Music Review: Justin Bieber has more to say about love on ‘Swag ll’

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If it wasnโ€™t clocking to you before, it should be now. Justin Bieber is doing whatever he wants. Friday’s โ€œSwag llโ€ follows the July release of โ€œSwag.โ€ In a review, The Associated Press music writer Maria Sherman says โ€œSwag llโ€ is an obvious companion piece, not only in name but also in sound, theme and zeal. Collaborators repeat. There are songs about his wife and references to his religion. But Sherman says there is also a kind of lightness to โ€œSwag ll.โ€ That is likely because Bieber spends less time considering how he is depicted in the media on this release. Sift and find gold.

NEW YORK (AP) โ€” If it wasn't clocking to you before, it should be now. Justin Bieber is doing whatever he wants.

The 31-year-old has surprised listeners with a second new album in 2025 โ€” โ€œSwag llโ€ follows July's โ€œSwag.โ€ Both arrived shortly after mysterious billboards teasing the records cropped up in major cities. The new album, his eighth, is an obvious companion piece, not only in name, but also in sound, theme and zeal. Liken it to Taylor Swift's โ€œThe Tortured Poets Departmentโ€ double album drop โ€” this 23-track album is for his diehard loyalists. (Or 44 tracks, if listened to with โ€œSwag,โ€ a combined run time of two hours and 11 minutes.)

The first installment was, in some ways, a return to form. Before he became the internet's first true popstar, and long before he'd find additional fame for his EDM-pop megahits โ€œWhere Are รœ Nowโ€ and โ€œWhat Do You Mean?,โ€ Bieber was a 12-year-old Canadian kid uploading R&B covers to a YouTube account created by his mom to share with his friends. His performances were ambitious โ€” Ne-Yoโ€™s โ€œSo Sickโ€ and Aretha Franklinโ€™s โ€œRespectโ€ among them โ€” and charismatic, eventually catching the eye of Usher,Scooter Braun, and then the world. On โ€œSwag,โ€ Bieber pulled from those soulful influences, experimenting in the process. Slow-burn, alternative R&B-pop has always been a sweet spot; and on the introspective album, he reunited with those sounds, progressed by some future-seeking collaborators like the guitarist Mk.gee on โ€œDaisiesโ€ and the rising R&B singer Dijon on the Prince-esque โ€œDevotion.โ€

Both reappear on โ€œSwag ll,โ€ as do rappers Lil B and Australian singer Eddie Benjamin. There are three new voices as well: Afrobeats star Tems, rapper Hurricane Chris and the English singer Bakar. Notably absent are the self-referential skits of the first release with the comedian Druski.

And like the first, there are religious ruminations (most directly, in the nearly 8-minute-long coda โ€œStory of God,โ€ in which Bieber tells the story of Adam and Eve) and odes to his wife (โ€œBetter Man,โ€ โ€œMother in Youโ€). In one, the hooky โ€œLove Song,โ€ he sings to Hailey Bieber with an accidental Sara Bareilles-recollection: โ€œI wanna write you a love song / I wanna write you a good one you canโ€™t stop singing to me.โ€ In that regard, there's a kind of lightness to โ€œSwag llโ€ โ€” likely because Bieber spends less time considering how he is depicted in the media (think โ€œTherapy Sessionโ€ and the paparazzi recording that introduces โ€œButterfliesโ€ on โ€œSwagโ€), and, instead, goes deeper into his relationships. There's a reason the โ€œSwag llโ€ album cover is baby pink and โ€œSwagโ€ was jet black after all.

Bieber continues with the dreamy production of the first โ€œSwag.โ€ Sometimes it works, sometimes it feels repetitive. Some songs are so lo-fi as to feel unfinished, like demos released to function as interludes or raw evocations of vulnerability (โ€œDotted Line,โ€ in particular). Others have obvious delights, from the joyful trap hi-hats of โ€œPoppin' My S—โ€ to โ€œPetting Zoo,โ€ which recalls his beloved 2013 album โ€œJournals.โ€ Bieber ornaments โ€œEye Candyโ€ with Michael Jackson-informed inflections, which succeeds โ€” particularly in advance of the next song, โ€œDon't Wannaโ€ featuring Bakar, with its MJ-like production. โ€œLove Songโ€ is a contender for the album's best; โ€œSpeed Demonโ€ brings back rap-singing Bieber.

Across 23 โ€” or 44 โ€” songs, those who sift will find gold. They'll also hear a lot of love.

Three stars out of five.

On repeat: โ€œLove Songโ€

Skip it: โ€œDotted Lineโ€

For fans of: โ€œSwag,โ€ the Rhode skincare brand, the 2011 film โ€œJustin Bieber: Never Say Neverโ€


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