Lovesexy

| Prince

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Lovesexy

Lovesexy is the tenth studio album by American recording artist Prince. The album was released on May 10, 1988 by Paisley Park Records and Warner Bros. Records, a little over a year after Prince's previous studio album, Sign o' the Times, which received critical praise and a Grammy nomination for Album of the Year. Lovesexy received mixed reviews; it was issued as a substitute record after the last minute cancellation of the infamous The Black Album. The album was recorded in just seven weeks, from mid-December 1987 to late January 1988, at Prince's new Paisley Park Studios, and most of the album is a solo effort from Prince, with a few exceptions. The opening track, "Eye No", was recorded with the full band (Miko Weaver on guitar, Levi Seacer, Jr. on bass, Doctor Finkand Boni Boyer on keyboards, Eric Leeds on saxophone, Atlanta Bliss on trumpet and Sheila E. on drums). Sheila E., in fact, plays drums on several tracks and sings backup, along with Boyer. Leeds and Bliss provide horns on most tracks, and Ingrid Chavez provides the intro to "Eye No". The album is designed to be heard in the context of a continuous sequence: LP pressings split the album in two side-long tracks, without visual bands to indicate individual songs. Similarly, early CD copies of Lovesexy have the entire album in sequence as a single track, though some later editions have it as nine separate tracks. Lovesexy is also the first Prince album to replace the pronoun "I" with a stylized 'eye' symbol, hence the title of "Eye No"; however, the 'eye' symbol would not be completely adopted until 1992's Love Symbol Album. -wikipedia

Critic Reviews

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  • Rolling Stone

    as complex and indecisive as the black album was locomotive and sexual  

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  • The Quietus

    the last great Prince album 

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  • Albumism

    contains moments of brilliance and is a powerful dose of positive funk that should be sought when needed 

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  • The Guardian

    The last Prince album, chronologically speaking, from his intimidatingly Midas-fingered infallible years. Sequenced as one long track on CD, annoyingly.  

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  • All Music

    A handful of tracks are worthwhile ... but Lovesexy is his weakest album since Controversy.  

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  • Metro Weekly

    It’s almost a genre to itself. An essential album that should be part of any Prince fan’s collection. 

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  • movingtheriver.com

    At once scary, profound, silly, funny, romantic and outrageous, Lovesexy still sounds fantastic 30 years on. 

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  • MTSU Sidelines

    I’m far too white to fully appreciate what Prince has done here, though with brilliant records like this one, listening does not require ability. 

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  • A Pop Life

    Prince’s crowning achievement 

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  • Nick Bollinger's Album Reviews

    Lovesexy is not Prince’s masterpiece. But it is a tantalising half-step forward on a path that, over ten years, has become more interesting at every turn. 

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  • Wilson & Alroy's Record Reviews

    The disc is remarkable for the colossal number of interlocking melodic hooks throughout  

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  • Clems Music Reviews

    a very high caliber album filled with some great music  

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