Princess Superstar
Princess Superstar (born Concetta Suzanne Kirschner; February 25, 1971) is an American rapper, singer, and DJ of Jewish-Italian heritage from the suburbs of Philadelphia.[1][2] She has built a career blending hip-hop with electronic and electroclash elements since releasing her debut single "I'm White" in 1994.[3] Known for her irreverent lyrics and stage persona that satirizes fame, Princess Superstar achieved commercial success in the UK with top-20 hits "Bad Babysitter" in 2002 and "Perfect (Exceeder)" in 2007, the latter a mashup collaboration with Mason that sampled her vocals over electronic beats.[4] Her music often explores themes of identity, sexuality, and celebrity, positioning her as one of the early female artists fusing rap with dance genres.[5] After a period of reduced activity following pregnancy and management disputes in 2008, she resumed touring and releasing tracks, including collaborations like "Counting" with Hamdi in recent years.[6][7] The track "Perfect (Exceeder)" experienced a major revival in 2023 when featured in the film Saltburn, propelling it to viral status on platforms like TikTok and renewing interest in her catalog amid discussions of ageism in music.[8][9] This resurgence was marred by controversy, as she accused her former label, Ministry of Sound, of seizing creative control and dispatching unauthorized performers impersonating her on tour without consent.[10] Beyond music, she has engaged in education, leading hip-hop classes for children in Brooklyn, and maintains an active presence in content creation and branding.[11][12]
Early Life and Background
Childhood and Family Origins
Concetta Kirschner, professionally known as Princess Superstar, was born on February 25, 1971, in Spanish Harlem, New York City.[1][13] Her father was Jewish, with ancestral roots in Russia and Poland, and her mother was Sicilian-American, who converted to Judaism.[14][15] Both parents were psychologists by profession.[16] The Kirschner family experienced financial hardship during her early years, living on food stamps in a one-bedroom apartment in Spanish Harlem.[16] As a child, the family relocated from New York City to rural Pennsylvania before settling in the suburbs of Philadelphia, where she spent her formative years amid a mix of urban, rural, and suburban environments.[16][17] Her father affectionately nicknamed her "Princess," a moniker that influenced her later stage name.[16] Kirschner attended Germantown Academy, a private preparatory school in the Philadelphia suburbs, reflecting a degree of upward mobility despite the family's initial poverty.[14] Her Jewish-Italian heritage shaped aspects of her cultural upbringing, though specific details on religious observance in the household remain undocumented in available sources.[4]Education and Initial Influences
Concetta Kirschner attended Germantown Academy, a private high school in Fort Washington, Pennsylvania, where she participated in the Theatre Club and the Black Student Union.[14] At age 17, she relocated to New York City to pursue acting studies at New York University, earning a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in drama.[12] [16] During her time at NYU and shortly after, Kirschner began exploring music alongside her acting training, learning to play the guitar and producing a demo tape under the moniker Princess Superstar, a nickname given by her parents.[16] [4] She submitted the demo to College Music Journal, marking an early step toward her hip-hop career.[18] Kirschner's initial musical influences drew from diverse sources, including glam rock pioneer David Bowie for his theatricality and rapper Lil' Kim for her bold, explicit style, which resonated with Kirschner's emerging persona in the post-punk East Village scene of the 1990s.[11] She developed the Princess Superstar character as a satirical take on fame, amid a cultural milieu of underground rebellion that predated similar acts like Peaches and Lady Gaga.[19] [3] This blend of performance art, hip-hop, and irony shaped her entry into music, leading to her first group project with The Gamma Rays in the mid-1990s.[9]Music Career
Early Recordings and Underground Scene (1990s)
