Prince pal St. Paul Peterson drops funky new, Prince-inspired single

With a release party on Friday at the Icehouse, he offers a video with guests Donny Osmond, Sinbad, Fred Armisen and Tyka Nelson.

January 8, 2019 at 7:56PM
(The Minnesota Star Tribune)
Paul Peterson and Tyka Nelson/ Star Tribune photo by Aaron Lavinsky
Paul Peterson and Tyka Nelson/ Star Tribune photo by Aaron Lavinsky (The Minnesota Star Tribune)

He's recorded with fDeluxe and LP Music. But Paul Peterson – or St. Paul Peterson to you Purple fans – hasn't recorded under his own name since 2004.

He just dropped a new single "You Got 2 Love." Not surprisingly, it's a big old funky slice of the Minneapolis Sound, with lyrics about one love in this divisive, segregated world. The music and the message sound straight out of the Prince playbook.

You'll recall that Peterson, fresh out of high school, became a replacement member in the Time in 1983, just in time for the filming of "Purple Rain." Then, he became co-lead singer of the Family, a Prince-created spinoff of the Time, featuring Peterson, Jellybean Johnson, Eric Leeds and Susannah Melvoin. After one album (he sang the original "Nothing Compares 2 U") and one gig at First Avenue, Peterson exited for a solo career.

Over the years, he has worked as a teacher at professional music schools, toured as a sideman with the likes of Kenny Loggins and Oleta Adams, gigged with his jazzy family band the Petersons, resurrected the Family as fDeluxe and led the Minneapolis Funk All-Stars.

You can see how well-connected Peterson is in his video for "You Got 2 Love." Look for cameos by Sinbad, Fred Armisen, Tom Arnold, Donny Osmond, Victor Wooten, Jellybean Johnson, Monte Moir and Prince's sister, Tyka Nelson, among others.

Peterson will celebrate his new single with a performance Friday at the Icehouse in Minneapolis.

about the writer

about the writer

Jon Bream

Critic / Reporter

Jon Bream has been a music critic at the Star Tribune since 1975, making him the longest tenured pop critic at a U.S. daily newspaper. He has attended more than 8,000 concerts and written four books (on Prince, Led Zeppelin, Neil Diamond and Bob Dylan). Thus far, he has ignored readers’ suggestions that he take a music-appreciation class.

See Moreicon