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Prince: Inside the Music and the Masks

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A fascinating, authoritative biography of one of the most commercial, controversial, and influential musicians of all time

In his three decades-long of recording, Prince has had nearly thirty albums hit the Billboard Top 100. He is the only artist since the Beatles to have a number one song, movie, and single at the same time. Prince's trajectory―from a teenage unknown in Minneapolis to an idol and Rock and Roll Hall of Famer―has won him millions of adoring fans.

Prince is the first book to give full treatment to this 30-year career of epic proportions. Acclaimed music journalist Ronin Ro traces Prince's rise from anonymity in the late 70s, to his catapult to stardom in the 80s, to his reemergence in the 21st century as both an artistic icon and a starmaker. Ro chronicles the music, showing how Prince and his albums helped define and inspire a generation. Along the way, Prince confronted labels, fostered other young talents, and took ownership of his music, making a profound mark on the entertainment industry and pop culture.

In this authoritative biography, Ro digs deep to reveal the man behind some of the most important music of our time.

384 pages, Hardcover

First published March 1, 2011

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Ronin Ro

13 books21 followers

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 63 reviews
Profile Image for David.
87 reviews6 followers
December 11, 2011
This exhaustive compilation of previously published information on Prince's career may well be enough for the casual fan. But if you've been falling his ups and downs over the years you'll already know everything here, as Ro didn't do much original research (no bombshells or inside scoops) and has no particular insight into what makes Prince tick.
Profile Image for LuvBug .
336 reviews96 followers
July 4, 2016
I was fan girl CRAZY for Prince when I was a teenager. Bought all his CD's sight unseen. Had his inappropriate half naked posters up on my walls with kisses all over them ( to my mother's horror). Turning down "Darling Nikki" real low so mom couldn't hear the very sexual lyrics, lol. Never thought I would be attracted to a man that wore makeup, heels, lace, frills and thigh highs, but there you have it, I was! I was a fan for many years into young adulthood. Still loved him even when he became unpronounceable... Then marriage, motherhood, romance novels, (lol) and life took over whatever obsession I had with him. His death touched me deeply. More deeply than I expected... I guess it was because he bought a little purple to my otherwise colorless childhood, and to know that he's not with us on the planet anymore seems a little gray...

After his death on April 21st, 2016 (without realizing) I had missed out a lot on the progression of his career. Apart from dashing to the tv screen whenever I knew he would be on, I wasn't a very proactive fan anymore. Now I want to read all things Prince related. I can see the future, I'll be one of those Elvis like fan girl junkies, but instead for Prince!

While this book was enlightening in the musical sense, it was pretty impersonal and cold. It was a lot about his music and a few disparaging tid bits here and there. Some of it annoyed because I guess I feel protective so soon after his death. And really, how do we even know that half this crap is even true?? It was not an official book authorized by Prince. I kind of felt that the author wasn't really a Prince fan at times. Nonetheless, I came away thinking that Prince really was way more talented than people really knew. His onstage persona was so flamboyant that it overshadowed his many talents. Most placed him in a purple box, but apart from his charismatic sexual demeanor, he was actually a musical genius. So even though I felt like the author wasn't really a fan, I think the legend that was Prince still shines through. Mmmm, maybe that was the authors intent all along...

P.S: I'm pretty proud of my teenage self to have picked a genius to be my Prince...
Profile Image for Scott Woods.
Author 7 books67 followers
December 18, 2011
This is yet another largely non-exclusive look at Prince that doesn't stand out of the pack. Spending more time on the fat years of Prince and far too little time on the lean, this book reveals almost nothing that a fan of Prince - the most likely candidate to even pick up this book in this day and age - doesn't already know or have access to. There is virtually nothing distinguishing this book from the last five books about Prince that came out in the last ten years. Information is largely culled from the same sources as every other book, the anecdotes are largely old hat at this point, and there isn't the promised revelation of Prince's influence on much more than himself and his audience.

The biggest disappointment is that the opportunity to make a book that stood out is lost by committing the same crime that almost every other book about Prince makes: it acts like the last 15 years didn't happen. It spends 290 of its 356 pages of actual text on the albums leading up to 1996 (12 total, not counting soundtracks) and a practically scant 66 pages on the TEN albums that followed. It covers the early, more successful (and, not coincidental I am sure, thoroughly picked over) period of his career almost song by song, but then almost dismisses the last fifteen years of his career by comparison.

