Harry Styles has never been an artist inclined to repeat himself. Across his solo career, each album has opened a new chapter. With Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally, released on March 6, 2026, the British singer takes another step sideways rather than forward in a straight line. The result is a record that leans heavily into electronic textures, dancefloor rhythms and playful experimentation.
Arriving four years after Harry’s House, the Grammy Award–winning album that defined much of pop in the early 2020s, the new project marks Styles’ most adventurous sonic pivot to date. During the years following the global success of Love On Tour, the singer kept a relatively low profile, surfacing occasionally while quietly developing the next phase of his catalog. When the album finally arrived, the direction was clear: brighter synthesizers, sharper beats and a looser, club-influenced energy.
The opening stretch of the album sets the tone quickly. Lead single “Aperture” launches the project with a confident pulse. It remains one of the album’s defining moments, not only because of its chart success but because it captures the spirit of the record. The following track “American Girls” keeps the momentum alive, leaning further into upbeat dance-pop territory.
Not every moment hits the same balance. At times, the album’s fascination with looping grooves and extended structures results in songs that linger longer than necessary. Tracks like “Are You Listening Yet?” flirt with repetition, stretching their ideas beyond their strongest point.
Where Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally thrives is in its sense of movement. Songs such as “Taste Back” and “Dance No More” embrace shimmering electronic production and joyful rhythms that allow Styles to settle comfortably into a dance-pop lane.
See our ranking of all songs below.
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