Hilary Duff’s limited re‑record

Hilary Duff released a re‑recorded version of “Come Clean (Mine)” tied to an upcoming Record Store Day EP called “(Mine),” and the release will be limited to 10,000 copies — a classic Record Store Day scarcity move aimed at collectors. (Just Jared reports the re‑recording and the 10,000‑copy cap for the Record Store Day EP release.) (justjared.com)

Hilary Duff just put out a new version of “Come Clean,” but the bigger play is on vinyl: the song is tied to a Record Store Day release called “(Mine)” that is capped at 10,000 copies and scheduled for April 18, 2026. Record Store Day is the annual event built around independent record stores, and its official site says it began in 2007 with the first event held on April 19, 2008. That setup matters because limited runs are the whole engine: stores get exclusive pressings, fans line up early, and some titles disappear the same morning. Duff’s release is not a random old single pulled off a shelf. The official Record Store Day listing says “(Mine)” contains newly re-recorded versions of her hits “from Hilary’s voice today,” including “Come Clean (Mine)” and “What Dreams Are Made Of (Mine),” on silver vinyl. The track list on the release page shows seven songs: “Wake Up,” “So Yesterday,” “What Dreams Are Made Of,” “Sparks,” “Come Clean,” “Why Not,” and “With Love.” That makes the record less like a one-song nostalgia drop and more like a compact greatest-hits reset. “Come Clean” is the obvious song to lead with because it was one of Duff’s signature crossover hits from 2003, and the new version is already out on streaming services through Atlantic Records. Trade coverage published on April 9 and April 10 says the re-record arrived ahead of the vinyl release rather than waiting for Record Store Day itself. This also lands in the middle of a broader comeback. Just Jared reported in September 2025 that Duff had signed with Atlantic Records to release new music, ending a gap of about 10 years since her 2015 album “Breathe In. Breathe Out.” By January 2026, that return had turned into live shows and a larger touring plan. Just Jared reported a mini-tour in January and then said Duff would head out on her first arena world tour in 20 years later in 2026. So the 10,000-copy cap is doing two jobs at once. It gives collectors a scarce Record Store Day item, and it gives Duff a way to reintroduce songs like “Come Clean” and “What Dreams Are Made Of” as current recordings instead of museum pieces. The date is part of the strategy too. Releasing the streaming track on April 10 and the silver-vinyl edition on April 18 gives casual listeners one easy entry point and gives record-store regulars a reason to show up in person a week later. For fans, the practical part is simple: “Come Clean (Mine)” is already available digitally, but “(Mine)” as a physical Record Store Day exclusive is a one-day-style hunt with a fixed ceiling of 10,000 copies. Once those copies are gone from participating shops, there is no second identical first run waiting behind it.

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