Why “Sometimes It Snows in April” Still Hurts So Good

CHALLENGE RESPONSE – MMB

One of my nephews stopped to visit. We talked about philosophy, music, and a bunch of other things. Almost like he knew I needed to get out of my own head for a moment and be reminded of something that’s always been soothing—music.
After he had left, I plugged in the headphones and got to work.


Prince’s music has left a mark on humanity.
However, the music I enjoyed the most was songs seldom played on the radio—the tracks only discussed quietly among the fans who kept searching for the ones that touched them deepest.

For me, “Sometimes It Snows in April” is one of those songs.

It’s not built for the charts. No booming drums or flashy guitar solos. Just a delicate piano, soft guitar, and Prince’s voice—fragile, almost whispering. It’s stripped down in a way that makes you sit still. Makes you feel.

The song was part of the Parade album in 1986, which doubled as the soundtrack to Under the Cherry Moon. Prince played Christopher Tracy in the film—a charming romantic who dies too soon. The song is what comes after: mourning, confusion, and the quiet heartbreak of losing someone who wasn’t supposed to be gone yet.

And Prince didn’t try to clean it up. He kept the raw demo. You can hear creaking chairs and fingers sliding on strings. Those imperfections? They’re what make it real.

The lyrics hit like a conversation you didn’t want to have but needed:
“Sometimes it snows in April / Sometimes I feel so bad, so bad.”
Simple words, but when Prince sings them, they carry weight. It’s not performance—it’s confession.

Then came April 21, 2016. Prince passed away. Suddenly, a song about losing someone too soon became eerily personal. It was recorded in April. He died in April. And just like that, it sounded like he’d written his own farewell without knowing it.

And here’s the part that always gets me—I often wonder why we don’t truly appreciate an artist until after their transition.
Why do we wait?
Why do the tributes flood in only once they’re gone?
It’s a question that’s never been answered—at least not a good one.

Maybe it’s human nature. Maybe we think there’ll always be time. Maybe we don’t realize what someone gave us until we can’t get more of it.

With Prince, we had a genius in real-time. But songs like “Sometimes It Snows in April” remind us that his deepest gifts weren’t always the loudest. They were the quiet truths tucked in between the hits—the kind you don’t hear until you’re really listening.

“Sometimes It Snows in April” isn’t just about death. It’s about love, memory, and the strange ache of time. It’s about the moments we don’t talk about much—but feel the deepest.

And that’s why it still hurts. In the best kind of way.


10 thoughts on “Why “Sometimes It Snows in April” Still Hurts So Good

  1. I loved Prince, he was such an artist which framed an era when music was transitioning from funk and R&B (for a time, it returns) into pop and hip-hop. Especially when Mike Jackson was at his Everest moonwalking through pop music peek, still Prince stood strong in his lane. Artistically he fitted his soul into his music, I know MJ put his heart and voice in his, Prince was that guy though. ✌🏻

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    1. I remember once having a conversation with a woman bench after a festival to the wee hours of the morning. Just talking about Prince. What was strange not once did either of us bring up any of his standards. She told me that Prince was influenced Joni Mitchell. I never knew that. Such a great conversation.

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  2. I appreciate seeing someone else analyzing lyrics too! I originally thought this was going to be an article about the science behind why it snows in April, which I was genuinely curious about since we just got hail recently in Mass haha, so this was a pleasant surprise! Great analysis. Take care ✨

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    1. lmao! The first time I heard the song, I didn’t even know the title. I heard it I needed more. All I knew was a Prince cut. I literally slowly acquired all his albums until I found it. thanks for stopping by

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