New Power Generation and Prince keyboardist Cassandra O'Neal became his fan as a kid the moment she heard "I Wanna Be Your Lover."
"I fell in love with that music," O'Neal said. "My parents allowed me to listen to his music even though he was sexually risqué." It was no minor concession for her parents — her dad was a minister. "I just knew what I heard and liked it," said O'Neal, who performed recently in the Twin Cities at concerts noting the second anniversary of Prince's death.
O'Neal first met Prince in 2005 while playing with the all-female Sheila E. band that backed up Prince when he received the NAACP Vanguard Award. In 2009, Prince wanted them to accompany him at the Montreux Jazz Festival. While practicing in a studio, she was told, " 'Prince is checking you out,' but I didn't want to get all hyped," she said. She didn't play that gig because "in proper Prince fashion" he hadn't said when it was. "It was my mother's 70th birthday, and she had been in and out of the hospital. I told him I couldn't go. He understood. He said, If I can't have all of you, I'll go in a different direction."
A few months later O'Neal got "a call to come to Paisley. I went and rehearsed with his other keyboard player Morris Hayes. That was the beginning of all of it."
When her music career took off, O'Neal postponed finishing college. During this phone interview, she was preparing her undergraduate thesis at the School of Jazz at the New School.
Q: Do you have perfect pitch when you wake up in the morning?
A: Yeeess. I have perfect pitch when I go to sleep at night, too. It is a gift, but I'm going to say a lot of people have it who don't know.
Q: Is it correct that you played keyboards on the "Dreamgirls" soundtrack?