Purple Rain made Prince sound like he could do anything, but it still didn't
prepare even his most fervent fans for the insular psychedelia of Around the
World in a Day. Prince had made his interior world sound fascinating and utopian
on Purple Rain, but Around the World in a Day is filled with cryptic religious
imagery, bizarre mysticism, and confounding metaphors which were drenched in
heavily processed guitars, shimmering keyboards, grandiose strings, and layers
of vocals.
As an album, the record is a bit impenetrable, requiring great demands of the
listener, but individual songs do shine through: “Raspberry Beret” is a
brilliant piece of neo-psychedelia with an indelible chorus, “Pop Life” is a
snide swipe at stardom that emphasizes Prince's outsider status, “Condition
of the Heart” is a fine ballad, “America” is a good funk jam, “Paisley
Park” is heavy and slightly frightening guitar psychedelia, while the title
track is a sunny, kaleidoscopic pastiche of Magical Mystery Tour.
The problem is, only a handful of the songs have much substance outside of
their detailed production and intoxicating performances, and the album has a
creepy sense of paranoia that is eventually its undoing. (Allmusic)