SZA
Solána Imani Rowe (born November 8, 1989), known professionally as SZA, is an American R&B singer-songwriter raised in Maplewood, New Jersey.[1][2] She began her career in the early 2010s, releasing extended plays See.SZA.Run (2012) and Z (2014) before signing with Top Dawg Entertainment.[2] Her debut studio album Ctrl (2017) peaked at number three on the Billboard 200 and achieved platinum certification from the RIAA for one million equivalent units sold in the United States.[1] Ctrl's singles, including "Love Galore" featuring Travis Scott, reached number 32 on the Billboard Hot 100.[1] SZA's sophomore album SOS (2022) debuted at number one on the Billboard 200, marking the largest streaming week ever for an R&B album at the time, and has since been certified eight times platinum by the RIAA for over eight million units.[3][4] Tracks from SOS, such as "Kill Bill" and "Snooze," topped the Billboard Hot 100, contributing to the album's record-breaking 100 nonconsecutive weeks in the top ten of the Billboard 200—the longest for any album by a female artist.[3][5] SZA has received five Grammy Awards, including Best R&B Song for "Snooze" in 2024 and for "Saturn" in 2025, alongside 26 nominations, reflecting her commercial dominance and critical recognition in contemporary R&B.[6][7]Early life
Family background and upbringing
Solána Imani Rowe was born on November 8, 1989, in St. Louis, Missouri, to parents Audrey Rowe and Abdul Mubarak-Rowe.[8] Her mother, a Christian, pursued a career as an executive at AT&T, while her father, a Muslim, worked as an executive producer at CNN.[9] [10] The family maintained an interfaith dynamic, with Rowe recalling early exposure to both the Quran and the Bible as foundational texts in her household.[8] Rowe has a half-sister, Panya Rowe, who is eleven years older than her.[8] Around age ten, the family relocated from St. Louis to Maplewood, New Jersey, where Rowe spent the majority of her childhood in a middle-class environment shaped by her parents' professional media backgrounds.[8] [11] Influenced primarily by her father's Muslim faith, Rowe was raised in an observant household that emphasized religious discipline; she attended a Muslim preparatory school after regular classes and wore a hijab until her teenage years.[12] [13] This upbringing proved sheltered, restricting access to secular music and social activities, though her father introduced her to jazz records, fostering an initial appreciation for the genre amid limited external influences.[14]Education and early interests
Rowe graduated from Columbia High School in Maplewood, New Jersey, in 2008, where she participated in cheerleading and gymnastics, serving as captain of the gymnastics team and achieving competitive ranking as a sophomore.[15][16] She later described experiencing bullying and Islamophobia at the school, which motivated her determination to succeed.[17] Following high school, Rowe attended three colleges before enrolling at Delaware State University to major in marine biology, driven by an early interest in science and oceanography.[11] She earned straight A's over two semesters but dropped out during her final semester, feeling a loss of interest and compelled to pursue music instead.[18][19] Rowe's pre-music interests centered on athletics, with 13 years dedicated to gymnastics before shifting focus, alongside cheerleading activities during high school.[16] This period marked her transition from structured academic and sports pursuits to creative endeavors, including early music experimentation after leaving university.[9]Career
2011–2014: Early independent releases and EPs
SZA began her musical career with independent releases following her college graduation, self-releasing her debut extended play (EP), See.SZA.Run, on October 29, 2012.[20] The project featured seven tracks produced by artists including Brandun DeShay and APSuperProducer, blending alternative R&B with downtempo and contemporary elements.[20] Distributed via free download on platforms like SoundCloud, it served as an initial effort to generate income and build an audience through bedroom-recorded material.[21] On April 10, 2013, SZA released her second self-produced EP, S, continuing her lo-fi aesthetic with producers such as Zodiac contributing to its dreamy sound.[22] The EP garnered positive reception from music critics for its introspective lyrics and atmospheric production, helping to attract industry attention.[23] These independent efforts led to connections with Top Dawg Entertainment (TDE), an independent label known for artists like Kendrick Lamar. In August 2013, TDE announced SZA as its first female signee, marking a shift from fully independent releases.[24] Under the label, she issued her third EP, Z, on April 8, 2014, which expanded on prior works with ten tracks featuring psychedelic R&B influences and collaborations aligned with TDE's roster.[25] This release represented her early commercial foray while retaining the experimental style established in her prior independent projects.[26]2015–2018: Ctrl and emerging recognition
