De Angela L. Duff

De Angela L. Duff

Symposium Creator & Curator

What Did Prince Do This Week? #WDPDTW Co-Host

ATWIAD Roundtable

De Angela L. Duff is an Associate Vice Provost at New York University and Industry Professor in Integrated Design & Media (IDM) at NYU Tandon. She also curates music symposia as polished solid, including this virtual celebration and the upcoming Prince #EroticCity40 Symposium (2024), celebrating 40 years of Prince’s Purple Rain, The Time’s Ice Cream Castle, Sheila E.’s The Glamorous Life, and Apollonia 6’s eponymous debut and Prince #Come30 Virtual Symposium (2024), celebrating 30 years of Prince’s Come; presents about music, design, and technology, internationally, at numerous conferences and events including All 7 Years: The Past, Present, and Future of Prince Studies at the University of Minnesota (2023), Black Portraiture[s] VII (2022), Pop Conference 2021Prince 78-88: An Interdisciplinary Conference (2021) and 2nd Dayton Funk Symposium (2021), writes about music most recently in Prince’s Diamonds and Pearls (Super Deluxe Edition) (2023), AMP: American Music Perspectives (2022), Interactions: Studies in Communication & Culture (2022), and the edited book volume Prince and Popular Music: Critical Perspectives on an Interdisciplinary Life (2020); speaks about music, most recently at Prince’s Paisley Park (2023), on WNYC, Minnesota Public Radio radio, and BBC Manchester radio shows; appears in documentaries such as We Want The Funk! (2025) and Prince: The Final Secret (2023); and produces and co-hosts What Did Prince Do This Week? #WDPDTW, a weekly online book club series. You can view her past and present work at polishedsolid.com or subscribe to her newsletter at polishedsolid.substack.com.

What Did Prince Do This Week? #WDPDTW Weekly Video Book Club Series
#TripleThreat40 Virtual Symposium (2023)
#SexyMF30 Virtual Symposium (2022)
#PRNAlumni5 PRN Alumni Foundation's 5 Year Anniversary (2021)
#W2AVC Virtual Celebration (2021)
#1plus1plus1is3 Virtual Symposium (2021)
#1plus1plus1is3 Virtual Symposium (2021)
Peach + Black 2 (#SOTTSDC) & After Salons
Prince #DM40GB30 Symposium
Prince Batdance Symposium #Batdance30ATL
EYE NO: Prince Lovesexy Symposium #Lovesexy30BK
Betty Davis – They Say I’m Different Symposium
Peach + Black: Sign O’ The Times Panel (#SOTT30BK)
polishedsolid.com
De Angela L. Duff's Newsletter
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Crystal Wise

Crystal Wise

Crystal Wise

Crystal Wise

ATWIAD #1 Presentation

Sometimes U Got 2 Pop Life and Show ‘em

“Pop Life” is Prince’s seventh song on his seventh studio album, Around the World in a Day, released in 1985. The number seven is often coded within Prince’s artistry to mark significance. In academia, it typically takes seven years to earn tenure, which ends an assistant professor’s probationary period and begins the period in which they can only be fired under extreme circumstances. The success of Prince’s previous album, Purple Rain (1984) cemented his status as a popular culture icon and catapulted him into worldwide fame. In this presentation, the album, Around the World in a Day will be considered the start of Prince’s career as a “tenured” artist, earning him immunity from what now can be termed, “cancel culture.” Considering popular culture as rooted in appeasing white audiences, I conceptualize “Pop Life” as a diss track to explore the ways in which Prince codes Around the World in a Day as resistance to fame and oppression, particularly the white gaze. 

Crystal N. Wise is an assistant professor in literacy education at the University of Minnesota. Her research interests include the historical and contemporary language and literacy practices of African-Americans as acts of liberation and resistance. Her publications on Prince, “(A)Political Prince: An Analysis of Prince’s Political Consciousness” and “It’s All About What’s In Your Mind: The Origins of Prince’s Political Consciousness” explore his evolving world views and (a)political identities represented in his lyrics.