At this point I'd rather just read a book about all of the other acts Prince has launched, or a treatise that genuinely attempted to parse out his influence on culture and art during his tenure. if there's anything left to say about Prince, no one but Prince is likely to write the book compelling enough to warrant purchasing (and we all know how likely that is to happen). I'd say this is fine for people who are looking for an entry into Prince's world, but that's the same thing you can say about every other book about Prince.
Profile Image for Bert.
418 reviews
October 14, 2015
This book isn't just an utter waste of time if you've read Prince bios like Per Nilsen's Dance, Music, Sex, Romance: Prince: The First Decade and Alex Hahn's Possessed: The Rise and Fall of Prince; annoyingly it contains plenty of mistakes, like for instance claiming Prince was still recording tracks for The Black Album in December 1987, when that album was actually scheduled for release in the first week of that month.

Basically it's a thinly disguised rewrite of Per Nilsen's A Documentary, combined with a number of other sources to fill in the last ten years or so. Ro's tried to convert A Documentary's factual approach into a more vivid life story, but it falls flat since he doesn't seem to grasp Prince's working habits. There's very little evidence of actual research by Ro, most of this book simply cites other books and articles and plenty of times this goes horribly wrong.

Don't waste your time with this, invest it in the few great books there are. Hint: if Per Nilsen is involved, it is worthwhile.

This book just seems utterly pointless to me. Ro doesn't offer any insight, he doesn't seem particularly interested in Prince.
Profile Image for Meghan.
646 reviews68 followers
June 3, 2018
I liked reading this book. I am currently going through a little big Prince phase after having read his first wife Matye's book, The Most Beautiful: My Life with Prince, so I have been picking up any books on him that I can find. This was not my favorite. I learned a lot about him that I didn't know before reading this book, which was exciting, but I did not enjoy Ro's writing style. It felt like I was reading a textbook about Prince, his music, and his life. If I wasn't so invested in the topic I would have found this book to be boring. Another thing that I was not please with was his inaccurate information. When Ro starting mentioning things in the book that I knew from reading other books did not go down the way that he was saying they did, it made me question all the information he was giving in the book. Overall though I did like reading this book and learned more than I knew before opening in.

Longer review coming soon
Profile Image for Kristan.
97 reviews11 followers
July 16, 2019
Why would you write a book about Prince when you have 1) no insider information besides what’s already been published and 2) an obvious disdain for the man and his fans, who are the people who would pick up this book?? I’m not editorializing here. In the intro he calls Prince’s fan base “deluded” and “aging creeps”. He also lists all the reasons why he isn’t a Prince fan. After reading the intro, I almost put the book down. I decided to give it a shot thinking that a good journalist/documentarian wouldn’t let his personal feelings get in the way of the work. But I only made it 1\3 of the way through the book because it read like a school paper that someone obviously didn’t want to write. Honestly, I will read anything about Prince but I couldn’t get through this.
Profile Image for Aria.
531 reviews42 followers
December 2, 2019

Dnf p. 146. Basically, the author tells you what he read other people wrote about Prince. Unbelievably bad. Literally the only positive thing I have to say about this book is that the cover looks good.

For a bit of Prince fun, I recommend the second season of Tales from the Tour Bus; he's scattered throughout a few of those episodes. It's a t.v. show by Mike Judge, aired by Cinemax. Here's the IMDB so you'll know what you're seeking: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt7212136/

