Camille_(album)

<i>Camille</i> (album)

Camille (album)

Studio album by Prince/Camille


Camille is the upcoming[4] second posthumous studio album by American musician Prince. The album was originally recorded in 1986 under the pseudonym Camille, a feminine alter ego portrayed by Prince via pitch-shifting his vocals up to an androgynous register.[3] Prince planned to release the album without any acknowledgement of his identity.[3] The project was initially scrapped several weeks before its planned release, with rare early LP pressings eventually surfacing for auction in 2016;[3] several tracks recorded for Camille were instead included on various other projects, most prominently Prince's 1987 double LP Sign o' the Times.

Quick Facts Camille, Studio album by Camille ...

In March 2022, Third Man Records announced that they had received the rights to release the album, with Ben Blackwell (co-founder of the label) saying "Prince’s people agreed – almost too easy." While the label indicated plans to release Camille, no release date or method of release has been announced yet.[5][6][7][8] There have been no updates on the release since July 2022.[9]

Recording and concept

After abandoning his Dream Factory LP and breaking up his backing band The Revolution in mid-1986, Prince entered the studio with engineer Susan Rogers in late October to begin a new project.[10] He began experimenting with his vocals in an artificially pitched-up style, achieved either by using a pitchshifter or by recording his vocals at a slower tempo and then speeding up the tape to create a higher, androgynous tone (he had previously experimented with this technique on his 1984 B-side "Erotic City").[10]

Prince began referring to this new pitched-up voice as a feminine alter ego named Camille.[10][11] The sessions commenced with the recording of the dance track "Housequake"[10] and within ten days he had completed enough material for an album,[10] which he planned to release pseudonymously under Camille's name as a self-titled debut.[11] He informed Warner Bros. that his image would not appear on the cover and that he would not acknowledge the album as his own work.[11][12][13] At some point, his plans for Camille also extended to ideas for a movie.[10] It has been suggested that the name was inspired by the 19th century French intersex person Herculine Barbin, who also used the alias Camille and was the subject of the 1985 film Mystère Alexina.[11][14]

By November 5, the album had reached the mastering stage and a number of copies were pressed, but Prince abandoned it weeks before its intended release. His reasons for doing so are not entirely clear,[10] though it may have been in part due to Warner Bros.' unwillingness to release an album that would not be attributed to Prince's name.[12] It is unknown how many original printed copies of the album exist,[3] or whether prepared cover artwork was ever finalized, though the catalogue number 25543 was assigned to it.[10] After shelving Camille, Prince combined the tracks intended for that album (except "Feel U Up") with other unreleased recordings from the period into the proposed triple album Crystal Ball.[3] Against his wishes, Warner Bros. forced him to trim the tracklist down to a double album, which became Sign o' the Times (1987). This release included the Camille tracks "Housequake", "If I Was Your Girlfriend", and "Strange Relationship".

Aftermath

The remaining tracks from Camille would be released through other avenues in subsequent years. "Rebirth of the Flesh" was first released in its original form in 2020 on Sign o' the Times – Super Deluxe Edition. The NPG Music Club made a 1988 Lovesexy Tour rehearsal recording available in September 2001. "Feel U Up'" was released in 1989 as the B-side of "Partyman". "Shockadelica," originally written (unsolicited) by Prince as the title track for Jesse Johnson's then-forthcoming album titled Shockadelica (1986), was later included as a B-side of "If I Was Your Girlfriend". "Good Love" was later released on the Bright Lights, Big City film soundtrack in 1988.

Two other songs were credited to Camille after the album project was abandoned. The first was "Scarlet Pussy", which was released as the B-side of the 1988 single "I Wish U Heaven" featuring a black label. The second was "U Got the Look", which appeared on Sign o' the Times and was also released as a single. Another song was recorded using Camille vocals called "Cosmic Day", it was released alongside "Rebirth of the Flesh" on the super deluxe edition of Sign o' the Times.[15]

Prince later invoked Camille as the guiding force responsible for his next project, The Black Album (which contained "Rockhard in a Funky Place", again as the final track).[11][16] Like Camille, this album was also shelved shortly before its intended release after Prince experienced a spiritual epiphany and became convinced it was "evil";[17] he later blamed the album on an entity named Spooky Electric, described as a demonic alter-ego to Camille.[18]

In 2016, a rare LP pressing of Camille made before its official shelving was put up for auction.[3] The album sold for $58,787.

A super deluxe edition of Sign o' the Times was released on September 25, 2020, which includes outtakes from the Dream Factory/Camille/Crystal Ball sessions as bonus tracks.

Track listing

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All tracks are written by Prince, except "Rockhard in a Funky Place" by Prince and Eric Leeds

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Personnel

Credits from Duane Tudahl, Benoît Clerc and Guitarcloud[19][20][21][22][23]

See also


References

  1. "Super rare copy of Prince's unreleased Camille LP up for auction". The Vinyl Factory. 12 September 2016. Retrieved 24 January 2018.
  2. Kreps, Daniel (9 September 2016). "Rare Copy of Prince's Unreleased LP 'Camille' Up for Auction". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 2 February 2017.
  3. Staff. "25 Essential Prince Songs". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 2 February 2017.
  4. Partridge, Kenneth. "A Brief History of Prince Being Prince". Consequence of Sound. Retrieved 2 February 2017.
  5. Gottschalk, Kurt (4 March 2011). "In Which Prince at Last Wins the Battle Against Evil, and Yet Y'all Still Make Fun of Him". Brooklyn Rail. Retrieved 2 February 2017.
  6. Hahn 2004, pp. 121–122.
  7. Tudahl, Duane (2021). Prince and the Parade and Sign O' The Times Era Studio Sessions 1985 and 1986. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 9781538144527.
  8. Clerc, Benoît (October 2022). Prince: All the Songs. Octopus. ISBN 9781784728816.
  9. "Sign O The Times & The Black Album". guitarcloud.org. Retrieved 2023-04-30.
  10. "Yamaha DX7". guitarcloud.org. Retrieved 2023-05-12.
  11. "Linn LinnDrum". guitarcloud.org. Retrieved 2023-05-12.

Bibliography

  • Hahn, Alex (2004). Possessed: The Rise and Fall of Prince. Billboard Books. ISBN 0-8230-7749-7.

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