Album Title
Prince
Artist Icon Black Album (1994)
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First Released

Calendar Icon 1994

Genre

Genre Icon Funk

Mood

Mood Icon Energetic

Style

Style Icon Urban/R&B

Theme

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Tempo

Speed Icon Medium

Release Format

Release Format Icon Album

Record Label Release

Speed Icon Warner Bros. Records

World Sales Figure

Sales Icon 820,000 copies

Album Description
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User Album Review
Originally recorded for Sheila E’s birthday it later evolved into a release Prince intended as a club album. It was dubbed The Black Album because no cover nor name was ever given to it.

The songs were originally written in 1987 after the Sign O’ The Times sessions, but pulled from sale days before their intended release (8 December 1987) – Prince citing their excessive eroticism and violent lyrics (Warner Bros. fearing it’s sales potential). Prince hastily wrote a more enlightened replacement album, Lovesexy (When 2 R In Love is the sole survivor from The Black Album and transferring to Lovesexy). Prince still performed several songs from the withdrawn album during the Lovesexy Tour. A reference to the album is made in the video for Alphabet St. where the caption “Don’t buy The Black Album” is seen for a few frames scrolling in the background. With approximately 100 promotional copies in circulation following the withdrawal The Black Album became one of the most bootlegged albums in history, but got its eventual official release in November 1994 as The Legendary Black Album (packaged accordingly to retain its legendary forbidden mystique) albeit only to fulfill Prince’s contractual output for Warner Brothers which the label paid $1m to suede him to sanction the release.


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