All The New Albums Coming Out In March 2024

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Keeping track of all the new albums coming out in a given month is a big job, but we’re up for it: Below is a comprehensive list of the major releases you can look forward to in March. If you’re not trying to potentially miss out on anything, it might be a good idea to keep reading.

Friday, March 1

  • Abby Sage — The Rot (Nettwerk)
  • Amaro Frietas — Y’Y (Psychic Hotline)
  • Another Sky — Beach Day (Republic)
  • Asha Imuno — Pins & Needles (GUIN Records)
  • Ben Frost — Scope Neglect (Mute)
  • The Bevis Frond — Focus on Nature (Fire)
  • Big Big Train — The Likes of Us (InsideOut Music)
  • Bruce Dickinson — The Mandrake Project (BMG)
  • Bruce Sudano — Talkin’ Ugly Truth, Tellin’ Pretty Lies (Purple Heart Rec Co)
  • BrhyM — Deep Sea Vents (Zappo Productions/Thirty Tigers)
  • Brynn Cartelli — Out of the Blue (Elektra)
  • Caravan Palace — Gangbusters Melody Club (Le Plan)
  • CHALK — Conditions II EP (Nice Swan Records)
  • Chloe George — A Cheetah Hunting in Slow Motion EP (FADER Label)
  • Dekker — Future Ghosts (Pure Noise Records)
  • Everything Everything — Mountainhead (BMG)
  • Faye Webster — Underdressed at the Symphony (Secretly Canadian)
  • Ferris & Sylvester — Otherness (Archtop Records)
  • Footballhead — Overthinking Everything (Tiny Engines)
  • Jade Dust — Grey Skies (Council Records)
  • Jahari Massamba Unit — YHWH is LOVE (Law of Rhythm)
  • Julian Lage — Speak to Me (Blue Note)
  • Julien Chang — Home For the Moment EP (Transgressive Records)
  • Hannah Frances — Keeper of the Shepherd (Ruination Record Co.)
  • Hollow Coves — Nothing to Lose (Nettwerk)
  • Kaiser Chiefs — Kaiser Chiefs’ Easy Eighth Album (Bertus Distribution/Kaiser Chiefs Recordings)
  • Kitchen Dwellers — Seven Devils (No Coincidence)
  • Kyle Gordon — Kyle Gordon Is Great (BMG)
  • Lake J — Dizzy (Cadien Lake James)
  • Late Bloomer — Another One Again (Dead Broke & Self Aware Records)
  • Liam Gallagher and John Squire — Liam Gallagher and John Squire (Warner Music UK)
  • Mannequin Pussy — I Got Heaven (Epitaph)
  • Master Peace — How to Make a Master Peace (PMR Records)
  • Mildlife — Chorus (Heavenly)
  • Mini Trees — Burn Out EP (Run For Cover Records)
  • Ministry — HOPIUMFORTHEMASSES (Analogue Productions)
  • New Years Day — Half Black Heart (Century Media Records)
  • Nils Frahm — Day (LEITER)
  • Pissed Jeans — Half Divorced (Sub Pop)
  • Punchlove — Channels (Kanine Records)
  • Robb Banks — I Think I Might Be Happy Pt. 1 (Empire)
  • Sarasara — Elixir (One Little Independent Records)
  • SAVAK — Flavors of Paradise (Peculiar Works Records)
  • Schoolboy Q — Blue Lips (Top Dawg Entertainment/Interscope Records)
  • Scout — Everything Will Make Sense EP (Sweat Entertainment)
  • Shane Smith & The Saints — Norther (Geronimo West Records)
  • Sheer Mag — Playing Favorites (Third Man Records)
  • STRFKR — Parallel Realms (Polyvinyl)
  • Tish Melton — When We’re Older EP (CMDSHFT)
  • Tyla — Tyla (Fax/Epic Records)
  • Yard Act — Where’s My Utopia? (Island)
  • Zakk Sabbath — Doomed and Forever Doomed (Magnetic Eye)

Friday, March 8

  • Ariana Grande — Eternal Sunshine (Republic)
  • Bananarama — Glorious — The Ultimate Collection (London Records)
  • Bayonne — Temporary Time (Orchestrated) (Nettwerk)
  • BEO Lil Kenny — Don’t Let Up (Quality Control Music)
  • Bktherula — LVL5 P2 (Warner)
  • Bleachers — Bleachers (Dirty Hit)
  • Bolis Pupul — Letter to You (Deewee)
  • brother bird — another year (Easy Does It Records)
  • Charles Moothart — Black Holes Don’t Choke (The Red Recordings)
  • Conscious Pilot — Epoxy Plains EP (DevilDuck Records)
  • Dion — Girl Friends (KTBA Records)
  • Discovery Zone — Quantum Web (RVNG Int’l)
  • The End Machine — The Quantum Phase (Frontiers Music Srl)
  • Ghost Work — Light a Candle for the Lonely (Spartan Records)
  • Haux — Blue Angeles (Ultra Records)
  • Hijss — Stuck On Common Ground (Heavy Psych Sound)
  • Homeshake — CD Wallet (SHHOAMKEE)
  • Judas Priest — Invincible Shield (Epic Records)
  • Kilgour — How to Put Your Hat On (Last Night Glasgow)
  • Kim Gordon — The Collective (Matador)
  • The Klittens — Reading Material EP (AWAL Recordings)
  • Konradsen — Michael’s Book on Bears (777 Music)
  • Loreena McKennitt — The Road Back Home (Quinlan Road)
  • Luke Grimes — Luke Grimes (Universal Music Group Nashville)
  • Maggie Lindemann — HEADSPLIT EP (swixxzaudio)
  • Marry Waterson & Adrian Crowley — Cuckoo Storm (One Little Independent Records)
  • Mayday Parade — Mayday Parade Lofi EP (Mango Wax Records)
  • Meatbodies — Flora Ocean Tiger Bloom (In the Red)
  • Moor Mother — The Great Bailout (Anti-)
  • Norah Jones — Visions (Blue Note Records)
  • Oisin Leech — Cold Sea (Outside Music)
  • Peach Luffe — Honey EP (Nettwerk)
  • Slow Hollows — Bullhead (Danger Collective)
  • The Stylistics — Love Is Back In Style (Marathon Records)
  • Taj Mahal — Swingin’ Live at the Church in Tulsa (Lightning Rod Records)
  • Too Close To Touch — For Keeps (Epitaph Records)

Friday, March 15

  • Beans — Boots N Cats (Fuzz Club)
  • The Black Crowes — Happiness Bastards (Silver Arrow)
  • bob junior — friends vol. 1 (777 Music)
  • BRAT — Social Grace (Prosthetic Records)
  • Charles Lloyd — The Sky Will Still Be There Tomorrow (Blue Note)
  • Chuck Strangers — A Forsaken Lover’s Plea (Lex Records)
  • Cory Wells — Harboring the Hurt I’ve Caused (Pure Noise Records)
  • Dan Boeckner — Boeckner! (Sub Pop)
  • The Dandy Warhols — Rockmaker (Rhino)
  • Devon Welsh — Come With Me If You Want To Live (American Dreams)
  • DragonForce — Warp Speed Warriors (Napalm Records)
  • Four Tet — Three (Text Records)
  • The Fourth Wall — Return Forever (Devilduck Records)
  • Heavee — Unleash (Hyperdub)
  • Holly Humberstone — Work in Progress EP (Darkroom/Geffen/Polydor Records)
  • Grieving — Everything Goes Right, All At Once (By The Time It Gets Dark)
  • John Lurie — Painting With John (Strange & Beautiful)
  • Jahari Massamba Unit — YHWH is LOVE (Law of Rhythm)
  • Justin Timberlake — Everything I Thought I Was (RCA Records)
  • Lenny Kravitz — Blue Electric Light (BMG)
  • Luke Dick — Lockeland (Virgin Music)
  • The Messthetics and James Brandon Lewis — The Messthetics and James Brandon Lewis (Impulse! Records)
  • Nemzzz — Do Not Disturb (self-released)
  • Potato Beach — Dip In (SILUH)
  • Scott Stapp — Higher Power (Napalm Records)
  • Tierra Whack — World Wide Whack (Interscope)
  • WILDES — Subsidence EP (Apollo)

Friday, March 22

  • A Perfect Circle, Puscifer, and Failure — Cinquanta (Puscifer Entertainment)
  • Adrianne Lenker — Bright Future (4AD)
  • AKTHESAVIOR and sagun — u r not alone (Platoon)
  • Alena Spanger — Fire Escape (Ruination Record Co.)
  • Barely Civil — I’d Say I’m Not Fine (Take This To Heart Records)
  • Cakes da Killa — Black Sheep (Young Art Records)
  • Carpool — My Life in Subtitles (SideOneDummy)
  • Cassie Kinoshi’s seed. — gratitude (International Anthem)
  • Chris Young — Young Love & Saturday Nights (RCA Nashville)
  • Christian McBride and Edgar Meyer — But Who’s Gonna Play The Melody? (Mack Avenue)
  • Claire Dickinson — The Beholder (New Amsterdam Records)
  • Cody Jinks — Change the Game (Late August Records)
  • Early Day Miners — Outside Lies Magic (Solid Brass Records)
  • Elbow — Audio Vertigo (Polydor/Geffen Records)
  • Empress Of — For Your Consideration (Major Arcana)
  • Fletcher — In Search of the Antidote (Capitol)
  • Gary Clark Jr. — JPEG RAW (Warner Records)
  • Glass Beams — Mahal EP (Ninja Tune)
  • Gossip — Real Power (Columbia)
  • Great Good Fine Ok — Exist EP (Nettwerk)
  • Haleluya Hailu — eternally, yours EP (604 Records)
  • Hello Maud — Celebrate (Heavenly Recordings)
  • Illiterate Light — Slow Down Time EP (Red Books Records)
  • The Jesus and Mary Chain — Glasgow Eyes (Fuzz Club)
  • Jlin — Akoma (Planet Mu)
  • Julia Holter — Something in the Room She Moves (by Domino)
  • The K’s — I Wonder if the World Knows (Lab Records)
  • Kaleah Lee — Birdwatcher EP (Bingo Records)
  • Kaleida — In Arms (Embassy One)
  • Lauran Hibberd — Girlfriend Material (Virgin Music)
  • Logic1000 — Mother (Because Music)
  • Magic Tuber String Band — Needlefall (Thrill Jockey)
  • MIZU — Forest Scenes (NNA Tapes)
  • Nourished By Time — Catching Chickens EP (XL Recordings)
  • Odetta Hartman — Swansongs (Transgressive)
  • Operator Music Band — Four Singles EP (Deep Break Records)
  • Pan American & Kramer — Reverberations of Non-Stop Traffic on Redding Road (Shimmy-Disc)
  • Prefuse 73 — Modern Crime Vol. 1 (Lex Records)
  • Rosali — Bite Down (Merge)
  • Rosie Tucker — Utopia Now! (Sentimental Records)
  • Ruston Kelly — Weakness, Etc. EP (Rounder Records)
  • SAICOBAB — NRTYA (Thrill Jockey)
  • Saint Saviour — Sunseeker (VLF Records)
  • Sam Evian — Plunge (Thirty Tigers)
  • Sam Morrow — On the Ride Here (Copaco Records)
  • Shakira — Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran (Sony Music Latin)
  • Sierra Ferrell — Trail of Flowers (Rounder)
  • SIIGHTS — Through Thick and Thin EP (Insanity Records)
  • SiR — Heavy (Top Dawg Entertainment)
  • Sly5thAve — Liberation (Tru Thoughts)
  • Son of the Velvet Rat — Ghost Ranch (Fluff & Gravy/Missing Piece Records)
  • The Staves — All Now (Nonesuch)
  • Tatyana — It’s Over (Sinderlyn)
  • USA Nails — Feel Worse (One Little Independent)
  • Van Houten — The Tallest Room (Clue Records/EMI)
  • The Veronicas — Gothic Summer (Big Noise Music Group)
  • Villagerrr — Tear Your Heart Out (Darling Recordings)
  • VR Sex — Hard Copy (Dais Records)
  • Wahid — feast, by ravens EP (Innovative Leisure)
  • Waxahatchee — Tigers Blood (Anti)
  • Wye Oak — Shriek: Variations (Merge Records)

