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Justin Bieber’s swag II is softer and more heartfelt but still overstuffed

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Less than two months after the surprise release of his seventh album , Swag, Canadian pop star Justin Bieber has returned once again, announcing the follow-up , Swag II , with less than a day’s warning. Though the record was promised for a midnight release, it arrived three hours late, with Bieber admitting to fans that he, too, was “clicking refresh” and waiting for it to appear on streaming platforms.

While Swag was filled with questionable lyrical moments (the low point being Go Baby and its clumsy shoutout to Hailey Bieber’s phone-mounted lip gloss holders), its successor is more straightforward, which works to its advantage. Swag II also tones down the overt sensuality of the first installment, which had Bieber making promises to “make your sheets hot” with all the allure of an appliance manual.

This time around, the mood is lighter and often more tender. On Mother In You, an acoustic-driven reflection on fatherhood, Bieber recalls meeting his son for the first time. “It’s half past seven, I had somewhere to be,” he sings. “I guess I’m late, but I got a reason; you’re a beautiful world that’s countin’ on me.” The infamous paparazzi sample, first heard on "Standing On Business ," returns on "Speed Demon," but here it is used more playfully. “Is it clocking to you?” he asks, over breezy guitar lines and a hip-hop-inspired beat.

Love Song, the album’s standout and Mk.Gee’s only contribution leaves space for jazzy piano flourishes to shine. Tems delivers a strong feature on I Think You’re Special, while Bad Honey is another highlight, with Bieber leaning into funk-tinged vocals and layering in falsetto for added flair.

Still, not everything works. The nearly eight-minute closer Story Of God, in which Bieber retells the Biblical tale of Adam and Eve, comes across as unnecessarily indulgent. Lyrically, the album also repeats itself, circling the same two themes: devotion to God and love for his wife.

One improvement is the absence of Druski’s wandering interludes, which weighed down the first record. Yet overall, Swag II does little to set itself apart from its predecessor. Much of the sound remains the same, with returning collaborators Dijon and Mk.Gee, Carter Lang, and Eddie Benjamin are helping Bieber shape a similar R&B-infused palette. There are no obvious singles, and the project reportedly underwent last-minute changes right up until its release.

Like Taylor Swift’s unexpected addition to The Tortured Poet’s Department, SZA’s extended SOS deluxe, or Drake’s lengthy Scary Hours update to For All The DogsSwag II feels like a streaming-era project stretched too far. Across both parts, there are strong ideas, but together they run for more than two hours, making the experience bloated and repetitive. There is plenty of good music scattered throughout, but as a double album, it feels excessive. The real question lingers: Did it genuinely need to be released this way?

Details

Justin Bieber 'Swag II' artwork

  • Record label: Def Jam Recordings
  • Release date: September 5, 2025
 

 

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On June 7, 2023, the sky above New York turned an eerie orange. People across the city looked up to see the air thick with smoke, carrying the sharp scent of wildfires that had drifted down from Canada. It was a startling moment, more alarming than a strangely warm November day but less directly dangerous than an active blaze in your own neighborhood. For many living on the East Coast, it was simply surreal. The air felt heavy and golden, and yet, everyday routines continued without pause.

“Something in the Air,” the second single from the Antlers’ new record Blight, depicts this environmental event, or at least one that mirrors it closely. If the Antlers have been unfairly labeled a “sad” band, this song won’t do much to change that. Peter Silberman, the group’s longtime creative force, sings with a trembling voice, “Oh, keep your window closed today.” Rather than fully grasping the strange intensity of the moment or facing its unsettling implications, the song leans into ordinary habits: “Oh, be sure to charge your phone today/Oh, maybe work from home today,” he sings softly.

Since their rise to prominence, the Antlers have specialized in songs that linger in deep emotional pain. Titles like “Shiva,” “Wake,” and “Putting the Dog to Sleep” offer a glimpse of the grief they’ve often explored. Back in 2009, their breakthrough album Hospice used a cancer ward as a backdrop for songs about a crumbling relationship, becoming a defining blog-era classic. Silberman now widens that lens, shifting from personal sorrow to collective mourning—what’s often referred to as “eco-grief.” Blight, the band’s seventh album, is presented as a song cycle about the climate crisis. Its nine tracks dwell on pollution (“Pour,” “Calamity”), complacency (“Consider the Source”), and looming environmental collapse (“A Great Flood”). Yet despite the weight of its subject, the music often lacks the sense of urgency or emotional release that once defined Silberman’s most powerful work.

Silberman wrote much of the album while walking around the land near his home studio in upstate New York. During those walks, he noticed a neighbor clearing part of the forest to make space for vehicles. That observation sparked songs like “Carnage,” which starts with spare synth and voice before exploding into a stormy full-band climax, packed with striking imagery—a decapitated snake, a toad crushed under a tire. “Accidental damage,” Silberman sings as the music breaks open in a rugged guitar solo. The title track reaches for the same vividness, describing “chawed up trees with skeletal leaves.” It also hints at his growing interest in electronic sounds, as skittering drum loops by drummer Michael Lerner weave through the latter half of the track, twisting like something alive and mutating.

That raw, immediate energy doesn’t carry into the longer pieces like “Something in the Air” and “Deactivate.” Those songs drift along on delicate arpeggios and mournful vocals but never find their shape. The Antlers have always embraced slow, ethereal soundscapes, but on earlier records those sounds still carried high emotional stakes and bursts of intensity. Here, they look straight at the scale of environmental disaster and end up with little more than a quiet sigh.

Throughout the record, Silberman circles around the question of responsibility for the climate crisis. He often points the finger at himself—or at people like him—everyday consumers who toss out disposable items without a second thought. There’s sincerity in that guilt, but it doesn’t always translate into compelling lyrics. “Is it enough to add to cart with buyer’s remorse?/Well, if you don’t know where to start, consider the source,” he sings on “Consider the Source,” an opener that echoes the warm, glowing mood of 2021’s Green to Gold. A few tracks later, the opening verse of “Blight” takes a more pointed tone: “Quickly, I need it!/Shipped in a day/Oceans away.” The words are blunt, leaving little room for interpretation.

This kind of introspection has merit, but it’s hard to ignore what’s missing. The album shows little anger toward the corporations, fossil fuel magnates, and politicians who have driven the climate crisis for profit. Everyday consumers are not without fault, of course, but there are far greater powers at play. In contrast, Tamara Lindeman of The Weather Station painted a chilling portrait of those forces in “Robber” from 2021’s Ignorance. That kind of confrontation is largely absent in the Antlers’ view of the world.

Perhaps that’s why Blight feels oddly detached for a record about an inherently political subject. In 2025, when the Environmental Protection Agency has been gutted and national parks stripped of funding by a science-denying administration, the quiet ambivalence in Silberman’s writing stands out. The album contains flashes of anger and guilt but not a clear sense of resistance. On the final track, “A Great Flood,” Silberman sings gently, “Of this I’m uncertain/Will we be forgiven?” The question hangs heavy, like the smoke-filled sky it reflects. Another, more pressing question lingers behind it: Who exactly is “we”?

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