
Tomorrow’s Album Drop: Harry Styles, Denzel Curry & The Scythe, and Charlotte Sands
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Tomorrow’s Album Drop: Harry Styles’ HS4 Meets Denzel Curry’s New Supergroup—and Charlotte Sands Goes Skyward
It’s March 5, 2026, and the release calendar is doing that thing it does when labels want the weekend to light up at midnight: one mainstream pop event, one rap-heavy project built for replay value, and one alt-pop statement with the kind of track names that read like diary entries. Here’s what’s expected to land Friday, March 6—anchored to verifiable tracklists, credits, and confirmed rollout details. No fan-fiction, no “sources say,” no imaginary features.
1) Harry Styles — Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally. (Expected March 6, 2026)
Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally. is positioned as Harry Styles’ fourth studio album, arriving nearly four years after Harry’s House (2022). The rollout, as documented publicly, leaned on cryptic billboards and posters that began appearing across multiple cities—New York, Manchester, Palermo, São Paulo, and Berlin—before the album announcement cycle fully snapped into focus.
What’s concrete right now is the personnel and the tracklist. The credited production on the album points to Kid Harpoon and Tyler Johnson as producers, with writing credits listing Harry Styles, Kid Harpoon, and Tyler Johnson. Additional engineering credits include Emi Trevena, Liam Hebb, and Owen Stoutt, while arranging credits include Jules Buckley and Kid Harpoon. If you want the cleanest “what do we actually know” snapshot, that’s it: names, roles, and a 12-song grid.
Verified tracklist (per published listings)
- Aperture
- American Girls
- Ready, Steady, Go!
- Are You Listening Yet?
- Taste Back
- The Waiting Game
- Season 2 Weight Loss
- Coming Up Roses
- Pop
- Dance No More
- Paint By Numbers
- Carla's Song
One more thing that’s verifiable (and editorially useful): there is an official, published video for Aperture, and it’s been used as a key anchor in the album’s pre-release cycle. That matters because it sets the “entry point” track fans and casual listeners will likely chase first once the album hits streaming in full.
2) Denzel Curry & The Scythe — Strictly 4 The Scythe (Expected March 6, 2026)
Strictly 4 The Scythe is billed as an upcoming mixtape tied to Denzel Curry’s new supergroup, The Scythe. The available details lean heavily on what’s often the most accurate early signal in rap rollouts: the features list and the credited production infrastructure.
The project’s listed distribution and label info includes Concord as distributor, with labels Loma Vista Recordings and PH Recordings, LLC. Executive production is attributed to iloveit! and BEAUTIFULMVN. Producers listed include BEAUTIFULMVN, BNYX®, Bryan Yepes, and others, and the feature grid is stacked: A$AP Ferg, TiaCorine, Juicy J, Smino, Rich The Kid, BKTHERULA, LAZER DIM 700, 1900Rugrat, Key Nyata, 454, and Luh Tyler. In other words: a project designed for collision.
Verified tracklist (as listed pre-release)
- THE SCYTHE (ft. A$AP Ferg, TiaCorine)
- LIT EFFECT (ft. BKTHERULA, LAZER DIM 700)
- PHONY (ft. A$AP Ferg, Juicy J, Key Nyata)
- MUTT THAT BIH (ft. 1900Rugrat, Key Nyata)
- HOOPTY (ft. Smino, TiaCorine)
- YOU AINT GOTTA LIE (ft. 454, Luh Tyler)
- TAN (ft. BKTHERULA, TiaCorine)
- UP (ft. A$AP Ferg, Rich The Kid, SadBoi)
If there’s one track title doing the obvious “start here” work, it’s THE SCYTHE, and it has a verifiable presence on YouTube as an audio upload—useful for an embedded player or a “listen now” module once your album page is live.
3) Charlotte Sands — Satellite (Expected March 6, 2026)
Satellite is the March 6 album on this list with the most “open space” around it publicly right now— which is exactly why it can win on a lyrics-first site. When the pre-release narrative is quieter, the tracklist and credits become the story. The listed producers are Keith Sorrells and Oscar Linnander, with writing credits including Charlotte Sands, Cici Ward, Jesse Thomas, and additional collaborators. Keith Sorrells is also credited on bass and drums.
Verified tracklist (as listed pre-release)
- Satellite
- one eye open
- HUSH
- half alive
- Afterlife
- back to you
- neckdeep
- water me down
- None of My Business
- Sunday
Context that’s verifiable: her recent releases include can we start over? (2024) and Good Now EP (2023). If you’re building internal modules around discovery, Satellite is the clean keyword anchor, and the rest of the tracklist reads like a set of strong, short slugs that will perform well once lyrics pages populate.
About the Author

Music Journalist
Ashley Tan brings energetic, backstage-level coverage of live music and emerging artists to LyricsWeb readers.
