The 45 Most Anticipated Albums and Tours of Summer 2017

Exclusive details on new albums and tours from Haim, U2, Bruno Mars, Kendrick Lamar, Lorde, and more

Summer Preview Music
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Crack open a cold one: Summer is nearly here — and so are dozens of artists with massive new tours and music. From Katy Perry's anticipated Witness to Kendrick's DAMN. tour, EW has all the details on the 45 most anticipated musical events of the season.

JUNE

Paula Abdul, New Kids on the Block, and Boyz II Men

The Total Package Tour (buy tickets here)

Through July 16

Paula Abdul hasn't hit the road with her solo material in 25 years, but she's making a comeback this summer when she joins New Kids on the Block and Boyz II Men on the '90s-tastic Total Package Tour. "Being the only girl isn't something that's new to me, because of American Idol," says Abdul, who spent seven years spent judging the musical competition show with Simon Cowell and Randy Jackson. "I'm used to having lots of brothers. But none of them will be as testy as the British one!" Expect her setlists to feature all her biggest '80s and '90s hits, from "Opposites Attract" to "Forever Your Girl." —Ariana Bacle

52nd Academy Of Country Music Awards - Show
Kevin Winter/ACMA2017/Getty Images for ACM

Tim McGraw and Faith Hill

Soul2Soul: The World Tour (buy tickets here)

Now through Oct. 27

The couple's last joint tour, which ran from 2006 to 2007, became the highest-grossing country music tour ever. So to hit the road together again, they know they have to outdo themselves. Hill says they accomplished that with their "rock solid" backing band, who will support the pair through their own solo material and songs from their upcoming joint LP. McGraw adds, "There hasn't been a night where we haven't turned back to them and went, 'Holy s—!'" —Madison Vain

Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers

40th Anniversary Tour (buy tickets here)

Now through Sept. 17

Forty years after their debut, Tom Petty and his legendary crew are out on what the singer says might be their final trek. They'll hit arenas, festivals, and stadiums before early fall and they're bringing a killer slate of openers along: Joe Walsh, Chris Stapleton, Peter Wolf, the Lumineers will all trade off dates throughout the run. Says Stapleton: "The 17-year-old me is going to be freaking out — and probably the 39-year-old me! He's a hero. I used to spend my money on going to Tom Petty concerts." —M.V.

Metallica

WorldWired Tour (buy tickets here)

Now through Aug. 16

Metallica doesn't mess around when it comes to their stadium tours. "You want to bring some s— that blows up," drummer Lars Ulrich says. "You want to have everything be larger than life." Of course, on their first massive jaunt since the release of 2016's double LP Hardwiredto Self-Destruct, they're focusing on more than just pyrotechnics. Ulrich touts the band's unique setlists — he says they haven't duplicated one since 2004 — and claims fans have been clamoring for the new stuff, too. "In 35 years of being in this band, I've never heard the phrase, 'Play more new songs!'" —Eric Renner Brown

UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital Benefit Concert With U2
C Flanigan/FilmMagic

U2

The Joshua Tree tour (buy tickets here)

Now through July 1

As the rock gods revisit their 1987 classic for this stadium tour, they won't be messing too much with the album's original arrangements. "We all felt that there was a duty to be faithful to the record — radical reinvention would rather defeat the object of celebrating this album," U2's longtime creative director Willie Williams says. In fact, the concert is so true to the original, the band tapped photographer Anton Corbijn, who shot the original cover art, to create accompanying visuals, which Williams calls "breathtaking." But it's not just a celebration of U2's pivotal masterpiece. They've also been performing new material like "The Little Things That Give You Away" and peppering setlists with other tunes like "I Will Follow" and "Ultraviolet (Light My Way)." —Kevin O'Donnell

J. Cole

4 Your Eyez Only tour (buy tickets here)

June 1 – Aug. 20

The North Carolina rapper is flying high after releasing his fourth album, 4 Your Eyez Only, in December, which maintained his streak of topping Billboard's albums chart with every release. He'll begin his summer tour with a string of intimate club shows in southern cities including Baton Rouge and Memphis before expanding his act for arenas across the country. —E.R.B.

