By Stacy M. Brown | NNPA Newswire Senior National Correspondent

Photo: Prince playing at Coachella, 2008. / Wikimedia Commons

Five years after his sudden death, the icon Princeโ€™s estate is releasing brand new music that is sure to excite his still loyal fanbase.

The new โ€œWelcome 2 Americaโ€ CD marks the first time Princeโ€™s estate is releasing never-before-heard music from the megastarโ€™s famous Paisley Park vault.

Fans got a preview on CBSโ€™s Minutes, and Princeโ€™s longtime guitarist, Brown Mark, sat for a special interview with the Black Press at 7:30 a.m. EST on Thursday, April 15.

The 12-track disc was recorded in 2010 to accompany a tour of the same name but never released.

The estate plans to debut the new music on July 30.

โ€œWelcome 2 America is a document of Princeโ€™s concerns, hopes, and visions for a shifting society, presciently foreshadowing an era of political division, disinformation, and a renewed fight for racial justice,โ€ Princeโ€™s estate noted in a statement.

Never a big fan of social media, Prince sings about how superficial social media could be, corporate monopolies in music and reality television.

On the title track, Prince sings: โ€œWelcome 2 America, the land of the free โ€“ home of the slave.โ€

Prince fans know that track is reminiscent of his 1985 song, โ€œAmerica,โ€ from his โ€œAround the World in a Dayโ€ album.

In that song, the Purple One sings: โ€œAristocrats on a mountain climb, making money, losing time/Communism is just a word, but if the government turn over, itโ€™ll be the only word thatโ€™s heard/America, America/God shed his grace on thee/America, America Keep the children free.โ€

Songs from the new CD include โ€œRunning Game (Son of a Slave Master),โ€ โ€œBorn 2 Dieโ€ and โ€œOne Day We Will All B Free.โ€

Prince also sings about โ€œDistracted by the features of the iPhone/Got an application, 2 fix Ur situation.โ€

During the โ€œWelcome 2 Americaโ€ tour, which lasted for three years beginning in 2010, Prince performed over 80 shows. The estate doesnโ€™t explain why he never released the accompanying CD.

Prince died on April 21, 2016, at the age of 57.

The National Newspaper Publishers Association (NNPA), known as the Black Press of America, is the federation of more than 200 Black community newspapers in the United States.