The Morning Papers

For the waltz by Johann Strauss II, see Morgenblatter.
"The Morning Papers"

UK 7" single
Single by Prince and The New Power Generation
from the album Love Symbol Album
B-side "Live 4 Love"
"Love 2 the 9's" (UK CD)
Released April 3, 1993
Format
Recorded Paisley Park Studios, September 1991 to March 1992
Genre Pop rock
Length 3:57
Label Paisley Park/Warner Bros.
Writer(s) Prince
Producer(s) Prince
Prince and The New Power Generation singles chronology
"Damn U"
(1992)
"The Morning Papers"
(1993)
"Pink Cashmere"
(1993)
Prince (UK) chronology
"7"
(1992)
"The Morning Papers"
(1993)
"Peach"
(1993)

"The Morning Papers" is a song by Prince and The New Power Generation, from the 1992 Love Symbol album.[1] It was released as the fourth worldwide (and fifth overall) single from the album; the B-side was "Live 4 Love", a track from Prince's previous album, Diamonds and Pearls. The UK CD single included "Love 2 the 9's" as well, also from the Love Symbol album.

The lyrics of the song concern Prince falling in love with Mayte Garcia, and sticks to the theme of the movie 3 Chains o' Gold, where Mayte (a princess in Egypt) and Prince meet after her father is assassinated by seven mysterious men. Prince sings about the things they do together and how other people do not value/understand the bond they share. Musically, the song is a pop-rock number with an emphasis on guitar. The video is notable for featuring Prince embracing "the grunge look".

Chart performance

"The Morning Papers" was a moderate success on all the charts on which it appeared. It peaked at number 44 on the US Billboard Hot 100, number 18 on the Top 40 Mainstream, number 68 on R&B/Hip-Hop Songs, and number 52 in the UK. The song became the first song by Prince released in proper form in the United Kingdom to miss the top forty since "Mountains" in 1986, seven years earlier (this means that 23 of Prince's songs in a row had made the top 40 before "The Morning Papers"). The song, despite missing the Billboard top 40, made the Top 40 mainstream chart, meaning it received significant radio airplay in America.

Charts

Chart (1993) Peak
position
Australia (ARIA)[2] 87
Belgium (Ultratop 50 Flanders)[3] 42
Netherlands (Single Top 100)[4] 39
Switzerland (Schweizer Hitparade)[5] 31
UK Singles (Official Charts Company)[6] 52
US Billboard Hot 100 44
US Billboard Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs 68
US Billboard Top 40 Mainstream 18

References


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