Upon leaving
Warner Brothers in 1996,
Prince agreed to let the label release a collection of unreleased recordings from his legendary prodigious vaults at some point in the future. Warner unveiled that collection, unimaginatively titled
The Vault: Old Friends 4 Sale, in the summer of 1999. Instead of an official release for several of
Prince's legendary songs though,
The Vault is a brief collection (under 40 minutes) of ten songs, recorded between 1985 and 1994 according to the liner notes -- though they all feel like
Graffiti Bridge (or maybe
Symbol) outtakes. That's not a complaint, actually. There's a wonderful carefree feeling to the record, heavy on jazz and light funk, constantly swinging, and nearly always engaging. Only the title track has the necessary weight to announce itself as a major addition to his official catalog, but that doesn't matter since the songs are all enjoyable. After all, it's hard not to be impressed with
Prince's songcraft or the casually sophisticated flair to the musicianship throughout the album. That might not be what most observers expected from
The Vault, but consider this -- of these ten songs, eight tracks have never been heavily bootlegged before. That means that even some hardcore followers may not have heard all of this material, which is noteworthy in itself. But the nicest thing about the compilation is that even though it's a minor addition to his catalog, it holds together as an album better than
Come or
Chaos & Disorder, the two other
Warner-era odds-and-ends collections, or even the tossed-off
New Power Soul. It's an unassuming, jazzy little record that's damn near irresistible. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine