Damn U

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"Damn U"
File:Prince DamnU.jpg
US 7" single
Single by Prince
from the album Love Symbol
B-side "2 Whom It May Concern"
Released November 17, 1992
Format 7" single
Cassette single
CD single
Recorded Paisley Park Studios, September 1991 to March 1992
Genre Pop, smooth jazz
Length 4:04
Label Paisley Park/Warner Bros.
Writer(s) Prince
Producer(s) Prince
Prince singles chronology
"7"
(1992)
"Damn U"
(1992)
"The Morning Papers"
(1993)
Prince (UK) chronology
"7"
(1992)
... "The Morning Papers"
(1993)

"Damn U" is a song by Prince and The New Power Generation from the 1992 Love Symbol album.[1] The B-side was "2 Whom It May Concern", which was also available on the maxi single for "7".

"Damn U" is a slow-grooving romantic R&B ballad, featuring strings and violin. Prince sings of a woman who affects him greatly emotionally, and uses the term "damn u" as an expression of surprise at the woman's power over him. His vocal range shifts throughout the song from very high falsetto to his deeper lower baritone. The music video features Prince singing in the outfit he is wearing on the cover, sitting on a stool with shots of the New Power Generation performing the music. The video is notable for featuring Carmen Electra, and was used in the 1994 direct-to-video film Three Chains O' Gold.

Chart performance

"Damn U" was released as a limited-edition single and tailored for the R&B market; it became the lowest charting single from the album. It failed to make the U.S. Billboard Hot 100, but it peaked at #8 on the Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles chart, which is equivalent to #108. It fared better on the R&B/Hip-Hop charts, where it made the Top 40, peaking at #32. It received the most airplay on Mainstream Urban and Urban Adult Contemporary radio stations, and reached the top 10 on R&R's UAC Airplay chart. The single was not released anywhere else in the world.

Charts

Chart (1992/1993) Peak
position
U.S. Billboard Hot 100 108
U.S. Billboard Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs 32

References

External links

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