Sam Hunt

15 in a 30 Tour (buy tickets here)

June 1 – Sept. 23

Since debuting in 2014, the burgeoning superstar has warmed stages for the likes of Kenny Chesney and Lady Antebellum. But this summer, the 32-year-old now has his name on the marquee's top spot. Playing music off his anticipated second album has the singer excited — Hunt's finger-snapping new jam "Body Like a Back Road" has cracked the Top 20 on the Billboard Hot 100—but it's his openers Maren Morris and Chris Janson that really pump him up. "They could be doing their own thing but they've chosen to go out with us," Hunt says. "In country, we do things as a family. It's more fun to go out with your peers and play for fans that are fans of the genre first." —M.V.

Bleachers

Gone Now

June 2

After producing hits for stars like Taylor Swift, Lorde, and Zayn, Jack Antonoff's second album with Bleachers marks a huge creative leap forward. The album mixes giant, fist-pumping choruses with deeply felt lyrics about life, love, and the anxieties of adulthood. It's the kind of album that wouldn't sound out of place soundtracking one of John Hughes' teen soaps from the '80s. Recorded in Antonoff's home studio in Brooklyn, the sessions were a largely relaxed affair. Says Antonoff, "I've basically filled my tiny studio with all this bizarre crap and I just roll around all day and make noises until something feels truly interesting." —K.O.

Roger Waters

Is This the Life We Really Want?

June 2

Roger Waters originally planned Is This the Life We Really Want? to be what he describes as a "long meandering radio play." But the Pink Floyd founder was talked out of that idea by producer Nigel Godrich. "He listened to this rambling thing and went, 'Hmm, it's really interesting, I don't think it's a record though,'" says Waters. The singer and bassist's first rock release since 1992's Amused to Death has an abundance of ballads but also an uptempo single, "Smell the Roses." "That song is almost an afterthought," says Waters. "It's Nigel going, 'Oh f—, you've written all these ballads. Thank god we've done some jams. Could you please write some words to this thing?' 'What thing?' 'That thing in E.' 'Do I have to?' 'Yeah!'" Waters launches a tour titled called Us + Them in Kansas City, MO., May 26. "I'm playing four tracks off this album and a bunch of Pink Floyd tracks," says Waters. —Clark Collis

Alt-J

Relaxer

June 2

Don't let the title of the British alt-rock group's third album, Relaxer, fool you. "There are some subdued songs on there, but I think there are eight very different songs and eight very different moods," says keyboardist and vocalist Gus Unger-Hamilton. "It's quite a well-balanced meal — gives you all the food groups emotionally." Recorded late last year in London, the project is Alt-J's most sonically rich yet, adding strings and horns to their idiosyncratic melodies. "We have the freedom from the label to try out more new things," Unger-Hamilton says. "We thought it would give extra depth." And the group, who documented the real-life romance of 1930s war photographers on 2012's "Taro," remain an unusual and bold lyrical force, especially on closing cut "Pleader," which was inspired by a book about 19th century Welsh miners. "Our lyrics are always grounded in the realm of imagination," Unger-Hamilton explains. "We're always taking these flights of fancy and seeing where we land." —E.R.B.

Dan Auerbach

Waiting on a Song

June 2

For his second solo album, the Black Keys frontman stayed local in his adopted home of Nashville and enlisted some of the city's session legends — John Prine, Duane Eddy, and Jerry Douglas, to name a few — to help him cook up a distinctly American "musical stew" of rock, country, blues, and soul. "We're talking about, for me, some of the greatest musicians that have ever walked the earth," Auerbach says, rattling off credits that include Elvis Presley, Aretha Franklin, and more. "The only thing these guys have done their entire lives is make records. That's always been the music I've loved — and I have the opportunity now to work with these guys who, unknowingly to them, have been blowing my mind for years!" But even among his idols, Auerbach held his own. "I always felt honored to be playing with them," he notes. "They always make me feel like an equal." —E.R.B.

Amber Coffman

City of No Reply

June 2

After years as a singer-guitarist in Brooklyn indie-rock outfit Dirty Projectors, Amber Coffman decamped to Los Angeles in 2013 to record what would become her solo debut. "I moved out here with nothing and started my life over," she says. "The main purpose of moving here was to make this record. [Los Angeles] certainly fostered an environment for me to be able to focus and relax a bit. … I was allowed to have the time and the mental space to come up with things and sit on them and develop them carefully." Coffman loaded City of No Reply with breezy pop-rock tunes that harken back to the Laurel Canyon's singer-songwriter heyday of the '70s — but the roster of artists she assembled, including percussionist Mauro Refosco (Atoms for Peace, Red Hot Chili Peppers) and the string players of the Calder Quartet, added fresh sonic depth. She also drew inspiration from collaborating with Frank Ocean on his 2016 album Blonde, describing the singer as "somebody who is doing a pretty good job of living on his highest vibration." Says Coffman: "I've wanted to do this since I was about five years old. It was a really special experience." —E.R.B.