Friday, March 29

  • Beyoncé — Act II (Parkwood Entertainment/Columbia Records)
  • Blu DeTiger — All I Ever Want Is Everything (Capitol Records)
  • Candi Carpenter — Demonology (A-Frame Records/House of 42)
  • Chastity Belt — Live Laugh Love (Suicide Squeeze)
  • Chicano Batman — Notebook Fantasy (ATO Records)
  • CNTS — Thoughts & Prayers (Ipecac Recordings)
  • Dent May — What’s For Breakfast? (Carpark Records)
  • Fanclubwallet — Our Bodies Paint Traffic Lines EP (Cool Online)
  • Flyana Boss — This Ain’t the Album EP (Atlantic Records)
  • Gesaffelstein — GAMMA (Sony)
  • gglum — The Garden Dream (Secretly Canadian)
  • Halo Maud — Celebrate (Heavenly)
  • High Llamas — Hey Panda (Drag City)
  • Holiday Ghosts — Coat of Arms (FatCat Records)
  • J-Hope — HOPE ON THE STREET VOL. 1 (BigHit Music)
  • Jake Sheppard — Midwest Marlin (Desserted City)
  • Jeremiah Fraites — Piano Piano 2 (Mercury KX)
  • Jim White — All Hits: Memories (Drag City)
  • Kelly Moran — Moves in the Field (Warp)
  • Kenny Chesney — Born (Warner Nashville)
  • Lindsey Lomis — Handle With Care EP (Warner)
  • Majesty Crush — Butterflies Don’t Go Away (The Numero Group)
  • Omar Souleyman — Erbil (Mad Decent)
  • Peel — Acid Star (Innovative Leisure)
  • Real Bad Man and Lukah — Temple Needs Water. Village Needs Peace. (Real Bad Man Records)
  • Reyna Tropical — Malegría (Psychic Hotline)
  • Ride — Interplay (Wichita Recordings/PIAS)
  • The Rocky Valentines — Erase (Fair Vaux)
  • Sarah Shook & the Disarmers — Revelations (Thirty Tigers)
  • The Secret Sisters — Mind, Man, Medicine (New West Records)
  • Shabazz Palaces — Exotic Birds of Prey (Sub Pop)
  • Sheryl Crow — Evolution (Big Machine)
  • Sum 41 — Heaven :x: Hell (Rise Records)
  • Sunglaciers — Regular Nature (Mothland)
  • Teens in Trouble — What’s Mine (Asian Man Records)
  • Texas & Spooner Oldham — The Muscle Shoals Sessions ([PIAS])
  • Yot Club — Rufus (Amuse)

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

The Most Anticipated Albums Of 2024

The Most Anticipated Albums of 2024
Getty Image/Merle Cooper

2024 is here. And as the year brings about resolutions of change and a healthy dose of election-year dread, the certainty of a host of new music will help soundtrack the highs and lows that are ahead.

Some of the new albums have official titles and dates — including offerings from Kali Uchis, Usher, and The Smile — while other albums are more in the expected camp than fully confirmed, like new full-lengths from Dua Lipa, Playboi Carti, and Lil Nas X. But, it wouldn’t be a fun most anticipated albums list without some pure speculation, too, and you’ll find plenty of that below. And of course, our hopes are always high for a couple of albums you will not find below, the forever anticipated new releases from Frank Ocean and Rihanna.

Check out the most anticipated albums of 2024 below.

21 Savage

In the five years since his last solo album, I Am > I Was, 21 Savage has showcased his versatility. Through smooth, melodic grooves on his Drake collaborative album Her Loss, and scorching rhythmic beats on his Metro Boomin’ collab Savage Mode II, 21 proves that he can switch it up with ease, matching the energy of those he works with. But fans are long overdue for a reminder of what he can do at his own discretion. – Alex Gonzalez

Adrianne Lenker

Do we know for sure that an Adrianne Lenker album is coming in 2024? No. Does it look like one is? Absolutely. In December, the Big Thief leader, who has maintained an active solo career for the past decade, shared a new song, “Ruined,” and announced 2024 tour dates. All that’s left is an album announcement, and given that those tour dates start in late March, that news could arrive at some point before then. – Derrick Rossignol

Anitta

Brazilian superstar Anitta has been taking the world by storm. Through sexually-empowerment and pure, vulnerable, love, her music has made fans smile, cry, and most importantly, dance. Last August, Anitta released her EP Funk Generation: A Favela Love Story, a bridge signaling an era of groovy, funk-inspired tunes. If we’ve learned anything about Anitta throughout her illustrious career, it’s that she’s a survivor, and her upcoming sixth studio album will instill confidence and power on the dancefloor. – A.G.

Ariana Grande

Over the last year-plus, Ariana Grande took on the roles of Glinda The Good Witch (officially) and “Goat Mother” (unofficially), and she embodied both titles by confirming she will quench our thirst for an album in 2024. Grande posted footage from the studio throughout 2023, including shots with super-producer Max Martin, who produced on her 2019 album, Thank U, Next. And while Grande’s most recent album was 2020’s Positions, I desperately want — no, need — AG7’s tracklist to lead with “Thank U, Next (Pt. II),” updating the famed first verse that name-checked Big Sean, Ricky Alvarez, Pete Davidson, and Mac Miller to now include Dalton Gomez and Ethan Slater. – Megan Armstrong

ASAP Rocky – Don’t Be Dumb

While being the coolest dad in the world and working through an unfortunately-timed assault case, ASAP Rocky has also apparently been working on his fourth studio album, Don’t Be Dumb. Throughout the year, he has released a handful of previews, premiering a new song at Rolling Loud Miami just days after dropping the single “Riot (Rowdy Pipe’n).” In January of last year, he said he was putting the “finishing touches” on the album, so at this point, it’s all a matter of timing. – Aaron Williams

Ayra Starr

You heard it here first: Ayra Starr will become a global star in 2024. She has all the talents that her successful peers Tems and Tyla have displayed in their respective rises to the top. Whether it be singing, songwriting, or dancing, Ayra Starr can do it. All that’s left for the Nigerian singer to do is release her debut album, which she said was “80%” complete back in July. With “Sability” and “Rhythm & Vibes” as the presumed lead singles from her debut, we can expect it to be just as good, if not better, than her 2021 EP 19 & Dangerous. – Wongo Okon

Bartees Strange

There’s not currently much to know about Bartees Strange’s next album. It hasn’t even been officially announced, but that doesn’t mean it’s not coming: In response to his inclusion on a most-anticipated albums list, Bartees responded on X/Twitter with a wall of smiling devil emojis. A couple days later, he asked his followers for recommendations for the “best guitar shop in Toronto for older guitars, weird synths, etc.” So, let’s prepare, perhaps, for Bartees to continue expanding on his sound, which has made him a favorite since first emerging a few years ago. – D.R.

Billie Eilish

Finneas recently estimated that Billie Eilish’s next album is “85 percent done,” and I have never cared more about the 15-percent gap between 85 and 100. Eilish’s 2023 musical contribution was the multi-nominatedBarbie soundtrack standout “What Was I Made For?,” which helped her crack the code on crippling post-Happier Than Ever writer’s block. At the Barbie premiere, Eilish told Apple Music’s Zane Lowe that she’s aesthetically “trolling these b*tches,” and we’ll have to see how (or if) that translates sonically. – M.A.

Bleachers – Bleachers (3/8)

With two singles — “Alma Mater” (which features Lana Del Rey on guest vocals) and “Modern Girl” — already out, Bleachers have built some serious anticipation for the upcoming self-titled album. Although it won’t be out until March, the record includes four bonus tracks, making it 18 songs in total. Fans will also get to hear the new tunes on the road, with both a UK and North American tour planned next year. – Lexi Lane

Brittany Howard – What Now (2/2)

Soul rocker Brittany Howard announced her sophomore album What Now in October, sharing its sinuous title track along with a slew of tour dates extended well into the new year. In November, she followed up with the more experimental “Red Flags,” which suggested she’d continue the more left-field divergence from her bluesy work with Alabama Shakes which she began on her debut album Jaime. – A.W.

Camila Cabello

Save for a voice role in the movie Trolls Band Together, 2023 was mostly quiet for Camila Cabello. It turns out, though, that she was busy behind the scenes. Before the year ended, Cabello shared a series of social media posts looking back at 2023, and they indicated she’s been busy working on new music, which will seemingly be unveiled in the new year. In one telling Instagram Story featuring a selfie with a microphone, she wrote, “mostly the year of this [zippered mouth emoji] see you next year b*tches.” So, it certainly appears 2024 will yield Cabello’s first album since early 2022’s Familia… b*tches. – D.R.

Cardi B

For the past several years — at least since 2020 — there has perhaps been no more anticipated album in all of hip-hop than Cardi B’s expected follow-up to Invasion Of Privacy, which carries over from last year’s most anticipated list. In many ways, we have her history-making debut to thank for the delay; Cardi herself has said that she’s intimidated by the prospect of falling short of the insanely high bar the 2018 album set. Debuting at No. 1 and spawning two diamond-certified No. 1 singles, Invasion broke every record there was for a woman-led rap album to break. So far, we’ve gotten a single, the Megan Thee Stallion-featuring “Bongos,” and a lot of promises from Cardi that she’s been in the studio working to ensure she tops her debut. – A.W.

Charli XCX

Charli XCX took a trip to Barbie world with a her infectious pop banger “Speed Drive,” and then her Sam Smith collaboration “In The City” demonstrated that the vibe could continue across her upcoming music. Although it is unclear when the next project will hit streaming platforms, Charli doesn’t typically stay dormant for long. And with Charli set to perform at Primavera Sound Barcelona 2024 in May, it wouldn’t be surprising if it was anytime in the next few months. – Flisadam Pointer

Childish Gambino

Donald Glover is a pretty busy guy. Even with the end of Atlanta and the turmoil surrounding his Lando spinoff, he’s got Mr. And Mrs. Smith and the Community movie coming up. So it was probably fair to believe him when he said he wanted to retire from music. And yet, here we are: with Glover promising a new album “soon” but otherwise remaining cryptic, despite Tyler The Creator’s advice. The best thing, though, is we have no idea what we could get. Will it be Camp rap? Awaken, My Love soul? 3.15.20-esque experimentation? Anything could happen, and that’s why we can’t wait to find out. – A.W.

Doechii

Doechii appeared on last year’s most anticipated list, with TDE founder/CEO Top Dawg Tiffith saying Doechii’s debut album was planned for a 2023 release along with projects from TDE OGs Jay Rock and Schoolboy Q, as well as her fellow freshmen Ray Vaughn and Reason. Then SZA’s second album happened, and a lot of attention was rightly diverted to keeping the gravy train rolling. But now that things have calmed down on that front, fans are undoubtedly hungrier than ever for the Florida rapper’s full-length — especially after she stole the show as an opener on Doja Cat’s Scarlet tour. Doechii hasn’t revealed when her album will drop just yet, but she has released a stream of strong singles, including “Booty Drop,” “Pacer,” and “Universal Swamp Anthem.” – A.W.

Dua Lipa

Houdini” is the perfect (presumed) lead single for Dua Lipa’s forthcoming third studio album because the album has been eluding us for what feels like forever. Dua has teased it several times, dating back to early 2022, and the vision had “taken a complete turn” by the end of that year. Most recently, Dua shared she was “going for more of, like, psychedelic-pop vibe” when making it with Tame Impala’s Kevin Parker, Tobias Jesso Jr., Danny L. Harle, and Caroline Ailin. – M.A.

FKA Twigs

No two FKA Twigs albums sound alike, but that’s part of the allure. Over the years, she’s transported us into haunted club scenes, magical haunted forests, and technological, robotic soundscapes. It may be a bit until we get the next FKA Twigs project — due to the fact that 85 of her demos leaked to the internet last October and she scrapped what she was working on — but we look forward to where she’ll take us next. – A.G.

FLO

FLO made their mark as a British girl group set on impacting R&B, and in 2023, they did just that. Whether it be songs like “Fly Girl” with Missy Elliott, collaborations with Stormzy, or their The Lead EP which shot them into the mainstream light, FLO has proved their talents through these instances and others. Next up on the agenda for the girls is releasing their debut album, which they teased and updated fans on throughout 2023. FLO spoke about their album during an interview with Uproxx last summer. “That’s also what our album gonna be about,” Stella said, “just us and our journey and being honest about everything.” – W.O.

Flo Milli

When Flo Milli first burst onto the scene in 2018 with her breakout single “Beef FloMix” and its 2019 follow-up “In The Party” (thanks in large part to TikTok, natch), rap fans and music publications alike proclaimed great things for her future. She has, in most respects, lived up to those expectations, with two cheekily titled mixtapes — Ho, Why Is You Here? and You Still Here, Ho? — as well as a well-attended national headlining tour to her name. However, the true test will be whether her official debut album, Fine Ho, Stay, can live up to the hype. Her well-earned confidence is clear in its definitive title. – A.W.

Future & Metro Boomin

Future and Metro Boomin have long been one of rap’s most celebrated dynamic duos. In addition to gifting Metro one of his iconic producer tags (“if young Metro don’t trust you…”), Future has delivered some of his most storied performances on Metro’s beats, including “Jumpman,” “Mask Off,” and the fan-favorite mixtape Monster. Meanwhile, Metro is on a hot streak, coming off his second solo album, the latest Spider-Verse soundtrack, and Young Thug’s most recent album from behind bars. In January, Future called the project the “album of the year” (studiously avoiding noting which year), while Metro teased part of a new song in June. Although they didn’t finish by the end of 2023 (by this writing), Metro did promise that this album is his top priority — which is impressive, considering he’s also heavily producing ASAP Rocky’s upcoming album. – A.W.