887 reviews
December 19, 2012
Ronin Ro is the opposite of Kitty Kelley or Andrew Morton in terms of writing biographies. This is an interesting, if somewhat stale, re-telling of the rise of Prince Rogers Nelson, a musical prodigy whose influence on the industry is felt today. It's not bad, but the book reads as though a lot of the research was simply cut and pasted from other sources. If you're a fan of Prince, read it.
551 reviews4 followers
July 20, 2012
Nothing new, previously published information from interviews etc. Prince is talented and creative, that's what I wanted to read about.
Profile Image for Michael Trigilio.
15 reviews1 follower
August 23, 2016
Robin Ro just doesn't seem to like the music (or masks) if Prince very much. I mean, he doesn't have to like anything. But it's a bummer when, I'm writing about every single record release he describes each album since 1984 as "lackluster," "disappointing'" "tame," or "flat." Ro goes into some depth over the business and financial whirlwind of Prince's early-to-mid 90s career. But there's such constant low-grade disdain and derision that it feels more like a poorly-collated collection of gripes than an original body of research.
Two stars because it does read like a soap opera and I couldn't put it down, which speaks to Ro's storytelling gifts, even if the ideas are petty, lackluster, tame, or flat.
Profile Image for Tiffany.
45 reviews
May 25, 2025
I am giving it a 1 star, not because it was poorly written, but because it was BORING. Prince was such a fascinating man and this book had zero feeling or emotions behind it. It was like reading a 5th graders essay, just the facts and super monotone. Prince was a colorful, iconic, mysterious man. This was just a list of things he did in the order he did them. I felt nothing.
I love music biographies. This is the only one I have ever given a low rating to, simply because I don't think the author even liked Prince after reading this.
Also....why no pictures? This makes no sense. I'm not saying it needs to be fully a picture book, but a few just to mark his main phases.
Anyway it's a no for me.
Profile Image for Fran.
Author 57 books148 followers
December 12, 2011
A mask will hide your face but not who you really are. Masks are worn to keep a person’s identity hidden, the focus on the mask itself and detract from the face that someone does not want seen. But, there are many other masks that hide people and not always are they ones we physically put on. Prince was a complicated young man and man from the start. He has many different personas, goals and friends that helped, hindered and worked with them to get where he is today. At times he felted shunned, ostracized and cast out by his family because of his beliefs, ideas, and passions. Never really recalcitrant, rude or disrespectful and only wanting to rise to the top of the musical charts, Prince went on a roller coaster or Ferris wheel ride filled with dips, turns, wild twists and much more to become who he is today: Prince the Music Icon and Star.

Flamboyant, talented, unique and quite different Prince rocks the stage like no one else. But, it was not always that way for him and his roots and his beginnings are related in a biography that will bring it all home for the reader allowing you to get to know the real Prince. Ronin Ro wrote Prince: Inside the Music and The Masks to showcase this amazing and talented man. Born in 1958 to John and Mattie his parent’s life took on a rocky road from the start. A father who wanted to be what his son aspired to and became and a mother who wanted him to be college educated and not what he turned out to be. Life began for him as Prince Rogers Nelson in Minneapolis with a rocky start. Parents that wanted to become singers and musicians but with six children to support had to give up on their dreams and aspirations. A father who resented his children’s talent as Prince and his sister would play the piano and sing together. His parent’s divorce, his mother’s remarrying and his flight to live with a father that would turn him out onto the streets with nowhere to go. An aunt that took him in and a father that finally understood but did he? Things changed for Prince as his mother had a child from her second husband life was not to the same.

One thing that this reviewer loves if this performer which is why I asked to read and review this talented man’s biography who is totally unique and different from others in the field of music. Breaking every music boundary and definitely developing a style so different and unique author Ronin Ro takes the reader on a journey back to where it all began as we learn about his talented singer, musician and man of many masks or hidden faces.

From the start he had several strikes against him. Being short in stature received him much ridicule and harassing in school. A father that wanted to become a piano playing star and a mother whose aspirations were cut short because of family obligations, Prince decided to leave home at an early age and pursue his music career.

At the age of 17 he caught his first break when he became friends with Chris Moon who had wrote songs, had faith in Prince and managed to get his first demo recorded. Prince played all of the instruments, produced his own records and was totally in control of how he wanted things done. Not focusing primarily on the piano, he began playing bass, drums, lead guitar and adding vocal tracks. Mystifying those that heard him and astounding the studio tech and he orchestrated, created and wrote the words, chapters and book so to speak that would be his life. But, at seventeen he was unstoppable and even though he did not have the total confidence he does today being in the limelight, he hid it behind his mask of fear. Going to New York would change things for him as he was offered not one but two contracts. But, as the contracts and offers came in Prince wanted total control of everything including how the music was played, the instruments he used and those allowed to voice any opinions. He became more difficult to work with although many thought him talented. Not wanting to be branded as black made it more challenging to promote him yet his first album signing scored over 3000 screaming kids. In order to try and corner the black market Warner Brothers sent the media publicity materials. Black teen magazines, editors and writers wanted to feature Prince. Next, Warner provided money for a small tour and with the help of his cousin Charlie he created and formed his own band. Next, to prove his talent he needed his first show. In 1978 Prince released his album For You playing every instrument himself. But, he still went over the allotted budget for this project. IN 1979 he released another album where his fame and popularity skyrocketed due to one hit song, “I Wanna Be Your Lover.” This particular song enabled him to make an appearance on everyone’s favorite show American Bandstand. Imagine meeting Dick Clark that to me has to be the greatest honor. Of course being a fan of Prince I even listened to the original recordings on UTube of his music.