Dua Lipa

Dua Lipa

June 2

The British singer's debut solo album was supposed to arrive earlier this year, but she pushed it back to squeeze in some eye-catching collaborations: R&B crooner Miguel shows up on the rollicking "Lost in Your Light," while Coldplay's Chris Martin joins her for the tender duet "Homesick." Upbeat electro-pop, moody piano ballads, sassy kiss-offs to no-good guys — Lipa pulls it all off with attitude and confidence. "I want music to make people feel strong, to make people feel good," she told EW earlier this year. "Talking about my stories and writing songs has helped me. To find out that it's helping other people? It's just a win for me, really." —Nolan Feeney

Zedd Presents WELCOME! - Fundraising Concert Benefiting The ACLU - Show
Scott Dudelson/WireImage

Halsey

hopeless fountain kingdom

June 2

When Halsey wrote her debut album, 2015's shadowy Badlands, she did it with her now ex-boyfriend in her home. Since then, she's sung on the Chainsmokers ubiquitous hit "Closer," sold out Madison Square Garden, and played enormous festivals like Coachella. "The scope has changed," the 22-year-old says. So for her second LP, which chronicles the demise of that romance, she teamed up with hitmakers Benny Blanco and Greg Kurstin to create something "more cinematic, cleaner, and more vibrant. I wrote the record from top to bottom. I wanted the end result to somehow prove to me that I was just as good on my own." —M.V.

Jason Isbell & the 400 Unit

The Nashville Sound

June 9

Isbell has solidified himself as one of America's great singer-songwriters over his past two solo collections — and now he's ready to turn the dial way up. For his latest, his lead backing band, the 400 Unit, lets loose with heavy riffs, raucous drums, and nimble fretwork. "That was an accident," Isbell told EW earlier this year. "I got lucky on this album that I had a good set of songs that I think will keep everybody awake." The Nashville Sound is the nickname for RCA Studio A, where the group recorded, and after they'd wrapped, it occurred to the 38-year-old, "Wouldn't it be nice to try and claim that?" —M.V.

102.7 KIIS FM's 2017 Wango Tango - Show
Rich Fury/Getty Images

Katy Perry

Witness

June 9

For her follow-up to 2013's Prism, the pop superstar has collaborated once again with hitmaker Max Martin and his team—along with a host of new writers and artists. "It's a beautiful smorgasbord, honestly," Perry says. "Max has kind of been my longtime guy….We do our best work together. But I wanted to experiment and fly away from the nest." Among the talent that she's recruited: Jeff Bhasker, Mike WiLL Made-It, Hot Chip, Purity Ring, Hayden James, and Rationale. Lyrically, Perry is mixing lighter fare — "[There's a song] called 'Swish Swish," she says — with weightier subjects, such as the aftermath of the election. (Perry was a vocal supporter of Hillary Clinton.) "I have a song on the record called 'Bigger Than Me,' and I think the song talks about Hillary and the election and something is happening that's bigger than her," says Perry. "Yes, maybe at that moment she lost. But that might have been a battle, and we're [now] looking at a war here. I think you have to think about long-term. I think [the election] woke up a sleeping giant that is now getting its strength back and breathing and about to just slay!" —K.O.

Lady Antebellum

Heart Break

June 9

The country trio took a brief hiatus before recording their anticipated seventh LP — singers Hillary Scott and Charles Kelley each dropped solo sets while Dave Haywood focused on producing — but now, the group finds itself ready for a jam-packed 2017 as Lady Antebellum. The new set's 13 tracks burst with refreshed energy, but there's one song in particular that has Haywood gushing. "I'm most excited for people to hear the lyrical twist on the title track," says the guitarist. "We wrote 'Heart Break' at the beach and I feel like once we wrote that we felt like we were on course for this entire record. So, check out the lyrical spin and dive into that song." —M.V.

