Kiss All The Time, Disco Occasionally is the fourth album from global superstar Harry Style. Don your dancing shoes and mark 6 March in the calander
Looks like everyone is going back to Harry’s house on March 6, 2026.
Grammy-award-winning global superstar Harry Styles has announced his fourth studio album, KISS ALL THE TIME. DISCO, OCCASIONALLY. A 12-track record executive produced by longtime collaborator Kid Harpoon, the album will be released globally on 6 March 2026 – and, if the title is anything to go by, it promises a damn good time.
Styles has made a career out of swerving expectation. From boyband alumnus to solo artist with genuine cultural heft, his post–One Direction arc has been defined by a willingness to shapeshift: rock romantic, pop provocateur, arena-filling showman with a fondness for feather boas and emotional sincerity in equal measure. This fourth outing feels positioned as another evolution rather than a victory lap – a record that hints at groove and glamour, but with a touch of ironic restraint. Disco, occasionally. Not obsessively.
Kid Harpoon’s return as executive producer is telling. Their partnership has previously delivered music that balances polish with personality, the kind of songs that sound equally at home blasting out of festival speakers or bleeding quietly through headphones at 2am. (As It Was hits differently after midnight.) That duality – scale without sterility – has become a hallmark of Styles’ solo work, and expectations will be high.
While details beyond the title and release date remain under wraps, the announcement alone has been enough to send the internet into its usual forensic spiral. Fonts have been analysed. Capital letters debated. The word “disco” interrogated like a suspect. This, too, is part of the Harry Styles economy now – anticipation as performance art. It’s not for nothing he’s the closest thing we have to David Bowie in 2026.


What feels clear is that KISS ALL THE TIME. DISCO, OCCASIONALLY. is unlikely to be a nostalgia exercise or a straightforward genre pivot. Styles has never been interested in pastiche for its own sake. Instead, he tends to borrow silhouettes, then tailor them to his own frame.
6 March 2026 suddenly feels a long way off. Pucker up – we’ll see you on the dance floor.
‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’
‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source squaremile.com ’














