FEATURE:
I Just Want Your Extra Time and Your…
IN THIS PHOTO: Prince in 1986/PHOTO CREDIT: Everett Collection/Bridgeman Images
Kiss is one of Prince’s most adored and acclaimed songs. One of his most recognisable. It was the lead single from and The Revolution's eighth studio album, Parade: Music from the Motion Picture Under the Cherry Moon. The album is the soundtrack for the 1986 film, directed by and starring Prince. Although the film was panned upon its release and is not really worth watching like 1984’s Purple Rain, the songs from Under the Cherry Moon are phenomenal. I am going to get to some insight into Kiss. How it came together and why it is so impactful. A number one smash in the U.S., I think that 1985 and 1986 are years of Prince’s career not as investigated and respected perhaps as what came before and after. The fact is that 1985’s Around the World in a Day and 1986’s Parade: Music from the Motion Picture Under the Cherry Moon were sandwiched between 1984’s Purple Rain and 1987’s Sign o’ the Times means they will always fall short. However, Parade (I will shorten it for the rest of the feature) has plenty of incredible songs. New Position, Girls & Boys, Under the Cherry Moon and Sometimes It Snows in April are classic examples. In terms of singles from Parade, some less obvious songs were released instead. Mountains and Anotherloverholenyohead are less obvious singles. If some felt Parade was overblown and not to his usual high standard, Parade was a commercial success and in years since is ranked alongside the best and most important Prince albums. How Parade led to the mighty Sign o’ the Times. I think that Kiss is one of those songs that everyone knows the words to. Covered by the likes of Tom Jones, nothing beats the electric and sexy original. There are various features written about Kiss. Varying in length, insight and quality, there are two very detailed ones I am going to draw and quote heavily from. The first is from Sound on Sound that was published in 2013. There is a tinge of sadness looking ahead to 5th February. Just over a couple of months later, we mark ten years since Prince died. It still doesn’t seem real that he is no longer with us. However, thanks to his legendary Vault, there is material and whole albums still being released by his estate:
"For a long time, Prince had been talking about forming his own record label,” says David Z, who by then was heavily into the creative employment of sampling, synths, loops and drum machines that had already become characteristic of that era. "One day, he called me and said, 'There's a group that I've just signed and want you to have something to do with. Come to LA.' So, I went there, walked into Sunset Sound, and he said, 'You're going to produce this group called Mazarati.' That was the first time I'd been labelled a producer, which I'm very grateful for. It got me started.”
Formed by the Revolution's bassist Mark Brown (aka Brown Mark), Mazarati was a funk/R&B outfit whose only hit was the Z-produced/Prince-co-written '100 MPH', but whose greatest claim to fame was a recording that never saw the light of day — at least, not in the form that the band members intended.
"We did a bunch of songs for Mazarati's album,” Z recalls. "Then, when we needed a single, Prince gave me this demo of him just playing straight chords on an acoustic guitar — one verse and one chorus — while singing in a normal pitch; not the falsetto that's on the finished record. To us, it sounded like a folk song and we were wondering what we could do with it. No way was it funky. Anyway, starting with a LinnDrum, I programmed the beat and began experimenting. Taking a hi-hat from the drum machine, I ran it through a delay unit and switched between input and output and in the middle. That created a very funky rhythm. Then I took an acoustic guitar, played these open chords and gated that to the hi-hat trigger. The result was a really unique rhythm that was unbelievably funky but also impossible to actually play... I'm sure that sound influenced the fabulous new Daft Punk song 'Get Lucky', because it uses the same trick, with the guitar gated to some sort of rhythm and sequencer.
"Next, I remembered a little piano part from a Bo Diddley song called 'Say Man' and put it on there, and then Tony Christian sang the lead part, an octave lower than what Prince wound up doing. The background vocals I adapted from the Brenda Lee song 'Sweet Nothings' — good music is always taken from somewhere else — and that was that. The whole thing was done in a day.”
Or David Z and the guys in Mazarati thought it was. The fact is, in this form 'Kiss' sounded OK — a so-so dance number. However, Tony Christian's lead vocal was a little soulless and uninspiring, and when Prince heard the track he decided to head in a different direction... with himself at the helm.
"When I came back into the studio the next morning, Prince had already taken it off the machine, replaced the vocal with his own falsetto performance — which, I guess, he felt it needed — got rid of the bass part and added a James Brown 'Papa's Got A Brand New Bag' guitar lick,” Z recalls. "'What happened?' I asked, to which he replied, 'It's too good for you guys. I'm taking it back.'”
