Skip to content
Search

Tyla Reveals Sophomore Album ‘A*POP’

"I feel like I just did something really fresh and so Tyla," the star previously teased to Rolling Stone

Tyla Reveals Sophomore Album ‘A*POP’

Tyla on Oct. 30, 2025 in London, England.

Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images for Glamour

Tyla has unveiled the release date of her highly anticipated sophomore album: A*Pop is set to arrive July 24.

The star teased the announcement with an album trailer on Wednesday, which showcases her upcoming LP as “African,” “Unapologetic,” “Confident,” and “Global.” The follow-up to her self-titled debut arrives after the release of her hit single “Chanel” and Y2K-fueled collaboration “She Did It Again” with Zara Larsson.


- YouTube youtu.be

In February, Tyla revealed to Rolling Stone that her second album was on the way. Discussing the LP, Tyla said, “I feel like the first album, it was very hectic, it was a rush. It was like, all of a sudden, overnight craziness. So now that I’m settled in, I feel like I know more about my direction and what I want to do, what I want to say.”

She added, “I just knew that as I lived through the making of the album, it was going to fall into place, which it did. I feel like I just did something really fresh and so Tyla.”

In 2024, Tyla won her first Grammy with the inaugural Best African Music Performance award for her breakthrough track, “Water.” Last year, she took home her second Grammy for Best African Music Performance with “Push 2 Start” — the hit song found on the deluxe edition of her debut LP, Tyla+.

Tyla has also garnered four nominations at the American Music Awards in May including Best Female R&B Artist, Best Afrobeats Artist, and — for her hit “Chanel” — Social Song of the Year and Best Music Video.

More Stories

Ikky

Ikky

Warner Music

Ikky

If you’ve been anywhere near Punjabi music over the last few years, you’ve already heard Ikky’s work. The Toronto-born producer, Ikwinder Singh, has been behind some of the records that pushed the sound well beyond its core audience — from Shubh’s “Baller” to his long-running collaboration with Karan Aujla across Making Memories and P-Pop Culture, along with crossover records like “Tell Me” with OneRepublic.

What’s changed over time isn’t just the scale, but where the music is landing. His records are now moving between Punjabi audiences and global pop spaces without feeling like they’ve been reworked to fit either. That comes from how he’s built his sound — rooted in Punjabi music, but shaped by growing up in Toronto, where those influences naturally overlap.

Keep ReadingShow less
Kuzi Cee

Kuzi Cee

Patrick Duong

Kuzi Cee

Born in Zimbabwe and raised across cities like London, New York and Toronto before eventually settling in Calgary, Kuzi Cee doesn’t come from one fixed scene—and you can hear that in the music. His approach to R&B feels shaped by movement: different cities, different influences, all landing in one place.

Over the past couple of years, he’s been building steady momentum, first catching attention online with early snippets of ‘Rather Be,’ a track that went on to pick up millions of streams and views across platforms. That moment translated offline too—festival slots, opening sets, and a growing audience that’s been following him from social media into real rooms. He’s shared stages with artists like Mario, Nelly and Ashanti, while also performing at spaces like the Calgary Stampede, slowly building a live presence to match the online buzz.

Keep ReadingShow less
Cameron Whitcomb

Cameron Whitcomb

James Baker

Cameron Whitcomb

Before the music started landing, Cameron Whitcomb was back home in Nanaimo, B.C., figuring things out as he went. His run on American Idol in 2022 put him in front of a bigger audience, but it didn’t immediately translate into a clear next step. What followed was slower — writing, releasing, and building a connection online through songs that felt direct and unfiltered.

That’s the space his 2025 album The Hard Way comes from. The project is built to play straight through — concise, intentional, and rooted in his own experiences, including addiction and recovery. It moves across folk, country and alternative, but never really settles into one, which lines up with how he approaches writing in the first place.

Keep ReadingShow less
Ruby Waters
Photographs by Lissyelle Laricchia

Ruby Waters

Ontarian singer-songwriter Ruby Waters has built momentum in a way that feels increasingly rare: through constant motion, word of mouth, and live shows that turn songs into something sweatier, louder, and less fixed than their recorded forms. While streaming and social media helped widen the audience, Waters’ music still carries the energy of someone figuring things out in real time, letting instinct outrun polish.

Her songs move easily between rock, pop, folk, and something harder to pin down, but genre rarely feels like the point. There is looseness in the writing, chaos in the delivery, and a refusal to flatten personality into something easier to package. Even as her audience has grown, Waters continues to make music that feels emotionally immediate, sometimes messy, and entirely uninterested in sanding itself down for mass approval.

Keep ReadingShow less
Connor Price

Connor Price

Megan Clark

Connor Price

Connor Price didn’t come up through the usual music industry system. The Markham-born artist spent years working as an actor before the pandemic brought that side of his career to a halt, pushing him to take music seriously and build something of his own. What followed was a fully independent run shaped by consistency, sharp instincts for digital storytelling and a close partnership with his wife and manager, Breanna.

Together, they’ve built a hands-on operation that controls everything from releases to visuals, allowing Price to move quickly and stay directly connected to his audience. His Spin the Globe series expanded that world further, turning global collaboration into a format while introducing listeners to artists across countries.

Keep ReadingShow less