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There are four versions to date: Dirty Minds (the original), More Dirty Minds, Deluxe Dirty Minds, which introduced an entirely new category and the travel card game edition, and Dirty Minds Supreme. As of 2011, a television game show version was in the works. Dirty Minds is also played regularly on radio stations across the country. [citation ...
Dirty Mind is the third studio album by the American singer-songwriter and musician Prince. It was released on October 8, 1980, by Warner Bros. Records . The album is notable for Prince's increasing reliance on rock music elements, high register vocals, sexually explicit lyrical themes and an androgynous image.
"Do It All Night" was the lead single in the UK to support Prince's third album, Dirty Mind. [2] The song is an ode to sex, and Prince exclaims that he wants to do it all night. The song opens with a simple keyboard hook before a prominent bass guitar kicks in, along with rhythm guitar and li
On February 21, 1981, Prince and his backing band performed "Partyup" in an appearance on Saturday Night Live during the show's infamous 1980–1981 season. [5] The performance was Prince's first on the show, and one of the first performances that he had ever done on live television.
Dirty Mind", went on to win the award for Best Rock Instrumental Performance at the 2002 Grammys; [6] this being Beck's third such award, after the albums Flash (1985) and Jeff Beck's Guitar Shop (1989). Singer Imogen Heap is featured on "Dirty Mind" and "Rollin' and Tumblin'", and would later tour with Beck in 2004. [7]
Controversy is the fourth studio album by the American singer-songwriter and musician Prince, released on October 14, 1981, by Warner Bros. Records.With the exception of one track, it was written and produced entirely by Prince.
S83. December 7, 1980) review of Dirty Mind (1980): "DIRTY MIND." Prince. Warner Bros. BSK 3478. O ne look at his album cover is the. first tip-off that Prince is not _ your standard black R&B star. Clad in a metal-studded trench coat and bikini briefs, Prince seems to revel in be- ing the rebel with a dubious cause.
Overall, the success of this album geared Prince towards his next album, Dirty Mind, which would be called a complete departure from his earlier sound. Reviewing in Christgau's Record Guide: Rock Albums of the Seventies (1981), Robert Christgau wrote: "This boy is going to be a big star, and he deserves it—he's got a great line. 'I want to ...