Music / NewsAn online museum dedicated to Prince has just launchedThe website looks back on the late icon’s incredible Internet presenceShareLink copied ✔️July 4, 2016MusicNewsTextDominique Sisley Prince’s relationship with the Internet was a famously fraught one. Despite being critical of its effects on the music industry, the late icon was characteristically ahead of the curve; setting up official websites, online stores, and download managers years before they became the norm. In fact, over the last two decades of his life, the “Controversy” singer published nearly 20 variations of the classic ‘official website’ template – and most of them turned out to be eerily prescient of the way we use the web today. Now, just two months after his tragic death in April, a new museum has been launched to honour this part of his legacy. The ‘Prince Online Museum’ – which opened officially today (July 4) – offers a full (and free) digital archive of the icon’s official online ventures. “Prince launched nearly 20 different websites, maintained a dozen different social media presences, participated in countless online chats and directly connected with fans around the world,” site director Sam Jennings explains. “This Museum is an archive of that work and a reminder of everything he accomplished as an independent artist with the support of his vibrant and dedicated online community.” Prince – who once called the Internet a “double-edged sword” – often incorporated innovative technology in his creative process. Despite this, he remained a fierce advocate for artists rights, and often expressed his worries about the harmful effects of Internet freedom on the music industry. “Prince firmly established that an artist-owned online distribution business can be successful and build that connection between an artist and his audience without a middleman,” Jennings adds. “This is what freedom sounds like.” View the full Online Museum for free here. Courtesy Prince Online MuseumExpand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MOREWhen did UK underground rap get so Christian? Why listening parties are everywhere right nowA night out with Feng, the ‘positive punk’ of UK UgDoppel-gäng gäng gäng: 7 times artists used body doublesWesley Joseph is the Marty Supreme of R&B (only nicer) How Turnstile are reinventing hardcore for the internet ageWill these be the biggest musical moments of 2026?Rising singer Liim is the crooning voice of New York CityFrench producer Malibu is an ambient antidote for the chronically online10 musicians to watch in 202610 great albums you may have missed in the last three monthsZukovstheworld on the UK Ug scene: ‘It’s modern pop music’