University of Minnesota Faculty Profile

Arthur Turnbull

Arthur Turnbull

Arthur Turnbull

Arthur Turnbull

ATWIAD Roundtable Moderator

ATWIAD #3 Presentation

Out Through the In Door

When Prince Left the "Minneapolis Sound"

In the early summer of 1985, Prince told interviewer Neal Karlen of Rolling Stone magazine, “I think the smartest thing I ever did was record Around the World in a Day right after I finished Purple Rain. That’s why the two albums sound completely different.”

And because Prince had the follow-up to Purple Rain completed by the end of 1984, he created two opportunities for himself in the following year: the room to develop his next album and film project; and the ability to walk away from the sound he created that became a template for R&B and pop music for the remainder of the decade.

In all, we can see the first glimpses of Prince’s ability to work in two timelines: one for Right Now and another for What’s Next.

Arthur Turnbull began a career in technology as a Technical Wizard for Jellyvision, makers of the video game series You Don’t Know Jack. He continued on as Technology Manager for Chicago Jazz Philharmonic, a leader in third stream. In 2018, he started Arturo Solo LLC, a managed services consultancy. Arthur is also a co-founder of Wildflower LLC, home to The Music Snobs,  Snobs On Film, and Entry Points podcasts.

The Music Snobs PodcastENTRY POINTSSnobs on Film

Anil Dash

Anil Dash

Anil Dash

ATWIAD Roundtable

Anil Dash is recognized advocate for more humane, inclusive, and ethical technology through his work as an entrepreneur, activist, and writer, honored by the Webby Awards with its lifetime achievement award in 2022. Today, he leads Fastly’s Developer Experience team, which provides the tools that the world’s most innovative developers use to build experiences that make the internet better for billions of users every day. Dash joined Fastly with its acquisition of Glitch in 2022, where he served as CEO of the friendly coding community beloved by millions of developers.

Dash also serves as a board member for organizations like the Electronic Frontier Foundation, the pioneering nonprofit organization defending digital privacy and expression, The Markup, the leading nonprofit investigative newsroom pushing for tech accountability, and the Lower East Side Girls Club, which serves girls and families in need in New York City. Previously, Dash was an advisor to the Obama White House’s Office of Digital Strategy, was co-chair of the Obama Foundation’s tech advisory council, served for a decade on the board of Stack Overflow, the world’s largest community for coders, and was a founding board member of the Data & Society Research Institute, which researches the cutting edge of tech’s impact on society. Today, he continues to advise respected startups and non-profits including DonorsChoose, Medium, The Human Utility, and Project Include. In 2009, he led a MacArthur-backed research project carrying out pioneering research on social media’s impact on public policy making. And, during his tenure as CEO of Glitch, the company became the first tech startup ever to voluntarily recognize its workers’ union.

Described by The New Yorker as a “blogging pioneer”, and by the New York Times as a “Prince scholar”, his personal website has been cited in hundreds of newspapers, academic papers and journals. As a writer and artist, Dash was a contributing editor and monthly columnist for Wired, has written for publications including The AtlanticRolling Stone and Businessweek, co-created one of the first implementations of the technology now known as NFTs, had his work exhibited in the New Museum of Contemporary Art, and collaborated with Hamilton creator Lin-Manuel Miranda on one of the most popular Spotify playlists of 2018.

Back when Twitter was relevant, Time named @anildash one of the best accounts on Twitter, and he is the only person ever retweeted by both Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Prince, a succinct summarization of Dash’s interests. Dash has also been a keynote speaker and guest in a broad range of media and events ranging from the Aspen Ideas Festival to Desus and Mero’s late-night show, and has guested on a surprisingly large number of your favorite podcasts.

Dash is based in New York City, where he lives with his wife Alaina Browne and their son Malcolm. Like most people, he has never played a round of golf, drank a cup of coffee, filed a patent, or graduated from college.

