
Chaos and Disorder (1996)
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By 1996, Prince’s battle with Warner Bros. had reached a boiling point. He had written “Slave” across his cheek, declared that “Prince” was dead, and was releasing music at a furious pace in an attempt to burn through his contract. Just months after The Gold Experience proved he could still create a masterpiece, he dropped Chaos and Disorder, a lean, 39-minute album that felt more like a middle finger than a grand artistic statement.
Prince himself dismissed the project, calling it “originally intended 4 private use only,” and refused to promote it. No tour, no music videos (save for the odd “Dinner with Delores” clip), and only a small push from Warner. Critics at the time wrote it off as a contractual throwaway. But listening closely, Chaos and Disorder has its own charm: a rough, guitar-driven, sarcastic collection that reveals Prince at his rawest.