Prince photographed during a concert in Paris in 1987. (Image courtesy: AFP)
Highlights
- In 1978, Prince released his first album, titled For You
- He gained immense popularity in 1984 with Purple Rain
- His album Emancipation in 1996sold more than two million copies
Los Angeles:
Musical genius, ultimate showman,
style icon - Prince, a pop legend, died Thursday at age 57. Here are a few key dates in his award-winning career.
June 7, 1958: Birth in Minneapolis, Minnesota of
Prince Rogers Nelson. His parents were both jazz musicians.
1978: Release of Prince's first album,
For You. The singer's agent billed him as the new Stevie Wonder. He wrote lyrics, composed the music and sang the entire album, but it was a relative commercial failure.
1979: His second album, the self-titled
Prince, features his first major hit,
I Wanna Be Your Lover, which establishes his funk-infused style and sexually charged lyrics. A million copies are sold.
1984: Worldwide fame comes with
Purple Rain, widely considered one of the greatest albums of all time. Hits include the title
Purple Rain,
Let's Go Crazy and
When Doves Cry.
Purple Rain becomes the soundtrack for a movie starring the singer, and Prince wins an Oscar for original song score.
1991: Release of the album
Diamonds and Pearls, which includes the hits
Cream and
Get Off. Six million copies sold. Prince stages a massive tour.
April 27, 1993: Prince, in a conflict with his label Warner, notably over the speed of his album releases, says he will no longer write music for them. He changes his name to an unpronounceable "love symbol."
1996: His child with dancer and then-wife Mayte Garcia dies shortly after birth. The same year, he releases
Emancipation on his own New Power Generation label. It goes double platinum (two million copies sold).
1999: Prince takes his name back and signs with Arista Records to release
Rave Un2 the Joy Fantastic.
2015: Release of
HITNRUN Phase One - initially exclusively on streaming site Tidal.
April 21, 2016: Prince dies at age 57 at his Paisley Park studio in Minnesota, after a recent brief hospitalization for flu. The local sheriff says he was found unresponsive in an elevator.