Boasting a four-octave range, Prince sang virtually the entire song in head voice, reverting to chest voice for the final line, as well as a single note before the last chorus. "At the time, I think he was into using a [Sennheiser MD] 441,” says Z.
"We only used nine tracks for that song, including a bass drum on one track, the rest of the drums on another and the hi-hat on a separate track. As for the lack of bass guitar, we always ran the kick drum through an [AMS] RMX16 and put it on the Reverse 2 setting to extend the tail of the reverb. That served as a kick drum and a bass, and it was a signature sound that we used all the time with Prince. We didn't need a real bass. And there was no reverb on anything else; just the kick. The guitar was dry and gated, and everything else sounded kind of different to the corporate rock that was on the radio at that time.”
Mazarati's backing vocals ended up on the finished record, yet this was scant compensation for what they had hoped would be their breakout hit.
"They were pissed,” says Z. "Prince had promised everyone a share of the songwriting credit, but that never happened and they were kind of mad about it.”
While Z had engineered the Mazarati recording in Sunset Sound's Neve 8088-equipped Studio 2, Prince used the API/DeMedio-equipped Studio 3 to record his overdubs.
"We had a factory going,” Z says. "I did a bunch of things like that, with him always in the other room. That's also how we worked at Paisley Park.”
According to David Z, the minimalist arrangement of 'Kiss' required him and Prince to spend only "about five minutes doing the mix”. Nevertheless, he wasn't involved with the 12-inch mix, which, built around the funky guitar lick and featuring additional lyrics as well as a more comprehensive arrangement — complete with organ and bass guitar — could be heard in Prince's critically-panned, commercially disappointing 1986 musical-drama movie Under The Cherry Moon, which he directed and starred in.
"The 12-inch was done by Prince after the fact,” Z explains. "He was obligated by the record company to do a dance version, and it was just a matter of editing in eight bars and then another eight bars of something different. Prince did a lot of his own engineering; sitting behind the board and singing, playing guitar or playing bass while punching buttons at the same time. He worked super-fast. And, apart from the first album, that went for everything we did.
"We'd have these stations set up, with drums out in the room, the bass plugged in, the keyboard plugged in, the guitar plugged in, and he'd jump around between stations while expecting everyone to work as super-fast as he did. If someone didn't, there'd be hell to pay; I've seen him be really hard on some second engineers. So we had to be aware of what he was doing and when he wanted it done. He'd jump to the guitar, you'd hit 'record' and bam, it was done.
"There was no rehearsing. I think he just rehearses in his head, 24/7. He'd start a song, do all of the parts, and then we'd mix it and take it off the board before starting another one. We often did two songs a day, and it was usually a constant process of starting a song and totally finishing the song within about fours hours without any coming back to overdub or remix.”
The soundtrack album, Parade: Music From The Motion Picture Under The Cherry Moon, was the final record on which Prince was backed by the Revolution. He was reinventing himself, as evidenced by the new image that saw him dispense with his curly mane, purple outfits and ruffled shirts in favour of shorter, slicked-back hair and smoother-looking clothes. Accordingly, 'Kiss' matched the mood of the moment, yet it initially didn't impress the record-company honchos.
"It was so different to everything else out there that the Warner Brothers executives freaked out when they first heard it,” David Z confirms. "I was going to get credit as the producer, arranger, everything, but when I talked to the Warners A&R guy he said, 'Oh man, Prince really screwed up. It sucks.' I thought, what? My heart just hit the floor. He said, 'It sounds like a demo. There's no reverb, there's no bass — it's terrible.'
"I was shaken and really disappointed. At that time, however, Prince had enough power to go, 'That's the single and you're not getting another one until you put it out.' The rest is history. When he recorded 'Kiss', Prince was actually going down in terms of his popularity. He had already hit his peak and people were going, 'Ah, Prince is over with.' Well, that song, because it was so different, totally reignited his career and a year later Warners were trying to sign people who sounded like that”.
I am going to conclude with a feature from Stereogum. They explored the sublime and supreme Kiss as part of their The Number Ones run. Although it was number one for only a couple of weeks, it is one of Prince’s most enduring tracks. You can play it to anyone and get a reaction. It is insatiable and slinky. Sweaty and seductive. Classic Prince! If you have not listened to this song for a while then go and play it now:
“In the first decade of his career, Prince released 10 albums. Most of those albums are essential. A couple of them are double LPs. The man kept up an insane pace, but he didn't release all the great songs he wrote. By the early '80s, Prince had already made a habit of gifting hit singles to other artists.
