Dez Dickerson and André Cymone: Why these early Prince collaborators joined the Revolution's tribute concerts

These early Prince partners talk about their relationship with Prince and their involvement in the Revolution's tribute concerts.

August 26, 2016 at 2:42PM
Press photo of Andre Cymone, by Katherine Copeland Anderson
André Cymone was Prince's childhood friend and an early music collaborator. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)

André Cymone wasn't ready. He didn't want to participate in a tribute concert to Prince, his childhood friend and former bandmate.

"It was way too soon," he said, recalling a phone call this spring from Bobby Z, drummer for Prince & the Revolution. "Bobby doesn't take no for an answer. He asked me four or five [different] times. I asked my crew [his kids]. They called him Uncle Prince."

Cymone agreed to get involved with three concerts by the Revolution this week in Minneapolis.

Cymone, who grew up in Minneapolis but moved to Los Angeles in 1985, had to do some homework before he joined rehearsals in L.A. He had to learn the songs — the bass (the role he played with Prince), guitar and lead vocal parts because he didn't know what would be asked of him.

He also had a confession to make: After he left Prince's band in 1981, Cymone stopped listening to Prince's albums.

"I never heard 'Controversy,' '1999' and 'Parade' till four weeks ago," he admitted. "I was blown away. His personality — his jokes — is all over that stuff."

Cymone has plenty of stories to tell, including how Prince left his autograph on a basement vent in the house on Russell Avenue N. where he lived with Cymone's family during high school. And the signature is still there.

On Aug. 13 at an invitation-only memorial service at Paisley Park, Cymone told some childhood stories about Prince. On Sept. 20, Cymone will release an EP, "Black Man in America." In 2014, he performed at First Avenue to promote "The Stone," his first album in 29 years.

"Prince and myself, we had our issues," said Cymone, 58. "But we always came together. He'd call me before 'Sign o' the Times' and play it and 'what do you think?' I had a song called 'Let's Get Crazy' with Evelyn 'Champagne' King and he called and said 'I got a song 'Let's Go Crazy.' I don't want you to think I took it from you.'"

While Cymone last talked to Prince in 2014, guitarist Dez Dickerson, who joined Cymone in Prince's band in 1978, talked to the rock star three weeks before he died. Prince called him to talk business.

Dickerson, 61, who has a marketing company in Nashville, was en route to his fourth-grade stepson's parent/teacher conference when his cellphone lit up with messages like "Is it true?"

"We found out what happened by googling," Dickerson said of Prince's death. "I had to excuse myself during the meeting to do two interviews from the school parking lot."

Dickerson, who also rehearsed with the Revolution in Los Angeles — Melvoin replaced him in the band in 1983 — thinks the First Avenue concerts will have a higher purpose for the musicians and the fans.

"My feeling," he said, "is you can't keep from seeking catharsis in times of sorrow or tragedy — or anything unexpected."

Guitarists Wendy Melvoin and Dez Dickerson together late in the show. The Revolution Reunion, a Benefit to Celebrate Life initiated by drummer Bobby Z, brought together Prince's former backing band together in a benefit for the American Heart Association at First Ave. in Minneapolis, Minn., Sunday night, February 19, 2012. ] JEFF WHEELER • jeff.wheeler@startribune.com
Guitarist Dez Dickerson joined Cymone in Prince’s band in 1978. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)
about the writer

about the writer

Jon Bream

Critic / Reporter

Jon Bream has been a music critic at the Star Tribune since 1975, making him the longest tenured pop critic at a U.S. daily newspaper. He has attended more than 8,000 concerts and written four books (on Prince, Led Zeppelin, Neil Diamond and Bob Dylan). Thus far, he has ignored readers’ suggestions that he take a music-appreciation class.

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