Lindsey Buckingham and Christine McVie

Lindsey Buckingham/Christine McVie

June 9

Fifty years after Lindsey Buckingham and Christine McVie came together to form Fleetwood Mac, the two are finally splintering off for their first-ever collaborative album. The blueprints came together after McVie rejoined the group in 2014, following her 16-year-long hiatus. "We thought we'd go into the studio to reacquaint myself to playing in a rock band and getting the chemistry and the vibe," says McVie. "We thought we'd lay down a couple of tracks; that's all we meant to do. And then Lindsey had some [songs]. And we just started having a good time." Longtime Mac fanatics will be stoked to learn that the two recorded these 10 tracks — which feature uptempo rockers like "On With the Show" and quieter, McVie-led ballads like "Game of Pretend" — in the same Los Angeles studio as the band's 1979 opus Tusk. "It was like a time warp," says Buckingham. "It was cool!" —K.O.

Phoenix

Ti Amo

June 9

To Phoenix, their last album, 2014's Bankrupt!, wasn't lively enough. This one, though? "The new songs are more physical," guitarist Christian Mazzalai explains. "We couldn't release this album in the winter." Although initially hesitant about creating such a sunny record amid strife in their home country of France, the foursome ended up embracing the contradiction. "The music is hedonistic and light and joyful," frontman Thomas Mars says, "and we feel that it embodies the true value of what art should be, which is a world of possibilities." —A.B.

Fleet Foxes

Crack-Up

June 16

After the sweeping, critically acclaimed Helplessness Blues debuted in 2011 — and earned the band their first Grammy nod — Fleet Foxes took a break. Frontman Robin Pecknold, for one, studied at Columbia University. But after six years, they're back with their third record — and it has all the hallmarks of their most beloved material: grand, atmospheric folk riffs and soaring, multi-part harmonies. —A.B.

2017 New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival - Day 3
Erika Goldring/Getty Images

Lorde

Melodrama

June 16

How do you top an album like 2013's Pure Heroine, which vaulted Lorde from New Zealand outsider to Top 40 megastar thanks to left-field hits like "Royals"? Easy: You don't even try. "Anytime you have a gigantic first album, the second album is just going to be different," says Ron Perry, president and head of A&R for SONGS Music Publishing, who helped Lorde develop the LP. "She understands that." Expect one-third weird-pop anthems like first single "Green Light," one-third vulnerable numbers like "Liability," which she performed on Saturday Night Live, and one-third darker, hip-hop-flavored tunes that evoke her debut. Says Jonathan Daniel, one of Lorde's managers, "It feels like a very natural progression." —N.F.

Lionel Richie and Mariah Carey

All The Hits Tour (buy tickets here)

June 22 – Sept. 5

After delaying this tour's March launch so Richie could recover from knee surgery, the two will finally kick off this 30-date trek in Oakland, Calif. Expect a non-stop parade of their hits: Recent Richie gigs have featured material from his solo career as well as his Commodores days, while Carey has sprinkled her performances with hits like "Hero" and "Emotions," plus surprising covers like Michael Jackson's "Rock With You." —K.O.

Imagine Dragons

Evolve (buy tickets here)

June 23

Over two opulent albums, the Las Vegas quartet delivered spine-tingling, arena-rock catharsis. But for their third effort, they're scaling things back. Frontman Dan Reynolds says most songs on the LP feature just four instruments. "We wanted to be selective about each noise," the 29-year-old says. Imagine Dragon's sonic shift comes after a particularly bad spell of depression for the singer. "I felt very numb," he says. "Numb and gray. This record encapsulates color in a way the band has never experienced before. It's a celebration, an evolution of mind and sonics."—M.V.

2016 Lollapalooza - Day 4
Josh Brasted/FilmMagic

Vince Staples

Big Fish Theory

June 23

Staples stormed the hip-hop world with his masterful 2015 double LP Summertime '06 — and on Big Fish Theory, which follows collaborations with James Blake and Damon Albarn, he shows no signs of letting up creatively. "We were trying to create a new soundscape," he says of his second full-length. "We wanted to have something really concise that spoke to the mood we were trying to convey emotionally, because it's not always what you say, it's about how you say it." Staples emphasizes, though, that Big Fish Theory isn't a political record. "I don't pay attention to politics, to be completely honest," he says. "People are people." And as for whether the album's runtime will approach Summertime's sprawling hour? "Ah, f— no." —E.R.B.

Algiers

The Underside of Power

June 23

"We started recording right around the time Brexit happened and finished the album's mixing and mastering right around Trump's inauguration," Algiers frontman Franklin Fisher tells EW of the post-rock group's explosive second album. Global turmoil pervades The Underside of Power, which grapples with bleak concepts like cryptofascism and late capitalism. Inspired by their academic pursuits — Fisher and bandmate Ryan Mahan hold advanced degrees from King's College London and the London School of Economics, respectively — the album's lyrics draw on influential theorists like Fredric Jameson and Jean-François Lyotard. "Late capitalism subverts any sort of real political engagement and ability to engage," Fisher says. "Materialist escapism is so endemic of our entire culture. If you think about it, in that context, Donald Trump makes perfect sense as president of the United States in 2017, because that type of person is what the culture as a whole glorifies." Those brainy lyrical themes are punctuated with wild instrumentals; Portishead legend Adrian Utley produced the album and encouraged Algiers to dabble in styles from crackling hip-hop to U.K. grime. "Adrian was actually really hands-off," Fisher explains. "But then he would make a suggestion and it would work brilliantly." —E.R.B

iHeartRadio Music Awards - Show
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Ed Sheeran

Divide world tour (buy tickets here)

June 29 – Oct. 7

The pop-rock megastar took the first hiatus of his career in 2016 and now, he tells EW, he's feeling "refreshed and rejuvenated" and ready to hit the road to promote his pop juggernaut, Divide. "[The] production is definitely bigger," he says of the massive run that's currently crossing Europe before hitting the States in June. "I have a new loop station that can handle a bit more." But longtime fans shouldn't expect big changes to his intimate performances. "Ultimately," he adds, "it's still just me, my guitar, and my looper … I don't see that changing." —M.V.

Calvin Harris

Funk Wav Bounces Vol. 1

June 30

Get ready to pick your jaw up from the floor: The DJ-producer has tapped an insane roster of all-stars to collaborate on his fifth studio album, including Frank Ocean, Katy Perry, Big Sean, Migos, Ariana Grande, Snoop Dogg and others. —K.O.

TLC

TLC

June 30

Chilli and T-Boz are bringing their '90s R&B group back for one final, Kickstarter-funded album — and their first as a duo since founding member Lisa "Left Eye" Lopes died in 2002. "Even though you cannot physically see her, you will always feel her presence and we make sure of it," Chilli previously told EW of the new album's music, which the two promise "will stay true to the TLC sound" defined by now-classic hits like "No Scrubs" and "Waterfalls." —A.B.

JULY

Outlaw Music Festival Tour (buy tickets here)

July 1 – 16, Sept. 8 – 17

Willie Nelson and an ace crew of his favorite musical outlaws — Bob Dylan, Sheryl Crow, the Avett Brothers, Eric Church, and more — are making select stops for single-day mini-festivals in both July and September this year. "It's going to be a great summer," says Crow. "There are going to be a lot of people coming on and off. I am so excited!" —M.V.

Rod Stewart and Cyndi Lauper tour (buy tickets here)

July 6 – Aug. 12

Two of rock & roll's most recognizable voices — and hairstyles! — are heading out for 18 dates together this summer. It's a tour that's been decades in the making. Lauper and Stewart first performed together in 1985, when Elizabeth Taylor booked them at the inaugural Commitment to Life Benefit. But then, Lauper explains, "Life and career took us on our journey." Now, they're performing sets of their classics — and prepping a nightly duet. Sir Rod Stewart sums it up: "I know there's going to be great energy on stage because we are not the 'standing still' type of performers." —M.V.

The Canadian singer and song-writer Shawn Mendes pictured on
Roberto Finizio/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images

Shawn Mendes

Illuminate world tour (buy tickets here)

July 6 – Aug. 23

The Canadian singer-songwriter isn't going overboard with the production on his first all-arena tour. "I wanted [a stage design] that told a story and wasn't just flashing lights," the 18-year-old recently told EW. "I wanted it to enhance the music without overshadowing it." Mendes — who also just released a dancey new single, "There's Nothing Holdin' Me Back" — hopes those plans will help him preserve the intimate feel of last year's Illuminate LP. "No matter where you play, a stadium or an arena, when you're present on stage, it's going to feel like a theater," he says. —N.F.

