April 21--In 2004, Prince walked onstage at the Waldorf Astoria hotel in New York for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony honoring himself, the late George Harrison and others. Prince was surrounded by fellow legends -- Tom Petty, Jeff Lynne and Steve Winwood -- who all joined in a cover of the Beatles' "While My Guitar Gently Weeps."
When the song reached its climax, Prince stepped forward, dressed in a red hat and matching shirt unbuttoned to his stomach. He then played one of the best guitar solos of his life. A roomful of rock titans strummed along, gape-jawed, as Prince burned through riff after riff of instrumental fireworks. When he finished, he threw his guitar over his head and walked offstage without saying a word.
In the company of icons, Prince still had no equal. A sexual boundary pusher and devout Jehovah's Witness, he was our first post-everything pop star, defying easy categories of race, genre and commercial appeal. He was one of the bestselling artists of all time, and showed the way to a transcendent new future for pop music.
Prince, 57, died Thursday at his home, Paisley Park, outside Minneapolis. The singer had been hospitalized in Illinois last week for what his representative said at the time was the flu, which he had been battling for weeks, leading to the cancellation of two shows on his "Piano and a Microphone" tour. He was released after three hours and returned to his home, in Minnesota.
The Carver County Sheriff's Office confirmed the singer's passing, saying in a statement, "We are investigating the circumstances of his death." Authorities found the singer unresponsive in an elevator at his home recording studio in Chanhassen, Minn. "First responders attempted to provide lifesaving CPR, but were unable to revive the victim. He was pronounced deceased at 10:07 a.m.," the sheriff's office said.
Testifying to the enormous impact Prince had on the pop culture landscape, reactions quickly poured from his music peers and fans, including President Obama, Elton John, Justin Timberlake and Katy Perry. John called him "greatest peformer I've seen. A true genius."
Ken Ehrlich, executive producer of the Grammy Awards show, called Prince "one of music's true original creators and performers."
"The several times we were fortunate enough to work with him were always times of incredible showmanship and artistic brilliance, and for my money, he was one of the greatest guitarists in the world," Ehrlich said in a statement. "His opening number with Beyonc頯n the Grammy Awards has always been thought of as one of our greatest Grammy moments .... Personally, I loved his gentle demeanor and often wondered how he could go from that softspoken, almost shy persona backstage to the fireworks that followed."
Born Prince Rogers Nelson in Minneapolis on June 7, 1958, the trailblazing performer sold more than 100 million records over his career, fusing rock, pop, funk and R and demonstrating an audacious, idiosyncratic sense of style and a willingness to court controversy. He won seven Grammys and an Academy Award for best original song score for the 1984 film "Purple Rain."
Prince married twice, first to his backup singer and dancer Mayte Garcia in 1996, then to Manuela Testolini in 2001. Both marriages ended in divorce. He had a son with Garcia who died a week after birth. Before, between and after his marriages, he had been romantically linked to many celebrities and musical collaborators, including Madonna and Kim Basinger.
A highly prolific and restless artist who blended androgynous sexuality with impeccable pop craftsmanship, Prince released more than three dozen albums over his four-decade career. He scored more than 50 Top 40 hits around the world since 1979, including such songs as "When Doves Cry," "1999," "Little Red Corvette" and "Raspberry Beret."
Drawn to music from a young age, in part as a way to escape a turbulent home life, he wrote his first song on his father's piano when he was just 7 years old.
"I was born epileptic and I used to have seizures when I was young," he told PBS host Tavis Smiley in 2009. "My mother and father didn't know what to do or how to handle it, but they did the best they could with what little they had .... From that point on, I've been having to deal with a lot of things -- getting teased a lot in school -- and early in my career I tried to compensate for that by being as flashy as I could and as noisy as I could."
While attending Minneapolis' Central High School, Prince joined his first band, Grand Central, playing piano and guitar while performing a mix of covers and original songs that touched such varied influences as James Brown, Miles Davis, Jimi Hendrix and Sly and the Family Stone.
Having developed into a virtuosic multi-instrumentalist, Prince produced, arranged, composed and played all 27 instruments on his 1978 debut album, "For You." But it was with his second album, titled simply "Prince," that the singer's career began to explode, with the infectious, brazenly sexual singles "Why You Wanna Treat Me So Bad?" and "I Wanna Be Your Lover" driving the album to platinum sales.
Prince's music was steeped in the contradictions of his background -- a black artist who toyed with his racial background in the casting of "Purple Rain," sexually flamboyant and gender playful, with a Midwestern self-reliance that created space for his idiosyncrasies. Minneapolis' First Avenue nightclub was his home base, and few musicians have defined a city so thoroughly.
"Prince was the Patron Saint of First Avenue. He grew up on this stage, and then commanded it, and he united our city," said representatives of First Avenue in a statement. "It is difficult to put into words the impact his death will have on the entire music community, and the world."
Reviewing one of the singer's concerts in Los Angeles in 1981, Times critic Robert Hilburn predicted, "If he can overcome rock radio's absurd resistance to programming black music, Prince could become one of rock's pop superstars."
"The most important thing is to be true to yourself, but I also like danger," Prince told Hilburn in an interview the following year. "That's what is missing from pop music today. There's no excitement and mystery -- people sneaking out and going to these forbidden concerts by Elvis Presley or Jimi Hendrix."
Songs like "Darling Nikki" and "Head" were some of the most frankly sexual tracks of the era. Yet, unlike many of his rock peers, they were always rooted in a tender, sometimes mystical spirituality that made even his bawdiest lyrics feel generous. Coupled with his one-of-a-kind fashion sense -- ubiquitous purple, alluring makeup and frilled garments -- he was matched only by David Bowie for his appeal across all sexualities.
Perfectly poised to capitalize on the advent of music videos, Prince would go on to rule the pop charts in the 1980s, releasing a string of wildly successful albums, including "1999," "Around the World in a Day" and the soundtrack to the semi-autobiographical "Purple Rain," in which he also starred, an album that has sold over 22 million copies worldwide and is regularly ranked as among the best in rock history.
Raised a Seventh Day Adventist, he later became a Jehovah's Witness and often referenced spirituality in his lyrics. "Dearly beloved, we are gathered here to get through this thing called life," he intoned in the manner of a preacher in 1984's "Let's Go Crazy."
Speaking to Smiley in 2009, he cited his religious views to explain why he didn't vote for President Obama: "The reason why is that I'm one of the Jehovah's Witnesses, and we've never voted .... President Obama is a very smart individual and he seems like he means well. Prophecy is what we all have to go by now."
Leveraging his status as a respected tastemaker, Prince wrote songs that became hits for other artists, like the wrenching Sinead O'Connor ballad "Nothing Compares 2 U," and nurtured the careers of a series of proteges, including Morris Day, Vanity and Sheila E, who wrote, "My heart is broken. There are no words. I love you" on her Twitter page.
A strong and vocal proponent of artists' rights, he waged a public battle in the early '90s against his label at the time, Warner Bros., changing his name to an unpronounceable symbol and writing the word "slave" across his face. Last year, in protest of what he saw as paltry royalties being paid to musicians, he pulled his music off of all streaming services except Tidal.
"The art of making records, I give it so much respect," Prince told The Times in 2009 in a rare interview. "But it gets trampled on for the sake of commerciality."
Even as the music business shifted dramatically around him, Prince remained productive. In recent years, he continued to release albums at a steady clip, including 2015's two-part "HITnRUN." And he never lost his penchant for provocation, making headlines in 2007 with a Super Bowl halftime show that featured a phallic guitar silhouette.
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