Future Islands – People Who Aren’t There Anymore (1/26)

Future Islands reached their commercial crest with 2014’s Singles, and they’ve remained consistent since then, busting out a new album of high-quality, synth- and bass-driven indie rock every few years. (Speaking of what band members have been up to, props to Samuel T. Herring for his role in the 2023 Apple TV+ series The Changeling.) Their latest was 2020’s As Long As You Are, meaning they’re due. Right on schedule, People Who Aren’t There Anymore is set for January, which they announced in October with “The Tower, a driving and evocative single that fits nicely in the band’s soaring oeuvre. – D.R.

Glorilla

2024 is shaping up to be the year of the hip-hop it-girls, with expected releases from Ice Spice, Flo Milli, and more in the works. GloRilla slots right into that list thanks to her stellar breakout in 2022 with “FNF” and “Tomorrow 2.” Fans expecting her to release her debut album in 2023 wound up a little disappointed that she put it off for a year — but that might turn out to be a wise move. After all, it gave her a year to live and write, polishing her debut, which she teased in August in an interview with Good Morning America. – A.W.

Grandaddy – Blu Wav (2/16)

Grandaddy broke up in 2006, leaving behind Just Like The Fambly Cat as their final album. They later reunited, though, and dropped another album, Last Place, in 2017. Seven years later, the comeback continues with Blu Wav, the title of which represents a mash-up of “bluegrass” and “new wave.” Indeed, when sharing “Watercooler,” Jason Lytle said, “Listeners will also notice the pedal steel on this track and eventually on many others from the forthcoming new album. It’s a first for Grandaddy, and I couldn’t be more thrilled about this fact.” – D.R.

Green Day – Saviors (1/19)

Green Day made perhaps the defining political rock album of its era with 2004’s American Idiot, but they mostly kept that stuff out of the conversation with their latest album, 2020’s Father Of All Motherf*ckers. They have Saviors set to drop in January, though, and they’re getting back in the political saddle, with Billie Joe Armstrong saying, “This time, we brought it out, and we felt like it was the perfect time for it,” he said. “It takes those special, inspired moments to have a moment like ‘The American Dream Is Killing Me.’” – D.R.

Grimes

Grimes unveiled Miss Anthropocene in early 2020, and since then, it appears she has deprioritized her music career: Aside from becoming an AI influencer, she declared in early 2023 that music is currently her “side quest.” Still, she did promise to release her upcoming project, known as Book 1, and she did deliver new music in 2023 with songs like “Welcome To The Opera” and “I Wanna Be Software.” – D.R.

Halsey

Fresh out of the longstanding beef with their former record label and nestling into a new recording home, fans are eager to see what’s next for Halsey. According to them, new music is atop the list. With the creative blockage removed, Halsey’s next project is sure to shoot to the top of the charts. – F.P.

Helado Negro – Phaser (2/9)

Helado Negro broke through in 2019 with the album This Is How You Smile and followed it nicely in 2021 with Far In, his first album for 4AD. Now he’s got Phasor coming in 2024. He announced the project in October and explained that it was inspired in part by Lupe Lopez, a Mexican-American woman known for building amplifiers for Fender Guitars in the ’50s. Fans won’t have to wait long to hear the new batch of songs live, as Helado has a tour kicking off right after the album’s February release. – D.R.

Ice Spice

2023 was the year of Ice Spice. The breakout rapper weathered a tidal wave of criticism as she garnered an equally large wave of attention behind high-profile collabs with Nicki Minaj, PinkPantheress, and Taylor Swift. Her Like…? kept her momentum going but also merely whet fans’ appetites for the main course. Although she hasn’t said anything concrete about when her official debut album is coming, a viral video of an Ice Spice flag flying over the Capitol Records building in Hollywood suggests that the “Ice Age” is soon to begin and blanket the world in a cloud of Spice. – A.W.

Idles – TANGK (2/16)

British indie darlings Idles are turning up the heat on their upcoming fifth album, TANGK. With production by Kenny Beats, Nigel Godrich, and Idles’s own Mark Bowen, TANGK is shaping up to be unlike anything the band has ever done before — from the bravado displaying “Dancer” to the smooth, downtempo “Grace.” According to lead vocalist Joe Talbot, TANGK was born out a need for love, which will reflect in the album’s 11 tracks. – A.G.

J Balvin

J Balvin fans can expect a ton of new music from the Colombian superstar. In December, he released a new single, “Amigos,” which was accompanied by a cinematic arctic visual. He is also set to embark on the international Que Bueno Volver Al Verte tour, which will see him visit various arenas across the world. In addition to music of his own, Balvin also plans to drop a collaborative album with Ed Sheeran. – A.G.

J. Cole – The Fall Off

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Philip Cosores

J. Cole’s upcoming, constantly-teased album is another holdover from 2023’s list as it appears it needed a bit more time in the crock pot to hit all the notes Cole is apparently looking for from his possible swan song. In November, he explained the title on an episode of Lil Yachty’s podcast A Safe Space, he hinted that “the fall-off” is a phase he never wants to actually enter, instead going out at the height of his powers and popularity. That’s a good indicator this one might be his last, as well as a prompt of what to expect: his best. – A.W.

Jay Rock – Eastside Johnny

Jay Rock’s long-awaited follow-up to 2018’s Redemption was slated for release in 2023, but you sort of have to give the artists of Top Dawg Entertainment a lot of leeway in that regard. The recent successes of Isaiah Rashad’s The House Is Burning and SZA’s SOS are all the validation you could ask for regarding their “tortoise” approach (as opposed to the “hare” from the fable). Rocky started rolling out Eastside Johnny in June with the raucous single “Eastside,” continuing in July with “Too Fast,” then “Blowfly.” with three singles out, it wouldn’t be a surprise if this wound up being a first-quarter release, but a much later one wouldn’t be out of the question at all. – A.W.

Jennie

Blackpink’s Jennie recently founded a label, OA (Odd Atelier), which “aims to create new things that attract attention in a different way from what is usual or expected.” Earlier in the year, Jennie tried something different by acting in The Idol, which just spawned her first Hot 100 entry outside of Blackpink with “One Of The Girls” alongside The Weeknd and Lily-Rose Depp. Those breadcrumbs would be enough to be on high alert for a solo album from Jennie, but Jennie reportedly went ahead and confirmed it with Lee Hyori on KBS 2TV, saying her “dream” is to drop her debut solo LP in 2024. – M.A.

Jhene Aiko

The 2020s have proven to be rough, and Jhené Aiko’s most recent album, Chilombo dropped almost four years ago, a week before the world went into lockdown amid the COVID-19 pandemic. A lot has changed between now and then, but Aiko’s music continues to be a timeless source of energy. By the grace of her magical Pisces energy, we’re sure a new project will give us the collective healing we all need. – A.G.

Jin

BTS’ ongoing hiatus was announced in October 2022 because, in part, the K-pop pioneers needed to fulfill their mandatory military service. Jin was the first to enlist, and BTS’ Army faithful missed him so much that BigHit had to formally request they stop sending any more letters and gifts. Jin recently shared a video message in which he expressed excitement about what he’ll be able to resume doing after completing his service in the coming months, including “working hard.” That could mean any number of things, but making music feels like a safe assumption, as does the possibility that his next release will be his most warmly received yet. – M.A.

Joanna Newsom

Joanna Newsom has been quiet recently, but she has been patiently starting to reemerge in recent months. She was a surprise support act for Fleet Foxes in March, which was her first public performance since 2020. She’s also on the Kilby Block Party 2024 lineup, and she doesn’t make festival appearances every day. So, you can’t blame a fan for hoping that her first album since 2015’s Divers is actually, finally coming. – D.R.

Joyce Wrice

Nearly three years ago, Los Angeles-based singer Joyce Wrice released her debut album Overgrown, and the project was met with critical acclaim. In fact, many would say it is one of the strongest debuts that R&B has received in that timespan. Since then, she released her Motive EP with production alongside Kaytranada, collaborated with Mahalia, performed on NPR’s Tiny Desk, and recorded the new theme song for The Proud Family: Louder & Prouder series. Now, it’s time for Wrice’s next album and we can expect that in 2024 as she announced on X last fall that she is in “sophomore album mode.” – W.O.

Justin Timberlake

While nothing is on the record yet, it appears Justin Timberlake has some major plans for 2024. In September, there were reports of a potential NSYNC reunion tour. However, Billboard debunked those, with the cited reason being that Timberlake is planning his own solo tour, in support of a new solo album. If a new JT album indeed does materialize in 2024, it’ll be his first in a while, since 2018’s Man Of The Woods (although he was all over the Trolls World Tour soundtrack in 2020). – D.R.

Kacey Musgraves

Kacey Musgraves stamped 2023 without releasing solo material. The six-time Grammy winner notched two Billboard Hot 100 entries as the featured artist on Zach Bryan’s “I Remember Everything” (No. 1) and Noah Kahan’s “She Calls Me Back” (No. 76). Most recently, Musgraves teamed with Madi Diaz for “Don’t Do Me Good,” a single from Diaz’s forthcoming Weird Faith album. Perhaps Musgraves’ collaboration choices instruct what direction her fifth LP will take, but we need her to confirm an album is en route before we can make any predictions about it. Whatever it is, whenever it arrives — hopefully, in 2024 — it will be her first since her 2021 “divorce album” star-crossed. – M.A.

Kali Uchis – Orquideas (1/12)

Colombian singer Kali Uchis came through on her word, promising two albums in the span of a year — one in English and one in Spanish. On 2023’s Red Moon In Venus, Uchis heals by way of nature and spirituality. On her upcoming second Spanish album (and fourth overall), Orquídeas, fans will get to hear Uchis navigate sex, heartbreak, and fame in her native tongue. If the songs “Muñekita” and “Labios Mordidos” are of any indication, Orquídeas may be a special gift crafted to empower the ladies. – A.G.

Katy Kirby – Blue Raspberry (1/26)

Kirby became an indie favorite with 2021’s Cool Dry Place, but now, she’s onto her third LP, Blue Raspberry. In a recent Uproxx interview, she said of the album, “I felt like I should honor the spirit of these songs, and let them be big, beautiful love songs, and not try to complicate that or to be squeamish about it. I think it would have been easier for me to make them a little smaller. But I was like, ah, they’re queer love songs; they deserve to sound like a big, romantic deal.” – D.R.

Kehlani

Kehlani has yet to go more than two years without a project which makes it likely that 2024 will present a new album from the Oakland native. This year is a special one for Kehlani as this August will mark ten years since she released her debut mixtape Cloud 19. Though she’s yet to release a single from this upcoming project, a post on her Instagram to close 2023 let us know that music is indeed on the way. “The labor of pure joy in the last 6 months provided a rebirth, there’s been break through, a redefinition,” she wrote. “When it’s time for Her, she will arrive,” later adding, “felt like i owed u an update. i’m almost done.” – W.O.

Kid Cudi – Insano (1/12)

Kid Cudi might still retire from making music as Kid Cudi one day. But the retirement party will not happen in 2024. His Insano album, previously expected in 2023, will drop on January 12 — later joined by his CUDI memoir and subsequent book tour. Cudi posted on X (formerly Twitter) that he hopes to release his book in September. My fellow Kansas Citians may excommunicate me for invoking a Cincinnati Bengal, but Cudi’s book tour coinciding with Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow’s comeback — after “Burrow” was the closing track on Cudi’s Entergalacticin September 2022 — would be *chef’s kiss*. — M.A.

Lil Baby

2023 was supposed to be Lil Baby’s year. Unfortunately, touring issues and subtle feuds clouded his artistic shine. However, with a string of new singles out, his recently announced social media break until his next album is done, and his 4PF label signee, 42 Dugg, getting out of prison, the chips are stacking up in Lil Baby’s favor to have an epic 2024 run. – F.P.

Lil Nas X

A lot’s changed since “Old Town Road,” Lil Nas X’s 2019 viral breakout single, both for him and the music business as a whole. “OTR” was arguably the song that put TikTok on major labels’ maps, upending decades of established marketing strategy and touching off the ongoing arms race for the latest viral sensation (to seemingly diminishing returns for all parties involved). Meanwhile, Nas himself has become a superstar; his debut album Montero peaked just short of the top of the Billboard 200 at No. 2, its title song (subtitled “Call Me By Your Name“) skyrocketed to No. 1 on the Hot 100, and Nas has become a charismatic controversy magnet whose trolling doubles as both forward-thinking music promotion and incisive commentary on his critics’ outstanding hypocrisy. He’s already teased some tidbits about his next album, such as a projected summer release date. We can’t wait to see what mischief (heh) his next album will bring. – A.W

Lil Uzi Vert – Luv Is Rage 3

The original Luv Is Rage, Lil Uzi Vert’s debut mixtape, landed in 2015, sparking a seismic shift in the hip-hop landscape. Its 2017 sequel constituted Uzi’s official debut album spawning the star-making single “XO Tour Llif3,” becoming an instant classic and fan favorite of the so-called SoundCloud era. In November, Uzi confirmed the third installment after teasing it for months prior while hinting that it could be their last album ever. Later, they doubled down on the claim, predicting a future career in women’s fashion. Rappers are constantly threatening retirement but rarely do they actually follow through. Whether or not Uzi does so after releasing Luv Is Rage 3, the Philadelphia rapper does have one thing such a heavily-anticipated swan song can afford them: the opportunity to go out on top. – A.W.

