Friday Music Guide: New Music From Lorde, Megan Thee Stallion, Benson Boone & More
Billboard’s Friday Music Guide serves as a handy guide to this Friday’s most essential releases — the key music that everyone will be talking about today, and that will be dominating playlists this weekend and beyond.
This week, Lorde shakes us awake, Megan Thee Stallion is ready “whenever” and Benson Boone shows off a different side. Check out all of this week’s picks below:
Lorde, “What Was That”
Lorde has made a habit of returning every four years with a bold new solo statement, and with “What Was That,” the pop auteur circles back into our orbit in her late twenties, chasing new highs in New York City and feeling a little more bruised by breakups; the subtle, slightly twitchy production and subject matter draw a line back to 2017’s Melodrama, but Lorde is evolving her feelings, sharpening the specificity of her lyrics and treating a much-anticipated new single like a too-honest piece of poetry.
Megan Thee Stallion, “Whenever”
Megan Thee Stallion blacks out in the second verse of her new single “Whenever,” rattling off lines like “I love when I hear that a b—h don’t like me, stalk my IG / This pretty face on her FYP,” in a way that recalls her ferocious early mixtapes — it’s a moment that reminds us of Meg’s effortless drive when she wants to pick up the pace, and stirs up even more anticipation for her next project.
Benson Boone, “Mystical Magical”
Unless you’ve spent the past year under a rock, you know that Benson Boone possesses the type of soaring vocals that can startle listeners, and serve as the engine of a smash. Unlike “Beautiful Things,” however, new single “Mystical Magical” peppers that force into a more delicate arrangement, with Boone delivering the titular phrase in a blissed-out falsetto as the bass pops beneath him.
Young Thug feat. Future, “Money on Money”
After a few guest spots in recent months, Young Thug has unveiled his first proper single since leaving jail on a plea deal last year, and it’s a doozy: “Money on Money” is opulent Atlanta rap, with a killer beat switch, a reinvigorated Thugger calling out those who doubted him (and declaring that he’s “blowing money fast like a cheetah”), and Future supporting his frequent collaborator on the back end.
Coco Jones, Why Not More?
Coco Jones has already translated legions of Disney fans into R&B listeners, scored a crossover hit in “ICU” and taken home a Grammy, yet the release of her long-awaited debut album Why Not More? feels like a momentous occasion — as well as the proper full-length showcase that her voice deserves, as Jones spends the first half of the album sans guests and letting her sensual delivery commanding our attention.
Tucker Wetmore, What Not To
The reason why Pacific Northwest singer-songwriter Tucker Wetmore has broken through in Nashville involves his adeptness at emotional storytelling as well as party-ready singles; debut album What Not To boasts both across its 19-song track list, from the finger-snapping viral hit “Brunette” to the searing title track.
D4vd, Withered
Throughout his short career, D4vd has refused to trade in viral success for mainstream pandering, instead using the platform afforded by his early hits to keep exploring his sonic interests — and Withered, his first proper album, sounds like a young singer-songwriter comfortable in his own skin, drifting toward dreamy rhythmic pop that should be a natural springtime soundtrack.
Editor’s Pick: Samia, Bloodless
Bloodless is the sound of a talented artist achieving clarity: Samia Finnerty has released intriguing albums before, but nothing comes close to the stylistic command and singular point of view she demonstrates on her third album, which oscillates between alt-folk and indie-pop to study gender norms in modern society and present Samia’s full self without compromise.
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