On February 20, 2026, New Music Friday features notable releases including Baby Keem's second studio album Ca$ino and Hilary Duff's first full-length project in over a decade, Luck…or Something. These albums join a diverse slate of new music from artists like Hen Ogledd, The Messthetics, and Larry June alongside Curren$y and The Alchemist. The releases highlight reflective themes in hip-hop and mature pop explorations.
Baby Keem's Ca$ino, released via pgLang/Columbia Records, marks his first full-length since 2021's The Melodic Blue. The 25-year-old rapper reflects on his life from Carson, California, to Las Vegas, where he wrote his first music. It includes a collaboration with cousin Kendrick Lamar on 'Good Flirts,' where Lamar describes their shared background as 'a warfare environment... to try and change our generational curses,' per documentary shorts shared ahead of the release. Other features include Momo Boyd, Too $hort, and Che Ecru.
Hilary Duff's Luck…or Something, on Atlantic Records, arrives after a decade since her last album. Co-written and produced with husband Matthew Koma, it blends sunny pop-rock with grown-up themes. Lead single 'Mature' addresses a former lover's new partner, while 'Roommates' captures the thrill of an overnight encounter. Duff, a cultural figure for millennials from her Radio Disney days, performed the album at sold-out shows at Voltaire at The Venetian Resort Las Vegas, including a fan proposal during 'With Love' on February 13.
Other highlights include Hen Ogledd's Discombobulated on Weird World/Domino, featuring Richard Dawson's synthpop with political commentary against 'misuse of language for evil means.' The Messthetics and James Brandon Lewis' Deface the Currency on Impulse! draws from Diogenes' quote to buck convention across seven tracks. Larry June, Curren$y, and The Alchemist's Spiral Staircases on EMPIRE unites the trio for jazz-infused hip-hop. Additional releases span genres, with Nathan Fake's Evaporator on InFiné as a 'daytime album,' Peaches' No Lube So Rude on Kill Rock Stars after over a decade, and Moby's Future Quiet on BMG, emphasizing meditative quiet amid excess.
These drops, available on streaming platforms like Apple Music and Spotify, reflect a busy week post-Grammys and Super Bowl, as noted in Billboard's coverage.