Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally

Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally.
Studio album by
Released6 March 2026 (2026-03-06)
Recorded2024 – 25 June 2025
Studio
Genre
Length42:33
Language
  • English
  • Italian
Label
Producer
Harry Styles chronology
Harry's House
(2022)
Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally.
(2026)
Singles from Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally.
  1. "Aperture"
    Released: 22 January 2026[1]
  2. "American Girls"
    Released: 6 March 2026

Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally. is the fourth studio album by English singer-songwriter Harry Styles. It was released on 6 March 2026, by Erskine and Columbia Records. Produced by frequent collaborators Kid Harpoon and Tyler Johnson, the album features background vocals from Ellie Rowsell and the House Gospel Choir; additional contributors include Tom Skinner, John Metcalfe, and Jules Buckley. Musically, it marks a departure from the city pop and R&B influences of his previous album, Harry's House (2022), in favour of a dance-pop sound influenced by electronic music.

Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally. was recorded in various locations, including London and Berlin. Its lead single "Aperture" was released on 22 January 2026, while its second single, "American Girls", was released on 6 March alongside the album. Both singles debuted in the top 5 on the US Billboard Hot 100, with "Aperture" reaching number one, marking Styles' third US number one single.

Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally. opened with first-week sales of 430,000 album-equivalent units in the United States and topped the Billboard 200. It also topped the charts in numerous other territories, including the United Kingdom, Australia, Germany, France and Canada. Styles is set to embark on the Together, Together concert tour from May to December 2026 to promote the album.

Background and promotion

English singer and songwriter Harry Styles released the studio albums Harry Styles (2017), Fine Line (2019), and Harry's House (2022) between 2017 and 2022, and promoted the last two with the 22-month Love On Tour until July 2023, after which he made sporadic public appearances.[2] He stated in August 2022 that he was working on ideas for a fourth album. He was speculated to have begun recording it after being sighted visiting London's RAK Studios in 2024.[3][4] In May 2025, it was reported that Styles was living in Berlin and working on his fourth studio album.[5] The move to Berlin to "record a synthesiser-heavy album", with Styles "embracing big career pivots, and staying silent in between", drew comparisons to David Bowie's own move to Berlin to record his Berlin Trilogy.[6] After the album was announced, Styles revealed that the album was largely inspired by LCD Soundsystem, describing their music and live shows as "joyous".[7] The album's title comes from what Styles considers a "life mantra".[8]

On 27 December 2025, Styles uploaded an eight-minute video to his YouTube channel, under the title "Forever, Forever", which included footage from the final show of his Love On Tour.[2][9] It showcased him performing an original instrumental piece composed for the concert and concluded with the phrase "We Belong Together". On 12 January 2026, posters displaying the phrase were discovered in various cities globally. These posters directed individuals to Styles' newly established interactive website, webelongtogether.co, which subsequently redirected them to a text chat on WhatsApp.[10] Two days later, a voice memo of Styles mumbling "we belong together" was sent to fans through text.[11]

On 15 January, Styles announced his fourth studio album, Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally, which was released on 6 March.[12] The lead single, "Aperture", was released on 22 January.[1][13] It was produced by Kid Harpoon.[14] That same day, Styles announced Together, Together, a series of concert residencies in seven cities.[15] The album's track listing was revealed the following day.[16]

"American Girls" was released as the second single in conjunction with the album on 6 March.[17][18] Styles also performed at Co-op Live in Manchester for a "one night only" concert the same day,[19] which was released to Netflix as a concert film, Harry Styles: One Night in Manchester, two days later.[20]

Composition and recording

Recording for Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally. began in 2024.[3][21] Upon the album's release, Styles revealed via social media the album recording appeared to be completed on 25 June 2025.[22] The album was mainly recorded in the UK and Germany at RAK and Abbey Road Studios in London and Hansa Studios in Berlin, with additional recording in the UK and USA, specifically at Clubhouse (New York), Green Oak Studios (Los Angeles), Angel Studios (London), Ridgemont Studios, and Traquillo Studios.[23]

Styles co-wrote the album alongside Harpoon and Tyler Johnson, both of whom he has worked with throughout his solo career. Harpoon produced all 12 tracks on the album and serves as its executive producer, with Johnson having full and additional production credits on seven songs. The album features frequent collaborations with the London-based group House Gospel Choir, with select members appearing on lead single "Aperture" as well as "Are You Listening Yet?", "Season 2 Weight Loss", "Pop", and "Dance No More". English singer Ellie Rowsell, the lead singer of rock band Wolf Alice, contributes backing vocals to "Aperture", "Taste Back", and "Season 2 Weight Loss". The track "Coming Up Roses" features an orchestral arrangement by Styles, Harpoon, and English composer Jules Buckley.[24] Musically, the record blends synth-pop, dance-pop, and pop rock with groove-driven production and elements of post-punk, indie electronic, alternative dance and funk.[25][26][27][28][29]

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
AnyDecentMusic?7.0/10[30]
Metacritic72/100[31]
Review scores
SourceRating
ConsequenceB[32]
Financial Times[33]
The Guardian[34]
The Independent[35]
The Irish Times[36]
NME[25]
PasteC[37]
Rolling Stone[38]
The Telegraph[29]
The Times[39]

Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally received generally favourable reviews from music critics.[31] AnyDecentMusic? gave the album a score of 7.0 out of 10 based on eighteen reviews.[30] HuffPost UK's Daniel Welsh described the initial critic reception as "varying levels of positive",[40] while PA Media's Casey Cooper-Fiske described it as mixed.[41]

The Age's Tom W. Clarke awarded four stars out of five, calling the album a brave departure from Styles' previous albums.[42] The Australian's Geordie Gray awarded three stars out of five. He enthusiastically complimented the production and lightly complimented the songwriting, but criticised Styles' voice, which he believed was his biggest strength, for taking a back seat. Although he clarified that he didn't consider the album "bad", he believed that the album ultimately failed as a dance music album, writing that it lacked in fun moments and adopted the signifiers of various dance music styles without adopting any of their quirkiness.[43] BBC News' Mark Savage was impressed by the album's "funky" grooves. He felt Styles' vocals and "distant and disconnected" demeanor on several tracks were an "odd mismatch" with those grooves, but ultimately commended the "compellingly knotty" album as a brave departure from his previous works.[44]

Billboard's Jason Lipshutz thought the album was Styles' most mature yet and praised the cohesion of the track listing.[45] Clash's Robin Murray awarded a score of eight out of ten, praising the "physical impactness" of the album and referring to the lyricism as "thrilling, but also empathetic".[46] Classic Pop's John Earls awarded it four-and-a-half stars out of five, complimenting the "maverick sonic choices" and emotive lyrics.[47] Consequence's Paolo Ragusa awarded a B grade, writing that the album contained some of Styles' best songs but that it could have gone further in an "unhinged" direction. He also noted that the "ballad-adjacent" "Coming Up Roses" and "Paint by Numbers" did not fit well into the track listing.[32] DIY's Emma Swann awarded four-and-a-half stars out of five, writing that Styles no longer seemed to be searching for his artistic identity, and praising the "excellent" album's "leftfield" sonic choices.[21] Euphoria's Athena Sobhan awarded five stars out of five, praising the experimentation relative to Styles' previous albums and writing that he "nails" the disco aesthetic.[48] Financial Times' Ludovic Hunter-Tilney awarded three stars out of five. He enjoyed the album's "impressive" instrumentation and "audacious edge," but criticised Styles' vocals as "inadequately expressive"; he also felt the album lacked engaging lyrics and song structures.[33] Flood's Kyle Lemmon praised the emotive lyrics, which he felt were the centre of the album, and the "infectious" music.[49] The Guardian's Alexis Petridis awarded three stars out of five. He commended the album's sonic cohesion and lack of trend-chasing, and felt that it was generally a pleasant listening experience, but criticised a lack of memorability and vague lyricism.[34]

British GQ's Ben Allen felt the album's lyrics were more mature than on Styles' previous works. He also praised the musicality.[50] The Independent's Roisin O'Connor awarded four stars out of five, praising the album as a musically playful and emotionally vulnerable experience; positively comparing it to Styles' previous album, which she found bland; and concluding that Styles has found his identity.[35] The Irish Times's Ed Power awarded three stars out of five and called the album a "profoundly okayish" letdown, citing a lack of substance. However, he did commend Styles' attempt to evolve his sound.[36] JubileeCast's Timothy Yap awarded score of four out of five, praising the sonic cohesion, catchy hooks, and lyrical contrast between romance and melancholy.[51] The London Standard's Maddy Mussen awarded four stars out of five, praising the production and playful tone, writing that "Aperture" is a "reverse Trojan horse" that does not accurately reflect the album's sound, which she describes as largely in line with his previous works, "just with a little more dance influence". She noted that the slower tracks were the weakest and let the album down.[52]

Music Week's Ben Homewood wrote that the album was an improvement on Styles' strengths from previous works, listing choruses, lyrical introspection, quirkiness, and catchy melodies as examples.[53] NME's Rhian Daly awarded four stars out of five, writing that Styles has grown past gossip-fuelled songwriting and "nailed" the ability to make personal songs that are not bogged down with minor details. He was also impressed by the album's "exploratory" and enveloping sound, though he found some tracks forgettable.[25] The Observer's Kitty Empire called the album "fun" yet "confusing", praising Styles' mature lyrics yet noting musical and thematic meandering.[54] Paste's Matt Mitchell awarded a C grade and wrote that Styles feels like a guest on his own album, calling the vocals largely overprocessed or muted, the lyrics often boring and cringe-inducing, and the songs too reliant on electronics and effects.[37] Rolling Stone's Joe Levy awarded four stars out of five, describing the album as "delightfully strange, often lovely, and consistently fascinating",[38] while Rolling Stone UK's Nick Reilly awarded four stars out of five, feeling frustrated by the "oblique" lyrics but writing that the music was "joyous" and "eclectic", calling the album "excellent".[55] The Telegraph's Neil McCormick awarded three stars out of five, praising the "interesting and fun" sonics but criticising the vague lyrics and lack of substance, calling it "music that hints at big ideas and emotional depths without actually having either".[29] The Times' Will Hodgkinson awarded four stars out of five, calling the album "musically deep and lyrically shallow" and praising the laid-back, fun atmosphere.[39] USA Today's Melissa Ruggieri thought the album was quirky, writing: "Styles admirably dedicates himself to progressing, even if it doesn't mean gift-wrapped radio fodder".[56] Variety's Jem Aswad praised Styles for taking a risk with the album's relaxed atmosphere.[57]