Creating his own visions and incorporating his ideas into every song, video and concert, Prince rebuilt and reinvented himself over and over again showing the public and his critics a different side or face of Prince each time he performed. Outrageous in his appearance, overbearing, zealous, focused, distracted at times this megastar was unpredictable, highly motivated and yet hiding his real self behind so many different faces or as the author states in his title Masks. Prince had many hidden fears. He would often pray that audiences would accept and like him. Managers that could not control or deal with him or the stress that went with working with him. Never allowing anyone to upstage him, walking off stage and finding his way onto a plane to start another project, Prince was truly as one album was titled: A Controversy. Competition made his pulse. Michael Jackson came on the scene and provided Prince with the momentum, impetus and energy to forge ahead and create more albums, concerts, begin a movie and become totally unstoppable. His song, “ Little Red Corvette,” was one of his success and each album produced was better than the one before and each theme unique and different. Tours, concerts, the song Purple Rain and dealing with many managers who left him, performers he had to replace and creating band after band to suit his needs and desires for each project, Prince did not have to write I Am A Star, he was one already.

Throughout the novel you hear the voice of the author narrating the detailed events of this star’s life. Included and interspersed he adds the artist’s words and thoughts for the reader to really begin to understand Prince, his fears, his desires, goals and aspirations in his own words.

The competition between Prince and Jackson did heat up and the distance between him and his father narrowed as they finally came to an understanding and began working together. A rift with this bodyguard changed things and severed their relationship. Just how you need to learn the facts for yourself. His next film being cast and imagine wanting Madonna to play the rich girl in it. He came so far and was really soaring over the top. Girlfriend in hand, next movie to be released and hoping to get Under the Cherry Moon done, Prince tried his best to include Susannah in The Family. Paul Peterson cast in the movie, contracts that remained unsigned and tensions that would rise before all was said and done.

One thing that rings true throughout his career is how he remained loyal to his father allowing him to movie into his purple place on Kiowa Drive and made sure his mother was taken care of too. That would endear everyone to him and much more and let’s not forget his sister, Tyka too. But, what deflated his ego were the reviews he received from the media. Personalities coming into play, those loyal to him not really there, others needing to be replaced Prince’s career took many upward and downward turns on his spiral staircase to success.

The author relates all of his experiences, his concerts, his movies and much more in this in-depth biography of the life of a man who still brings the house down just walking on stage or when you hear the name Prince.

The death of a close friend brought things into perspective the reasons really heartbreaking. Next, the movie Graffiti Bridge and then let’s go to part three The Retreat before bringing it all to a close. However, the reviews were not very gratifying and the plot was said to be feeble and the description not flattering. Graffiti Bridge opened nationally and the reviews were not what he expected. Next, the change of managers and another album for Warner and love the title: Diamonds and Pearls.

There is so much more that the author included in this biography it would take another review to tell it all. Private and to himself those around him thought this was the concept for his album’s fictional story. At thirty- five he referred to himself as a symbol and the reason why and the reaction you can learn when you read Chapter 32. The final chapters tell how he began being known as The Artist Formerly Known As Prince instead of the glyph combination of male and female symbols. Problems with Warner Bros over his artistic creativity, conflicts that soared and Prince protesting many situations in public Prince once again showed the world and the recording companies who was in charge. The summer of 1994 would change things when the parties The summer of 1994 would change things when the parties The summer of 1994 would change things when the parties came to an agreement where Prince would be able to leave the Warner Bros. label after completing two more albums where the Gold Experience received outstanding reviews. More albums and more successes but I cannot reveal it all because that would not leave anything for you the reader to experience for yourself. In 1996 he signed a distribution agreement with EMI- Capitol Records which released a triple CD called Emancipation. Believe it or not he got married the following year and had a son who died hours after being born leaving a great impact in this talented man. The rest of his story His return and the author’s final thoughts you can learn as his comeback came in 2007 when five hundred reporters packed the Miami convention Center for the Pepsi Super Bowl and Prince found himself as the headline for the event. The rest my dear readers is History. Passionate, determined, talented, focused, still at the top of his game and definitely one of my favorite singers in the world marked by my favorite color Purple. Prince is a legend and his work is memorable. This book is a definite tribute to the life of this outstanding artist and for those of us that love Prince: Read the book. The interesting last piece of information I want to share is that Prince was the one who helped Michael Jackson learn how to best stage his comeback. Kindhearted, appreciative of all that he has received he is truly a voice that will always and should always be heard. Thank you Ronin Ro for writing this book and thank you to St. Martens for sending me this outstanding book to review.

