think this was a good enough script, so we shook hands and that was the end of it. Then, about a year later, we were suing each other. But even when we sued each other, it was kinda funny. I said, “How could you not pay me?” He said, “How could you sue me?” He said, “You can’t have my children, those songs. You’re gonna give your involvement in those songs to your grandchildren?” And I said, “Yeah, I put ten years of my life into you, and you sucked all the air out of the room. I couldn’t really manage anybody else except for your friends.”
Matt Thorne, Prince

“Among the many ecstatic notices, Robert Christgau, the self-appointed ‘dean of American rock critics’, put it best, in a review that would still be being quoted when he left the Village Voice twenty-six years later: ‘Mick Jagger should fold up his penis and go home.”
Matt Thorne, Prince

“Vanity 6’s most famous song, ‘Nasty Girl’, may be less well-known than Prince’s greatest hits, but it’s among the most influential songs Prince has written. It’s easy to trace a line from Madonna, who in her earliest incarnation could have been a fourth member of the band, on to Janet Jackson, whose 1986 song ‘Nasty’ (produced by two former members of The Time) reverses the gender from ‘nasty girls’ to ‘nasty boys’, to Britney Spears, who claimed that the track ‘Boys’, from her 2001 album Britney, had ‘a kinda Prince feel to it’, but actually lifts directly from ‘Nasty Girl’ (the song is produced by The Neptunes, and its remixed version, ‘Boys (The Co-Ed Remix)’, features vocals from Pharrell Williams, a producer and rapper and diehard Prince fanatic). Britney’s ‘Let’s turn this dance floor into our own little nasty world’, and repeated invocations to ‘get nasty’, are clear Xeroxes of Vanity’s ‘my own little nasty world’ and ‘dance nasty girls’.”
Matt Thorne, Prince: The Man and His Music



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