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SZA performing at Glastonbury 2024. American singer-songwriter SZA co-writes almost all of her songs with their respective producers; for many of them, she is the sole lyricist. [a] Her repertoire encompasses two studio albums, one reissue album, three extended plays (EPs), multiple film and television soundtracks, and several guest appearances.
SZA released her second studio album, SOS, in 2022. It broke several records in R&B/hip-hop and overall charts. It broke several records in R&B/hip-hop and overall charts. In the US, it opened with the biggest streaming week ever for an R&B album, spent 10 weeks atop the Billboard 200, [ 5 ] and ended 2023 as the country's third-biggest album ...
Lana (written fully as SOS Deluxe: Lana) is the reissue of SOS (2022), the second studio album by American singer-songwriter SZA. It was released on December 20, 2024, through Top Dawg Entertainment and RCA Records. It features a single guest appearance from Kendrick Lamar. The album was supported by the singles "Saturn", "BMF", and "30 for 30".
SZA’s long-awaited the deluxe edition of her Grammy-winning 2022 album “SOS,” which is titled “Lana,” has finally arrived. The album has been through a long series of false alarms — it ...
On Sept. 8, SZA performs a free concert at the Brooklyn Navy Yard where she announces to the audience: “The deluxe is a whole ’nother album. It’s called ‘Lana.’ It’s seven to 10 songs ...
SZA's second studio album, SOS, was released on December 9, 2022. [1] Soon afterward, she made a post on Instagram in which she teased about a possible deluxe edition for the album. [2] Speaking to Variety in August 2023, she revealed that the deluxe edition became a "whole 'nother" project, a reissue she named Lana.
SZA released 14 new songs, plus her earlier single "Saturn," in "SOS Deluxe: Lana." The album also includes a Kendrick Lamar collab, "30 For 30."
A more braggadocious piece within her discography, "30 for 30" allows SZA to "bask in her accomplishments" accentuated with "soaring strings and booming 808's". [2] The song starts off with a spoken-word sample, taken from the R&B/funk band Switch song "I Call Your Name", with lead singer Bobby DeBarge admitting to indulging in "immature things" as well as "painful doubts and insecurities ...