The world is still in shock at the passing of Prince, one of the greatest musical artists in American history. Prince was an entertainer, an icon (at one point a symbol), but even more importantly, he was an explicitly political artist in how he presented himself, his music and his quest for creative independence. While his career spans almost 40 years and he has many legendary moments, a few stand out as some of the most political and poignant of his career.
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Intersectionality
The idea that we have identities that overlap (you can be black and gay and Christian and a Republican; who knew?) and interact with one another is a relatively new part of public discourse. But Prince was breaking down political barriers and binary relationships of race and gender from the start.
โ[Prince was] a champion of intersectionality and not being boxed in and labeled, way before academia was talking about those sorts of things,โ music and culture critic Tourรฉโwho wrote an exceptional biography of Prince, I Would Die 4 U: Why Prince Became an Icon, in 2013โtold The Root.
Long before it was trendy, Prince pushed the envelope by pushing questions about race at a time when artists were either good girls or bad girls, crooners or pop stars. In his early days you didnโt know if Prince was black or white or both; gay or straight or bi; atheist or Christian or none of the above. โHe was what we would call today โgender nonconforming,โโ said Tourรฉ, laying out how Princeโs scantily clad performances and focus on his own slight build changed what defined โsexyโ and โsexuality,โ especially for black men, at the time. In the end, through these actions he forced consumers and America in general to decide whether these labels really mattered as long as your music was good.
Cold Warrior
On his 1981 album Controversy, a little-known song called โRonnie Talk to Russiaโ was a plea for newly elected Republican President Ronald Reagan to prevent the Cold War from going hot. He exhorts Reagan to talk to the Russians instead of talking โatโ them to solve the worldโs problems: โRonnie talk to Russia before itโs too late/Before they blow up the world/Before they blow up the world/Donโtcha/Donโt you blow up my world.โ
Prince had several other major political ballads in the โ80s, especially on his Sign Oโ the Times album, including tracks about AIDS, poverty and Reaganโs Star Wars defense program.
Slave to the Labelย ย
Princeโs long-running battles with Warner Bros., and record labels in general, are too heavy to detail here, but there are plenty of significant histories that are worth reading. Fiercely independent, Prince, then โthe Artist Formerly Known as Prince,โ then Prince again, demonstrated that he would not under any circumstances have his creative powers controlled by record labels. At one point he was performing with the word โslaveโ scrawled on his face to protest the restrictions that huge (and at that point merging) conglomerates were having on artists and their pocketbooks. Most black artists werenโt nearly that bold or confident at the time but took cues from Princeโs defiance to later break out and start their own labels and streaming outlets for music.
LGBT Rights
Princeโs sexual politics are as complex as his musical catalog, according to various interviews and actions he took over the years.
โShe described him as politically conservative,โ Tourรฉ said about his interviews with Susan Rogers, a sound engineer on Princeโs Purple Rain album. โShe linked it to his class status. As youโre making more money, you want to make more money. You want to protect it. He was definitely on that,โ he continued, detailing how Princeโs conservative religious background (Seventh-day Adventist and later Jehovahโs Witness) and upbringing affected his politics.
While Prince certainly advocated free love, he was, ironically, less open to lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender rights and issues. In a New Yorker interview in 2008, the artist reportedly suggested that homosexuality was something that God โcleanedโ out at certain points in the Bible (although his representatives reportedly later said that heโd been misquoted). While Prince declared in subsequent interviews that he was primarily concerned with Godโs love and being nonjudgmental, his positions on homosexuality always felt politically at odds with his early music.
Black Lives Matter
Prince, despite seeming racially and sexually ambiguous, was always very clear and political in his love for black lives. He released the tribute song โS.S.T.โ in September 2005 to raise funds for Hurricane Katrina victims. It went to No. 1 on the then-fledgling iTunes charts. Most recently, Prince was active both publicly and privately in the Black Lives Matter movement. He worked with the Rev. Al Sharpton, donated money to Trayvon Martinโs family and legal fund, and threw a concert in Baltimore whose proceeds went to youth groups. He also wrote and performed the song โBaltimore,โ decrying the police violence and systematic racism in the city. And finally, to make it a Black Lives Matter trifecta, he said this at the Grammys: โLike books and black lives, albums still matter.โ
Jason Johnson, political editor at The Root, is a professor of political science at Morgan Stateโs School of Global Journalism and Communication and is a frequent guest on MSNBC, CNN, Al-Jazeera International, Fox Business News and SiriusXM Satellite Radio. Follow him on Twitter.
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