Fran Lewis: reviewer

THIS BOOK GETS FIVE PURPLE AND GOLD STARS















Profile Image for Matthew.
199 reviews1 follower
July 15, 2024
I will admit, I am not Prince fan, but I've always liked his 1999 (1982) and Purple Rain (1984) albums and a few of his 1990s era songs. So, in essence, the only reason why I brought this book is because I have an admiration for author Ronin Ro's writing style, and I wanted to see what he had to say about one of the most gifted as well as one of the most mysterious musicians of all time.

Prince: Inside the Music and Masks was pretty much a biography of Prince with Ro's own style of reportage about the late artist. There were so many books written about Prince in his lifetime, especially around the time of his passing in 2016. But you have to give it to Ronin Ro, with his literary version of Prince's life he wanted to give you the reader an impartial, well researched, and passionately written book on a man who was as complicated as he was gifted.

This book's success (i.e. book sales), worthiness, and quality hinged on Ro's music knowledge, his research on Prince, and his attempts through his writing to understand what kind of person and musician Prince was.

One of my favorite elements of this book was the fact that Ro analyzed most of the album's Prince put out from 1979 to 2015. He didn't just talk about Purple Rain; he even analyzed the obscure or not so well-known Prince albums like the true music critic or analyst that he is.

This book really educated me on Prince's life, his muses, and his complicated relationships with his mother and father. I learned through this book that Prince's father threw him out of his house more than once even though he was just a kid. His father was cold and distant, which is part of the reason why Prince himself was consistently cold and indifferent towards his bands The Revolution, The Time, The New Power Generation, The Family, and Vanity 6.

One of the obscure or not so known parts of Prince's musical career was that he tried to make Carmen Electra and Mayte Garcia (his first wife) pop stars, and that part of his musical career was explained here and there in this book. If it weren't for this book, I wouldn't have ever known that he tried to make both of those women pop stars in the 90s. Both of them were very beautiful women, but neither one of them had musical talent but for some reason Prince thought that they did. Trying to make those two women stars is one of the biggest head scratchers of Prince's musical career.

Pros of Prince: Inside the Music and Masks: The book did a good job explaining the ups and downs of Prince's career through the extensive analysis of his many albums. Plus, the book was seriously objective on Prince as a person and musician. One of the plain as day illustrations of that objectivity or impartiality towards Ro's book subject was this: "Prince was a lousy talent scout, other Warner executives in Burbank decided," (Ro, page 247). When you get to that part of the book, you'll see why Ro wrote that.

Cons of Prince: Inside the Music and Masks: I wish Ro would have put at least a chapter with a few pages together dedicated to Prince's death with some truths, speculation, or even some conspiracy theories. With all of Ro's researching skills you would have thought he would have given Prince's death more thought or more space in this book than just a mere mention of it in the Afterword section near the tail end of the book.

In conclusion, Prince: Inside the Music and the Masks was a well-researched and impartial book on one of the greatest musicians of all time. You don't have to be a Prince fan to enjoy this book, you just have to have an open mind and a passion for reading about interesting entertainers.
Profile Image for Jake Zavracky.
73 reviews2 followers
February 25, 2022
I'm somewhat incredulous that the author of this book managed not only to get a book deal but to even decide to become an author in the first place. He is staid, clumsy, joyless, he seems to write as if the act of it is a chore.

That's not to say he doesn't have certain strengths - the book seems well researched (although I don't really know enough about Prince to spot anything problematic) and he does dole out a lot of information in a very condensed way - it's almost like reading a glossary. There's something to be said for that, but having just come off reading books on music that were crafted lovingly by Hanif Abdurraquib, Kefefa Sanneh, and Questlove, by comparison this book was like reading a Wikipedia entry, only more terse.

It's not particularly well cited either. It's difficult to keep track of the myriad characters in the Prince universe, who enter and exit and enter again often without any reminder of who they are, and really unless they're major players in the Time or the Revolution, reminders would usually be helpful if not completely necessary.

I also, and this has nothing to do with the author, lost a bit of motivation about halfway through, as I don't really care for Prince's work after Lovesexy, and I would even say there's a fairly significant dropoff after Purple Rain, although not any where as significant as the dropoff that begins after Diamonds and Pearls.

