That might be so sorry for music industry and gender fluid community. But people should stop overrate the singers to show their fake favor in their music when they are just dead , I dun see its respectful if your havent appriciate his music WHEN they are ALIVE not AFTER DEAD
That might be so sorry for music industry and gender fluid community. But people should stop overrate the singers to show their fake favor in their music when they are just dead , I dun see its respectful if your havent appriciate his music WHEN they are ALIVE not AFTER DEAD
I'm sure you still listen to Avril Lavigne and she's been dead for years now.
I've been jamming Prince's music since I saw the news. I can't think of a better way to pay tribute to the man right now, and believe me, I'm trying.
What really strikes me right now is how...numb I feel. I've only felt this way about a musician dying one other time: When Michael died. Prince was...almost inhuman in his musical ability. The man was perhaps the most naturally gifted musician in the history of popular music. In some ways, when I would watch a Prince live performance, I would just stare in awe at what I was seeing, a virtuoso at the top of his craft seemingly all the time, even at times when it looked like he wasn't trying. My mind calls back to the 2004 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame ceremony (the year Prince was inducted) and the final jam that night, where legends such as Tom Petty, Steve Winwood, and Jeff Lynne were left staring in awe as Prince performed one of the guitar solos to end all guitar solos. I unabashedly love both Petty and Lynne (as well as the Travelling Wilburys, the supergroup that featured Petty, Lynne, George Harrison, Bob Dylan, and Roy Orbison), but my god, Prince owns the stage the moment his solo begins. There's a reason why, when asked how it felt being the world's greatest guitarist, fellow guitar god Eric Clapton said, "I don't know. Ask Prince."
Most gifted musician of my (or perhaps anyone's) lifetime. There will never, ever, EVER be another Prince.