In 1994, Concetta Kirschner adopted the stage name Princess Superstar and recorded her first demo tape, Mitch Better Get My Bunny, using a rudimentary 4-track setup borrowed from an acquaintance.[20] This self-produced cassette captured her initial forays into hip-hop rapping, blending humorous, irreverent lyrics with raw production, and served as her entry point into New York's indie music distribution networks.[21] Kirschner's debut full-length album, Strictly Platinum, followed in 1996, released independently and marking one of the earliest recorded outputs by a white female rapper in the hip-hop genre.[22] The album showcased her agile lyrical delivery over beats influenced by East Coast underground rap, earning niche recognition within alternative music circles for its unpolished authenticity amid a male-dominated field.[20] In 1997, she issued CEO, another self-directed project that further explored satirical themes of fame and industry excess, solidifying her presence in the era's DIY rap ecosystem.[22] That same year, Kirschner established her own imprint, initially named A Big Rich Major Label (later rebranded as The Corrupt Conglomerate), to retain control over her releases and distribution.[20] Throughout the 1990s, Princess Superstar immersed herself in New York's underground scene, particularly the East Village's post-punk and hip-hop fringes, where she honed her persona as a provocative, fame-mocking rapper performing at small clubs and DIY events.[19] This period positioned her outside mainstream hip-hop's commercial pathways, aligning instead with alternative and experimental artists who prioritized creative independence over polished production, though broader breakthrough remained elusive until the next decade.[5] Her work contributed to the diversification of rap's underground voices, predating electroclash fusions that would later define her sound.[20]Breakthrough Hits and Mainstream Recognition (2000s)
Princess Superstar achieved her first significant mainstream exposure with the release of her album Princess Superstar Is... in late 2001.[23] The project blended hip-hop with electronic elements, featuring collaborations such as with The High & Mighty on the track "Bad Babysitter."[24] The lead single "Bad Babysitter," released on February 18, 2002, marked her breakthrough, peaking at number 11 on the UK Singles Chart.[25] Its explicit, humorous lyrics depicting a night of debauchery while neglecting babysitting duties resonated in club scenes and garnered radio play, propelling the song's visibility beyond underground circuits.[26] This success introduced Princess Superstar to broader audiences, establishing her as a provocative female rapper in the early 2000s electronic-rap crossover landscape. Further mainstream traction came in 2007 with "Perfect (Exceeder)," a collaboration mashing her vocals from the 2005 track "Perfect" with Dutch producer Mason's instrumental "Exceeder."[27] Released via Ministry of Sound, the single climbed to number 3 on the UK Singles Chart and topped the UK Dance Chart, achieving her highest commercial peak to date.[27] The track's infectious electro-house energy and Princess Superstar's brash delivery contributed to its widespread adoption in clubs and media, solidifying her recognition in international dance music markets during the decade.[28]Independent Releases and Challenges (2010s)
Following the commercial peak of tracks like "Perfect (Exceeder)" in the late 2000s, Princess Superstar encountered significant disputes with her label, Ministry of Sound, which she accused of seizing creative control and authorizing tours featuring unauthorized performers under her moniker without her consent.[10] This fallout contributed to a diminished mainstream presence in the early 2010s, with Kirschner describing a period of relative obscurity after her prior releases.[6] To regain autonomy, she pivoted to independent production, launching a crowdfunding campaign via PledgeMusic in May 2010 to finance her next album, offering perks such as private performances to backers pledging substantial amounts like $10,000.[29][30] The effort culminated in The New Evolution, her sixth studio album, self-released on CD in 2013 with 15 tracks including "Joy Explosion," "The New Evolution," and "Boss Chick."[31] Featuring production from UK collaborators The Rural, the album emphasized electronic and pop-rap elements, reflecting personal and artistic maturation amid industry hurdles.[32] Financial constraints persisted, prompting additional crowdfunding initiatives, such as an Indiegogo campaign in 2013 for a children's record project amid broader struggles as an independent artist.[33] By decade's end, she issued Look What I Found! (1995-2019), a compilation aggregating prior material from her career spanning 1995 to 2019, underscoring reliance on catalog reissues for visibility without major label support. These efforts highlighted ongoing challenges in sustaining momentum independently, including limited promotional resources and distribution compared to earlier major-label eras.[6]TikTok Revival and Recent Projects (2020s)