Still I might recommend this book to Prince fanatics, although something tells me they'd probably already know most of this stuff anyway.
Profile Image for GD.
1,121 reviews23 followers
March 31, 2019
A lot of what you think about biographies has to do with what you think about the subject of the biography. I know there are fans of Prince in the world bigger than me, I've just never met one in real life. Did I learn anything from this book that I didn't already know? A few details, actually, especially regarding the fight with Warner (where I thought he was wrong about half the time haha), and I've never seen hi portrayed as such an impossible asshole before, but I don't doubt he was probably hell to get along with or even be around.

One weird thing about this book, the very cover says 1958-2016, but the book ends just after the release of Lotusflow3r and MPLSound, which was in 2009. I guess it was just a reprint of a book that came out then, with a new subtitle on the cover. If you want to know about 20Ten, or the mysterious four year gap between that and the two albums he released at once in 2014, you're SOL.
Profile Image for Dana.
17 reviews2 followers
November 5, 2019
Provides more of a music critique than a bio. Started well but became more of an opinion piece as it progressed. I didn't find all things presented as facts to be complete truths as some of the persons involved have told fuller stories that could have been used considering he does a lot quotes from magazine articles including those from Prince himself.

I appreciate the music tie in to Prince's story, but I wanted more with the personal story. It came through in tidbits as opposed to fullness. As a fan I was insulted a few times as we were attacked by outdated descriptions from someone who seems to not understand why fans continued to follow Prince's career. Which gives me a feeling that the author didn't understand Prince at all.
Profile Image for Angela.
1,039 reviews41 followers
August 17, 2017
even though I adore the music and talent of Prince Nelson. I can honestly say that I truly would not have liked being around him. But this book was horrific. I mean the first part was truly wonderful because it was the story of his life but once he became famous this author only wrote about the music the tours and the crazy management. No longer was Prince a person. Instead he was a commodity.
Profile Image for Trae Mitten.
74 reviews
September 28, 2022
This is a very thorough accounting of the insane business and publicity side of Prince's career. While Ro gives some tiny glimpses into since as a person, the end of the book still leaves the reader starving for information about who Prince really was as a man, not a persona. Perhaps that mysteriousness is impermeable, and left to the interpretation and imagination of Prince's fans... just like he wanted.
167 reviews
May 15, 2018
Certainly want to have a decent knowledge of Prince before reading this. It is less about the music and songs than about his life. The author is quite balanced with his views, this is neither a hagiography nor an attack upon him, but seems to take the ups and the downs, report them as such and move on to the next stage in his life.
Profile Image for James.
777 reviews24 followers
November 25, 2018
Really well-researched and exhaustively listened to (I can't believe the author actually listened to "Crystal Ball," for example) but ultimately without a coherent structure or organizing principle. I suspect this may be because Prince doesn't give interviews and lives a pretty disordered life, but compared to a book like "Shakey" or "Petty" it feels a bit slight.
Profile Image for Yetta Yvette.
Author 8 books6 followers
February 23, 2019
I've always been a huge fan of Prince. Because of his music, style, and creativeness. I love this book because, I found out valuable information that I did not know about him, like his journey and how he propelled to succeed as an artist. It would have been even better, if the author would have included a few pictures. Overall good read!
58 reviews
August 1, 2024
It sure is a detailed account of the inner workings of Prince Inc. I couldn't keep up with how many songs, albums, band members, staff etc he had. I have enjoyed revisiting his music in conjunction with reading this though. I feel like I know his music a lot better as a result of reading this & listening, but I'm none the wiser on what really made him tick.
19 reviews2 followers
July 21, 2019
I picked up on a whim for ~$6 with a Barnes and Noble gift certificate, and was blown away. I've read a number of books about Prince, but was impressed at the detail with which this one focused on how his recordings came together/fell apart.
Profile Image for Rick Christiansen.
1,169 reviews11 followers
March 24, 2020
I mean it was factual. I can't deny that. Great overview of his life as a musician. I still know very little about Prince even after reading 400 pages about his music. Interestingly enough, I was rarely if ever bored by the book.
192 reviews
August 1, 2023
Prince is my favorite musician. This book was interesting and learned facts I didn't know about him. I would like to have heard more about the more recent events in his life. It ended at a time that was a while ago.
Profile Image for G Scott.
350 reviews1 follower
October 26, 2019
A good overall sketch of a pioneer and an enigma.
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