Friday Music Guide: New Music From Lana Del Rey, Bon Iver, Jelly Roll & More

Check out the must-hear releases of the week.

Apr 11, 2025 - 16:42
 0
Friday Music Guide: New Music From Lana Del Rey, Bon Iver, Jelly Roll & 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, Lana Del Rey giddies up to country, Bon Iver finds the love and Jelly Roll discovers new “Dreams.” Check out all of this week’s picks below:

Lana Del Rey, “Henry, Come On” 

“All these country singers / And their lonely rides to Houston / Doesn’t really make for the best / You know, settle-down type,” Lana Del Rey concludes on “Henry, Come On,” a poignant reflection on the dissolution of a romance with plenty of Southern iconography that would fit into the singer-songwriter’s long-teased country album; the song is more swaying ballad than Nashville anthem, but Del Rey sounds magnificent over the finger-picked acoustic guitar as she presents her spin on the country heartbreak standard.

Bon Iver, SABLE, fABLE 

We’ve come a long way from the desolate cabin of For Emma, Forever Ago with Bon Iver, as band mastermind Justin Vernon has preceded the release of long-awaited new album SABLE, fABLE with a press campaign detailing his newfound happiness — and the album does indeed radiate a new type of warmth for the singer-songwriter, whose recent collaborations with Taylor Swift have expanded his profile but whose joy is captured here in quiet, contained bursts.

Jelly Roll, “Dreams Don’t Die” 

Jelly Roll is making his acting debut on the CBS hit Fire Country, and to mark the occasion, the country superstar dropped a new single: “Dreams Don’t Die” functions as the type of lump-in-throat croon-along that Jelly Roll has excelled at in the past, motivating the listener to reach for their long-held goals (regardless of whether or not they involve primetime dramas).

Shaboozey & Myles Smith, “Blink Twice” 

Shaboozey has announced the upcoming release of the “complete” version of his 2024 album Where I’ve Been, Isn’t Where I’m Going — a different way of describing a deluxe edition, but an apropos one, considering that the original album came out before “A Bar Song (Tipsy)” had grown into a record-setting smash. “Blink Twice” gives Shaboozey the opportunity to iterate on his sonic and personal success, while also roping in Myles Smith, the singer-songwriter who had a breakout hit of his own with “Stargazing.”

Cynthia Erivo, “Worst of Me” 

The time is right for a high-profile Cynthia Erivo album: after Wicked gave her multiple talents a gigantic platform, “Worst of Me,” which previews the June full-length I Forgive You, presents her vocal theatrics in front of cinematic rhythmic pop, her voice spinning down through the verses before defying gravity on the high-powered chorus.

Rauw Alejandro, “Carita Linda” 

“Carita Linda” and its accompanying music video may be a heartfelt tribute to Puerto Rico, but the graceful single finds Rauw Alejandro looking outward and finding new musical territory to cover — as his first release since Cosa Nuestra, and arriving at a moment in which Alejandro is performing his first tour with a live band, “Carita Linda” is the sound of a star admirably widening his aesthetic.

Rema, “Bout U” 

After releasing “Baby (Is It a Crime),” which featured an affecting Sade sample, earlier this year, Rema has offered a follow-up that sounds more ready-made for a packed Coachella set this weekend: “Bout U” gives the Nigerian star a playful dance atmosphere and lets him wander around, tossing out vocal runs and flirtations as the production glides forward.

Editor’s Pick: Jessie Murph, “Blue Strips” 

At the age of 20, Jessie Murph has already hopscotched through multiple genres while always sounding confident in her approach and effortlessly mining interesting lyrical territory; “Blue Strips,” which quickly follows last week’s “Gucci Mane,” starts out as a vocals-only showcase, then segues to a piano ballad before pivoting to a combustible head-knocker just 30 seconds in, but Murph’s voice prevents whiplash, and remains compelling throughout the exercise.