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Music for People Who Believe Love
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Music for People Who Believe Love
Current price: $17.99

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Music for People Who Believe Love
Current price: $17.99
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Size: CD
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On his second solo album, 2025's
Music for People Who Believe in Love
,
Joe Jonas
offers a thoughtfully mature amalgam of his previous pop incarnations. The record is technically the follow-up to 2011's
Fastlife
, which is a long time between projects for most pop artists. However,
Jonas
has been busy in the decade since, releasing an album with his dance-rock outfit
DNCE
and reuniting with his brothers for several tours and a 2023 album. He also got married, had children, and eventually split with actress Sophie Turner. All of which is to say that the former Disney Channel star grew up. And while you wouldn't necessarily call
a breakup album, it certainly finds
in an introspective mood, thinking back over the past decade and having worked through some tough experiences. It's a feeling he underscores on "Work It Out," admitting to himself, "You go to bed with a head full of insecurities/Nobody cares what you said back when you were 17." Yet, as emotionally heavy as things can get on
, there's a feeling that
is letting go of the past and moving on. That vibe meshes nicely with the hooky, club-ready new wave he embraced in
, a sound he returns to you on several tracks, including "Parachute," where he proclaims, "I don't know where I might land/Got my life back in my hands." Along with this newfound sense of self-determination comes the sense that
is opening himself up to a wider palette of genre possibilities. Emblematic of this openness is "Woven," a jazzy instrumental track featuring piano-and-drum duo
DOMi & JD Beck
that kicks off the album. Particularly compelling is the midtempo ballad "Heart by Heart," where
croons in the twangy, country-adjacent style of
Amos Lee
, lamenting a relationship that just didn't work out despite love and best intentions. More West Coast country-rock vibes pop up on the sun-dappled "Honey Blonde" and "Sip Your Wine" with
Sierra Ferrell
. There's also "Hey Beautiful," a slow-burning collaboration with
Louane
and
Tiny Habits
, and "What We Are," a slinky Latin-R&B duet with
Luiza Sonza
, both of which nicely evoke the sophisticated adult-contemporary influences at play on the album. If
has grown into a savvy pop craftsman, his fans have grown up right along with him, and
is the kind of mature pop album he and his fans deserve. ~ Matt Collar
Music for People Who Believe in Love
,
Joe Jonas
offers a thoughtfully mature amalgam of his previous pop incarnations. The record is technically the follow-up to 2011's
Fastlife
, which is a long time between projects for most pop artists. However,
Jonas
has been busy in the decade since, releasing an album with his dance-rock outfit
DNCE
and reuniting with his brothers for several tours and a 2023 album. He also got married, had children, and eventually split with actress Sophie Turner. All of which is to say that the former Disney Channel star grew up. And while you wouldn't necessarily call
a breakup album, it certainly finds
in an introspective mood, thinking back over the past decade and having worked through some tough experiences. It's a feeling he underscores on "Work It Out," admitting to himself, "You go to bed with a head full of insecurities/Nobody cares what you said back when you were 17." Yet, as emotionally heavy as things can get on
, there's a feeling that
is letting go of the past and moving on. That vibe meshes nicely with the hooky, club-ready new wave he embraced in
, a sound he returns to you on several tracks, including "Parachute," where he proclaims, "I don't know where I might land/Got my life back in my hands." Along with this newfound sense of self-determination comes the sense that
is opening himself up to a wider palette of genre possibilities. Emblematic of this openness is "Woven," a jazzy instrumental track featuring piano-and-drum duo
DOMi & JD Beck
that kicks off the album. Particularly compelling is the midtempo ballad "Heart by Heart," where
croons in the twangy, country-adjacent style of
Amos Lee
, lamenting a relationship that just didn't work out despite love and best intentions. More West Coast country-rock vibes pop up on the sun-dappled "Honey Blonde" and "Sip Your Wine" with
Sierra Ferrell
. There's also "Hey Beautiful," a slow-burning collaboration with
Louane
and
Tiny Habits
, and "What We Are," a slinky Latin-R&B duet with
Luiza Sonza
, both of which nicely evoke the sophisticated adult-contemporary influences at play on the album. If