Haim

Something to Tell You (buy tickets here)

July 7

As its title suggests, communication is a major theme of the sisters' second album. "In general I feel like it's stuff everyone talks about: having your phone all the time, millennials," says Danielle Haim. "You can preoccupy yourself with all these things, but at the end of the day, you're trying to figure out how you feel, or [how to] tell someone you're intimate with or friends with exactly what's on your mind." The band says "Kept Me Crying" was inspired by the "u up?" text, while "Ready For You," which was co-written with Twin Shadow, touches on devotion in an era of endless choices. "Everyone has an infinite amount of options in terms of how you pick your friends and lovers, and you're open to communication with so many people," says Twin Shadow, a.k.a. George Lewis Jr. "This idea that one person can still be special and get all your attention is becoming a bit of a novel idea in a way." —N.F.

Paul McCartney

One on One Tour (buy tickets here)

July 7 – Oct. 2

Launched in 2016, Macca's One on One is a doozy: the Beatles icon is delivering a three-hour show stacked with hits from his towering career. He's also been busting out songs he hasn't played in years, such as "A Hard Day's Night." The production — which has featured insane pyrotechnics during "Live and Let Die" — is equally over the top. In fact, McCartney has had to delay the launch of this leg so he can accommodate "exciting production enhancements." —K.O.

Kendrick Lamar Joins The Weeknd During The "Legends of The Fall Tour" At The Forum
Rich Fury/The Forum via Getty Images

Kendrick Lamar

DAMN. tour (buy tickets here)

July 12 – Aug. 6

Like his studio work, the 29-year-old Compton, Calif., MC keeps most of his tour details under wraps. But on the heels of visually impressive festival sets and his acclaimed fourth album DAMN., Lamar's first headlining arena tour should be the hip-hop event of the summer. And whatever production tricks he has up his sleeve — Lamar climbed atop a giant, illuminated cube when closing Coachella in April — he now has the hits to keep a lengthy gig going, from 2012's "Swimming Pools (Drank)" to 2015's "Alright" to his first No. 1 single on the Hot 100, DAMN.'s "HUMBLE." —E.R.B.

Shabazz Palaces

Quazarz: Robed in Rareness & Quazarz: Born on a Gangster Star

July 14

When Ishamel Butler, who goes by Palaceer Lazaro as half of the experimental hip-hop duo Shabazz Palaces, began to plot the group's next release, he found himself out of place. "How do I really feel, being here in the states and in the world being a black person?" says Butler, 47. "Looking out around — also being my age, too — I started to feel a little alienated with the way things were going with social media and politics and things like that." To articulate his discomfort through art, Butler developed a character, Quazarz. "I thought the way I could put it was being a thoughtful person from another realm that's here, now, finding their way through what's going on." Across two albums, Shabazz Palaces tell the story of the alien Quazarz, who arrives and must decipher what's going on in America, from fraught racial politics to smartphones, depicted here as "jealous machines." And as for Shabazz Palaces joining a canon of sci-fi hip-hop that also includes Deltron 3030 and clppng., Butler sees it as a natural progression. "People from another realm, people from different places are actual and real," he explains. "They always have represented themselves through music and artistic expression. We come from this extraterrestrial history." —E.R.B.

  • Waxahatchee
  • Out in the Storm
  • July 14 For her third album as Waxahatchee, Katie Crutchfield brought her live touring band into the studio for the first time. "In the past I had just worked with a couple of people in my house, and it was a very intimate process," she says. "I really wanted to work with my band on this record because a lot of the songs are [about] things we went through together." The bolder, bigger sound of songs like "Never Been Wrong" and "Brass Beam" also lends some muscle to her fired-up lyrics, many of which deal what Crutchfield calls the "end of a long bad relationship." "[The songs] are angry, and they are projected outward at this situation rather than looking in at myself and thinking, 'What am I doing?'" she says. "I hope that people who are having a bad day hear this and feel better." —N.F.

Bruno Mars

24K Magic world tour (buy tickets here)

July 15 – Nov. 11

Uptown Funk, indeed: The stylish hitmaker will make arenas feel like an old-school soul revue come to life, thanks to party-starting jams from his unstoppable chart-topper 24K Magic. —K.O.

