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Steve Lacy’s Oh Yeah? Enlists SZA and Erykah Badu

Will Lisil 15 July 2026
Steve Lacy's Oh Yeah? Enlists SZA and Erykah Badu

Steve Lacy’s Oh Yeah? is one of the most anticipated R&B releases of the summer, and the details now confirmed only sharpen the appeal. Out July 17, 2026 through RCA Records, the 10-track album is the Grammy-winning artist’s third solo full-length, written, performed and produced entirely by Lacy himself. It also carries a guest list that bridges eras of Black music, pairing him with SZA and the neo-soul icon Erykah Badu, and it arrives framed as his most personal statement to date.

A Self-Made Third Album

Lacy has always been an auteur. Since his teenage years making beats on an iPhone as part of The Internet, he has built a reputation as a one-man studio, and Steve Lacy’s Oh Yeah? extends that approach to its logical end: every note written, played and produced by him. That level of control is rare at this scale, and it is central to how the album is being positioned, not as a committee production but as a singular vision.

The self-contained method also raises the degree of difficulty. With no co-producers to lean on, the album’s successes and its indulgences are entirely his, a bet on personal taste that has paid off across his catalogue so far. For an artist still in his twenties with a Grammy already in hand, Oh Yeah? is a chance to prove that the auteur model scales.

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The stakes are personal as much as commercial. Lacy has spoken about the pressure that followed his mainstream breakthrough, and answering it with a fully self-made record is a way of reasserting who is in charge of his sound. In an era when hit records are often built by rooms full of writers and producers, an album made almost entirely alone is a quiet statement of principle, and a risk that puts his name on every decision.

The Guest List: SZA, Erykah Badu and Cecile Believe

For a self-produced record, the features are carefully chosen. SZA appears on “Is It Cool?,” a pairing of two of alternative R&B’s most distinctive voices that ranks among the album’s most talked-about moments before release. Erykah Badu, a foundational figure in neo-soul, turns up on “Pure Colour,” lending the project a direct line to the tradition Lacy’s sound draws from. Cecile Believe features on “Lovesexdrugbomb,” rounding out a guest list that favours texture and lineage over chart-chasing.

The choices say a lot about the album’s ambitions. Rather than stacking the tracklist with radio-ready names, Lacy reached for collaborators who deepen the record’s alt-soul identity, a move in keeping with an artist who has always prized feel over formula.

The Badu inclusion is especially pointed. As one of the architects of neo-soul, she represents the lineage that runs beneath Lacy’s guitar-driven experiments, and putting her on “Pure Colour” reads as both a tribute and a claim to that history. SZA, meanwhile, connects the album to the current wave of alternative R&B that has redrawn the genre’s mainstream. Together the two guests bracket the tradition Lacy is working within, past and present in the same tracklist.

Made in Paris, Born From a Breakup

The emotional backdrop is central to the album’s story. Lacy wrote much of Oh Yeah? in the aftermath of a breakup, and although his label reportedly nudged him toward happier material, the depth of that period shaped the music anyway. He has described the record as his most personal and transparent to date, a portrait of a young artist working through change.

Place mattered too. Lacy recorded a good portion of the album in Paris, and he has spoken about being drawn to the city’s atmosphere, loving what he called “the color of all the beiges and the lights.” That sense of finding comfort in unfamiliar surroundings runs through the way the album has been described, a study in self-discovery set against a change of scenery.

The Singles and the Sound

Two singles have set the table. “Nice Shoes,” released in August 2025, paired a jungle-inspired breakbeat with the loose, melodic guitar work that is Lacy’s signature. “The Feeling” followed as the more recent taste, a groovy and unsettled track built on wah-wah bass lines that has drawn repeated comparisons to Prince, complete with the kind of playful, questioning hook that gives the album its title energy.

Taken together, the singles sketch a record that blends R&B, experimental pop and Lacy’s alt-soul instincts without settling into any one of them. It is music built on groove and mood rather than obvious hooks, the sound of an artist trusting his audience to follow him somewhere less predictable.

That willingness to wander is what has always separated Lacy from his peers. Where much of contemporary R&B chases immediacy, his music rewards patience, folding jazz chords, lo-fi textures and rock guitar into songs that reveal themselves slowly. Oh Yeah? appears set to push that instinct further, trading easy singles for a mood-driven whole, the kind of album designed to be lived with rather than skimmed. It is a gamble on depth over reach, and one his track record suggests he has earned.

From Gemini Rights to Oh Yeah?

The anticipation is grounded in what came before. Lacy’s 2022 album Gemini Rights turned him from a respected cult figure into a mainstream force, powered by “Bad Habit,” a single that topped the Billboard Hot 100 and soundtracked hundreds of thousands of TikTok videos. That crossover raised expectations for whatever came next, and Oh Yeah? is the answer.

The leap was not just commercial but critical. Gemini Rights earned Lacy a Grammy and cemented him as a rare artist equally at home on alternative playlists and pop radio, a balance few of his generation manage. Following it has been the defining challenge of his career so far, and Oh Yeah? is being positioned as the record that answers whether the breakthrough was a moment or a foundation. For an artist who has always seemed to move at his own pace, the wait itself has become part of the story.

The rollout has kept his art-world sensibility front and centre. The album cover was photographed by the filmmaker Gus Van Sant, and the release shares its date with Beard, the new album from Syd, Lacy’s bandmate in The Internet, a reminder of the collective that launched him. RapStar.News has explored the wider R&B and soul landscape he belongs to, including a look at the San Francisco neo-soul scene that shares Lacy’s West Coast roots and reverence for the genre’s history.

A Standout in a Crowded July

Steve Lacy’s Oh Yeah? lands on a stacked release day. July 17 also brings major rap projects, including Rick Ross’s feature-heavy Set in Stone, making for a crowded weekend across genres. Lacy’s bet is that a self-produced, intimate alt-soul record can cut through the noise on the strength of its craft and its collaborators rather than sheer volume.

If the singles are any guide, that bet looks well placed. Oh Yeah? has the ingredients of a defining second act: a clear artistic vision, a guest list that honours its influences, and a personal story that gives the songs stakes. When it arrives on July 17, it will test whether one of his generation’s most singular talents can turn a breakup and a season in Paris into his most complete work yet.

About Author

Will Lisil

Director & Digital Creator at MW3.biz Ltd, United Kingdom.

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