“‘I need you to destroy those albums,’ he insisted’: What led Prince to unexpectedly pull his new album just days before its 1987 release?”]

"‘I need you to destroy those albums,’ he insisted’: What led Prince to unexpectedly pull his new album just days before its 1987 release?"]

It’s common that artists come to resent their most popular work, Kurt Cobain soon developed a distaste for Smells Like Teen Spirit and its chart-busing parent album, Nevermind, REM’s Michael Stipe grimaces at the mention of Shiny Happy People and just try and ask Thom Yorke about Creep, we dare you.

But while artists often develop less-than-positive hindsight perspective of output that might have shifted their creative trajectory, it’s extremely rare for a musician to create, record and mix a whole album, have hundreds of thousands of copies pressed, and then, out of nowhere, startlingly make the call to abandon it, a matter of days before it was due to hit shelves.

Few had the power to make such a call. One man who did, was Prince.

The infamous aborted record in question was originally intended to be the follow-up to Sign o’ the Times. A title-less, completely black-sleeved, LP that is now universally known as the ‘Black Album’. Slated for release on the 8th of December 1987, Prince pulled it at the eleventh hour.

So, just what motivated Prince to ditch a record he’d spent months working on so close to the wire?

By all accounts, the ‘epiphany’ moment came on the night of Tuesday December 1st 1987. It’s a calendar date forever enshrined in Prince mythology as ‘Blue Tuesday’.

Few had the power to just go ‘nah’ after having a record mass-produced and ready for commercial sale. Prince did. (Image credit: Getty ImaMark Junge/Getty Images)

The tale is often told that Prince was gripped by the belief that potentially evil, demonic entities were guiding his hands and mind towards making a record suffused with negative energy.

Prince then was compelled by a spiritual duty to prevent the record hitting the ears of the masses.



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