PRÝNCESS is a Manhattan-born and Atlanta-raised rising artist. She taught herself to write and record, built her approach around pop, funk, and rock, and has cited Michael Jackson and Prince as early reference points — not as a branding exercise, but as a baseline for what artistic control actually looks like in practice. Her upcoming debut album Girl Power is the first full statement of that, and she has been rolling it out on her own terms since the campaign launched: new music on the 17th of each month, no exceptions.
April 17th brought “A-List,” released via Ditto Music, and it is one of the sharper singles in the campaign so far. The track runs on a pop-driven structure with funk rhythms underneath and direct, uncluttered phrasing on top. Thematically, it sits in the space between status and self-definition — not chasing visibility, but not apologizing for it either. She has described it as an anti-diss track, which holds up. The confidence in it is not pointed at anyone. It simply exists, which is a harder thing to pull off than it sounds.
What arrived alongside the single is worth equal attention. The Diary Footage visual, posted on YouTube, is shot in a home setting — a girl group playing games, drinking, existing in each other’s company. Nothing is constructed for effect. Two images surface repeatedly: PRÝNCESS wearing a tiara and PRÝNCESS playing her iconic pink guitar — details that connect the visual directly back to the identity the track is built around.
Girl Power is due physically on June 17th, 2026, through direct-to-consumer sales. At that point, eight tracks will still be unreleased, alongside a bonus track that will never appear on streaming platforms. The full album reaches DSPs in early 2027.