Lorde

Lorde has taken fans to the beach, a house party, and even the tennis courts. And while it’s unclear where she’ll be sonically driving fans next, they are all still strapped in for the ride. The pop star said previously that she takes quite a bit of time to research while making a new album. (It was about six years between her sophomore hit, Melodrama, and 2021’s Solar Power.) Yet, her social media activity has convinced fans that it might not be nearly as long, with a post recently teasing that she was “listening to myself.” – L.L.

Lucky Daye

You’ll be sure to find Lucky Daye atop the Mt. Rushmore of today’s day R&B landscape. His first two albums Painted and Candydrip are filled with evidence for why he holds that position and his upcoming third album will only add to it. Led by the Bruno Mars co-written and co-produced single “That’s You,” Lucky Daye has seemingly begun the rollout for album No. 3 with a project-defining single that should be as impactful as “Roll Some Mo” and “Over” were for Painted and Candydrip, respectively. – W.O.

Madi Diaz – Weird Faith (2/9)

Diaz earned herself some new fans in 2022 after opening for Harry Styles on his Love On Tour. She had just released the Same History, New Feelings EP at the time, and when she embarks on her own tour in February, she’ll be supporting a new album, Weird Faith. She has clearly earned favor in the pop world, as aside from the Styles nod, she collaborated with chart-topper Kacey Musgraves on “Don’t Do Me Good.” – D.R.

Mannequin Pussy – I Got Heaven (3/1)

In May, Marisa “Missy” Dabice told Uproxx that Mannequin Pussy doesn’t “necessarily want to be playing live because we’re just sitting on all these new songs and a new set that we are excited about playing but can’t just yet.” Months later, the band made the news official by announcing I Got Heaven in October. They’ve shared a couple singles so far, “I Don’t Know You and the title track, and both have a shoegaze-y vibe that’s gonna sound terrific in 2024. – D.R.

Megan Thee Stallion

New Year, new Stallion. The Hot Girl Coach finds herself in a much better place to begin 2024; she’s put both her legal dispute with her label and the Tory Lanez shooting case in her rearview, and she’s newly independent, meaning she’s the one calling all the shots on her next album. She kicked off her new era with the confessional return to form, “Cobra,” and predicted in September that her next album will contain “a lot of rawness, a lot of realness, a lot of sh*t talking,” while a more recent live stream promised she wouldn’t hold back, answering anyone who has called her out over the past couple of years. – A.W.

MGMT – Loss Of Life (2/23)

It’s been over 15 years since MGMT took over the indie landscape with hits like “Electric Feel” and “Kids.” That was essentially forever ago now, but through the years, the duo has continued to (relatively infrequently) bust out quality psychedelic jams. Their last album, their fourth, was 2018’s Little Dark Age, and they got Loss Of Life coming this year, which they teased in 2023 with Mother Nature and “Bubblegum Dog.” – D.R.

Miguel – Visera

If Miguel’s upcoming album, Viscera, boasts timeless classics like his breakthrough single, “Sure Thing,” fans know they are in for a treat. Over the past few months, the elusive singer has teased his fifth studio album by way of wild stunts, including hanging in midair through hooks pierced into his back. This, and surely his upcoming music, will prompt a visceral reaction. – A.G..

Omar Apollo

It seems unfair to expect Omar Apollo’s next album to find him more vulnerable than he’s already been, whether on his 2022 debut album, Ivory, which earned him a Best New Artist nomination at the Grammys, or across the four tracks of his October 2023 EP, Live For Me, especially his coming-out anthem “Ice Slippin” and its visceral video. But you also will never catch me questioning Apollo’s ability to do anything. It’s fitting that his first Billboard Hot 100 entry was 2022’s “Evergreen” because that’s the only word suitable for his artistry. Apollo hasn’t confirmed a 2024 album, but he captioned his Instagram post upon releasing Live For Me, “Love these songs so much. They’re a perfect transition for what’s to come.”- M.A.

PartyNextDoor – P4

PartyNextDoor’s 2020 third album PartyMobile came three years after PartyNextDoor 3, and with it, fans hoped that they wouldn’t have to wait as long for the OVO crooner’s next album, PartyNextDoor 4. The bad news on that is it’s been four years since PartyMobile, but the good news is that 2023 delivered two singles from the album, “Her Old Friends” and “Resentment.” Both Drake and PND himself have confirmed that the album is on its way, so it’s only a matter of time until PartyNextDoor 4 is in our hands. – W.O.

Playboy Carti – Music

Playboi Carti, hip-hop’s rebel child as many might call him, is days away from making another splash in the music industry. The rapper’s third album, tentatively titled Music, is moments from dropping as Carti released four YouTube-exclusive singles: “Different Day,” “2024,” “HoodByAir,” and “Backr00ms.” There’s no word on when Music will be released, but we can expect it to be as eccentric as pretty much everything that Playboi Carti has delivered to the world. – W.O.

Pusha T & DJ Drama

DJ Drama’s “Gangsta Grillz” mixtapes are a hip-hop institution, denoting either the highest levels of achievement at the craft of creating certified rap hits or the DJ’s seal of approval for up-and-coming bar smiths. Pusha T falls into the former category, but with the fervent fanbase of the latter. So when they revealed on Twitter Spaces (RIP) last Christmas that they’ve been working on a Gangsta Grillz installment, the announcement rightfully generated plenty of excitement. Considering the success Drama’s most recent work with fellow iconoclast Tyler The Creator and Pusha’s own improbably improving output after 20-plus years in the game, that excitement can certainly be considered justified. – A.W.

Real Estate – Daniel (2/23)

Real Estate fans have been eating. The breezy indie rockers released The Main Thing in 2020; Alex Bleeker had a solo album, Heaven On The Faultline, in 2021; and Martin Courtney dropped his second solo album, Magic Sign, in 2022. Now the group is getting back together for Daniel, their sixth album. That’s set for February and Real Estate announced it in November with “Water Underground,” which arrived alongside a delightfully nostalgic, The Adventures Of Pete & Pete-inspired video. – D.R.

Schoolboy Q

Top Dawg Entertainment fans have plenty to look forward to as the LA label moves into its post-Kendrick Lamar era. The roster has grown, with increasing emphasis being placed on its rookies and sophomores like Reason, Ray Vaughn, and Doechii, but that doesn’t mean they’ve forgotten about the OGs. Now that Ab-Soul has made a triumphant comeback, the Black Hippy focus has shifted to impeding returns from both Jay Rock and Schoolboy Q, both of which Top has said are on the docket — although, true to form, they weren’t released quite on the original planned timeline. In June, Q said his new album — his first since 2019’s Crash Talk — is being mixed, which could mean a summertime release, if all goes according to plan. – A.W.

Selena Gomez

Selena Gomez was happy — thrilled, even! — to be rid of a relationship in her pop bop “Single Soon” from August, but she seems even happier now with rumored boyfriend Benny Blanco, which bodes well for Gomez’s previously stated goal to “have some fun” with her next album. Gomez earned her first-ever Grammy nomination with her 2021 Spanish EP, Revelación, but we haven’t enjoyed a full-blown album rollout since 2020’s Rare, and we’d need a full season of Only Murders In The Building to cover everything Gomez has been through since then. Luckily, Gomez plans to fill us in soon, as she confirmed via Instagram comment in early December that SG3 is due “in 2 months” (as per Forbes). Soak it up because it could very well be her final musical output, as she explained on the Smartless podcast. – M.A.

serpentwithfeet – GRIP (2/16)

serpentwiftfeet’s upcoming third studio album, GRIP is a love letter Black queer nightlife. Over the course of the album, serpent steps into his R&B bag delivering a captivating queer love story by way of smooth tunes. GRIP is also set to feature Ty Dolla $ign, Orion Sun, and Mick Jenkins, creating an alternate universe through modern hip-hop and soul grooves. – A.G.

Sky Ferreira – Masochism

Although Sky Ferreira has made the anticipated lists at music publications for years for her sophomore album, Masochism, it seems like 2024 might actually be a possibility for its official arrival. During her sold-out NYC show and other recent stops, she played new songs called “Innocent Kind” and “All My Lovers Die.” Last month, there was also speculation that Ferreira left Capitol Records, and it only took years of fighting since her 2013 debut. – L.L.

Sleater-Kinney – Little Rope (1/19)

The Sleater-Kinney reunion is nearly a decade old now (their comeback album, No Cities To Love, dropped in 2015). While there has been some change (the band’s latest album, 2021’s Path Of Wellness, was their first following the departure of longtime drummer Janet Weiss), Carrie Brownstein and Corin Tucker are trucking on in 2024 with Little Rope. They previewed the upcoming LP in October with “Hell,” a raucous lead single that impactfully plays with loud-quiet dynamics. – D.R.

Snoh Aalegra

Since dropping her debut album Feels in 2017, Swedish R&B sensation Snoh Aalegra has maintained a consistent release schedule of dropping an album every two years. However, she deviated from this schedule last year, two years after the release of her third album, Temporary Highs In Violet Skies. Still, she did drop some breezy singles, including “Wait A Little Longer,” “Sweet Tea.” and “Be My Summer.” With a promising three-pack, fans are waiting on pins and needles for new Aalegra music. – A.G.

SZA – Lana

While the wait was long between SZA’s first two albums, CTRL and SOS, it looks like SZA’s next project will arrive sooner rather than later. In recent weeks, SZA has taken to social media to tease Lana, her third album, which originally began as an expansion upon SOS. While making the album, SZA explained to Variety that the album has become its own musical universe. “It’s outtakes and new stuff, too — I added a couple of songs,” she said. – A.G.

Taylor Swift – Reputation (TV)

Taylor Swift’s original Reputation album served as a rebirth for her in a way, channeling the intense internet scrutiny into an energetic body of work. Now, it is one of the last two records she has to re-record, with many fans believing this will be her next Taylor’s Version drop. There have also been some snippets from “Delicate (Taylor’s Version)” and “Look What You Made Me Do (Taylor’s Version)” in different television shows, suggesting the record is just waiting until the right release time. – L.L.

Tems

Tems delivered her last project in 2021 with If Orange Was A Place, but in 2024 that drought should end. She’s already shared two singles with “Me & U” and “Not An Angel,” which are truly promising signs of what’s coming for the Nigerian singer. Remember, Tems earned a Grammy and a collaboration with Rihanna in 2023, all in a year that saw her release three songs. So just imagine what could come out of 2024 for Tems. – W.O.

The Internet

It’s always a good year when The Internet drops an album. Nowadays, those years are far and few as the group’s last album arrived in 2018 with Hive Mind. Since then, members Syd, Steve Lacy, Patrick Paige II, and Matt Martians all released solo projects. Now it appears that it’s time for the band to reunite and their fifth and final album. The Internet shared images from a studio session all the members could be seen working hard and enjoying the process of creating new records. We’ll have the wait and see if this upcoming project is indeed the group’s last, but all we can do for now is enjoy the ride as there’s a good chance that the fifth album will arrive in 2024. – W.O.

The Smile – Wall Of Eyes (1/26)

Radiohead? Never heard of it! Not in the past few years, anyway. While the band has been on a sort of unofficial hiatus since 2016’s A Moon Shaped Pool, Thom Yorke and Jonny Greenwood have been teaming up with Tom Skinner for a new endeavor, The Smile. The band has one well-received album under its belt, 2022’s A Light For Attracting Attention, and another one that’ll presumably be similarly lauded is on the way: The Smile announced Wall Of Eyes in November with the title track, an atmospheric number that’s an eerie sign of things to come. – D.R.

Tierra Whack

Quite frankly, it’s time for Tierra Whack to shit or get off of the pot. Although her EPs Pop?, Rap, and R&B? are just two years old, the last robust body of work Whack has released (Whack World) is nearly six. From her viral online freestyles to her shout-out from Beyoncé, 2024 is the optical time for Whack her highly anticipated album (even if it is to simply shut me up). – F.P.

Twenty88

It’s been a while since we’ve heard new music from either Big Sean or Jhené Aiko. But all for good reason. In the past year, Aiko launched her own label, Allel Recording. She’s also released self-care mantras on streaming platforms. With Sean, the two welcomed a baby boy, Noah, who recently celebrated his first birthday. All of this makes for plenty of inspiration for new music. – A.G.

Tyla – Tyla (3/1)

On March 1, South African singer Tyla will release her self-titled debut album. It will be both the crowning moment and the start of a new chapter for the artist who saw her stock shoot up toward the stars in 2023. Her “Water” single became her best-selling release to date thanks to a remix from Travis Scott and a TikTok challenge that was the savory spice to an already flavorful song. “Water” helped put eyes from near and far on Tyla, and she used that opportunity to show them her versatility with another amapiano release in “Truth Or Dare,” the tender “Butterflies” which leans more on R&B, as does the upbeat and flirtatious “On & On.” All of these will accompany “Water” on Tyla, which by the looks of it, will be a project that taps into all sides of the singer. – W.O.

