Born in Manhattan and raised in Atlanta, PRÝNCESS came up absorbing the energy of pop, rock, and R&B, pulling early influence from the careers of Michael Jackson and Prince — two artists who didn’t just make music but controlled the narrative around it. She taught herself to write and record, developing a process rooted in discipline rather than industry access. The result is a body of work that is purposeful by design.
Her debut album Girl Power is the foundation of that design. Rather than releasing the project in full at once, PRÝNCESS built a structured rollout — dropping new singles on the 17th of each month, maintaining consistent audience contact without diluting impact. It’s a release cadence that prioritizes momentum over immediacy and long-term positioning over short-term visibility cycles.
That strategy extends to how the album itself will reach listeners. Girl Power is set to hit streaming platforms in early 2027, but physical editions will be available through direct-to-consumer sales beginning June 17, 2026 — well ahead of the digital release. Those physical formats will also include an exclusive bonus track not available on any streaming platform, a deliberate decision that rewards direct audience engagement and separates the physical product from its digital counterpart.
The next chapter in that rollout arrives April 17, 2026, with the release of “A-List” via Ditto Music. The track sits within the thematic territory PRÝNCESS has been building towards: status, self-definition, and the rejection of external validation. Delivered over a pop structure grounded in funk rhythms, the single uses direct lyricism to reinforce the independence that runs through her work as a whole.
What makes PRÝNCESS a name worth tracking isn’t a single release or a viral moment. It’s the consistency of the framework around the music: the monthly cadence, the physical-first rollout, the deliberate separation of streaming and ownership. In an industry that rewards noise, she’s building something quieter and considerably harder to replicate — an audience that’s hers.
“A-List” releases on all major streaming platforms April 17, 2026.