Following the release of her EP Z in 2014, SZA began preparing material for her debut studio album while affiliated with Top Dawg Entertainment (TDE). In early 2017, she released "Drew Barrymore" as the lead single from the forthcoming project on January 31. On April 28, 2017, SZA signed a distribution deal with RCA Records alongside TDE, facilitating wider commercial reach.[27] SZA's debut album Ctrl was released on June 9, 2017, through TDE and RCA Records. The album debuted at number three on the US Billboard 200 chart, earning 60,000 album-equivalent units in its first week, including 25,000 in traditional album sales, 33,000 streaming-equivalent units, and 2,000 track-equivalent units.[28][29] Key singles from Ctrl included "Love Galore" featuring Travis Scott, which peaked at number 22 on the Billboard Hot 100, and "The Weekend," which reached number 29 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart.[1] The success of Ctrl marked SZA's breakthrough, earning critical praise for its introspective lyrics on relationships and self-doubt, blended with alternative R&B production. In 2018, the album secured five Grammy Award nominations, including Best Urban Contemporary Album for Ctrl, Best R&B Performance and Best R&B Song for "The Weekend," Best Rap/Sung Performance for "Love Galore," and Best New Artist, though she did not win any.[30][31] SZA promoted the album through festival appearances and opening slots, including performances at Camp Flog Gnaw Carnival, Trillectro Festival, Bumbershoot, and Shoreline Amphitheatre in 2018.[32]2019–2023: High-profile collaborations and SOS release
In 2020, SZA released the single "Hit Different" featuring Ty Dolla $ign on September 30, which peaked at number 96 on the Billboard Hot 100.[3] Later that year, on December 4, she issued "Good Days," a standalone single that reached number 38 on the Hot 100 and topped the Billboard Adult R&B Airplay chart.[3] These releases marked her transition toward new material amid a five-year gap since her debut album Ctrl. In 2021, SZA collaborated with Doja Cat on "Kiss Me More," from the latter's album Planet Her, released on April 30; the track debuted at number 77 on the Hot 100 and eventually peaked at number three, earning a Grammy nomination for Best Pop Duo/Group Performance.[1] She followed with the single "I Hate U" on December 3, which debuted at number six on the Hot 100 and became her first top-10 entry as lead artist.[3] SZA's second studio album, SOS, arrived on December 9, 2022, via Top Dawg Entertainment and RCA Records, comprising 23 tracks with guest appearances including Don Toliver on "Low" and Phoebe Bridgers on "Ghost in the Machine."[33][3] It debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 with 318,000 album-equivalent units, the largest week for an R&B album by a female artist since 2019, and accumulated 10 nonconsecutive weeks at the summit through early 2023.[33] Lead singles "Shirt" (October 28, 2022) and post-release tracks like "Kill Bill" (December 2022), which hit number one on the Hot 100 for three nonconsecutive weeks and ranked as the third best-selling song of 2023, alongside "Snooze" (peaking at number two), drove its streaming dominance.[1][3] In 2023, SZA featured on Drake's "Slime You Out," released September 15, which debuted at number one on the Hot 100 with 1.77 million streams in its first week, marking her first chart-topping collaboration.[1] SOS continued charting success, logging 38 total weeks at number one on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart by mid-2023, surpassing prior records for the category.[34]2024–present: LANA deluxe edition, tours, and expanded ventures