Usher – Coming Home (2/11)

Now that Usher has completed his Las Vegas residency (and attempting to woo seemingly every celebrity that came through, to wildly various effects), he’s turned his attention to his upcoming Super Bowl Halftime Show headlining performance — and the album, Coming Home, scheduled to coincide with it. He explained the album’s title in an interview with Zane Lowe, saying, “In a sense, I’m coming home because I am in that comfortable space.” His single “Good Good” with fellow Atlantans Summer Walker and 21 Savage suggests that the release will see him employing his vocal gifts over contemporary production that is sure to please — the song peaked at No. 25 on the Hot 100 and No. 7 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs charts. – A.W.

Vampire Weekend

Vampire Weekend’s last album was back in 2019, making it a few years since they released a project. However, through the group’s latest newsletter, they had a truly promising update for fans. “LP news by the end of the year,” band member Chris Tomson wrote. “It’s close to done and I feel like it just might be our best yet. 10 songs, no skips.” As for what to expect, lead singer Ezra Koenig had been taking raga singing lessons in Japan and writing seven of his all-time favorite songs for this record. – L.L.

Waxahatchee

Officially, there’s no word of a new album from Waxahatchee set to drop in 2024. But, there’s reason to hope. For one, she tends to drop something every year or two: Saint Cloud came in 2020, then she and Jess Williamson teamed up as Plains for I Walked With You A Ways in 2022. So, you could say she’s due. Furthermore, she’s on the 2024 Shaky Knees festival lineup for this May, so maybe that means she’ll have an album out by then. This is all speculation, of course, but new Waxahatchee is worth speculating about. – D.R.

Wisp

Wisp had a better 2023 than most other newcomers: The 19-year-old, San Francisco-based artist released their first song, “Your Face,” last year, and it’s currently sitting at over 30 million Spotify streams. She’s described her music as “like being underwater,” and that’s definitely accurate for the immersive shoegaze gems she’s released so far (just three songs so far). Back in May, Wisp indicated she had an EP on the way, and based on how promising her start has been, more new music can’t come soon enough. – D.R.

Wizkid

In the final weeks of 2023, Wizkid fired off a buzzer-beater with the release of his S2 project, short for Soundman 2, a follow-up to his 2018 EP. The four songs, which cover everything from amapiano to afro-fusion, are just a warm-up to his upcoming sixth album which we can expect to arrive at some point in 2024. It remains untitled and without a release window, but that won’t be the case for long. – W.O.

Zara Larrson – Venus (2/9)

A Zara Larsson project is guaranteed to have bops. But this summer, the Swedish pop sensation made a vulnerable reintroduction with her dance ballad “End Of Time.” We spoke with her via Zoom, as she was spending the summer at home, where she teased her upcoming third album, Venus. With Larsson’s peachy pop prowess, and Rick Nowels and Danja at the helm of production, Venus promises to be an incredible body of work. – A.G.

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

All The New Albums Coming Out In January 2024

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iStock

Keeping track of all the new albums coming out in a given month is a big job, but we’re up for it: Below is a comprehensive list of the major releases you can look forward to in January. If you’re not trying to potentially miss out on anything, it might be a good idea to keep reading.

Friday, January 5

  • &TEAM — First Howling : NOW (Hybe Japan/Universal Japan)
  • French Montana — Mac & Cheese 5 (Coke Boys)
  • Pile — Hot Air Balloon EP (Exploding In Sound Records)
  • Sprints — Letter to Self (City Slang)

Friday, January 12

  • @ — Are You There God, It’s Me, @ EP (Carpark)
  • Armin van Buuren — Breathe In (Armada Music)
  • Bill Ryder-Jones — Iechyd Da (Domino)
  • The Clamps — Megamouth (Heavy Psych Sounds)
  • Folly Group — Down There! (So Young Records)
  • Hannah Wicklund — The Prize (Flatiron Recordings)
  • Harrison Storm — Wonder, Won’t You (Nettwerk)
  • Holler Choir — Songs Before They Write Themselves (Nettwerk)
  • Kali Uchis — Orquídeas (Geffen Records)
  • Kanye West and Ty Dolla Sign — Vultures (¥)
  • Magnum — Here Comes the Rain (Steamhammer)
  • Marika Hackman — Big Sigh (Chrysalis Records)
  • Nailah Hunter — Lovegaze (Fat Possum Records)
  • Neal Morse — The Restoration — Joseph: Part Two (Frontiers Music)
  • Russell / Guns — Medusa (Frontiers Music)
  • RYUJIN — RYUJIN (Napalm Records)
  • Vacations — No Place Like Home (Nettwerk)
  • The Vaccines — Pick-Up Full of Pink Carnations (Thirty Tigers/Super Easy)

Friday, January 19

  • 90 Day Men — We Blame Chicago (Numero Group)
  • Birthmark — Birth of Omni (Polyvinyl)
  • Bolts of Melody — Film Noir (Outer Battery Records)
  • Conchúr White — Swirling Violets (Bella Union)
  • Cowboy Sadness — Select Jambient Works Vol. 1 (People Teeth)
  • Daniel Johnston — Alive in New York City (Shimmy-Disc)
  • Eddie Berman — Signal Fire (Nettwerk)
  • EKKSTACY — EKKSTACY (self-released)
  • Eliza McLamb — Going Through It (Royal Mountain Records)
  • ericdoa — DOA (Interscope Records)
  • The Fauns — How Lost (Invada)
  • Flat Party — Flat Party EP (Submarine Cat Records)
  • glass beach — Plastic Death (Run For Cover)
  • Green Day — Saviors (Reprise Records)
  • Hot Garbage — Precious Dream (Mothland/EXAG’ Records)
  • Judy Whitmore — Come Fly With Me (Tiger Turn)
  • Keyon Harrold — Foreverland (Concord Jazz)
  • Lil Dicky — Penith (The Dave Soundtrack) (BMG)
  • Lizzie No — Halfsies (Thirty Tigers)
  • Neck Deep — Neck Deep (We Are Triumphant)
  • PACKS — Melt the Honey (Fire Talk)
  • Selmer — Body Wash (777 Music)
  • Sleater-Kinney — Little Rope (Loma Vista)
  • Touché Amoré — Is Survived By: Revived (Deathwish Inc.)
  • TR3 — Watch It (MRI)
  • ZHU — Grace (Astralwerks)

Friday, January 26

  • Alkaline Trio — Blood, Hair, and Eyeballs (Rise)
  • Angry Blackmen — The Legend of ABM (Deathbomb Arc)
  • Anna Calvi — Peaky Blinders: Season 5 & 6 (Original Score) (Banquet Records)
  • Benny the Butcher — Everybody Can’t Go (Def Jam/Roc Nation/Agency78)
  • Black Polish — Forest (Monsters Live in the Trees) (Riptide Music)
  • Brad stank — In the Midst of You (Sunday Best Recordings)
  • Chatham County Line — Hiyo (Yep Roc Records)
  • Colin Newman — Bastard (Cargo Records)
  • Courting — New Last Name (Lower Third)
  • Dylan John Thomas — Dylan John Thomas (Assai Records)
  • Elena Setién — Moonlit Reveries (Thrill Jockey)
  • Finnoguns Wake — Stay Young EP (What’s Your Rupture)
  • Future Islands — People Who Aren’t There Anymore (4AD)
  • Goth Babe — Lola (Mom + Pop)
  • Gruff Rhys — Sadness Sets Me Free (Rough Trade Records)
  • James Arthur — Sweet Love (Columbia)
  • John Leventhal — Rumble Strip (RumbleStrip Records)
  • Katy Kirby — Blue Raspberry (ANTI-)
  • Mall Girl — Pure Love (Jansen Records)
  • New Model Army — Unbroken (‎EARMUSIC)
  • NewDad — Madra (Fair Youth/Atlantic)
  • Office Dog — Spiel (New West Records)
  • Papooz — Resonate (Half Awake Records)
  • Philip Glass — Philip Glass Solo (Orange Mountain Music)
  • Office Dog — Spiel (New West Records)
  • Quarters of Change — Portraits (Elektra)
  • Raffaella — Live, Raff, Love (Act II) EP (Mom + Pop)
  • Sarah Jarosz — Polaroid Lovers (Ad-Astra Records)
  • Slower — Slower (Heavy Psych Sounds)
  • The Smile — Wall Of Eyes (XL Recordings)
  • Terra Twin — Head Leaking EP (Amuse)
  • Tom Odell — Black Friday (MTheory/Virgin Music AU)
  • Torres — What an enormous room (Merge)
  • Ty Segall — Three Bells (Drag City)
  • William Elliott Whitmore — Silent, The Mind Breaks (Whitmore Records)

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

The Best Vinyl Releases Of December 2023

vinyl
Uproxx

Anybody who thought the vinyl resurgence was just a fad was mistaken: The industry has experienced a legitimate revival. As a result, music fans are interested in physical media in ways they may not have if the decades-old medium hasn’t made a comeback. That doesn’t mean everybody is listening to just their parents’ old music, though. That’s part of it, sure, thanks to rereleases that present classic albums in new ways. A vital part of the renewed vinyl wave, though, is new projects being released as records, of which there are plenty.

Whatever you might be into, each month brings a new slew of vinyl releases that has something for everybody. Some stand out above the rest, naturally, so check out some of our favorite vinyl releases of December below.

Alicia Keys — Diary Of Alicia Keys (VMP 20th Anniversary Edition)

Diary of Alicia Keys (VMP 20th Anniversary Edition)
Vinyl Me, Please

Keys had a striking start with her debut album Songs In A Minor, and she kept that success going with Diary Of Alicia Keys, her second No. 1 album. The latter LP turns 20 years old this year, so Vinyl Me, Please has come through with a gorgeous reissue. The 3LP release is pressed on gorgeous “piano key” vinyl and comes with a bonus disc of remixes and alternate takes, along with a live performance at Webster Hall.

Get it here.

DJ Rashad — Double Cup (10th Anniversary Reissue)

DJ Rashad vinyl
Partisan

Late footwork pioneer DJ Rashad ultimately only released one album during his lifetime, 2013’s iconic Double Cup. That project is now a decade old and it just got a reissue that comes with revamped artwork and a limited-edition gold vinyl pressing. There’s also a documentary in the works, so that’s something for Rashad fans to keep an eye out for.

Get it here.

Aretha Franklin — A Portrait Of The Queen 1970-1974

A Portrait Of The Queen 1970-1974
BMG

This 6LP set is a great way to get into Aretha Franklin, or to revisit some favorites you already know and love. The collection includes five albums from the early ’70s, plus a bonus LP of session alternates, outtakes, and demos. On top of that, the original albums have been remastered from the analog master tapes, so they’ve never sounded better than they do here.

Get it here.

Sheryl Crow — Tuesday Night Music Club (3oth Anniversary Reissue)

sheryl crow Tuesday Night Music Club
UMe

Crow’s Tuesday Night Music Club didn’t get a proper vinyl release back in 1993, so here’s one now, on the project’s 30th anniversary. Bernie Grundman originally mastered the album, and he returned to remaster it from the original master tape for this reissue. In addition to a standard black pressing, a translucent sea blue LP is also available.

Get it here.

Violent Femmes — Violent Femmes (Deluxe Edition)

Violent Femmes
Craft Recordings

Violent Femmes have been at it for over four decades now and it all started with 1983’s self-titled debut album. As the album turns 40, the band has reissued it in an expanded collection. The set features the remastered album, along with rare B-sides, live sessions, and demo recordings, as well as “a book featuring new liner notes by journalist David Fricke and interviews with the band.”

Get it here.

The Cranberries — Everybody Else Is Doing It, So Why Can’t We? (Reissue)

Everybody Else Is Doing It, So Why Can't We?
Island/UMe

“Linger” by The Cranberries is often dubbed one of the best songs of the ’90s, and it comes from the band’s 1993 debut album, Everybody Else Is Doing It, So Why Can’t We?. For the project’s 30th anniversary, the album has been pressed onto crisp gold vinyl, but do keep in mind that you might not want to waste time getting this one if you want it, as it’s a limited edition.

Get it here.

Willie Nelson — Long Story Short: Willie Nelson 90 Live At The Hollywood Bowl

willie vinyl
Legacy Recordings/Blackbird Presents

Earlier this year, Willie Nelson celebrated a major milestone: he turned 90 years old. There was a literal celebration, too, via a star-studded concert at the Hollywood Bowl that featured performances from Nelson, Beck, Dave Matthews, Gary Clark Jr., Keith Richards, Norah Jones, Miranda Lambert, Sheryl Crow, and Snoop Dogg. Now, that special night has been immortalized on vinyl.

Get it here.

