Liv Warfield didn’t make it past the first audition for “American Idol.” She almost flunked her tryout with Prince. But he gave her the kind of coaching that Simon Cowell doesn’t offer on the first encounter.
“We were rehearsing in L.A. and Prince said, ‘If you’re not going to open up, we’ll find somebody else,’ ” Warfield recalled of her 2010 introduction. “It was a Sly and the Family Stone song. When I finally opened my mouth, he turned around: ‘There she is. I think I’ll keep you.’ ”
Warfield spent the next six years in Prince’s world. She sang backup for him and opened his concerts. In turn, he served as executive producer on her 2014 album, “The Unexpected.” Now she’s returning to Minneapolis to perform Saturday at the Dakota Jazz Club with two other singers from Prince’s court, Judith Hill and Shelby J.
The trio hatched the idea when they were in the Twin Cities for the official Prince tribute concert in October.
“Prince always said you need to stick together,” Warfield pointed out. “I wanted to make sure that all of us could stay strong and somehow help each other. This is a way for us to heal and to continue a legacy, which he’d want for us.”
They did two shows in January at B.B. King’s in New York. They’ll be backed by members of Warfield’s band plus NPG saxophonist Keith Anderson. They’ll offer solo numbers as well as tunes as a trio.
For Warfield, who is in her mid-30s, the all-star marathon tribute at Xcel Energy Center in October was highly emotional.
“There were highs and lows, for sure,” she said recently from Portland. “I felt like I was on a roller coaster. I had my eyes closed. It’s really hard for me to deal with death in general. But the celebration was wonderful just to be amongst everybody who he’s been around — NPG, Morris Day and the Time. That was a history lesson for me.”