Chappell Roan teases 'super weird' genre-hopping second album

Chappell Roan has begun teasing what fans can expect from her second studio effort.

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Chappell Roan has teased fans can expect a real mix of genres on her next album
Chappell Roan has teased fans can expect a real mix of genres on her next album

Chappell Roan traverses many genres on her "super weird" second studio album.

The 'Casual' hitmaker has confirmed she is several songs into her follow-up to her viral 2023 debut 'The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess' – and fans can expect an eclectic mix.

She told Rolling Stone: “We have a country song. We have a dancy song. We have one that’s really Eighties, and we have one that’s acoustic, and we have one that’s really organic, live-band, Seventies vibe. It’s super weird."

Fans who have attended her recent concerts will be familiar with her unreleased track 'Subway' that she has been performing, but she doesn't think it will be a single.

She explained: “I just like performing it. I have two others that I really want to perform, too, [but] I don’t know what’s next. When I don’t know, it just hasn’t hit me yet because usually I know. I always have an answer. I don’t think it’s ‘Subway.’"

Her manager, Nick Bobetsky, recently confirmed the singer was "busy" penning new tunes.

He told Music Business Worldwide: “She's been busy writing. I do think that we’re likely going to embrace a very similar plan that we did for this album, which is that when she finishes a song she loves, we put our heads together and quickly work to get that music out. That’s what we did with ‘Good Luck Babe.’”

Although Chappell is keen to deliver new singles for her fans as and when she's "ready", her team know they are eager for a full body of work.

Bobetsky explained: "Chappell Roan is absolutely an album artist. I think that's what people want from her, big picture. I don't think that takes away from the impact of singles.

"It's partly a question of when the fans are asking for an album, and we have a lot of insight into that sort of thing.

"There are arguments to be had about how you build an album out these days. Sometimes putting a record out with no lead-up singles can be very impactful.

"I think right now Chappell wants to feel free to put music out when it's ready and when she's excited about letting people hear it. And I think that's what the fans want as well."

In a recent interview, the 26-year-old pop star insisted she never got into music to top the charts.

The singer - whose real name is Kayleigh Rose Amstutz - told 'SNL' star Bowen Yang for Interview magazine: "I’ve never given a f*** about the charts or being on the radio, but it’s so crazy how industry people are taking me more seriously than before."

She continued: “My career doesn’t mean anything more now that I have a charting album and song. If anything, I’m just like, ‘F*** you guys for not seeing what actually matters."