Big Thief — Masterpiece (Reissue)

Big Thief vinyl
4AD

For Big Thief, it all started with 2016’s Masterpiece, a boldly named debut album that lives up to the title. Now it’s gotten a reissue and the “evo-vinyl” edition is an opportunity for a fun surprise: The LPs are pressed on random recycled vinyl, so you won’t know what color record you get until you get it and open it up.

Get it here.

Steely Dan — Gaucho (Reissue)

Steely Dan vinyl
Geffen/UMe

Gaucho was a major moment for Steely Dan, as the 1980 project was their last album before a lengthy hiatus, which they ended in 2000 with Two Against Nature. The band has been reissuing their old albums this year and the series continues with Gaucho, which just got a fresh remaster sourced from an analog tape copy.

Get it here.

The Sound Of Music (Deluxe Edition)

sound of music vinyl
Craft Recordings

Perhaps the most defining movie musical of all time, The Sound Of Music is a classic that still holds up, and now the film’s music has gotten a fresh reissue. This is the one fans have been waiting for, as this edition “collects every musical element from the film for the very first time,” including 14 previously unreleased tracks.

Get it here.

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

All The Best New Afrobeats Music From This Week

Teni Mannywellz KCee afrobeats recap
Getty Image/Merle Cooper

Afrobeats is one of the fastest-growing genres in the country. There are big names who have seen global success, but there are even more talented up-and-coming artists looking to achieve the same type of success. Finding those artists can be tough, but we’ve got you covered. Every week, we’ll share an update on the best new afrobeats songs you need to hear and hopefully, you can find someone new to add to your rotation.

Here are some more releases on the new music front that you should check out:

Mannywellz & Pink Sweat$ — “Attention” & “Better With You”

Almost six months after his Don’t Tell Anyone EP, Mannywellz returns with a pair of songs alongside Pink Sweat$. The two tracks, “Attention” and “Better With You,” are cut from a cloth closest to alté, a sound perfect for Mannywellz afrobeats and Pink Sweat$’s R&B backgrounds.

KCee — “I Pray” Feat. Oxlade

Weeks after releasing “Tuesday,” KCee checks in with “I Pray” alongside Oxlade. Together, the two singers strike up an energetic amapiano-inspired record that speaks to a higher power to thank them for their success and to protect them from the enemies that may lurk around them.

Teni — “Malaika”

Teni’s second album Tears Of The Sun arrives on November 19, and ahead of its release, she returns with “Malaika.” The third single on the project, joining “Lanke” and “No Days Off,” is built on the groove of afrobeats as Teni takes time to thank God for helping her through the ups and downs in her life.

Joeboy — “Only God Can Save Me”

In less than two weeks, Nigerian singer Joeboy will release his Body, Soul & Spirit EP. It appears to be a companion project to his second album Body & Soul, which he released back in May. He begins the EP’s rollout with the vulnerable “Only God Can Save Me” which Joeboy uses to discuss the lack of control we have over our destiny.

Victony — “No Joke”

During an interview with Uproxx back in May, Victony hinted at “really unique” records he had on the way. His latest single “No Joke” is seemingly the first, and it’s a groovy single that is both assertive and confident.

Minz — “Blessings”

We’re due for a project from Minz, but for now, we’ll take the singles the singer continues to deliver. “Blessings” joins “Sokoto” and a remix of “Wo Wo” as his drops in 2023, and on it, Minz takes a moment to celebrate the blessings and success that have rained on him in his life.

Morravey — Ravi

Much of the world was introduced to Nigerian singer Morravey thanks to her feature on Davido’s “In The Garden” from his Timeless album. She now steps out on her own with her debut EP Ravi. Through its five songs, Morravey shows her versatility through dance, reggae, highlife, and afro-pop records.

Tega Boi Dc — “Child’s Play” Feat. Shallipopi

If you love amapiano, Tega Boi Dc’s new record “Child’s Play” with Shallipopi is just the track for you. It comes after Tega Boi Dc’s summer record “Come For You” and after Shallipopi’s October release “Things On Things.”

Mellissa — “Henny Talk”

Ghana singer Mellissa is a name you’ve seen beside artists like Amaarae and BOJ, and now, she’s gearing up to stand out on her own with an upcoming EP. Ahead of that project, she drops “Henny Talk” which is a fun and steamy single that combines romance and a bit of liquor to show how feelings can run wild once both are combined.

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

All The New Albums Coming Out In November 2023

Keeping track of all the new albums coming out in a given month is a big job, but we’re up for it: Below is a comprehensive list of the major releases you can look forward to in November. If you’re not trying to potentially miss out on anything, it might be a good idea to keep reading.

Friday, November 3

  • Actress — LXXXVIII (Ninja Tune)
  • AJR — The Maybe Man (Universal)
  • Amor Muere — A time to love, a time to die (Scrawl)
  • Animal Hospital — Shelf Life (Sipsman)
  • Atreyu — A Torch in the Dark EP (Spinefarm)
  • Ava Mirzadegan — Dark Dark Blue (Team Love Records)
  • Bad Wolves — Die About It (Better Noise Music)
  • bar italia — The Twits (Matador)
  • Billy Joel — The Vinyl Collection, Vol.2 (Columbia Records/Legacy Recordings)
  • Cash Bently — Cash Corridos 3 (True Panther)
  • Chicago — Chicago Greatest Christmas Hits (Rhino)
  • Chick Corea Elektric Band — The Future Is Now (Candid)
  • Cody Johnson — Leather (COJO Music/Warner Music Nashville)
  • Cold War Kids — Cold War Kids (CWKTWO/AWAL)
  • Crystal Fighters — Light + ([PIAS])
  • Danielle Howle — Current (Kill Rock Stars Nashville)
  • Delilah Holliday — Invaluable Vol. 2 EP (One Little Independent Records)
  • Dirty Honey — Can’t Find the Brakes (Dirt Records)
  • Dirty Nice — Surrenderland (Chiverin Records)
  • Dove Armitage — Concernless EP (KRO Records)
  • Drop Nineteens — Hard Light (Wharf Cat)
  • Empty Country — Empty Country II (Get Better Records)
  • Enny Owl — Homes in Humans (Weird Sister Records)
  • ERNIE — Cold Cuts EP (Gravity Records)
  • Gregory Porter — Christmas Wish (Blue Note/Decca Records)
  • Hilary Woods — Acts of Light (Sacred Bones)
  • Hotline TNT — Cartwheel (Third Man Records)
  • Ian Sweet — Sucker (Polyvinyl Records)
  • ill peach — THIS IS NOT AN EXIT (Hardly Art)
  • Jaime Wyatt — Feel Good (New West Records)
  • Jean-Michel Jarre — OXYMOREWORKS (Sony Music)
  • Jeffrey Martin — Thank God We Left the Garden (Fluff and Gravy Records)
  • Jimmy Buffett — Equal Strain on All Parts (Mailboat/Sun Records)
  • Jockstrap — I<3UQTINVU (Rough Trade Records)
  • Johnny Marr — Spirit Power: The Best of Johnny Marr (BMG)
  • Joy (Anonymous) — Cult Classics (Island)
  • Jung Kook — GOLDEN (Big Hit Music)
  • Kevin Abstract — Blanket (Video Store/RCA)
  • Keys N Krates — IN: TENSION (Last Gang Records)
  • King Creosote — I DES (Domino Records)
  • kwes. — Rye Lane (Original Score) (Warp Records)
  • Laura Veirs — Phone Orphans (Raven Marching Band Records)
  • Light Beams — Wild Life (Dischord Records/Mud Memory)
  • Liza Anne — Utopian (Antifragile Music)
  • Lol Tolhurst x Budgie x Jacknife Lee — Los Angeles (Play It Again Sam)
  • Marnie Stern — The Comeback Kid (Joyful Noise Records)
  • Marshmello — Sugar Papi (Joytime Collective)
  • Matmos — Return to Archive (Smithsonian Folkways)
  • Michael Franti & Spearhead — Big Big Love (Boo Boo Wax)
  • Micky Dolenz — Dolenz Sings R.E.M. EP (7A Records)
  • Move 78 — Grains (Village Live Records)
  • Neil Young — Time Fades Away 50 (Reprise Records)
  • New Kids on the Block — The Block Revisited (Interscope)
  • Niall Horan — The Show: The Encore (Capitol Records)
  • Osmo Lindeman — Electronic Works (Sahko Recordings)
  • Pendulum — Anima EP (Virgin/Mushroom Group)
  • Sarah Davachi — Long Gradus (Late Music)
  • Semisonic — Little Bit of Sun (Pleasuresonic Recordings)
  • Sen Morimoto — Diagnosis (City Slang)
  • Seth MacFarlane and Liz Gillies — We Wish You The Merriest (Decca Classics)
  • Shooter Jennings — Shooter Jennings & The Werewolves of Los Angeles Do Zevon (BCR Media)
  • Silent Planet — Superbloom (UNFD/Solid State Records)
  • Skyway Man — Flight of the Long Distance Healer (Mama Bird)
  • Sonny Digital — Dolores Son (Atlantic Records)
  • Snail Mail — Valentine (Demos) EP (Matador)
  • Spiritbox — The Fear of Fear EP (Rise Records)
  • Spiritual Cramp — Spiritual Cramp (Blue Grape Music)
  • The Struts — Pretty Vicious (Big Machine)
  • SUDS — The Great Overgrowth (Big Scary Monsters)
  • Swampmeat Family Band — Polish Your Old Halo (PNKSLM Recordings)
  • Sylvia Tyson — At the End of the Day (Stony Plain Records)
  • TIFFY — So Serious (Totally Real Records/Dollhouse Lightning)
  • Tkay Maidza — Sweet Justice (4AD/Dew Process)
  • University — Title Track EP (Transgressive)
  • Van Morrison — Accentuate the Positive (Exile)
  • Various Artists — Rap Sh!t: The Mixtape (Soundtrack from the Max Original Series, S2) (Raedio/Def Jam)
  • William Eggleston — 512 (Secretly Canadian)
  • Willie Nelson — Long Story Short: Willie Nelson 90 Live At The Hollywood Bowl (Legacy Recordings)
  • Yawning Balch — Volume Two (Heavy Psych Sounds)
  • Youth Fountain — Together In Lonesome (Pure Noise Records)
  • Zoe Wees — Therapy (Capitol Records)
  • Zooey Celeste — Restless Thoughts (ATO Records)

Friday, November 10

  • 99LETTERS — Zigoku / 地獄 (Phantom Limb)
  • Aaron Lee Tasjan — Naked Pop Songs Live! (New West Records)
  • Aesop Rock — Integrated Tech Solutions (Rhymesayers Entertainment)
  • aespa — Drama EP (SM Entertainment)
  • Aïsha Devi — Death Is Home (Houndstooth)
  • Anthony Pirog — Nepenthe Series Vol. 1 (Otherly Love Records)
  • Art Feynman — Be Good the Crazy Boys (Western Vinyl)
  • AWOLNATION — Candy Pop EP (Better Noise Music)
  • Bear’s Den — White Magnolias EP (Communion Records)
  • Beirut — Handsel (Pompeii Records)
  • Brandy — Christmas with Brandy (Brand Nu)
  • Bre Kennedy — Scream Over Everything (Nettwerk)
  • Broadside — Hotel Bleu (SharpTone Records)
  • Bruce Brubaker — Eno Piano (InFiné)
  • Calling Hours — Say Less (Revelation Records)
  • Cannons — Heartbeat Highway (Columbia)
  • Cat Power — Cat Power Sings Dylan: The 1966 Royal Albert Hall Concert (Domino)
  • Chris Stapleton — Higher (Mercury Nashville)
  • Crush Club — The Sun EP (Symphonic)
  • Cuco — Hitchhiker EP (Interscope Records)
  • Daneshevskaya — Long Is The Tunnel (Winspear)
  • Daniel Donato — Reflector (Retrace Music)
  • David Holmes — Blind on a Galloping Horse (Heavenly Recordings)
  • Delia Meshlir — Bring Back the Light (Ba Da Bing Records)
  • Foghat — Sonic Mojo (Foghat Records)
  • François J. Bonnet & Stephen O’Malley — Cylene II (Drag City)
  • Fresco Trey — Detour EP (Warner Records)
  • George Riley — Un/limited Love EP (Ninja Tune)
  • Greg Lake — Magical (The Solo Years) (Manticore Records)
  • HAAi — DJ​-Kicks: HAAi (!K7 Records)
  • Hit Bargain — A Dog A Deer A Seal (Get Better Records)
  • J. Caesar — Another Day, Another World EP (Secretsundaze)
  • jess joy — SOURCEHEIRESS (Joyful Noise Recordings)
  • Jesse Kivel — Life and Death at Party Rock (New Feelings)
  • John Francis Flynn — Look Over the Wall, See the Sky (River Lea Recordings)
  • John Moreland — Live at Third Man Records (Third Man Records)
  • June McDoom — With Strings (Temporary Residence Limited)
  • The Kid LAROI — The First Time (Columbia)
  • King Louie Bankston — Harahan Fats (Goner Records)
  • KiNG MALA — Spilt Milk EP (Human Re Sources/The Orchard)
  • Kristen Ludwig — Sunbeam (Oscar St. Records)
  • L.S. Dunes — Lost Songs: Lines and Shapes (Fantasy Records)
  • Last Dinosaurs — RYU (Nettwerk)
  • Layperson — Massive Leaning (Lung Records/Bud Tapes)
  • Lila Blue — Sweet Pea (MOXE)
  • The Lives of Famous Men — Greener Pasture Blues (Human Re Sources/The Orchard)
  • Locket — Superluminal (Fearless Records)
  • Lola Brooke — Dennis Daughter (Arista Records)
  • Måneskin — Rush! (Are U Coming?) (Arista)
  • Meagre Martin — Gut Punch (Mansions & Millions)
  • Mia Joy — Celestial Mirror EP (Fire Talk Records)
  • Miguel Atwood-Ferguson — Les Jardins Mystiques Vol. 1 (Brainfeeder)
  • Mon Laferte — Autopoiética (Universal Music México)
  • MTVoid — Matter’s Knot, Pt. 1 (Lobal Orning)
  • Mxmtoon — Plum Blossom (Revisited) EP (AWAL)
  • Ninajirachi — 4×4 EP (NLV Records)
  • Patrick Shiroishi — I Was Too Young to Hear Silence (American Dreams)
  • Paulina Anna Strom — Echoes, Spaces, Line (Rvng Int’l)
  • PinkPantheress — Heaven Knows (Warner UK)
  • Pure Bathing Culture — Chalice (First City Artists)
  • Quantic — Dancing While Falling (Play It Again Sam)
  • Rick Ross and Meek Mill — Too Good To Be True (Maybach Music Group/Gamma)
  • Rosie Darling — Lanterns (Nettwerk)
  • The Sleeping Souls — Just Before the World Starts Burning (Xtra Mile Recordings)
  • Sophie Lloyd — Imposter Syndrome (Autumn Records)
  • Special Interest — Endure Remixed (Rough Trade/Remote Control Records)
  • Sydney Rose — One Sided (Public Consumption)
  • Trey Magnifique — Mature Situations (Human Re Sources/The Orchard)
  • Vincent Neil Emerson — The Golden Crystal Kingdom (RCA)
  • Wayside — What Does Your Soul Look Like (Nature Girl Records)
  • Wiki and Tony Seltzer — 14K Figaro (Wikset Enterprise)
  • YoungBoy Never Broke Again — Decide 2 (Never Broke Again/Motown)

