Star-studded Prince tribute celebrates his legendary music

Star-studded Prince tribute celebrates his legendary music

With these famous words in the "Let's Go Crazy" song, host Maya Rudolph pays tribute to the Prince.
"Let's Go Crazy: The Grammy Celt to Prince" aired on CBS on Tuesday night to mark the fourth anniversary of his death. It was recorded in late January
Rudolph, whose Prince Core band Princess was invited to perform during the tribute, thanked the composer for his groundbreaking career.

The comedian and former "Saturday Night Live" cast member said, "I have trouble expressing my personal feelings about the prince in words." There are words that don't exactly cut it. Folds: Genius, intelligent, promising, passionate, legendary. They are all true. But they don't really hold on to the feeling that can only be described through their music. "
"To me, Prince is music," he added. "To love a prince is to love music."
The superstar singer passed away April 21, 2016 in Minnesota's Paisley Park State over the accidental overdose of the opioid fentanyl. He was 57 years old.


An select All-Star lineup was tapped for successful viewing from Prince's popular catalog.
Actor Styles, including Beck, Gary Clark Jr., Common, Earth, Wind, & Fire, Fighters, HER, Joyce, John Legend, Chris Martin, Miguel, Morris Day and Time, Princess, Sheila E., St. Vincent, Mavis Revolution and Usher, featuring special appearances by Fred Armisen, Naomi Campbell, Misty Copeland, FKA tags and Jimmy Jam.

H.E.R and Clark performed their first performance of the night, the sound of "Let's Go Crazy." He was joined on stage by former Prince Progi and the love-struck Sheila E.
Miguel then "I will dye 4 U" and the legend "nothing compared 2 U".
The performances were varied as the Flyers "Darling Nicky" and Coldplay Chris Martin joined the Bengals' Susan Huffs for the piano version of her group's hit "Manic Monday" which Prince wrote.


DJD Nice kicked off the event with the popular "Club Quarantine Series" show "Grammy Salute to Prince" on their official Instagram account.
The set of hours celebrating the life and legacy of the world superstar started at 8 am. EST, with another set planned for 8 pmm PST.


"Regardless of the music lover's race, everyone can agree that the Prince is on time," said De Nice, adding that he misses his music anywhere in the world. "Prince will always be one of my favorite artists, and I have the honor of helping them celebrate today."
Last month, the Recording Academy and Mouciers set up the COVID-19 Relief Fund to help music professionals affected by the epidemic. A special PSA will begin broadcasting during the tribute.


Famous for "Purple Rain" and other successful films, Prince won seven Grammy Awards and was nominated 38 times, according to the Recording Academy.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Republic of Finland

Earth Day: How the world's largest environmental movement was born

Travel to Iceland-information and facts about Iceland