Sometimes, other artists covered Prince's songs and turned them into hits. That's what happened with "I Feel For You," Chaka Khan's 1984 take on a 1979 Prince track. (Khan's version of "I Feel For You" peaked at #3. It's a 9.) Other times, artists took Prince's melodies and built new songs out of them. Stevie Nicks' 1983 single "Stand Back" is essentially a rewrite of "Little Red Corvette," the Prince single from that same year. Before she recorded "Stand Back," Nicks called Prince to tell him that she'd used his song, and Prince came in to play keyboards on Nicks' track. ("Stand Back" peaked at #5. It's an 8. "Little Red Corvette," meanwhile, peaked at #6. It's a 10.) There were also plenty of cases, like Phil Collins' "Sussidio," where artists landed huge hits by outright biting Prince songs and not getting his blessing beforehand.
The stories I love the best are the ones about Prince just writing these glittering and immaculate pop songs and tossing them out to whoever he felt like helping out. By 1986, Prince had done that for plenty of people. In 1984, Prince wrote and co-produced Sheila E's "The Glamorous Life," which peaked at #7. (It's a 9.) A year later, Prince wrote "Sugar Walls" for Sheena Easton, and that one peaked at #9. (It's an 8.) One week in the spring of 1986, the top two songs on the Billboard Hot 100 were both tracks that Prince had written with other artists in mind. With one of those tracks, though, Prince heard what the other artist did with the track and decided that he wanted the song back. This was a wise decision, and it may have saved Prince's hitmaking career.
It seems far-fetched that Prince's mid-'80s run was ever in any kind of jeopardy, especially just two years after the global-conquest move of Purple Rain. But in 1986, many of Prince's ambitions got the better of him. Prince had followed up Purple Rain with the psychedelic pop LP Around The World In A Day. That album went double platinum and sent two singles into the top 10 -- including the classic "Raspberry Beret," which peaked at #2. (It's a 10.) But Around The World In A Day only managed a fraction of those Purple Rain sales, and then Prince went even further down that rabbit hole.
Prince's next album, 1986's Parade, was straight-up Sgt. Pepper-style baroque pop opulence. Parts of it, like the woozy ballad "Sometimes It Snows In April," are brilliant. But other parts are lushly disjointed to the point of absurdity. For the most part, Parade marked a severe departure from the pop zeitgeist of the moment. While most of Prince's peers were going for big drum-machine boom -- doing variations on Prince's Purple Rain sound -- Prince was fucking around with fussy string arrangements and flugelhorns. On top of that, Parade was also the unofficial soundtrack to Prince's second film, the black-and-white musical Under The Cherry Moon. Prince directed the movie himself, and it became an instant-punchline flop. (I've never seen Under The Cherry Moon, and now, watching the trailer, I feel like I should fix that.)
Ultimately, though, none of those moves wounded Prince because Prince was smart enough to drop "Kiss" right in the midst of all this. Originally, "Kiss" wasn't supposed to be a Prince song. At the time, Brownmark, the bassist for Prince's backing band the Revolution had a synth-funk side project called Mazarati, and they were signed to Prince's Paisley Park label. (Mazarati's highest-charting single was 1986's "100 MPH," which Prince wrote and co-produced. It peaked at #19.) Prince wrote "Kiss" with Mazarati in mind.
When Prince gave Mazarati the "Kiss" demo, it was a short and bluesy acoustic sketch of a song. At the time, Mazarati were working with producer David Z, a longtime Minneapolis music-scene fixture who'd played guitar on Lipps, Inc.'s "Funkytown" and whose brother was the Revolution's drummer Bobby Z. David Z took Prince's "Kiss" demo and rearranged it, using a LinnDrum drum machine to turn the song into a spacey, funky vamp. In other words, David Z made "Kiss," a song that Prince had written, sound like a Prince song. Mazarati recorded that version of "Kiss," but when Prince heard it, he decided to take it back for himself. David Z tells Sound On Sound that Prince literally told the band that "Kiss" was "too good for you guys."
Prince wasn't wrong. Mazarati's version of "Kiss" is close to the finished version, but singer Tony Christian sounds weirdly bored on it, and not in a cool way. Prince took that version of the song and made a couple of key adjustments, singing it in a squeaky falsetto and adding the spider-funk guitar fill from James Brown's "Papa's Got A Brand New Bag." ("Papa's Got A Brand New Bag" peaked at #8 in 1965. It's a 10.) Prince credited David Z as the arranger for "Kiss," and he left Mazarati's backing vocals intact. But Prince didn't give Mazarati co-writing credits for Kiss, which infuriated Brownmark. (David Z will eventually appear in this column as a producer.)
