DENVER – Prince pounded his rhinestone-encrusted cane into the floor to make a point. "I don't have time for old people," he insisted. "I want to work with young people."
As he prepares to turn 55 on June 7, the Minnesota music legend is turning a new page — looking forward, not backward.
During a rare and far-ranging, two-hour-plus interview late, late on Monday night, Prince pointed across the room at his 23-year-old manager and the members of his new female backup band, 3rdEyeGirl, featuring a 22-year-old drummer he discovered on the Internet.
"I have my legacy," he said. "It's time for their legacy. They're a Minneapolis band, too."
The Rock and Roll Hall of Famer touched on assorted topics as he unwound after two sold-out shows at the Ogden Theatre in Denver, performances in which he seemed refreshed and buoyed by his young and hungry bandmates doing both old favorites and new jams.
He talked about a new album with 3rdEyeGirl; other new younger musicians in his royal court; the preponderance of lip-syncing among today's pop stars, the lack of songwriting craft today; his mentor Larry Graham of Sly & the Family Stone; and his highly lucrative, stripped-down club tour that comes home to the Myth in Maplewood on May 25.
What he didn't discuss were some things Minnesotan. He dodged questions about the state's new marriage-equality law, the influence of Minnesota on his music and the impact that Bob Dylan had on him.
"Dylan didn't cross over," he said, referring to artists from his childhood who were successful with both white and black audiences. "Sly Stone crossed, Jimi Hendrix crossed."