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Jeremy Williams-Chalmers
Arts Correspondent
@jeremydwilliams
P.ublished 18th April 2026
arts
Review

Albums: Jessie Ware Superbloom

Jessie Ware Superbloom

Tracks: The Garden Prelude; I Could Get Used To This; Superbloom; Automatic; Chariots of Love Interlude; Sauna; Mr Valentine; Love You For; Ride; Don't You Know Who I Am?; 16 Summers; No Consequences; Mon Amour

Label: Universal


Jessie Ware’s sixth album Superbloom feels like a natural evolution rather than a reinvention. After fully embracing glossy, high-energy disco on her previous two records, here she keeps one foot on the dancefloor but softens the edges, favouring warmth, reflection, and ambience over outright euphoria.

The record still draws from the same lineage of classic ‘70s influences, but instead of chasing peak-time club intensity, it settles into something more intimate. The grooves shimmer rather than explode, with arrangements that feel plush and carefully layered—strings swell, basslines glide, and percussion pulses without overwhelming them. It’s disco viewed through a more personal lens.

Lyrically, there’s a noticeable shift inward. Where earlier work revelled in escapism, Superbloom often pauses to take stock—of time, identity, and the small moments that shape a life. These reflections are woven subtly into the music, never dragging down its elegance but adding a sense of depth that lingers after the songs fade.

There’s also a sense of lived-in joy running through the album. Snippets of everyday life and understated details give it a human touch, grounding the polished production in something real. It makes the listening experience feel less like a performance and more like an invitation into her world.

Standout tracks balance sophistication with accessibility, leaning into soul and funk textures while maintaining that unmistakable late-night glow. Even at its most rhythmic, the album resists the urge to go full throttle, instead opting for restraint and control—a decision that pays off in its cohesion.

Across its runtime, Superbloom confirms Ware’s mastery of this sound while proving she doesn’t need to chase bigger, louder moments to remain compelling. It’s a confident, refined collection that trades pure escapism for something more nuanced—music that moves both the body and the mind.