
Justice Justin Bieber
Album info
Album-Release:
2021
HRA-Release:
19.03.2021
Album including Album cover
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- 1 2 Much 02:32
- 2 Deserve You 03:07
- 3 As I Am 02:54
- 4 Off My Face 02:36
- 5 Holy 03:32
- 6 Unstable 02:38
- 7 MLK Interlude 01:44
- 8 Die For You 03:18
- 9 Hold On 02:50
- 10 Somebody 02:59
- 11 Ghost 02:33
- 12 Peaches 03:18
- 13 Love You Different 03:06
- 14 Loved By You 02:39
- 15 Anyone 03:10
- 16 Lonely 02:29
Info for Justice
Set for release on March 19, Justice marks the singer-songwriter’s seventh studio album and second in under two years. Taking to Twitter to make the announcement, Bieber posted a picture of a corkboard with various song titles on cards, including his recently released track “Hold On.”
The singer also revealed the star-studded tracklist that includes appearances by Khalid, Daniel Caesar, Giveon, and Kid Laroi, among others. Among the 16 tracks, Khalid will feature on the single “As I Am,” while Kid Laroi shows up on “Unstable” and Giveon and Daniel Caesar will appear on “Peaches.” Burna Boy and Beam will also guest on the tracks “Loved By You” and “Love You Different” respectively.
Even ahead of the album’s release, Bieber has been dominating the charts with his previously released singles, “Holy” featuring Chance the Rapper, “Lonely” with Benny Blanco, and “Anyone,” which have all hit the Top 40 in the Billboard Hot 100.
This news comes after Bieber made the ultimate declaration of love last night to his favorite team, the Toronto Maple Leafs, with a special version of his recent single “Hold On.” Titled “Hold On (Maple Leafs Love Letter)” the video featured a montage of clips of the ice hockey team in their day-to-day lives as Bieber’s single “Hold On” played, bringing a whole new meaning to the track.
Justice follows Bieber’s 2020 album Changes, which debuted at No.1 and is in the running for Best Pop Vocal Album at the 2021 Grammy Awards this Sunday. Changes tracks “Intentions” and “Yummy” are also nominated for Best Pop Duo/Group Performance and Best Pop Solo Performance, respectively.
Justin Bieber
Justin Bieber
He's descended from the rafters attached to giant angel wings made of speaker parts. He's also held court to seas of screaming fans while sitting on a stool with an acoustic guitar. He's danced madly on EDM festival stages while backed by wild bass kicked out by Diplo and Skrillex, and he's faced off with Questlove in a live drum battle. He is, of course, Justin Bieber — the Canadian-born singer, songwriter, musician and world's biggest pop star, period. His debut concert tour, 2010's My World Tour, launched when he was 16, sold 1.4 million tickets and grossed $53 million. Although he's taken the occasional hiatus from the spotlight, Bieber was a seasoned performer before he was old enough to vote. At the heart of that success is an immense talent (both vocal and instrumental) initially tailor-made to court a global fan base of fervent tweens and kids. But as Bieber grew up, so did his taste and perspective. In tandem with setting Guinness World Records for streams, sales, radio plays, social media followers and video views, the boy became a man in public and on record — his celebrated fourth and fifth albums, 2015's Purpose and 2020's Changes, found him shedding a bubblegum background for new sonic frontiers and critical acclaim.
Justin Drew Bieber was born in London, Ontario, in 1994, and raised in low-income housing by the single mother who would share one of his earliest performances on YouTube in 2006, kicking off one of the most storied careers in music history. His talent was evident early on — Bieber was playing the drums at 2, and singing not long after. By the time he was 12, he was able to earn $3,000 busking in front of his town's theater during tourist season. Within a year of that, he'd been discovered by future music mogul Scooter Braun and introduced to Usher. Management and record deals followed, and Bieber and his mother moved to Atlanta to start building his future. In 2009, Bieber's debut EP, My World, dropped and went platinum within a month. All seven of its songs ended up in the Billboard Hot 100, paving the way for appearances on Ellen, at the White House and on Taylor Swift's tour. Up through 2012's Believe, with its single "Boyfriend," Bieber continued to project youthful optimism and innocent romance, but his career was effectively relaunched in 2015 after he teamed with Jack Ü to release "Where Are Ü Now," an edgy EDM track that found him expressing doubt and lamenting loss. That song, along with his similarly oriented "What Do You Mean?", set the stage for Purpose, a coming-of-age album that explored spirituality, struggle and mature love. Collaborations followed across dance (Major Lazer's "Cold Water"), Latin (Luis Fonsi and Daddy Yankee's "Despacito"), rap (DJ Khaled's "I'm the One"), country (Dan + Shay's "10,000 Hours") and alternative pop (Billie Eilish's "Bad Guy"), culminating in 2020's appropriately named, fully grown offering, Changes.
This album contains no booklet.