Friday, November 17

  • 2 Chainz and Lil Wayne — Welcome 2 Collegrove (Def Jam/Gamebread)
  • Acetone — I’m still waiting. (New West Records)
  • Ali Sethi and Nicolas Jaar — Intiha (Other People)
  • Auragraph — New Standard (DAIS Records)
  • Babebee — A Prophecy EP (Epitaph Records)
  • Bastards of Soul — Give It Right Back (Eastwood Music Group)
  • Billy Porter — Black Mona Lisa (Island UK/Republic Records)
  • Daniel Bachman — When the Roses Come Again (Three Lobed Recordings)
  • Danny Brown — Quaranta (Warp)
  • Danny Daze — ::BLUE:: (Omnidisc)
  • Divorce — Heady Metal EP (Gravity/EMI Records)
  • Dolly Parton — Rockstar (Butterfly Records/Big Machine Records)
  • Dori Freeman — Do You Recall (Blue Hens Music)
  • Dutch Mustard — Beauty EP (DM Records)
  • The Dwarves — Concept Album (Greedy Records)
  • Earthside — Let the Truth Speak (Music Theories Recordings/Mascot Label Group)
  • Emeli Sandé — How Were We To Know (Chrysalis Records)
  • ENHYPEN — Orange Blood (Belift Lab/Genie/Stone)
  • Frost Children — Hearth Room (True Panther)
  • H31R — Headspace (Big Dada)
  • Halfnoise — City Talk (Congrats Records)
  • Iron & Wine — Who Can See Forever (Sub Pop)
  • Jaakko Eino Kalevi — Chaos Magic (Weird World)
  • Jeremy Squires — Riddle of Stars (Blackbird Record Label)
  • John Vincent III — Songs for the Canyon (Concord Records)
  • Josh Radnor — Eulogy I (Flower Moon Records)
  • Joshua Van Tassel — Lullabies for Adults (Backward Music)
  • Juliana Hatfield — Juliana Hatfield Sings ELO (American Laundromat)
  • Julie Byrne — Julie Byrne with Laugh Cry Laugh EP (Ghostly International)
  • The Kinks — The Journey — Part 2 (BMG)
  • Kurupi — Mano EP (Hit the North Records)
  • Kurt Vile — Back to Moon Beach EP (Verve)
  • Kyle Gordon — Kyle Gordon is Great (BMG)
  • Linying — House Mouse EP (Nettwerk)
  • Luther Dickinson — Magic Music for Family Folk (Antone’s Records/New West Records)
  • Madge — Boxjar (AntiFragile Music)
  • Mia June — Don’t Forget Your Bags EP (Father/Daughter Records)
  • Mock Media — Mock Media II (Tin Angel Records)
  • Montañera — A Flor De Piel (Western Vinyl)
  • Nathan Melja — With Dan! (Parodia)
  • Neil Hamburger — Season Depression Suite (Drag City)
  • Plain White T’s — Plain White T’s (MRI)
  • The Polyphonic Spree — Salvage Enterprise (Good Records Recordings)
  • Richard Walters — Murmurate (Nettwerk)
  • Ritual King — The Infinite Mirror (Ripple Music)
  • Sango — North Vol. 2 (Sango Recordings)
  • Saunder Jurriaans — Phantom Limb (Ghost Talk Records)
  • Smoke Fairies — Carried in Sound (Year Seven Records)
  • Soars — Repeater (Pelagic Records)
  • Soledriver — Return Me to Light (Frontiers Music)
  • Spencer Zahn — Statues II (Cascine)
  • Steve Aoki — HiROQUEST: Double Helix (Dim Mak/DJ Kid Millionaire)
  • Vince Clarke — Sound of Silence (Mute)
  • Walter Wolfman Washington — Feel So At Home (Tipitina’s Record Club)
  • Water From Your Eyes — Crushed By Everyone (Matador Records)
  • Wind Walkers — What If I Break? (self-released)
  • Wrabel — based on a true story (Big Gay Records/Nettwerk)

Friday, November 24

  • Almost Honest — The Hex of Penn’s Woods (Argonauta Records)
  • Bill Gould and Jared Blum — The Eclipse (Koolarrow Records/SubOst)
  • Busta Rhymes — BLOCKBUSTA (Epic Records)
  • The Coronas — The Best of the Early Days (SoFarSoGood)
  • DJ Muggs and Dean Hurley — Divinity (Original Motion Picture Score) (Sacred Bones Records)
  • Future Static — Liminality (Wild Thing Records)
  • Guided By Voices — Nowhere to Go But Up (GBV Inc.)
  • Human Interest — Empathy Lives in Outer Space EP (Nice Swan Records)
  • Joe Jackson — Mr. Joe Jackson Presents: Max Champion in ‘What A Racket!’ (‎EARMUSIC)
  • Margo Price — Strays (Live at Grimey’s) (Loma Vista Recordings)
  • merci, mercy — Like An Orchid EP (Liberation Records)
  • MF Tomlinson — We Are Still Wild Horses — Remixed EP (PRAH Recordings)
  • My Morning Jacket — Happy Holiday! (ATO Records)
  • O. — SLICE EP (Speedy Wunderground)
  • Pole — Tempus Remix EP (Mute)
  • Raze Regal & White Denim Inc — Raze Regal & White Denim Inc (Bella Union)
  • Screaming Trees — Live at Egg Studios (Screaming Trees LLC)
  • The Sleeping Souls — Just Before the World Starts Burning (Xtra Mile Recordings)
  • Spector — Here Come the Early Nights (Sony/RCA)
  • Take That — This Life (EMI)
  • Teen Daze — Quiet City EP (Easy Listening Recordings)

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

Sampha Overcomes Loss By Running Head-On Into Uncertainty On The Enchanting ‘Lahai’

The RX is Uproxx Music’s stamp of approval for the best albums, songs, and music stories throughout the year. Inclusion in this category is the highest distinction we can bestow and signals the most important music being released throughout the year. The RX is the music you need, right now.

Time always progresses, whether it be one day closer to when our taxes are due or one day closer to when our existence on Earth is over. The sun rises, it sets, and the moon appears. It progresses whether we’re ready for it or not. Sampha seems to understand that on his second album Lahai, his first body of work in six years and first since 2017’s Process.

However, for the London singer, accepting it is a more difficult task. Amid heartbreak and grief, it almost feels like Sampha hoped time would be courteous enough to wait for him, allow him to sort and recover from his feelings, and not be so fast to move on. The opening record on Lahai, “Stereo Color Cloud (Shaman’s Dream),” begins with a female voice that chants choppily, “I wish you, could, time / Time, missile, back, forward / I miss you, time, misuse / Time flies, life issues.” Though broken up and missing words, the message is still clear.

In “Jonathan L. Seagull,” Sampha poses a question that seems to be directed at this progression of time, among other things. “We’ve both dealt with loss and grief in separate ways / On the same track running at a different pace / Will I catch up or will you just race away someday?” Watching the world continue to spin as you work through grief or heartbreak can make the task of catching up insurmountable. The balance between the days where we fall behind and the ones we feel faster than the world keeps us on pace.

For someone who questioned so much in the face of loss, Sampha sings with hard-won clarity throughout the 14 songs on Lahai. He stands optimistic under blue skies and the bright sun, opposing pessimism under rain clouds with records that aim to be the light at the end of the tunnel for listeners who might be struggling with the latter. “Only” encapsulates Sampha’s existential questions well while also coming clean about the emotional damage that was incurred over time.

Sampha’s lyrics capture the swarm of uncertainties that lie in his head. Fluttering and erratic instruments are juxtaposed with Sampha’s soothing vocals as a way to show that peace can exist amid the whirlpool of the unknown as Sampha acknowledges the freedom to be him with love and protection from others on “Spirit 2.0.” Likewise, he conquers regression on “Can’t Go Back” as rapid drums and high hats dance in the background. There’s a mental and emotional fight at hand and Sampha excels at both telling, showing, and making us feel its existence.

Much of Lahai is inspired by Richard Bach’s 1970 book Jonathan Livingston Seagull. As Jonathan, a literal seagull, aims to discover more about the capabilities of their own body through their growing passion for flight and travel, Sampha seeks to accomplish the same level of self-discovery, growth, and more. In the book’s namesake track, he sings “Even though we’ve been through the same / Doesn’t always mean we feel the same
/ Doesn’t always mean we heal the same / You are not me and that’s okay” — a reminder that comparison is the thief of joy.

SLahai contemplates life, death, love, and the time to experience it all. Although the questions are neverending and the answers often don’t arrive as quickly as we’d like them to, there’s no fear in Sampha’s eyes. Instead, he runs head-on into and through the uncertainty that lies ahead of him. He’s now on the other side and proud of the progress he made.

Lahai is an enchanting display of growth and acceptance as a result of unfortunate events. His sophomore album was created with the intention of capturing both the swarming winds and settled dust that occurs on the journey. Six years gives you plenty of time to figure things out, and with that time available for him to use, Sampha made the absolute best of it.

Lahai is out now via Young Recordings. Find out more information here.

Travis Scott’s Fascinating View Of ‘Utopia’ Might Just Be Too Ahead Of Its Time

The RX is Uproxx Music’s stamp of approval for the best albums, songs, and music stories throughout the year. Inclusion in this category is the highest distinction we can bestow and signals the most important music being released throughout the year. The RX is the music you need, right now.

For a little under a decade now, Texas rapper Travis Scott has had his fingers firmly on the pulse of the hip-hop zeitgeist. Starting with his second mixtape Days Before Rodeo in 2014, Travis has embodied the sort of chaotic, disaffected energy anyone born after Y2K finds intrinsic to their nature. It’s sort of a combination of the shoulder-shrugging nihilism of Generation X, multiplied by the molar-grinding anxiety of the millennial generation, cut with the hyperspeed stream of always-on, instantly gratifying internet culture. The dude always seemed great at aesthetics and giving the impression of perspective without really having much to say, and that seems to be catnip for the algorithmically programmed YouTube junkies we’re all turning into.

Travis’ ascension to hip-hop supremacy seemed certified with 2018’s Astroworld, which finally alchemized all the components and influences he’d always jammed together into more than the sum of its parts. Hip-hop, for the better part of the next couple of years, sounded like Astroworld. Travis became the influence instead of just the living mood board showcasing his inspirations. His dominance appeared inevitable. Then, a pandemic happened. Then, just when it seemed things might be getting back to normal, Travis’ 2021 Astroworld Festival ended in disaster, and he was semi-forced into a year of exile, just when he was prepared to present the next phase of his stylistic evolution and pay off his potential in full.

