The Gold Experience

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The Gold Experience
Prince Gold.jpg
Studio album by
ReleasedSeptember 26, 1995
RecordedJanuary 1993; September 1993 – July 1994
GenreFunk rock[1]
Length65:04
LabelWarner Bros., NPG
ProducerPrince
Prince chronology
The Versace Experience: Prelude 2 Gold
(1995)
The Gold Experience
(1995)
Girl 6
(1996)
Singles from The Gold Experience
  1. "The Most Beautiful Girl in the World"
    Released: February 24, 1994
  2. "I Hate U"
    Released: September 12, 1995
  3. "Gold"
    Released: November 30, 1995

The Gold Experience is the seventeenth studio album by American singer, songwriter, producer and multi-instrumentalist Prince. It was credited to his stage name at the time, an unpronounceable symbol (shown on the album cover), also known as the "Love Symbol".

The album was produced entirely by Prince and released on September 26, 1995, by NPG Records and Warner Bros. Records. The album charted at number 6 on the Billboard 200 and number 2 on the Top R&B Albums.[2] The singles "The Most Beautiful Girl in the World", "I Hate U", and "Gold" charted on the Billboard Hot 100 at numbers 3, 12, and 88 respectively.[2]

Reception[]

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic4/5 stars[3]
Blender4/5 stars[4]
Chicago Tribune3/4 stars[5]
Entertainment WeeklyA−[6]
The Guardian4/5 stars[7]
Los Angeles Times4/4 stars[8]
NME7/10[9]
Q3/5 stars[10]
Rolling Stone4/5 stars[11]
The Village VoiceA[12]

The Gold Experience sold 500,000 copies in the United States and peaked at number six on the Billboard 200, failing to meet the record label's commercial expectations. According to biographer Jason Draper, it may have undersold because Prince was losing touch with younger listeners and also because his contractual dispute with Warner Bros. Records overshadowed the album's promotion, which he had done well before it was released.[13]

Nonetheless, The Gold Experience was a success with critics.[13] Melody Maker called it Prince's best record in years,[14] while Vibe said it was his best since Sign o' the Times in 1987.[15] In The Village Voice, Robert Christgau wrote that it showcased not only the unbridled artistry displayed on his other records but also "a renewal. It's as sex-obsessed as ever, only with more juice—'Shhh' and '319' especially pack the kind of porno jolt sexy music rarely gets near and hard music never does."[12] He believed its best songs, specifically "Endorphinmachine" and "P Control", "funk and rock as outrageously and originally as anything he's ever recorded".[16] Jon Pareles was less enthusiastic in The New York Times, finding most of the songs to be minor successes and calling it "a proficient album, not a startling one; most of its songs are variations and retreads of previous Prince efforts."[17]

The Gold Experience was voted the 30th best album of 1995 in the Pazz & Jop, an annual poll of American critics published by The Village Voice.[18] Christgau, the poll's supervisor, ranked it 10th best in his own year-end list.[19] In a retrospective review, Keith Harris from Blender cited The Gold Experience as the best album Prince recorded in the 1990s, "a mix of newly stripped-down funk and delicate balladry that reasserts his dynamic range".[4]

Several people speculated that the song "Billy Jack Bitch" was written about a Minneapolis Star Tribune gossip columnist known as "CJ".[20][21][22] Prince denied the song was about the columnist when CJ herself interviewed him.[23]

Track listing[]

All songs written by Prince, except where noted.

No.TitleLength
1."P Control[24]" (originally titled "Pussy Control"[25])5:59
2."NPG Operator"0:10
3."Endorphinmachine"4:07
4."Shhh"7:18
5."We March" (Prince, Nona Gaye)4:49
6."NPG Operator"0:16
7."The Most Beautiful Girl in the World"4:25
8."Dolphin"4:59
9."NPG Operator"0:18
10."Now"4:30
11."NPG Operator"0:31
12."319"3:05
13."NPG Operator"0:10
14."Shy"5:04
15."Billy Jack Bitch" (Prince, Michael B. Nelson)5:32
16."
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