In 2023, Princess Superstar's 2007 track "Perfect (Exceeder)" experienced a significant resurgence after being licensed for the soundtrack of the film Saltburn, released in December of that year, which propelled the song to viral status on TikTok through fan recreations of the movie's dance scene.[19] The platform's algorithm amplified the track among younger audiences, leading to over 138 million Spotify streams for the original version by mid-2025 and establishing her TikTok account (@therealprincesssuperstar) with 107,300 followers and 5.6 million likes as of late 2025.[22] This revival marked a return to prominence after a decade of relative obscurity, with Superstar noting in a personal account that her 14-year-old daughter first alerted her to the trend during a family vacation.[19] The TikTok-driven popularity extended to live performances, including a set at the Primavera Sound festival in Barcelona in 2024, where predominantly young attendees sang along to her lyrics, and a return to London on September 22, 2025, after a ten-year absence from major UK gigs.[19] She also appeared at the 2025 Music Business Conference, discussing the Saltburn effect alongside influences like Charli XCX.[34] A 1991 remix of "Perfect (Exceeder)" was released in 2024 to capitalize on the momentum.[22] Recent projects include the single "PRAY," a collaboration with SHOSH and Mary Droppinz released on September 26, 2025, via UKF, blending electronic and rap elements.[35] [36] On October 17, 2025, she dropped "Harrison Ford," produced by Whethan and Tim Randolph, featuring a music video shot in Thailand; additional 2025 releases encompass "Detonator (Redux)" and a feature on "Chick Flick."[37] [38] [22] These efforts reflect a shift toward independent digital distribution while leveraging social media for promotion.[39]DJing and Production Work
Development as a DJ
Princess Superstar, born Concetta Kirschner, began her development as a DJ in New York City during the early 2000s, building on her established presence in the local hip-hop and underground rap scenes. Initially focused on rapping since the mid-1990s, she transitioned into DJing amid the rising electroclash movement, which fused electronic beats, hip-hop, and punk aesthetics in downtown clubs. In her own recollection, this period marked her entry into DJing, where she drew from hip-hop roots while experimenting with club-oriented sets.[40] A pivotal shift occurred as she incorporated more electro and house elements into her performances, influenced by key figures in the electroclash scene such as DJ Hell. This evolution allowed her to blend her vocal rap style with dancefloor energy, distinguishing her sets in venues that hosted the genre's raw, ironic party vibe. By 2002, she released Princess Is a DJ, a mix album that demonstrated her growing proficiency in curating tracks across rap, electro, and pop, serving as an early showcase of her DJ persona amid the electroclash boom.[41] Her DJing matured through consistent club residencies and international tours in the mid-2000s, coinciding with hits like "Perfect (Exceeder)" that amplified her visibility in electronic music circles. This phase solidified her reputation for high-energy, genre-blending sets, evolving from underground experimentation to broader dance music integration, though she maintained an independent ethos via her labels.[42]Key Collaborations and Production Credits
Princess Superstar has collaborated with notable figures in electronic, hip-hop, and dance music, often contributing vocals or co-creation to tracks that blend rap with club-oriented production. In 2002, she provided rap verses for the single version of Moby's "Jam for the Ladies," from his album 18, enhancing the track's urban appeal alongside original features from MC Lyte and Angie Stone.[43] This collaboration appeared on official releases and in Moby's video, marking an early crossover into mainstream electronica.[44] A breakthrough partnership occurred in 2007 with Dutch DJ Mason on "Perfect (Exceeder)," a mashup combining her 2005 vocal track "Perfect" with Mason's instrumental "Exceeder." The release topped charts in the Netherlands and Belgium, reached number three in the UK, and gained renewed traction in 2024 via remixes and media placements.[45] That same year, she supplied lead vocals for "Licky" with New York DJ Larry Tee, an electrohouse anthem produced with electroclash influences, which Hervé remixed into a radio hit emphasizing her playful, explicit delivery.[46] Earlier efforts include a 1999 Christmas single with producer Prince Paul, "I Hope I Sell a Lot of Records at Christmastime," blending humor and hip-hop under her Corrupt Conglomerate label.