Prince was at a crossroads. His extravagant Lovesexy Tour lost big money in 1988-89, and he fired his longtime managers. His third film, 1990's "Graffiti Bridge," collapsed at the box office. Then, after a stripped-down tour of Europe and Asia, he dismissed his band.
So, in 1991, Prince once again decided to reinvent himself with a fresh group, the New Power Generation (NPG), featuring mostly Minneapolis musicians, including his childhood idol and mentor.
"He was definitely searching for something new," said NPG bassist/guitarist Sonny Thompson, who had given Prince some guitar and vocal tips when they were teens. "He wanted [the sound] to be a little more gritty, a little more street, just a little. A little bit of rock. And little more technology, some samples here and there."
Prince and the New Power Generation created "Diamonds and Pearls," a typically eclectic Purple project embracing pop, funk, soul, rock, gospel, jazz and, for the first time, hip-hop.
His 13th studio album — featuring "Cream," "Gett Off" and "Money Don't Matter 2 Night" — is the subject of the latest posthumous reissue from the Prince Estate, with the super deluxe 12-LP disc version ($349.98) or super deluxe 7-CD disc version ($159.98) containing 47 previously unreleased tracks, a live recording and a Blu-ray of a Jan. 11, 1992, concert at Glam Slam in Minneapolis, the NPG's official debut.
The introduction of hip-hop into Prince's oeuvre may have been more accidental than intentional. Minneapolitan Tony Mosley, who was a dancer on Prince's Nude Tour in 1990, was goofing around at a soundcheck in Paris rapping "The Humpty Dance," a then-hip-hop smash by Digital Underground, and Prince entered from the back of the arena.
"I thought we were going to get into trouble," Mosley remembered, "but he called me into his dressing room and said, 'I didn't realize you rapped, and you have good presence. What do you think if we add that to the set when I do a wardrobe change?' That was my opening."
Prince kept asking Mosley to write raps — both for Tony M., as he was billed, and Prince himself.