ANILDASH.COMFUNCTION PODCAST

Aisha K. Staggers

Aisha K. Staggers

Aisha K. Staggers

Aisha K. Staggers

Romance 1600 Presentation

A Love Bizarre

Minneapolis Sound Meets Rap in Krush Groove

“A Love Bizarre: The Minneapolis Sound Meets Rap in Krush Groove” explores the intersection of Prince’s signature Minneapolis Sound and the emerging hip-hop movement in the 1985 film Krush Groove. This presentation examines how Sheila E.’s electrifying performance of “A Love Bizarre” in the movie helped propel the song to #2 on the R&B chart, solidifying its place in 1980s pop culture. By blending funk-infused synths, driving percussion, and hip-hop’s rising influence, “A Love Bizarre” exemplifies the genre-blurring sound that defined the era. The film showcased the growing synergy between funk, pop, and rap, cementing the Minneapolis Sound’s impact on hip-hop’s evolution and the expansion of what would later become known as “Hip-Hop Soul.”

Aisha K. Staggers had her first major publication, an album review, in The New Haven Register while just a sophomore in high school. Another series of reviews published in The Hartford Courant followed. By the time she reached college, Aisha was writing for the literary magazine and interning at a local radio station, ABC-affiliate as a writer in the news department and in the A&R department of an independent record company.

As a graduate student at Fisk University, Aisha asked Dr. Raymond Winbush to chair her thesis because 1) he was one of the most renowned voices in black culture and academia, and 2) he was a Prince fan. His scholarship and guidance led Aisha to an early career as a professor of social sciences and later an administrator in higher education.

Aisha has also served as a director of education and policy research centers and on the staff of legislative commissions. She previously served on the Executive Board of the CT Young Democrats’ Women’s Caucus as an avid campaigner and has remained active in politics and public policy. 

Currently, she is the co-host of “Primetime Saturday with Aisha and Lala” airing Saturdays on The Dr. Vibe Show and Indie Soup Media.

The Infallible Fannie Freeman Book

Andrew-Scott

Andrew Scott

Andrew-Scott

Andrew Scott

The Family Presentation

Prince as Modern-day Duke Ellington? 

“Mutiny,” The Family, Bandleading, and the Blues

This talk is divided into two parts. In the first portion, I offer a deep reading and analysis of the track “Mutiny” from the 1985 eponymous recording The Family. Here, I demonstrate the musical trajectory of this composition, unpacking various versions and performances to show the iterative developmental compositional and performative style so often utilized by Prince. 

Next, I examine Prince’s own performance of this song from the Arsenio Hall Show on March 4, 2014. Here, I offer a critical reading of the performance attempting to make the point that many of the apparent qualities (band leading, arranging, conducting, the emphasis on dance and audience participation) are ones that Miles Davis connected with when, in his autobiography, he wrote that Prince could “be the new Duke Ellington of our time if he just keeps at it.” 

Ellington was a sacrosanct figure in jazz when, in 1990, Davis published those words. Unfortunately, Davis’s endorsement of Prince and assessment that he was musically on the level of Ellington was subsequently used pejoratively as further evidence that Davis had, for such critics as Stanley Crouch, simply fallen from grace. 

As such, in this talk, I want to revisit and reframe Davis’s comments and link them to this transformative late-career Prince performance that evidences so many of the qualities that made both Ellington and Prince seminal musical figures. My point in doing so is to connect clear and shared musical and performative qualities to both Prince and Ellington, to reframe Davis’s important and valid comparison, and to respond to Crouch’s wrongheaded assessment of Davis’s words by giving them the historical consideration they deserve.

As a musician, writer, journalist, and arts educator, the work of Andrew Scott, Ph.D., has impacted many aspects of the educational, and creative arts and culture space in Canada and beyond for nearly three decades. 