has grown into a savvy pop craftsman, his fans have grown up right along with him, and
is the kind of mature pop album he and his fans deserve. ~ Matt Collar
On his second solo album, 2025's
Music for People Who Believe in Love
,
Joe Jonas
offers a thoughtfully mature amalgam of his previous pop incarnations. The record is technically the follow-up to 2011's
Fastlife
, which is a long time between projects for most pop artists. However,
Jonas
has been busy in the decade since, releasing an album with his dance-rock outfit
DNCE
and reuniting with his brothers for several tours and a 2023 album. He also got married, had children, and eventually split with actress Sophie Turner. All of which is to say that the former Disney Channel star grew up. And while you wouldn't necessarily call
a breakup album, it certainly finds
in an introspective mood, thinking back over the past decade and having worked through some tough experiences. It's a feeling he underscores on "Work It Out," admitting to himself, "You go to bed with a head full of insecurities/Nobody cares what you said back when you were 17." Yet, as emotionally heavy as things can get on
, there's a feeling that
is letting go of the past and moving on. That vibe meshes nicely with the hooky, club-ready new wave he embraced in
, a sound he returns to you on several tracks, including "Parachute," where he proclaims, "I don't know where I might land/Got my life back in my hands." Along with this newfound sense of self-determination comes the sense that
is opening himself up to a wider palette of genre possibilities. Emblematic of this openness is "Woven," a jazzy instrumental track featuring piano-and-drum duo
DOMi & JD Beck
that kicks off the album. Particularly compelling is the midtempo ballad "Heart by Heart," where
croons in the twangy, country-adjacent style of
Amos Lee
, lamenting a relationship that just didn't work out despite love and best intentions. More West Coast country-rock vibes pop up on the sun-dappled "Honey Blonde" and "Sip Your Wine" with
Sierra Ferrell
. There's also "Hey Beautiful," a slow-burning collaboration with
Louane
and
Tiny Habits
, and "What We Are," a slinky Latin-R&B duet with
Luiza Sonza
, both of which nicely evoke the sophisticated adult-contemporary influences at play on the album. If
has grown into a savvy pop craftsman, his fans have grown up right along with him, and
is the kind of mature pop album he and his fans deserve. ~ Matt Collar
Music for People Who Believe in Love
,
Joe Jonas
offers a thoughtfully mature amalgam of his previous pop incarnations. The record is technically the follow-up to 2011's
Fastlife
, which is a long time between projects for most pop artists. However,
Jonas
has been busy in the decade since, releasing an album with his dance-rock outfit
DNCE
and reuniting with his brothers for several tours and a 2023 album. He also got married, had children, and eventually split with actress Sophie Turner. All of which is to say that the former Disney Channel star grew up. And while you wouldn't necessarily call
a breakup album, it certainly finds
in an introspective mood, thinking back over the past decade and having worked through some tough experiences. It's a feeling he underscores on "Work It Out," admitting to himself, "You go to bed with a head full of insecurities/Nobody cares what you said back when you were 17." Yet, as emotionally heavy as things can get on
, there's a feeling that
is letting go of the past and moving on. That vibe meshes nicely with the hooky, club-ready new wave he embraced in
, a sound he returns to you on several tracks, including "Parachute," where he proclaims, "I don't know where I might land/Got my life back in my hands." Along with this newfound sense of self-determination comes the sense that
is opening himself up to a wider palette of genre possibilities. Emblematic of this openness is "Woven," a jazzy instrumental track featuring piano-and-drum duo
DOMi & JD Beck
that kicks off the album. Particularly compelling is the midtempo ballad "Heart by Heart," where
croons in the twangy, country-adjacent style of
Amos Lee
, lamenting a relationship that just didn't work out despite love and best intentions. More West Coast country-rock vibes pop up on the sun-dappled "Honey Blonde" and "Sip Your Wine" with
Sierra Ferrell
. There's also "Hey Beautiful," a slow-burning collaboration with
Louane
and
Tiny Habits
, and "What We Are," a slinky Latin-R&B duet with
Luiza Sonza
, both of which nicely evoke the sophisticated adult-contemporary influences at play on the album. If
has grown into a savvy pop craftsman, his fans have grown up right along with him, and
is the kind of mature pop album he and his fans deserve. ~ Matt Collar

