AUGUST

2017 Coachella Valley Music And Arts Festival - Weekend 2 - Day 2
Christopher Polk/Getty Images for Coachella

Lady Gaga

Joanne world tour (buy tickets here)

Aug. 1 – Sept. 11

Will the pop star recreate a similar production like her triumphant headlining set at Coachella in April? Not likely. "[That was] exclusively for Coachella," her visual director Richy Jackson told EW in April. "[This] will be something entirely different." —K.O.

Coldplay

A Head Full of Dreams tour (buy tickets here)

Aug. 1 – Oct. 8

The Chris Martin-led foursome is bringing their A Head Full of Dreams tour to North America once again this summer after first stopping in U.S. cities like Chicago and Las Vegas a year ago — and they're bringing their colorful Xylobands, now known as a Coldplay trademark, and impressive pyrotechnics to add an extra bit of sparkle to crowd favorites like "Yellow" and "Viva La Vida." —A.B.

Brett Eldredge

Brett Eldredge

Aug. 4

Brett Eldredge has enjoyed remarkable chart success since debuting in 2013 (five No.1 country airplay songs, two of which cracked the Top 40 on the Hot 100) but the 31-year-old isn't resting on his laurels. Instead, for his third studio album, he says he logged more hours writing and recording than he did for any of his last efforts. "I just want this album to be perfect," he tells EW. As for why this is the one that he's naming after himself, he says, "It took me a minute to be like, 'Do I want to do a self-titled album?' But, I think, if you're feeling it, then you know that this album is more you than you've ever had an album be before and maybe more than you'll ever do." —M.V.

Grizzly Bear

Painted Ruins

Aug. 18

Long identified as one of Brooklyn's finest bands, Grizzly Bear have since decamped to the West Coast: Ed Droste, Chris Taylor, and Chris Bear are living in Los Angeles, while Daniel Rossen now calls Sante Fe home. "We're not next-door neighbors, but we're still very much a band," says Droste. "When we write, we still write together." And for their first album in five years, the indie rockers are beefing up their lovely, orchestral-pop arrangements with cool electronic flourishes. As they cut the album, the group came up with more than 30 ideas, according to Droste, which they've whittled down to 11 tracks. And while there are more synths than usual, singer-guitarist Ed Droste jokes, "It's not as if we tried to make an EDM record. But I'll say it's my favorite thing we've ever done. It's more accessible but not in an overt way — there's no filler." —K.O.

TBD

Camila Cabello

The Hurting, The Healing, The Loving

Release date TBD

The ex-Fifth Harmony star's solo debut won't arrive until late summer or early fall, but she's already recruited a who's who of top producers to mint Top 40 gold. A source tells EW that her staggering list of collaborators includes Diplo, Max Martin, Ryan Tedder (OneRepublic, Adele), Frank Dukes (Lorde, Rihanna), Savan Kotecha (the Weeknd, Ellie Goulding), and Stargate (Rihanna, Selena Gomez). She also got assists from co-writers such as Charli XCX and Sia, the latter of whom co-wrote the album's just-released first single, "Crying in the Club." —N.F.

DJ Khaled

Grateful

Release date TBD

The producer and social media phenomenon is riding high on the Hot 100 with his No. 1 single "I'm the One," featuring an all-star roster of guests Justin Bieber, Migos' Quavo, Chance the Rapper, and Lil Wayne. Expect a similar batch of heavy-hitters — he's been in the studio with Jeremih — to join Khaled for his second album, which he's been working on, as he posted on Instagram, until "the final sec mark." —K.O.

Old Dominion

Title TBD

Release date TBD

The Nashville fivesome broke out in 2015 with their debut LP Meat & Candy. That collection notched the group of former Music Row songsmiths two No. 1 country airplay singles but frontman Matthew Ramsey says the band has bigger ambitions for their next set. "We know what we are capable of as songwriters and we wanted to show a new side," he explained to EW. "[This album] sounds like us, but there is some heavier subject matter. We've definitely grown as a band and I think it shows in these songs." —M.V.

Zayn Malik

Title TBD

Release date TBD

The former One Direction member officially left boy band life behind in 2015 when he made his solo debut with the sultry, throbbing Mind of Mine. Expect to hear more of that R&B-influenced sound on his second record, along with some upbeat tracks in the style of the dancehall-inspired new single "Still Got Time." "This album has a more optimistic tone to it after coming through that more challenging time," RCA Records CEO Peter Edge says. "It shows a lot of growth." —A.B.

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