In December 2024, SZA released SOS Deluxe: LANA, an expanded reissue of her 2022 album SOS comprising the original tracks plus 15 bonus songs, including previously leaked material, outtakes, the Grammy-nominated "Saturn," and the new collaboration "30 for 30" with Kendrick Lamar, which samples Switch's 1979 track "I Call Your Name."[35][36][37] The project, teased earlier in the year with a promotional video featuring Ben Stiller, arrived on December 20, 2024, via Top Dawg Entertainment.[38][39] SZA described it as incorporating "the leaks and outtakes" to form a distinct body of work beyond a standard deluxe edition.[36] SZA continued updating LANA into 2025, announcing additions of new songs and mixes on January 6, followed by four previously unreleased tracks released during Super Bowl LIX on February 9, resulting in a further deluxe version of the album.[40][41][42] These expansions sustained chart performance, with SOS reaching its 12th nonconsecutive week at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 in early January 2025.[43][44] Following the SOS Tour's international dates in early 2024, SZA performed at major festivals including Glastonbury in June. In 2025, she joined Kendrick Lamar as an opening act on the Grand National Tour, a stadium run starting April 19 at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis, Minnesota, with subsequent stops including NRG Stadium in Houston on April 23, AT&T Stadium in Arlington on April 26, Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta on April 29, and extending through summer dates across North America.[45][46] SZA expanded into fashion and design in August 2025 by becoming Vans' first artistic director, a role encompassing creative oversight, product design, and collaborations drawing from 1990s aesthetics.[47] She also made her acting debut in 2025, marking entry into film and television amid ongoing music projects.[48]Artistry
Influences
SZA's musical influences encompass a broad spectrum of genres, including jazz, R&B, soul, rock, and alternative, reflecting her exposure to diverse sounds from family and personal exploration. Her mother introduced her to church music and R&B, while her father favored jazz artists such as Miles Davis and Billie Holiday, and abstract funk like John Coltrane; her sister contributed melodic hip-hop and rap influences.[49][23] Among vocal influences, SZA has highlighted jazz icon Ella Fitzgerald, stating she frequently sang Fitzgerald's "Tenderly" as a child and would cry to its emotional depth, describing it as one of the most beautiful songs.[49] She has also cited Lauryn Hill as a personal influence and Björk, whose music shaped her early artistic experiences through dance pieces with the American Ballet Theatre.[23] Additional inspirations include Jamiroquai, whom she praised effusively, and R&B figures like Meelah, Macy Gray, and Common.[23] SZA's appreciation extends to rock and pop-punk acts from her youth, such as Good Charlotte, Fall Out Boy, Blink-182, and Limp Bizkit, which informed the alternative edge of her 2022 album SOS.[49][50] She has professed lifelong fandom for Creed, likening their track "Higher" to a gospel song with uplifting, romantic vocals, and expressed enthusiasm for Nickelback.[49][50] In R&B and soul, influences include Stevie Wonder, Erykah Badu, Amy Winehouse, Jill Scott, and Marvin Gaye, alongside contemporary acts like Cleo Sol and Hiatus Kaiyote.[49][50] Further citations encompass Joni Mitchell, Thundercat, The Beatles, David Bowie, and hip-hop artists like Jay-Z and OutKast, underscoring her genre-blending approach.[49][23]Musical style
SZA's music is characterized by alternative R&B, often blended with neo-soul elements, incorporating influences from hip hop, trap, and pop.[51][52] Her work features atmospheric production built on layered, sliced, delayed, and reversed vocals, which create twisting, mutable textures over minimalist beats.[53] This approach draws from cloud rap and witch house aesthetics, emphasizing ethereal and introspective soundscapes rather than conventional rhythmic structures.[23] On her 2017 album Ctrl, production relies on smooth electric pianos, psychedelic guitars, and warm analog synths, maintaining a sparse arrangement that highlights emotional vulnerability.[54] Tracks employ ambient vocal harmonies and subtle reverb to evoke a confessional, late-night intimacy, with beats that prioritize mood over danceability.[55] By contrast, the 2022 album SOS expands into genre experimentation, transitioning between hip-hop percussion, indie rock guitars, and syrupy soul melodies, resulting in a 23-track sequence that resists categorization.[56][57] These shifts underscore a production philosophy favoring eclecticism, where producers layer unconventional elements—like trap hi-hats over soulful chords—to mirror lyrical fragmentation.[58]Vocal technique