You wouldn't think a song as simple as "Kiss" would have that complicated a backstory. It sounds like the kind of thing that Prince could do in his sleep. For most artists, this would be a complaint. For Prince, it's anything but. "Kiss" stands out on Parade because it's the one song where Prince doesn't work to smother his funkiest instincts. Instead, it's all negative space and swaggering fuck-squeak -- one of the most fundamentally Prince songs that Prince ever made.
When Prince first wrote the "Kiss" lyrics, he might've meant them as reassurance: "You don't have to be beautiful to turn me on/ I just need your body, baby, from dusk till dawn." Over and over, Prince tells this potential lover that she doesn't have to change anything about herself. She doesn't have to be rich or cool or experienced. She doesn't have to watch Dynasty. (Was there social pressure to watch Dynasty?) Prince would prefer it if this potential lover did not act younger than her age or attempt to talk dirty, since Prince can talk dirty enough for both of them. Mostly, though, he just wants her to be herself. That's all he needs -- her extra time and her kiss.
In its final form, though, there's nothing reassuring about "Kiss." Instead, it becomes a radically horny statement of intent. Prince sounds like he exists on the outer edges of the sexual imagination. He sings the whole thing in a near-inhuman falsetto, like Barry Gibb taking hits of helium. The beat is a spartan echo of a shimmy, a mechanized strut. His guitar needles and itches. The lyrics tell you that everything is going to be OK, that he just wants to hang out with you. The music tells you that everything is not OK. It tells you that you're about to go on a journey.
Just as much as that syncopated yip-stomp, the "Kiss" video speaks of fuck-worlds that most of us can scarcely imagine. Fashion photographer Rebecca Blake directs, filming Prince sliding and mugging in rooms full of sunset colors. Prince somehow looks more scandalous in his giant leather jacket and tiny little half-shirt than he does when he's straight-up shirtless. He does splits and spinkicks and twirls in towering heels. Dancer Monique Mannen and Revolution member Wendy Melvoin are both in the video, and both are plenty charismatic. But Prince carries himself like he exists on a whole other plane, like he's the only man in existence. It's some of the greatest peacocking ever put to film.
Decades of constant repetition have hurt "Kiss." Sometimes, its minimalism can sound slight and brittle, and it doesn't have the same heft or presence as Prince's best Purple Rain songs. But as a workout, it's extremely slick and beguiling. It's the kind of song that must take unearthly confidence to pull off. At the time, some Warner executives thought "Kiss" was too weird to be a single, even though it might be the least weird song on Parade. But at the time, nobody was going to tell Prince no.
After "Kiss," none of the other singles from Parade cracked the top 10. Parade would be the last album credited to Prince & The Revolution. Prince ditched most of his backing band after they finished touring behind Parade. Mazarati broke up a few years later without making any more hits. (Two members of Mazarati will eventually appear in this column, but only by voicing a rapping cartoon character.) Prince, meanwhile, went on to record Sign O' The Times, the astonishing double album that turned all his Parade-era pretensions into something sprawling but cohesive. We'll see Prince in this column again.
GRADE: 9/10”.
Kiss was ranked second when The Guardian ranked Prince’s greatest singles in 2019. Many might place Kiss a bit lower, though the fact it has this legacy and remains flawless speaks volumes. It is a song I heard as a child and never get tired of: “By 1986, Prince was peerless, so far ahead of everyone else in contemporary pop it was almost laughable. Kiss was all the evidence you needed. It repeated When Doves Cry’s hugely impressive trick of conjuring up funk without a bassline, and added perhaps the most indelible chorus of his career and a vocal that turns into an astonishing lust-racked scream at 3min 20sec”. American Songwriter declared Kiss as the third-best Prince song in their 2022 article. In 2024, when Rolling Stone decided on the best 250 songs ever, Kiss came in at eighty-five: “When Mazarati, one of the bands in Prince’s Paisley Park orbit, asked him for a song, Prince dashed off a bluesy acoustic demo for them. Mazarati added a funk groove, and Prince was smart enough to take the song back, maintaining some of producer David Z’s arrangements and the band’s background vocals but no bass line, to the disappointment of his label. “At that time, however, Prince had enough power to go, ‘That’s the single and you’re not getting another one until you put it out.’ The rest is history,” Z recalled in an interview. “That song totally reignited his career, and a year later Warner Bros. was trying to sign people who sounded like that”. On 5th February, it will be forty years since Kiss was released. The lead single from a fascinating soundtrack album that I think works better standalone, rather than tie it to Under the Cherry Moon, Parade is a masterpiece. Kiss is its brightest and boldest song. In 1986, with the world at his feet, Prince was this titan of an artist that…
FEW could equal.