Commercial performance

In the United Kingdom, Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally. opened with 183,045 album-equivalent units,[58] marking the biggest opening week of Styles' career in the country and his third chart-topping album in the region, after Harry Styles (2017) and Harry's House (2022).[59] Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally. recorded the biggest opening week for a male solo artist in almost a decade, since Ed Sheeran's ÷ (2017),[58] and sold 66,391 vinyl copies in its first week, marking the biggest first week vinyl album sales for a British artist in the 21st century, surpassing the record set by Sam Fender's People Watching (2025).[59]

In the United States, Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally. debuted at number one on the Billboard 200, as Styles' fourth consecutive chart-topping album in the country. According to Luminate figures, it opened with 430 thousand album-equivalent units, consisting of 291 thousand pure album sales, 138.5 thousand streaming-equivalent albums (from 140.31 million on-demand streams of the album's tracks), and approximately five hundred track-equivalent units.[60] Styles became the second solo male artist to have their first four albums top the chart, after DMX, and the first solo artist to debut at number one with their first four albums since Alicia Keys.[60] According to Hits figures, the album opened with 424,176 album-equivalent units, consisting of 284,650 pure album sales, 138,795 streaming-equivalent albums, and 731 track-equivalent albums.[61]

The 430 thousand unit tally marked the biggest US debut week by units of 2026, the biggest sales week for any album by units by any artist since Taylor Swift's The Life of a Showgirl (2025), and the biggest week by a solo male artist since Morgan Wallen's I'm the Problem (2025).[60] The 291 thousand pure album tally is the biggest for any album since The Life of a Showgirl, and the biggest for a male solo artist since The Weeknd's Hurry Up Tomorrow (2025). This tally also included 186 thousand in vinyl sales, marking the biggest ever week for an album on vinyl by a male artist since Luminate began electronically recording vinyl sales data in 1991.[60]

Track listing

All tracks are written by Harry Styles, Thomas Hull and Tyler Johnson, except "Aperture", "Dance No More" and "Carla’s Song", which were written only by Styles and Hull, and "Coming Up Roses", which was written solely by Styles.

Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally. track listing[24]
No.TitleLength
1."Aperture"5:11
2."American Girls"3:33
3."Ready, Steady, Go!"2:40
4."Are You Listening Yet?"3:12
5."Taste Back"3:41
6."The Waiting Game"2:49
7."Season 2 Weight Loss"3:49
8."Coming Up Roses"4:08
9."Pop"3:36
10."Dance No More"3:14
11."Paint by Numbers"2:27
12."Carla's Song"4:13
Total length:42:33

Personnel

Credits adapted from Tidal.[62]

Charts

Chart performance
Chart (2026) Peak
position
Australian Albums (ARIA)[63] 1
Austrian Albums (Ö3 Austria)[64] 1
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Flanders)[65] 1
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Wallonia)[66] 1
Canadian Albums (Billboard)[67] 1
Czech Albums (ČNS IFPI)[68] 1
Danish Albums (Hitlisten)[69] 1
Dutch Albums (Album Top 100)[70] 1
Finnish Albums (Suomen virallinen lista)[71] 1
French Albums (SNEP)[72] 1
German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[73] 1
German Pop Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[74] 1
Greek Albums (IFPI)[75] 1
Hungarian Albums (MAHASZ)[76] 1
Irish Albums (OCC)[77] 1
Italian Albums (FIMI)[78] 1
Japanese Digital Albums (Oricon)[79] 23
Japanese Hot Albums (Billboard Japan)[80] 26
Japanese Western Albums (Oricon)[81] 8
Lithuanian Albums (AGATA)[82] 1
New Zealand Albums (RMNZ)[83] 1
Norwegian Albums (IFPI Norge)[84] 1
Polish Albums (ZPAV)[85] 2
Portuguese Albums (AFP)[86] 1
Scottish Albums (OCC)[87] 1
Slovak Albums (ČNS IFPI)[88] 2
Spanish Albums (Promusicae)[89] 1
Swedish Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[90] 1
Swiss Albums (Schweizer Hitparade)[91] 1
UK Albums (OCC)[92] 1
US Billboard 200[93] 1

Release history

Release history
Date Format Label Ref.
6 March 2026 [24][94]

Notes

  1. ^ The House Gospel Choir consists of singers Aleysha Eve, CJ Idos, Cartell Green-Brown, Daniel Thomas, Dean Patron, Gemma Knight Jones, Harrison Atlee, Laura Leon, Monday Osarobo, Monique Meade, Natalie Maddix, Shayanne Campbell, Vania Lima, and Zaza Wright.

References

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