The Beautiful Ones

This article is about the song by Prince. For the single by Suede, see Beautiful Ones.
"The Beautiful Ones"
Song by Prince from the album Purple Rain
Released June 25, 1984
Format CD
Recorded September 1983
Sunset Sound, Los Angeles
Genre Soul, R&B, new wave, psychedelic rock
Length 5:13
Label Warner Bros.
Writer(s) Prince
Producer(s) Prince
Purple Rain track listing

"Take Me with U"
(2)
"The Beautiful Ones"
(3)
"Computer Blue"
(4)
"The Beautifiul Ones"
A sample of Prince's "The Beautifiul Ones" from Purple Rain

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"The Beautiful Ones" is the third track on Prince and The Revolution's soundtrack album Purple Rain. It was one of three songs produced, arranged, composed, and performed by Prince. The others were When Doves Cry and Darling Nikki. The song was recorded at Sunset Sound in Los Angeles by Peggy Mac and David Leonard in early September 1983.

"The Beautiful Ones" is a haunting musical tale of emotional longing and unrequited love. Starting out as a slow falsetto ballad, with Prince's piano and organ-sounding synthesizers providing a lush backdrop, it gradually builds in volume and intensity, and by the end of the song, Prince is screaming out "Do you want him, or do you want me? 'Cause I want you." The song comes to a quiet close, with Prince's keyboards and drum solo serving as the closing instrumentation.

The song replaced "Electric Intercourse" on the Purple Rain album.[1] It was originally written for Susannah Melvoin (Revolution band member Wendy's twin sister) to woo her away from her then-boyfriend.[2]

In the film, Prince sings the song directly from the stage to Apollonia, who is sitting with his rival Morris Day. The song is a direct and urgent appeal to Apollonia to choose Prince as her lover—and it is a direct challenge to Day. Ultimately, as the song ends and Prince lies, apparently spent, on the floor of the stage, Apollonia leaves in tears. (Later, she surprises him when he is unlocking his bike to leave.)

The version on the Purple Rain album is slightly cut; a longer version of the song exists.

Cover Versions

References

  1. "Everybody Want What They Don't Got", Uptown #44 (September 8, 2000). Accessed December 22, 2008.
  2. Nilsen, Per. Dance Music Sex Romance: Prince: The First Decade (SAF Publishing Ltd., 1999). ISBN 978-0-946719-64-8
  3. Spin Staff. "Get Your FREE Copy of SPIN's Prince Tribute!," Spin website (June 12, 200).
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