A jazz guitarist, Andrew has worked as an in-demand side person, led his own bands with a focus on classic jazz repertoire, and performed and recorded with such musicians as Bernie Senensky, Dan Block, Harry Allen, Grant Stewart, Jim Clayton (The Clayton/Scott Group), Ben Paterson, Randy Sandke, and Jon-Erik Kellso for such labels as Cellar Live, Marshmallow, Boomtang, and Sackville Records. 

Andrew has performed for members of the House of Lords, international dignitaries, and two former Canadian Prime Ministers. 

His latest album, Horizon Song with Kelsley Grant, Amanda Tosoff, Neil Swainson, and Order of Canada winner Terry Clarke was released on Cellar Live records in 2024. 

Andrew has committed himself to learning from the elders of this music and has enjoyed meaningful musical relationships with the late drummer Archie Alleyne—for whom he worked as side musician, music director of Alleyne’s Evolution of Jazz Ensemble, and co-composer of “Syncopation: Life in the Key of Black”—and the nonagenarian pianist Gene DiNovi, with whom Andrew has recorded three albums.

Andrew’s music has been heard internationally in film and television (“Pretend We’re Kissing,” “Once a Thief,” CBC’s “The Border” and “Kim’s Convenience”), and his writing about music has appeared in Downbeat Magazine, Wax Poetics, CODA (where he was the final Managing Editor), Jazz Research Journal, the Havurah Journal, the Humber Literary Review, the Journal of Popular Music Studies, and in more than one hundred sets of jazz liner notes. 

In 2024, Andrew was the principal researcher, essayist, and Associate Producer of an archival release of a 1972 recording from the famed American jazz organist Jack McDuff.

Andrew has also worked as an independent juror and consultant for the Toronto Arts Foundation and as a public educator was an invited lecturer for the Hot Docs “Curious Minds” speaker series, where he presented a six-part series entitled “Nights to Remember: The Great Concerts.” 

In 2025, Andrew will be presenting another lecture series (Anthems: Six Songs That Shaped the World We Live In) for The Speakers Annex. 

Andrew is frequently called upon to speak to such media outlets as the Globe & Mail, Now Toronto, CTV, the Canadian Press and others on topical issues and various events in the world of music, arts, and culture.

His comedic writing regularly appears on such humour platforms as The Haven, The Daily Drunk, MuddyUm, and The Toronto Harold where it garners between multiple hundreds and more than 11K online views, and his poetry has been anthologized by Alien Buddha Press (Alien Buddha Zine #58, Alien Buddha Zine #66, the chapbook Resist the Zeitgeistand in the compilation publication Best of 2024).

Having earned his PhD from York University, Andrew has lectured at universities and conferences across North America (NYU, Kent State, McGill, York University, Western University, the University of Guelph) and has enjoyed a long professional relationship with Humber College, where he is a Professor and the Program Co-ordinator of the Bachelor of Music Program. In this capacity Andrew has taught, administered, advised, and mentored thousands of students.  

Andrew was the former Associate Dean and Acting Dean of Humber’s School of Creative and Performing Arts, where he oversaw and administratively stewarded multiple music programs, as well as creative writing, arts administration, theatre, and comedy faculties. 

At Humber, Andrew has been recognized for his professional efforts, earning the “Administrative Distinguished Service” Award for valued administrative leadership in 2021, and being named a “Champion of Equity, Diversity and Inclusion” for contributing to an environmental scan with the Humber EDI Taskforce in 2022. 

As of 2024, Andrew has been involved with numerous research projects that have received nearly $500,000 of federal funding through SSHRC and other research granting bodies. Currently, Andrew is a part of a SSHRC Partnership Development project with the DeGroote School of Business at McMaster University entitled: “The show must go on: Supporting Canadian professional musicians” that examines employment issues surrounding professional musicians in Canada.

Andrew is the recipient of The Toronto Musician’s Association (Local 149) “Music Educator of the Year” (2024).