As he once put it to Rolling Stone magazine, Prince “knew how to write hits” by the time of his second album. While that self-titled record, issued in October 1979, included his breakthrough single, I Wanna Be Your Lover, it also harboured a song that, in Chaka Khan’s hands, would become a global smash that did its best to topple Prince’s own era-defining anthem, Purple Rain. Now regarded as a highlight in both artists’ back catalogues, I Feel For You straddles the worlds of pop, R&B and even hip-hop, yet it sounds like something uniquely its own, whoever’s name is on the recording.
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Prince’s version: “He already had everything in his head”
Although I Feel For You initially appeared on the Prince album, the song was originally written with a view to having Patrice Rushen record it. An R&B singer who’d contributed synth programming to Prince’s debut album, For You, Rushen had also inspired the Prince album’s lead single, I Wanna Be Your Lover, leading Prince’s onetime manager Alan Leeds to observe that the up-and-coming singer “had a mad crush on” Rushen in the late 70s.
As demoed in late 1978/early 1979, I Feel For You was a gentle acoustic number, Prince singing in a casual falsetto of feeling “mainly a physical thing” for the person he desires. “I can’t believe, can’t believe it’s true/The things that you do to me,” he adds, before wondering if this sensation may be love after all.
Even in this stripped-down version, Prince’s distinctive rhythm guitar hints at the song’s souped-up future, while its earworm melody underscores what Leeds, writing in the liner notes for Prince’s The Hits/The B-sides package of 1993, would note as the prolific musician’s tendency to “write more Top 40 when writing 4 other artists”.