The B-side was the album track "Solo", a downbeat number with Prince's voice only accompanied by harp, which was composed by David Henry Hwang.
A maxi single on CD and vinyl included several remixes of the track provided by Quincy "QD3" Jones III, Chronic Freeze., J-Sw!ft and Gerald "G Bomb" Baillergeau.
Larry Flick from Billboard wrote, "On what could be one of the final projects issued under the name Prince, punters are given a dark jack/funk ditty, pumped with a thick bassline and a wicked hook that is truly irresistible.
"[2] In 2019, Alexis Petridis from The Guardian commented, "By 1994, Prince was more interested in fighting with his record company than the quality of his releases.
[6] Pan-European magazine Music & Media wrote, "After the royalty in exile as Symbol, he now returns in his original identity with a mean swingbeat track of early Janet Jackson proportions.
[9] Sylvia Patterson from Smash Hits gave it two out of five, writing, "This is what you'd call one of his "mid-pace" sojourns, trunding along with it's [sic] interesting thumb-flappin' bass and, he's like, just "sitting back and lettin' the vibe flow", man and that's about that, really.