Deep Album Cuts Vol. 313: Sheila E.

 





I've been on a big Prince kick lately, as I often am, and I heard "The Glamorous Life" on the radio and remembered that I've never done a Sheila E. playlist. And she's probably recorded more songs written and produced by Prince than anybody besides The Time (he masterminded the first 3 albums by each, and worked with both sporadically after that). About a year after Prince died, I saw Sheila E. live at Artscape in Baltimore, and it was a killer show, great mix of her songs and Prince songs in the setlist. 

Sheila E. deep album cuts (Spotify playlist):

1. Dear Michaelangelo
2. Noon Rendezvous
3. Romance 1600
4. Wednesday Like A River
5. Tox Box
6. Shortberry Strawcake
7. Pride And The Passion
8. Funky Attitude
9. Next Time Wipe The Lipstick Off Your Collar
10. One Day (I'm Gonna Make You Mine)
11. Yellow
12. Faded Photographs
13. Promise Me Love
14. Blackbird
15. Hon E Man
16. Bedtime Story
17. Leader Of The Band
18. Mother Mary

Tracks 2, 6 and 9 from The Glamorous Life (1984)
Tracks 1, 3, 5, 11 and 16 from Romance 1600 (1985)
Tracks 4, 7, 10, 12 and 15 from Sheila E. (1987)
Tracks 8, 13 and 18 from Sex Cymbal (1991)
Track 17 from Icon (2013)
Track 14 from Iconic: Message 4 America (2017)

There's a (somewhat accurate) stereotype that most 'Prince proteges' were beautiful women of negligible musical talent who he could shape into whatever image he wanted and perform whatever material he gave them. Sheila E. was different, though, a seasoned drummer who was a little older than Prince, came from a famous musical family (her father's percussionist Pete Escovedo and her uncle's singer/songwriter Alejandro Escovedo) and had played with legends like Marvin Gaye and Herbie Hancock in the '70s when she first met Prince while he was getting his career off the ground. 

Of course, by the time Sheila E. really became part of the Prince crew, he was a superstar with a stable of acts recording his songs. Sheila E. played and/or sang on classics including "Erotic City," "Pop Life," "Alphabet Street," "Strange Relationship," and "Girls & Boys," and her early Prince-produced 
albums paralleled his peak period. The Glamorous Life was released a few weeks before Purple Rain, Romance 1600 was released a few months after Around The World In A Day, and Sheila E. was released a few weeks before Sign O' The Times. And I really love her voice on some of these tracks, she's a little more expressive as a singer than the Vanity/Apollonia types that often sang Prince's songs. 

The 2019 posthumous Prince album Originals, which collected his original solo demos for songs released by other artists, had four Sheila E. songs on it, a couple of singles as well as "Dear Michaelangelo" and "Noon Rendezvous." Sheila E. has released 8 solo albums, but a couple of them, 2000's Writes Of Passage and 2001's Heaven, aren't available on streaming services. Sex Cymbal is a pretty funny album title, but I suppose Sheila E. may as well have used that pun since there are barely any other famous drummers who can be accurately described as a sex symbol (maybe, I dunno, Larry Mullen Jr., but he's never made a solo album). 
« Home | Next »
| Next »
| Next »
| Next »
| Next »
| Next »
| Next »
| Next »
| Next »
| Next »

Post a Comment