Cover art from the reissued “Diamonds and Pearls” album. Early in his career, Prince was notoriously known for having a hard time sharing the spotlight, as his semi-autobiographical movie “Purple Rain” illustrated. With 1991’s “Diamonds and Pearls” — his thirteenth studio album and the first featuring his new band, The New Power Generation (NPG), that all changed. A strong departure from the pop-rock leanings of his previous group, The Revolution, The NPG seemed to have no musical bounds — their universe was an amalgamation of funk, rap, R&B, jazz, blues, whatever suited them on that particular day. While listeners got a taste of this on the original, multi-platinum album, the newl
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