Jessie Ware
Superbloom


4.0
excellent

Review

by Brandon Taylor USER (76 Reviews)
May 6th, 2026 | 2 replies


Release Date: 04/10/2026 | Tracklist

Review Summary: What a party that was, thank you for coming and please get home safe.

Superbloom is the grand finale of a trilogy of albums that started with What’s Your Pleasure? and That! Feels Good! In terms of compliments, there isn’t much to say about this chapter that hasn’t already been lavished upon her existing work this decade. Jessie Ware has rightfully assumed her position on the throne of soulful disco pop, thanks to her intelligent songwriting, effortless grooves, and rich, honey-like voice.

Her music can fill a dance floor just as easily as it can soundtrack a dinner party with your most tasteful and judgmental friends. It is therefore no surprise that Superbloom continues to be loungey, mature, stylish and polished… but perhaps slightly to its own detriment. Diminishing returns becomes a factor when her previous two albums were so acclaimed, and while Superbloom is consistently great, it lacks show-stopping moments like “Spotlight” from WYP or true bangers like “Freak Me Now” from TFG.

The best moment is on “Don’t You Know Who I Am?”, the most ABBA-like song of her disco trilogy. Its soaring melodies and sweeping strings evoke sheer robes, European chateaus and finely aged wine – it is, as Marina would say, cuntissimo. Unfortunately, Jessie follows it up with her worst song in a decade, the tepid ballad “16 Summers”, and the momentum is halted.

Maybe there can be too much of a good thing and it’s time for Jessie Ware to explore a new direction with her next album. With her mastery of disco now exhausted, I look forward to see what she does next.



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user ratings (38)
3.6
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other reviews of this album
SublimeSound (4)
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Comments:Add a Comment 
SublimeSound
May 7th 2026


129 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Good write-up. Glad to see this get more coverage. I get the feel that had this released before What's Your Pleasure and That Feels Good it would've absolutely exploded. This is gorgeous but I agree that, in a way, this feels like a retread of (overly) familiar territory.



16 Summers is easily the weakest track here. But Mr. Valentine is in contention for her best track to date. It is so unbelievably good.

PanosChris
May 9th 2026


121 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

Easily my AOTY (so far) and, like I said in the other review's thread, I love this more than her two previous albums. That being said, despite the trilogy being of excellent quality, I also anticipate a new musical direction with her next release, as I believe she has exhausted the possibilities of disco.

Best on the album: 'I Could Get Used To This', 'Mr. Valentine', 'Automatic', 'Don't You Know Who I Am?', 'Love You For'

Weakest on the album: 'Ride' (I still can't tolerate its 'The Good, the Bad and the Ugly' interpolation), '16 Summers' (while pretty, it has no place on this album)



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