Now, five years after Astroworld, Travis finally presents his vision of Utopia — and it seems that his aim, once so very true, is off for the first time in his career. The thing is, I’m not sure in which direction. It’s obviously forward facing, positing a view of hip-hop very different from its current trajectory. On the other hand, it seems like Travis has once again presented a project that is the sum of its influences, without being sublime enough to portend the future of the culture and the genre. Maybe it’s a dud or maybe, as with so many works of true genius, it’s just too ahead of its time.

It’s said in the fashion world — another realm in which Travis has always appeared to be intensely interested — if something goes out of style, just wait. In a decade or so, it’ll be back in style with a vengeance. In the case of Utopia, the common consensus appears to be that Travis is once again being moved by the spirit of his greatest inspiration, Kanye West. Unfortunately, it’s at a time when Kanye is not the hero to the world at large that he once was. Even worse, the album Travis chose to channel was one of Ye’s most controversial: Yeezus, the mercurial Chicago producer’s 2013 attempt at being deconstructionist and avant garde.

Like Yeezus, Mike Dean’s fingerprints are all over Utopia; distorted drum breaks blast through “Hyaena,” ghostly, stripped-down synths under-gird “My Eyes,” even a broken Nina Simone sample appears on “I Know?” It’s like Travis and Dean took the maximalist-minimalist approach from Yeezus and wrought it on a more massive canvas. Rather than the zoned-out groove of Astroworld, we’ve got the twitchy, nervous energy of Kanye right before his first breakdown, when it seemed like he stopped trying to impress us and started trying to see just what we’d let him get away with.

The thing is, Yeezus, for better or worse, was never really in style. Some critics loved it, some listeners hated it, but the thing is, there has never really been anything else that sounded like it in hip-hop since — until now. The culture, whether you believe it’s a hivemind or an algorithm or just advertising dollars being spent, went in other directions. In fact, Travis Scott’s sound was the one that seemed most in-demand, spawning a horde of imitators and collaborators from Future and Nav to Quavo and Young Thug. Everyone incorporated a little of what Travis did from 2014 to 2020, while Kanye seemingly moved on from his own experimentation by his next album, 2016’s The Life Of Pablo.

That avant-garde style sounds just as out-of-step now as it did ten years ago. Where hip-hop has decided to reincorporate its ’80s club sister sounds like house and techno (perhaps in an escapist effort to shake off the world’s looming problems through cathartic dance), Utopia perhaps more closely reflects the anxious, apocalyptic times we’re currently living through. If music is supposed to be an escape, Utopia sounds less like its namesake than a sharp-angled, iron-walled maze, a gilded cage, or a chair made of swords. It’s jagged and concussive and claustrophobic, while Travis’ raps haven’t really improved enough to feel like he’s trying to make any kind of a coherent statement about all of this.

So, I don’t see this album having the impact of an Astroworld. It’ll likely go No. 1, because in the world where listeners are fans of the person (or the persona, rather — cults of personality abound on Elon Musk’s Twitter) more than the music, there will surely be those who “Emperor’s New Clothes” their way into convincing themselves they’re enjoying the listen. But I can’t help but wonder if, should we wait another decade, we’ll finally start to see the true influence of Utopia — even if the world itself seems further away from the concept than ever.

Utopia is out now via Cactus Jack Records / Epic Records.

All The Best New R&B Music From This Week

Sometimes the best new R&B can be hard to find, but there are plenty of great rhythm-and-blues tunes to get into if you have the time to sift through the hundreds of newly released songs every week. So that R&B heads can focus on listening to what they really love in its true form, we’ll be offering a digest of the best new R&B songs that fans of the genre should hear every Friday.

Since the last update of this weekly R&B and Afrobeats column, we’ve received plenty of music and news from the genre’s artists.

Sampha finally made his return, one that fans waited six years for, with his new single “Spirit 2.0” while The Weeknd warned of the dangers of “False Idols” on his new song with Lil Baby and Suzanna Son. Victoria Monet officially announced her Jaguar II project and HER announced the return of her Lights On Festival for 2023. Elsewhere, Jon Batiste announced his World Music Radio album, Beyoncé dropped limited-edition merch for her Renaissance Tour with Amazon, and Patrick Star from SpongeBob Squarepants is on TikTok singing classic R&B songs thanks to AI.

Here are some more releases on the new music front that you should check out:

Terrace Martin — Fine Tune

On his new album Fine Tune, Terrace Martin has one goal: develop new talent and incorporate the legacy of jazz. Fine Tune is the first of six jazz albums that Martin will release throughout 2023 and this one checks in with 12 songs besides Alex Isley, Keyon Harold, Robert Glasper, Kamasi Washington, James Fauntleroy, and more.

Robert Glasper — “What Love Can Do”

Robert Glasper and Derrick Hodge joined forces to curate the music for season 1 of Run The Girls in 2021. Now they’re back to compose the music for season two the first offering from that batch is here with “What Love Can Do” with Emily King.

Tone Stith — “Girls Like You”

Tone Stith has one of the best voices in the R&B game and it seems like he could be getting ready to release his fifth project. That sign comes with the release of “Girls Like You,” a record that Stith uses to detail the effects that a bad relationship had on his approach to love with future partners.

Jordan Hawkins & DUCKWRTH — “Can’t Fake What You Feel”

Jordan Hawkins is just a few months removed from the release of his 4Play EP, but that isn’t stopping him from sharing new music. He’s back with “Can’t Fake What You Feel” with DUCKWRTH which strikes as an upbeat number perfect to groove to this summer.

Ryan Trey — “Ain’t Even Friends” Feat. Mariah The Scientist

It’s been a little while since we’ve heard from Ryan Trey, but the Kentucky native is finally back with his new single “Ain’t Even Friends” alongside Mariah The Scientist. Together, the singers blend their talents for a reflective record about a love they lost in their lives.

Kenyon Dixon — “Lucky”

Kenyon Dixon is having quite the active year. He dropped a remix of Jon Vinyl’s “Pressure,” shared his “Slow Dancing” single with Kincy, and later shared a remix of it with Kevin Ross. Now he’s back with “Lucky,” a song that sees Dixon praise a new woman in his life and all the qualities that made him fall in love with her.

Sekou — Out Of Mind

Meet UK singer Sekou who has slowly made waves in the rising R&B community and now he’s arrived with his debut project Out Of Mind. Through its five songs, Sekou blends jazz and pop with R&B for what strikes as a captivating body of work. “I wanted to have creative freedom on this and do something different from what I’ve done before,” Sekou said about the project.

Spinall — “Loju” Feat. Wizkid

Four months after releasing his Top Boy album, producer Spinall returns to team up with Wizkid for a third time with their new song “Loju.” The vibrant record is matched with a colorful video that’s set at a house party flushed with flashy cars and beautiful dancers.

Reggie Becton, Slim & Ye Ali — “Rm. 143 (Rm112 Remix)” Feat. 112

After reaching 10 million streams with “Rm. 143,” Reggie Becton is celebrating the feat with a remix of the track that features Slim 112 and Ye Ali. It’s a smooth blend of yesterday’s and today’s R&B that’s boosted by a bad-boy intro from Ye Ali.

Elmiene — “Mad At Fire”

Elmiene is just three months removed from his El-Mean EP, but now the singer has found himself a new home. Elmiene just inked a deal with Def Jam, and with that, came the release of his new single “Mad At Fire.” Co-written with Syd and Lil Silva, Elmiene’s voice fills up the room through a blend of soul and avant-garde electronic music.

Lah Pat — “Kamikaze”

Months removed from getting a boost thanks to the remix of “Rodeo” with Flo Milli, Lah Pat is back in action with his new single “Kamikaze.” The New Orleans-born and Houston-based singer delivers a seductive banger that dips a toe into ’90s neo-soul.

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

Janelle Monáe’s ‘The Age Of Pleasure’ Channels Freedom and Euphoria As Acts Of Resistance

Over the last five years, Janelle Monáe’s brand as a creative force to be reckoned with hasn’t gone unnoticed. However, after dipping her toes into new experiences like acting and writing, she’s getting back to her musical roots. Much like the Kansas City-bred, ATL-cultivated musician herself, The Age Of Pleasure (which clocks in at just over 32 minutes) is sweet and petite. Yet, despite its length, her fourth studio-album serves as a jam-packed, Pan-African-spanning ode to finding pleasure in everyday moments.

Released June 9, The Age Of Pleasure creates a comforting space for Monáe and her beloved “Fandroids” to live out loud. Crafted in response to the pandemic and influenced by “Everyday People,” a globally-recognized cultural gathering and love letter to the Black community, the project showcases the 37-year-old’s evolution as a “free-ass motherf*cker.” Pleasure’s varied yet succinct production traverses the Black diaspora across 14 songs — Afrobeats, Ampiano, Lover’s Rock reggae, and trap-infused tunes showcase the artist’s creative license to do whatever the hell she feels like doing, in the name of artistic and individual gratification.

Though lyrics were crucial to Pleasure’s predecessor, 2018’s Grammy-nominated Dirty Computer, they don’t demand the spotlight here. Instead, the music — and the communal energy it ultimately stands for — speaks volumes. While outside ears may have felt that Dirty Computer’s content wasn’t “for them” for whatever reason, Pleasure makes it clear that anyone — regardless of gender identity or affirmation — is welcome to toast to life’s delights and concede to the rhythms. (“I want all of us (Black and Brown people, specifically) to have a soundtrack to this lifestyle,” Monáe told Angie Martinez in May.)

But this is not to say that Pleasure is devoid of queer moments, which should not come as a surprise considering the mechanisms of Monáe’s catalog and personal life. (The artist uses she/they pronouns, and identifies as non-binary.) For instance, the “Vivrant Thing”-interpolating “The Rush” featuring Amaarae and Nia Long is a call-out to the “pretty girl” who’s caught her eye. The runway-ready “Haute” nods to gender-fluidity. (“A bitch look pretty, a bitch look handsome,” Monáe says.)

The island-tinged single “Lipstick Lover” celebrates queer Black bodies, and the buzz surrounding its “controversial” music video (which showcases those bodies and much more) ultimately forced the multihyphenate to create a censored version for virgin eyes. Despite the new visual’s slight deviation from full-out freedom, the point still stands firm through Pleasure’s music. Monáe urges listeners to give in to enjoyment of self and with others, whether it’s emotionally or sexually.

This could be through Issa Rae-in-the-mirror-style affirmations (“I’m looking at a thousand versions of myself, and we’re all fine as f*ck,” she states in “Phenomenal,” which features TDE’s Doechii), or through commemorations of personal growth. The album opener “Float” finds the artist applauding her wins over an infectious trap beat created by Nate Wonder and Nana Kwabena, and horns provided by Seun Kuti and his band, Egypt 80. (Pleasure largely feels Fela Kuti-esque through grandiose instrumentation, so the sonic support from the legend’s son feels especially apropos.) And obviously, pleasure can also be found through physical self-exploration. (“If I could f*ck me right here, right now, I would do that,” Monáe admits on the aquatic, autoerotic “Water Slide.”)

But The Age Of Pleasure is best represented through songs illustrating the importance of community — the hallmark of “Everyday People” bashes. Monáe has been open about her past experiences living with a perfectionist complex. Through healing, she’s learning to enjoy the present without edits or filters, and she encourages others to do the same. (“I’m working on the balance of knowing that some things are just beyond your control and you’ve got to be in the moment and roll with the punches,” she said of her journey back in 2018.)

The dropping of this shield is most evident during The Age Of Pleasure’s trifecta of tracks: the CKay-assisted “Know Better” (which samples a hip-hop favorite: “Darkest Light” by the Lafayette Afro Rock Band), the bouncy “Paid In Pleasure,” and “Only Have Eyes 42,” a cheeky nod to polyamory that concludes with a euphoric string outro. This particular trio amplifies the notion of loosened inhibitions, forcing us to surrender to the moment and just have fun soaking up the company of others.

Given the internet discourse surrounding Monáe’s expression of her autonomy after years of donning (and shedding) her iconic tuxedo uniform, the growth of her individual freedom and self-understanding feels affirmed through The Age Of Pleasure. It can be anxiety-provoking to let your guard down, let people in, or to show up completely as yourself, but it can also be liberating to be exactly who you want to be in a world that doesn’t want you to do so.

The album captures what we all aim to experience at the end of the day. In this mid-to-post-pandemic era, it amplifies a new definition of freedom for many. The attacks on Black, Brown, and queer Americans is a daily concern. (A centuries-long one for all, but especially within the last several years.) Considering the constant diversions from the real national issues at hand, art celebrating the euphoria of authentic humanity, even with the threat of Right-winged erasure congregating in the distance, is resistance at its finest.

Throughout history’s most unsavory moments, music has always been there for minorities in particular to feel safe and seen. As someone who has never been a stranger to creating art reflective of The Times™, Janelle Monáe’s The Age Of Pleasure maintains the musician’s crusade of using her work to allow any and all “dirty computers” to remember that there is indeed a place for them in the world, and on the dancefloor.

Janelle Monáe is a Warner Music artist. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.