[47] She has also worked with artists like Grandmaster Flash and Kool Keith on features and tracks such as "Kool Keith's Ass" from her 2000 album Last of the Great 20th Century Composers.[48] In production, Superstar co-produced her 2000 album Last of the Great 20th Century Composers with Curtis Curtis, incorporating live instrumentation and hip-hop elements across 17 tracks.[47] Her 2002 release Princess Superstar Is... credits her alongside The Herbaliser for beats and arrangements, showcasing self-directed studio work.[49] Additional credits involve remixing duties, including variants of "Fuck Me on the Dancefloor" for Disco D in 2003, though her primary output focuses on performative contributions over extensive third-party production.[50] She has partnered with producers like Arthur Baker, Todd Terry, and Jacques Lu Cont (Stuart Price) on various singles and albums, integrating rap into dance frameworks.[7]Discography
Studio Albums
Princess Superstar's studio albums primarily blend hip-hop, electro, and pop elements, reflecting her evolution from raw underground rap to more polished, dance-oriented productions. Her early works were issued on small independent labels, emphasizing DIY aesthetics and explicit lyrical content, while later releases incorporated broader electronic influences and collaborations.[20][5]| Title | Release Year | Label |
|---|---|---|
| Strictly Platinum | 1996 | 5th Beetle |
| CEO | 1997 | A Big Rich Major Label |
| Last of the Great 20th Century Composers | 2000 | Corrupt Conglomerate |
| Princess Superstar Is... | 2001 | A Touch of Class/Alternative Tentacles |
| My Machine | 2005 | Tummy Touch |
| The New Evolution | 2013 | PS: The Label |
Extended Plays and Compilations
Princess Superstar released her debut extended play, My Machine, in October 2005 via !K7 Records, consisting of electronic and hip hop tracks previewing material from her album of the same name.[52] In 2014, she issued the I'm a Firecracker EP, which included high-energy tracks available for digital purchase and streaming, reflecting her ongoing blend of rap and dance elements.[53] The EP Ridiculous Songs I Made While Having Writers Block followed on March 25, 2023, featuring five novelty tracks such as "Costco Ho," "Move Your Asses It's Time to Do Taxes," "Hot Men Home Depot," "Imma Make a Craft," and an untitled fifth song, self-released amid a period of creative experimentation.[54][55] More recently, the Goddess - The Remixes EP appeared in 2025, compiling remixed versions of her single "Goddess" to capitalize on renewed interest in her catalog.[22] Compilations include The Best of Princess Superstar, released May 12, 2007, which gathered key tracks from her early albums on the TINT label, emphasizing her hip hop roots.[56] Come Up to My Room - The Best of Princess Superstar, also from 2007, curated 12 selections highlighting her crossover hits and collaborations.[57] Still Perfect (The Best of Princess Superstar) emerged in 2020 as a 16-track retrospective, including staples like "Bad Babysitter" with The High & Mighty, underscoring enduring popularity driven by viral revivals.[58] Additionally, Look What I Found! (1995-2019) in 2019 assembled unreleased and archival material spanning her career, serving as a fan-oriented compilation of rarities.[22]Singles and Remixes
Princess Superstar's singles discography reflects her evolution from underground hip-hop to crossover dance hits, with several achieving commercial success primarily in the UK market. Her breakthrough single "Bad Babysitter," released in 2002 from the album Princess Superstar Is..., peaked at number 11 on the UK Singles Chart and spent 7 weeks in the Top 75.[59][60] The track's explicit lyrics and satirical tone contributed to its notoriety in club and radio play.[60] In 2006, "Perfect (Exceeder)," a vocal collaboration with Dutch producer Mason (originally an instrumental track remixed to feature her), marked her commercial peak, reaching number 3 on the UK Singles Chart.[61] The song's electro-house style propelled it to widespread dancefloor success, later inspiring multiple re-releases, including a 2024 version that charted at number 26.[62] Follow-up "Licky" (featuring Hervé's remix), released in 2007, built on this momentum with its club-oriented production but achieved lower chart placement.[63]| Title | Year | UK Peak Position | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bad Babysitter | 2002 | 11 | Lead single from Princess Superstar Is... |
| Perfect (Exceeder) (with Mason) | 2006 | 3 | Electro-house crossover hit |
| Licky | 2007 | - | Hervé remix version prominent in clubs |