When Prince died in April 2016, "Purple Rain" co-star Morris Day declined to talk to the news media. "I didn't want to be one of the first responders, if you know what I mean, talking about it on all those TV outlets," Day said recently. "Because it just didn't feel right."
But a year later, when celebrated music biographer David Ritz approached Day about collaborating on a memoir, the Minneapolis-launched actor and lead singer of the Time listened.
Day's "On Time: A Princely Life in Funk" will be published this week, with the author doing a signing Friday at the Mall of America. (Read an excerpt here.)
A breezy, hard-to-put-down book, it features Prince's voice throughout simply because Day can't get the Purple One out of his head.
"Prince is the first word in this book," Day writes, explaining that the Minneapolis icon was his biggest influence. "Though he's gone, he's still here. I still hear his voice in my head. I can't write this book without his voice. … Prince wants to be heard."
He comes through loud and clear — on almost every page, often in pointed one-liners — in a running conversation with Day.
Why shouldn't he be prominent in "On Time"? There would be no Morris Day without Prince, who invited the freckle-faced drummer he'd met in a Minneapolis middle-school lunchroom to be the lead singer of a funk band called the Time.
In an hourlong phone call from his home in Orange County, Calif. — where he lives with his second wife and 12-year-old son (his sixth child) — Day, 62, talked about his competition with Prince, the unreleased album they made, his forthcoming line of shoes and the 1990 Time song about Donald Trump.