Friday Music Guide: New Music From Charli xcx & Billie Eilish, Jack White, A$AP Rocky and More
Written by djfrosty on August 2, 2024
Billboard’s Friday Music Guide serves as a handy guide to this Friday’s most essential releases — the key music that everyone will be talking about today, and that will be dominating playlists this weekend and beyond.
This week, Charli xcx and Billie Eilish take a “Guess” together, Jack White has plenty of new riffs and A$AP Rocky returns with an unexpected guest. Check out all of this week’s picks below:
Charli xcx feat. Billie Eilish, “Guess”
Charli xcx’s spectacular Brat era continues with a new remix of “Guess,” in which Charli’s sultry delivery is paired with Billie Eilish’s soft-spoken sexual earnestness — the result is an explosive chemical reaction, that should have groups of partygoers shouting out Eilish’s line “Charli likes boys, but she knows I’d hit it” well beyond summertime.
Jack White, No Name
Do you love the White Stripes, want to explore more of Jack White’s solo oeuvre but aren’t quite sure where to start? No Name, which was recently sneaked out to Third Man Records consumers before arriving on digital, may be White’s sixth album, but most closely resembles his former band’s bluesy garage-rock anthems, and should bring any casual listener up to speed.
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A$AP Rocky feat. Jessica Pratt, “HIGHJACK”
During a recent chat with Zane Lowe for Apple Music, A$AP Rocky describes how Jessica Pratt’s music “kind of gave me this kind of Portishead meets Stevie Nicks vibe a little bit”; that explains how the hip-hop titan ended up corralling the indie songstress for one of the year’s more unexpected collaborations, on which Rocky’s boisterous flow collapses into Pratt’s gorgeous warbling.
Khalid, Sincere
Khalid released his debut album, American Teen, a few days after his 19th birthday; now 26, his soothing tone remains intact but has naturally deepened on Sincere, his first full-length in five years and a revealing R&B exploration of heartbreak, fighting for peace and growing up within the music industry’s spotlight.
Jelly Roll, “Liar”
Between his appearance on Eminem’s latest album, his contribution to the Twisters soundtrack and his John Denver-honoring team-up with mgk, Jelly Roll is on quite the prolific streak — but “Liar,” his first solo single since June’s “I Am Not Okay,” doesn’t dilute his appeal, functioning as a venomous farewell with unsettled guitar strums.
Maren Morris, Intermission
In the past year alone, Maren Morris announced her decision to leave country music, filed from divorce from singer-songwriter Ryan Hurd and came out as bisexual during Pride month; the highs and lows of her journey are given a five-song snapshot in the form of Intermission, a compelling stopgap on which her fears and flirtations are given a technicolor pop sheen.
Justin Quiles, Permanente
Puerto Rican hitmaker Justin Quiles wrapped up his visual song trilogy with “Te Perdió” last fall, and has moved on to more quick-hitting jams on Permanente, crafting rumbling hooks and commanding listeners’ attention while rarely allowing his tracks to stretch beyond the two-minute mark.
Jessie Murph feat. Teddy Swims, “Dirty”
The raw, wounded way that Jessie Murph sings the words “I’ve got no mercy / You don’t deserve me” on her new Teddy Swims team-up “Dirty” allows her hurt to scan as authentic, and her voice powers her through such woe; after scoring hits with Koe Wetzel and Jelly Roll, Murph continues to shine as a collaborator and storyteller.
The Smashing Pumpkins, Aghori Mhori Mei
There are moments across Aghori Mhori Mei, The Smashing Pumpkins’ thirteenth studio album, that harken back to their mid-‘90s heyday, and those callbacks are purposeful: Billy Corgan, James Iha and Jimmy Chamberlain have simplified their formula after some grander recent experiments, resulting in some refreshingly straightforward rockers.
Editor’s Pick: Kacey Musgraves, Deeper Into the Well
Five months after its release, Kacey Musgraves’ charming Deeper Well has received a deluxe edition that boasts new collaborations with Leon Bridges and Tiny Habits, as well as “Irish Goodbye,” a wistful kiss-off that’s among the most emotionally resonant moments on the project.