Lady Wray’s upcoming album Cover Girl opens its palms to the light. The partnership with Leon Michels remains intact, but the purpose behind it shifts—less about echoing a time, more about articulating a present shaped by lessons.
Built on the scaffolding of ’60s deep soul and ’70s disco shimmer, the record threads gospel cadences, filtered boom-bap, and handclap rhythm into a fabric that moves with intention. From the jump, the production centers mood: dry, crisp drums hold tempo, horns answer back with emphasis, and the low end stays grounded in groove. Michels shapes each sequence with restraint, setting a frame that lets the vocal phrasing lead.
Lead single “You’re Gonna Win” carries its own kind of uplift. It’s a tightly composed empowerment cut with warm chord progressions, tambourine drive, and a bassline that holds the floor steady. Lady Wray delivers each lyric with clarity and precision, her phrasing signaling assurance rather than urgency. She sings with purpose, never overextending the moment.
Where Piece of Me focused on the weight of motherhood and endurance, Cover Girl widens the lens to include self-repair, intention, and joy. The title track channels that restoration arc, placing melody at the center of her self-portrait. Wray’s voice reflects someone who has recalibrated without losing the pulse of care—every note grounded, every chorus spacious.
Pre-orders are available now on Bandcamp, with a limited-edition pink and blue smoke vinyl and signed press photo. If anything feels revival-ish, it’s because it never left—held not for sentiment, but for soundness. Cover Girl holds steady, sings clear, and knows where it’s going.

