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From Us 2 Him: Boston musicians come together to celebrate the music of Prince

The public response to the death of Prince on and after April 21 has felt far more personal than the many other celebrity deaths in recent months. One reason suggests that with the late icon's music not readily available on online platforms like YouTube and Spotify, many of the reflections and tributes have forced mourners to include detailed personal anecdotes; for example, where with David Bowie's death it was easy to post, say, the "Modern Love" video to one's social media, the dearth of Prince links floating around the internet allowed fans get a bit more personal.

With that in mind, we reached out to several of the participants of Thursday night's Prince tribute at Atwood's Tavern in Cambridge. Billed as We Could Never Take The Place Of Your Man: A Tribute To Prince, the night is designed celebrate the music and message of Prince through his songs. The house band features many familiar names of the Boston music scene -- Chris Anzalone (drums), Jack Pombriant (bass), Joshua Pickering (rhythm guitar), Magen Tracy (keys), and Catherine Capozzi (lead guitar) -- and the guest vocalist lineup looks like a recent Boston Music Awards nominee list: Andrea Gillis, Parlour Bells' Glenn di Benedetto, Future Starlets ringleader Gene Dante, Petty Morals' Tai Heatley, and Erica Mantone of the Boston Rock Opera.

In keeping the remembrances to Prince personal and unique, here's what a few of the players had to say about the man who inspired them.

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Erica Mantone

After diving into a proverbial Prince rabbit hole that last two weeks, I found myself listening intently — in awe and inspired… and then not really listening… because I have always been listening. I realized his music has become the natural fabric of my brain space to the point where it just exists without me really hearing his music. Prince, Michael Jackson, and Cyndi Lauper were my first LPs. I saw Purple Rain in the theatre when I was way too young to watch it. Prince’s music — even when I didn’t know he wrote it; 13-year-old me had no idea he wrote “Nothing Compares 2 U” — has inadvertently become a constant soundtrack/ear-worm of my life. Two years ago, I was lucky enough to meet one of his horn players at a gig I was doing. He was a tall, skinny guy wearing a mock turtle neck (which annoyed me) and a large gold medallion of the Prince symbol. He told me Prince gave it to all his band members after they were with him for over two years. He also told me Prince would take away that medallion in two seconds if you were not playing at the quality he expected. Prince was always at his best and expected that from everyone. My kind of musician. Oh and he was sexy. Prince. Not the horn player.

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