Prince posthumously wows the world with “Welcome 2 America.”/The-Prince-Estate-photo-credit-Mike-Ruiz
by Stacy M. Brown
NNPA Newswire Senior National Correspondent
@StacyBrownMedia
It is rare when a posthumous CD receives the rave reviews as Prince’s “Welcome 2 America.”
It is even rarer when the previously unreleased music was hidden in plain sight for more than a decade.
Yes, Prince played many of the same songs during his 2010 tour of the same name.
But the Purple One never released “Welcome 2 America” music – perhaps with the remarkable foresight he had always possessed, Prince had his eyes on 2021, Black Lives Matter, and the pandemic.
“I swear that he’s speaking from the grave,” Elisa Fiorillo, a memb...
“Now I listen to it, and I get it more than I did when I sang it, which is crazy. It’s like he read into the future,” exclaimed Fiorillo, who sang background vocals for the album.
Prince died in 2016 of an accidental prescription drug overdose. He was 57.
The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, Oscar and multi-Grammy and American Music Award-winner, reportedly has a treasure trove of unreleased hits inside his vault at Paisley Park, his famous home that’s now a huge tourist attraction outside of Minneapolis.
But it’s “Welcome 2 America” that has music aficionados, journalists, and fans fawning over the superstar all over again.
“Prince Made ‘Welcome 2 America’ in 2010. It Speaks to 2021,” The New York Times raved in its headline this week.
“Funkier, Sexier, Superflyier Than Most of His Latter-Day Music,” Rolling Stone headline writers asserted.
“A Prismatic Prince Shines Again on Welcome 2 America,” NPR added.
“‘Welcome 2 America’ was made two years into the Obama administration, and Prince didn’t see much progress. In the title track, women sing, ‘Hope and change’; then Prince dryly observes, ‘Everything takes forever/The truth is a new minority,’” mused the famed music critic John Pareles.
Pareles notes that the songs take on racism, exploitation, disinformation, celebrity, faith, and capitalism.
“21st century, it’s still about greed and fame,” Prince sings in “Running Game (Son of a Slave Master).”
“Eleven years after the album was recorded — as the 2020s have brought bitter divisiveness, blatant racism, battles over history and a digital hellscape of hyped consumption and algorithmically boosted lies — Prince doesn’t sound pessimistic, just matter-of-fact,” Pareles relayed.
“Welcome 2 America” wasn’t made casually, he concluded.
“It’s one of Prince’s more collaborative albums, constructed in discrete stages with different cohorts of musicians.”
“With the album coming out now, it’s almost like what everyone needs to hear,” Tal Wilkenfeld, who played bass during the March and April 2010 recording sessions, told the Post.
“He was very focused on the socio-political climate … He really cared to have a voice in what was happening in the world at large and make change.”
You need to be a member of Pittsburgh Jazz Network to add comments!
Join Pittsburgh Jazz Network