Harry’s Best tracks, Ahead Of ‘Kiss All The Time. Disco, Occasionally’
Harry Styles is BACK, and he’s drying the dishes.
We like a disco ball as much as the next person. In fact, probably more than the next person (we are called The Groove, after all).
But we wouldn’t dare claim first place in the Harry Styles fandom over this announcement… even though we are very excited that the 31 year old singer has just named his next album, ‘Kiss All The Time. Disco, Occasionally’, subsequently sending the internet into a yellow-knit frenzy.
And it’s coming out on 6th March… that’s only 48 sleeps!
To get us all prepared for HS4, we’re going back through the singer’s previous solo albums, counting down his best singles, covers, and hidden gems to date.
Read our countdown of Harry Styles’ best solo tracks (so far) below.
What do we know about Harry STyles’ New album, ‘Kiss All The Time. Disco, Occasionally’?
Before we jump into nostalgia, let’s get the facts straight. Here’s what we know so far about HS4:
It’s released Friday 6th March 2026, with limited edition vinyls and cassettes already available to pre-order from Harry Styles’ official website (which, unsurprisingly, has already crashed).
The album has been executively produced by Kid Harpoon, who has worked with Styles before.
It’s a full-length studio album, with 12 tracks.
It’s Harry Styles’ longest album title after his longest break from music. Each previous album title has been just two words… perhaps he’s adding a word for each year he’s been away? (yes, four).
From the sideburns to the sunglasses to the disco ball that’s got everyone’s heads spinning, all the signs point towards a dancing, disco vibe.
Harry Styles’ Best Solo songs so far, Ranked
So, while we wait, here’s an amuse-bouche to get us firmly back into Harry Styles world, with our countdown of his top 10 tracks from yesteryears.
10. Sign Of The Times
‘Sign Of The Times’ was everything except what people expected from the then-23-year old’s first step beyond One Direction. It was a huge sonic statement to make for a debut solo single, coming out of the world’s largest boyband. And whilst it may not have the mainstream longevity it seemed to have been conceived in mind with, it proved that Styles was intent on carving out an identity and musical footprint entirely different from his teen star status, something he has clearly achieved tenfold.
9. Girl Crush
At 315 million streams (as of January 2026), Harry’s cover of ‘Girl Crush’ is the most popular Spotify Singles track (as of February 2025), beating the original by Little Big Town by about 23 million. Though the original was sung by a woman depicting a strangely manifesting jealousy towards another woman, Harry’s delicate, acoustic version is just as vulnerable, perhaps even more desperate, as he yearns for her ‘long blonde hair’ to impress the object of their shared desire.
8. Sledgehammer
It’s a cover that introduced Peter Gabriel fans to Harry Styles, and Harry Styles fans to ‘Sledgehammer’, proving to even the most unrelenting critics that Styles is capable of delivering seriously good music. ‘Sledgehammer’ is an 80s dance funk classic, and Harry’s version on the Howard Stern show has clocked up 18 million views on YouTube. It’s a song he could just about pull off as his own, and one that also showcases the talent and chemistry between Harry Styles’ band.
7. Cherry
From the opening guitar, the rose-tinted nostalgia marred with reality’s disappointment is palpable. In one of Styles’ most intimate lyrical offerings, ‘Cherry’ paints the selfish resentment felt towards someone moving on, amidst the fear of being replaced by someone superficially ‘better’. The weight of embittered loss builds with reverbed guitars and drums until Styles finally lets out a chilling scream, ending with a crushingly sweet voice note which leaves the listener wondering if it was a dream, or a living nightmare.
6. Medicine
Style’s most teasing song, ‘Medicine’ starts with Harry almost whispering over a groovy bass, before erupting into a rock-inflected chorus. It was devoured by fans in grainy videos, isolated vocal edits, and attempted studio renditions collaged from live clips, fast becoming a bootlegger favourite. And perhaps that’s how it will remain – one of Harry Styles’ best songs, maybe because it was never released. (Just kidding, put it on the new album, Haz).
5. Kiwi
The third single off debut album ‘Harry Styles’, ‘Kiwi’ is full of attitude, energy and recklessness. Snarling jabs are delivered with an audible smugness, ‘When she’s alone she goes home to a cactus / She’s such an actress’, and the song’s title is suggested to be a not-so-subtle dig at the New Zealander rumoured to be the its muse. Styles lets his voice rip, growl and belt and it’s a strong veer towards a rock sound we (unfortunately) haven’t really heard much of since.
4. Golden
‘Golden’ is a breezy white shirt in a European summer. Well, that’s exactly what it is in the music video, encapsulating the sense of fresh air this song is soaked in. First track off ‘Fine Line’, we used it in our article celebrating fangirls, firstly because Harry Styles has been the passive leader of the kingdom since about 2010, and secondly because ‘Golden’ celebrates a nondescript love. Rather, it’s an expression of the radiating joys of being both adored and adorer, whether or not the admiration takes romantic form.
3. Watermelon Sugar
‘Tastes like strawberries / And it sounds just like a song’. It’s hard to think of a tune that captures blissful unawareness in the just-before-Covid-era better than ‘Watermelon Sugar’. The music video as dreamy as the brass, Harry Styles gave us his most ardent epicurean desires with this one, packaged in a way that we could all harmlessly blast it with the windows down or from our gardens or parks in the hot fever dream that was the 2020 summer lockdown.
2. Late Night Talking
Third album ‘Harry’s House’ mirrored a strange sense of reality, reflected in the global events of the time, and the album art itself being framed largely ‘upside down’. ‘Late Night Talking’, in contrast, is a charmingly simple celebration of conversation. On the ups and downs of personal everyday life amongst the confusion of whatever else is going on, it’s lifted with a woozy, almost overcompensatingly optimistic sound. But apart from its cultural context, it’s the ultimate mood-booster, and a great example of what Styles does best: uplifting people through his music.
1. As It Was
It was everywhere. Spotify’s global No. 1 streamed song for 2022, and the tune that broke the record for the most streamed song in a day (8.3 million, to be precise). It had an iconic music video filmed around the Barbican, and an equally iconic live GRAMMY performance in which the spinning stage spun the wrong way. It had a bridge that fans screamed back at Harry with their own agenda, and an ebullient bell chorus that’s become synonymous with Harry Styles’ brand of whimsy, love, and colour. ‘As It Was’ — no notes.
What Comes Next? Lots Of Kissing & Some Dancing, Apparently
Guessing from the title, it seems that Styles’ next body of work will continue leaning into themes of love and connection, and we’re sat. These 10 tracks alone are a hard act to follow, but when you’re the pop star, the biggest competition is yourself.
Let’s hope Harry can rise to the challenge and give us an album we can play all the time (plus keep listening to the other three, occasionally).

