Playing the Fine Line in Minneapolis will be bittersweet Saturday for singer Ashley Támar Davis.
She's scheduled to go on stage at 9 p.m. as the special guest of New Power Generation, a few days after the third anniversary of Prince's death. She looks forward to performing "Redhead Stepchild," the song she coproduced with Prince and doesn't believe has been performed here since 2006.
"He came into my life when I was 13, 14. That's when he was officially introduced. I received paraphernalia. I saw the 'Purple Rain' bike. I got a glimpse of everything Paisley. I went to a concert at Paisley, my second concert. I wasn't star-struck. I guess it was a premonition of [him being] family, not knowing later on I would actually work with him," she said.
"I didn't officially work with him until 2005. I elaborate on all the stories in detail in my memoir. The book was written seven years ago. I was approached [by] a boutique publisher in Houston, and I just didn't feel the time was right to put it out. But it's completed, and when he passed, I had to edit it.
"I am one of those people who is very methodical. I pray about everything. If it doesn't feel right, I don't move on it, I don't talk about it. But since doing 'The Voice,' people started putting two and two together about who I was from my childhood."
She was one of the girls in the group that became Destiny's Child. Between being on stage with Beyoncé in the beginning, becoming a Prince protégée and working on Broadway in "Motown the Musical," Davis has a treasure trove of stories. One of her most cherished notices from "Motown" came after Prince happened to be in the audience the night she filled in for the actor who played Diana Ross. There's a text message from Prince she's saving for the book.
Q: Select a duet you'd have recorded with Prince.
A: We already did a duet [they also wrote] together: "Beautiful, Loved and Blessed." It was Grammy-nominated. It gets no better than that.