When Prince showed up at his favorite Los Angeles recording studio, engineer Peggy McCreary never knew what was going to happen.
"It wasn't like you could ask him," she recalled. "He was very quiet. I got in his face: 'You're gonna have to talk to me. I can't work if you're just going to mumble instructions.' "
They worked together for six years, beginning in 1981, at Sunset Sound, recording "Controversy," "1999," "Purple Rain" and other projects.
That's where he cut many of the tracks on "Originals," a new posthumous album featuring his versions of songs he wrote for others. It is being released Friday, on what would have been his 61st birthday, by the Tidal streaming service (it will be available elsewhere June 21).
Ten of the 15 songs were written for women, including Sheila E., the Bangles, Martika, Jill Jones, Taja Sevelle and Apollonia 6. Others were for the Time, Mazarati and Kenny Rogers (yes, that "Gambler" guy).
"You never knew what he was working on or who it was for," McCreary said.
Some days, he'd walk in with lyrics handwritten on hotel stationery. Sometimes he'd scribble lyrics on the back of recording track sheets in the studio.
Only once did he explain a song — "Manic Monday," which the Bangles turned into a smash in 1986 (peaking at No. 2 behind Prince's own "Kiss").