Purple Rain by Prince and The Revolution

Purple Rain by Prince and The Revolution from Apple Music

Listening to Purple Rain by Prince and The Revolution.

Purple Rain by Prince and The Revolution from Apple Music

🎵 The Purple Rain album and movie was released in last year of high school and just after I sat for my General Certificate of Education (GCE) Ordinary level exams1. 1984 and the year prior were difficult years for me. Barclays Bank, where Dad worked for 38 years, had offered him a new opportunity in St. Vincent and we had to leave Antigua, the island where I became a teenager, discovered girls, cars, music, satellite TV and computers. Not all in that order.

Compared to Antigua which had an American feel to it, St. Vincent felt like a British Colonial backwater. No computers, no satellite TV and no appreciation of good American rock music.

I struggled to make friends, went steady with two girls who broke my heart. I was in a mood. I entered an angry and rebellious phase.

Purple Rain felt like it was written for me. The music and lyrics were fresh, different. The song, “The Beautiful Ones”, spoke to me and what I was feeling.

Oh baby, baby, baby
Don't my kisses please you right
You were so hard to find
The beautiful ones, they hurt you every time

Prince and the Revolution’s Purple Rain is the only album that I know for sure that I have purchased three times; on vinyl, cassette tape and compact disc (CD). I think I still have the cassette tapes and CD somewhere but I think the vinyl album is lost somewhere in a box from another move.

According to Rolling Stone magazine, Susan Rogers, who engineered Purple Rain, claims that “The Beautiful Ones” was Prince’s favourite.


  1. 1984 was the last year that the General Certificate of Education (GCE) Ordinary level was offered in St. Vincent and was replaced by the Caribbean Examinations Council (CXC) Caribbean Secondary Education Certification (CSEC). In 1986, I sat for and passed the GCE Advanced level exams in the subjects of mathematics, chemistry, and physics. I dropped out of biology after a spat with the biology teacher and school principal over my refusal to catch and euthanize a live frog. The GCE A level was replaced by the CXC Caribbean Advanced Proficiency Examinations (CAPE) examinations in 1998. 

Author:Khürt Williams

A human who works in information security and enjoys photography, Formula 1 and craft ale.

4 thoughts on “Purple Rain by Prince and The Revolution”

  1. Ever since I heard the Purple Rain track played on the radio I've been a huge fan of him. Standing in line to buy his newest album in front of the recordstore as was custom in those days for true fans... This album is now playing in the background.

    1. Excellent! I can imagine that the people in that line were as diverse at the music on that album. I was raised in the British Caribbean which at the time lacked good record stores. My record was purchased at a record store in Queens, New York during a summer visit to see family.

      1. They were quite diverse. By the sound of it,we have a bit in common. I had a glorious youth in Surinam. But that lasted until Iwas 14 and was chucked off to boardingschool in Holland. Bit of a culture shock for me as none of my contempories liked any of the Motown music. And I didn't care too much about Deep Purple and Black Sabbath.

        1. I don't think I have ever listened to Deep Purple and I know Black Sabbath only by name. Not my thing either.

          I have never visited Surinam but I do know many people from Guyana. Guyana and Belize are on my bucket list of British Caribbean countries to visit and I suppose that I can add Suriname. I guess the late 1970s and early 1980s was a period when many colonial territories became countries.

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