First the intercom would buzz from inside Paisley Park's Studio A. Someone would wheel in a rickety cart. Prince would hand over large reels of 2-inch recording tape. Then the cart would be rolled onto the elevator, down to the basement and on toward the foot-thick steel vault door straight out of a bank heist movie.
The first time Scott LeGere faced this task in 2005, he couldn't even get past the "pre-vault" room, a 20-square-foot storage space in front of the actual vault.
"The floor in front of the door was filled with 2-inch tapes," the former Paisley Park studio traffic manager remembers. "The door wouldn't budge. So by 2005, not only was the vault itself bursting at the seams with these tapes, so was the room in front of it."
It's a fitting analogy for Prince's career one year after his death. Things are ready to burst. Within a few months of his passing, new deals were in the works to make money at rates 10 times or more what he earned in recent decades — and in ways he often stood against.
That fabled vault in Chanhassen will soon be mined by Universal Music for a steady stream of "new" albums to be released in the coming years; maybe even the next 100 years. Warner Bros. is readying reissues of his heyday-era albums, including an expanded "Purple
Rain" coming June 9 along with two unreleased concert movies.
There's also an untold number of live films and albums on file from one of rock's all-time greatest performers. Prince's mountain of unreleased material makes the ever-gainful Michael Jackson and Jimi Hendrix archives look like anthills.
And that's just the recorded stuff. To think of a famous rock or pop icon's posthumous career simply in music terms is so 1999.