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Now V. 67
Girls like you / (Maroon 5) (3:35) -- Psycho / (Post Malone, featuring Ty Dolla $ign) (3:41) -- In my blood / (Shawn Mendes) (3:31) -- Delicate / (Taylor Swift) (3:52) -- IDGAF / (Dua Lipa) (3:36) -- Back to you / (Selena Gomez) (3:25) -- Growing pains / (Alessia Cara) (3:11) -- Boo'd up / (Ella Mai) (4:16) -- Everyday / (Logic & Marshmello) (3:25) -- Sit next to me / (Foster the People) (3:13) -- Youngblood / (5 Seconds of Summer) (3:23) -- Let me / (ZAYN) (3:01) -- Familiar / (Liam Payne & J. Balvin) (3:17) -- Dinero (radio edit) / (Jennifer Lopez, featuring DJ Khaled & Cardi B) (3:34) -- Don't go breaking my heart / (Backstreet Boys) (3:35) -- Heaven / (Kane Brown) (2:57) -- All the kids are depressed / (Jeremy Zucker) (2:51) -- When we were young / (Lost Kings, featuring Norma Jean Martine) (3:13) -- Middle finger / (Phoebe Ryan x Quinn XCII) (3:55) -- Valentine / (YK Osiris) (3:23) -- Your side of the bed / (Loote) (3:17).
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Come tomorrow /Dave Matthews Band
On this collection of songs, a handful of which are nearly a decade old, Matthews isn't quite as gloomy and unsettled as he was during the days after Y2K -- he throws in a handful of randy vamps and slow jams to puncture the mood -- but there's a sense that something is nagging at Matthews. That unease binds Come Tomorrow and is also articulated nicely by Matthews himself, whose weathered vocals feel appropriate weary.--All Music
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Sweetener/Ariana Grande
"it’s similarly impossible not to give in to Sweetener as a whole, a fascinating and sneakily complex pop album that adds new creative wrinkles to Grande’s already estimable repertoire. "--Entertainment Weekly
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Scorpion/Drake
"But in the long run, a few duds in 90 minutes of material doesn't seem too high a sin, especially considering the same concession could easily be made for a release like the Beatles' White Album. Thus, with Scorpion, Drake makes a cohesive argument for broadening our attention spans and enjoying life's music, regardless of runtime." --Popmatters
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Songs for The Saints/Kenny Chesney
"After several albums of middle-aged soul-searching, the 50 year-old superstar hits his stride on Songs for the Saints, a relatively somber, loosely-conceived concept album based on his part-time home, the hurricane-ravaged Virgin Islands. It turns out that Chesney’s stadium-sized feel-good beach-country is perfectly suited to tackle the natural-disaster-as-apocalypse allegory traced throughout his latest collection, a song-cycle that transforms grief and despair into healing and resilience." --Rolling Stone
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