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"HITnRUN Phase One" ist das 38. Studioalbum von Prince und das vorletzte Album, das zu seinen Lebzeiten veröffentlicht wurde. Es erschien am 7. September 2015 bei seinem eigenen Label NPG Records exklusiv bei dem Musikstreaming-Dienst Tidal. Eine Woche später, am 14. September 2015 wurde das Album auf CD und als Download veröffentlicht. Das Album enthält elf Songs, darunter die drei Singles "FALLINLOVE2NITE", "HARDROCKLOVER" und "THIS COULD B US". Koproduzent von "HITnRUN Phase One" ist wie auf dem Vorgängeralbum "ART OFFICIAL AGE" Joshua Welton. Die Laufzeit des Albums beträgt 37 Minuten und 53 Sekunden. Das Albumcover gestaltete der Kreativdirektor und Typograf Martin Hommet.
Die Albumaufnahmen fanden zwischen Dezember 2013 und Juli 2015 in den Paisley Park Studios in Chanhassen statt. Als Gastsängerinnen wirken unter anderem Curly Fryz, Judith Hill, Lianne La Havas und Rita Ora mit.
"HITnRUN Phase One" erreichte in den amerikanischen Billboard Charts posthum Platz 48 und wurde in den USA ca. 90.000 Mal verkauft. Vor Prince' Tod am 21. April 2016 erreichte das Album nur Platz 70 in den amerikanischen Billboard Charts. In Deutschland wurde das Album etwa 10.000 Mal verkauft und erreichte posthum Platz 53 der deutschen Album-Charts. Vor seinem Tod schaffte es das Album nur auf Platz 95.
User Album Review
Ever since his split with the Warner Bros. empire Prince’s fans have come highly accustomed, and let’s dare admit a little weatherworn, to the shenanigans one has to endure when it comes to hearing Prince’s new music thanks to his ceaseless one-man crusade to thwart conventional music channels. For HITNRUN Phase One fans were tasked to get a trial subscription with the artist-friendly streaming service TIDAL; a decision that left a foul taste in the mouths of many since to listen to it beyond that month required a paid subscription. The outcome was both typically bizarre and counterproductive in that rather than promote fair royalties for artists (the founding principal of TIDAL), it drove fans to download it illicitly elsewhere. So what about the music: the album’s opener is the upbeat Million $ Show and sets the scene for the rest of it, of what is immediately evident, is a very different style of Prince album. Yet different it’s supposed to be. What is abundantly clear at first is Prince’s hands off approach to HITNRUN Phase One, since it is evidently, judging by the almost total departure from Prince’s usual form, more the output of co-producer Joshua Welton. Prince provides mainly vocals, than musical input, which in this case is more a plus than a negative. HITNRUN Phase One still features that Prince distinctive flare, but the listener has will have to root it out to hear it. Prince’s signature funk is (thank heavens) present in the bounciest track on the album, the 90s throwback Shut This Down and the highly enjoyable Like A Mack. Overall HITNRUN Phase One is gloriously experimental and draped in plenty of bite; we have Welton to thank for that. The sound is a significant stride beyond Prince’s and Welton’s last collaboration, Art Official Age, and will divide fans in equal measure. (Mr. Nelson and This Could B Us are essentially remixes from Art Official Age although they are no less impactful.) Owing to Joshua Welton HITNRUN Phase One is fresh as a daisy and that sense is most evidently with Ain’t About To Stop, which Prince duets with Rita Ora, though it’s hard to spot him, which is unusual for a Prince album (recall Rave Un2 The Joy Fantastic on which he dominates the collaborators). The task of HITNRUN (bolstered by its cutting-edge method of delivery with which high fidelity sound is both offered and possibly quite necessary to get immersed into the full experience) is to appeal to a younger audience, a path that Art Official Age begun and HITNRUN Phase One fearlessly continues. Whether this audience subscribes to premium streaming services is another matter. HITNRUN Phase One won’t necessarily reboot Prince’s career, but it’s given him a clean slate but will require a few listens to fully absorb it as one is left uncertain exactly who’s album this is; Prince or Josh. The production is to the usual Paisley Park standard, possibly even his slickest to date. The closing song, June, finds Prince back in typical form and comes as no surprise that it’s also the album’s finest track. Other highlights is the urgent Hardrocklover and the rediscovered slow gem, 1000 X’s & O’s (a rework from his 1991 original). Just one complaint: how many obstacles should one have to negotiate to listen Prince’s new music, high-fidelity or not?
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