SZA's vocal technique emphasizes emotional expressiveness over conventional polish, drawing on intuitive control rather than formal training. Her delivery features a breathy, conversational timbre that prioritizes raw vulnerability, often incorporating subtle fry and airy head voice placements to evoke intimacy.[55] This approach allows for fluid melismatic runs and tongue-driven articulation, enabling smooth transitions across registers without rigid structure. Her documented vocal range spans roughly 2.7 to 4 octaves depending on recordings, with a comfortable foundation in the lower mezzo or contralto territory from B2 or G2 up to G5 or F6 in falsetto extensions.[59] [60] Strength in low notes provides a husky depth, as heard in tracks like "Good Days" starting at B2, while higher falsetto notes reach F♯6 in songs such as "Joni."[59] [61] Live performances demonstrate a practical range of D3 to B♭5, showcasing controlled vibrato and breath support for sustained phrasing.[62] Key techniques include twang for nasal resonance, mixed voice placement blending chest and head registers, and puckered embouchure for balanced tone. Vibrato adds organic fluctuation to held notes, enhancing emotional layering without overproduction.[63] In live settings, she integrates jazz-influenced improvisation, scatting, and ad-libs, adapting melodies spontaneously while maintaining pitch accuracy through agile diction.[64] Breath control underpins her phrasing, allowing extended lines and dynamic shifts from whispery verses to belted choruses without strain.[65]
Songwriting and lyrical themes
SZA's songwriting process emphasizes spontaneity and introspection, often beginning without predefined topics or structures, allowing lyrics to evolve from immediate emotional impulses during studio sessions.[66] She has described crafting songs like "I Hate U" in as little as 15 minutes through iterative collaboration with producers and engineers, sculpting raw ideas into polished tracks via repeated refinement.[67] This approach yields lyrics that read as conversational confessions, blending vulnerability with unfiltered honesty akin to personal diary entries.[55] Her lyrical themes predominantly revolve around relational turmoil, emotional vulnerability, self-doubt, and the pursuit of self-worth, drawing from experiences of love's transformative and often destructive effects. In Ctrl (2017), songs dissect the intricacies of romantic desire, betrayal, and self-acceptance, portraying female agency amid insecurity and heartbreak, as in tracks confronting post-breakup revenge and emotional dependency.[68] The album's narratives highlight womanhood's internal conflicts, where protagonists grapple with moral ordering of desires against relational realities.[69] Expanding in SOS (2022), themes shift toward broader self-discovery and resilience, examining how love exacerbates isolation, loneliness, and personal evolution while fostering both empowerment and regression.[70] Lyrics evoke universal struggles with connection and autonomy, such as in explorations of self-love amid relational voids, with Phoebe Bridgers' guest verse on "Ghost in the Machine" underscoring fame's isolating toll.[71] SZA's emphasis on raw exposure—evident in lines dissecting loss and healing—positions her work as a conduit for listeners' emotional processing, prioritizing authenticity over resolution.[72][73] This diaristic style, rooted in lived relational dynamics, underscores a causal link between personal upheaval and artistic output, yielding themes that resonate through their unvarnished realism rather than idealized narratives.Collaborations
SZA has collaborated extensively with artists across hip-hop, R&B, and pop, often providing featured vocals that integrate her emotive delivery and thematic depth into diverse tracks. These partnerships, spanning over a decade, have yielded several chart successes and Grammy recognitions, showcasing her versatility in blending soulful introspection with collaborators' styles.[74] Her most prolific collaboration is with Kendrick Lamar, beginning with "Babylon" on her 2014 EP Z, where Lamar contributed a verse emphasizing relational dynamics. Subsequent joint efforts include "Doves in the Wind" from her 2017 album Ctrl, which critiques superficial male behavior through layered production and Lamar's introspective rap. Their 2018 single "All the Stars," part of the Black Panther soundtrack, peaked at number seven on the Billboard Hot 100 and earned a Grammy nomination for Best Rap/Sung Performance. More recent works feature "Luther" from Lamar's 2024 album GNX, sampling Luther Vandross to explore romantic vulnerability, highlighting their ongoing synergy in narrative-driven music.[75][76] Beyond Lamar, SZA contributed to Rihanna's 2016 track "Consideration" on the album Anti, co-writing and delivering harmonies that underscore themes of independence; SZA later reflected that the song, originally intended for her own project, ultimately benefited her career exposure despite initial reservations. Other notable features include "What Lovers Do" with Maroon 5 in 2017, which reached number nine on the Billboard Hot 100, and "Kiss Me More" with Doja Cat in 2021, a funky pop-rap hybrid that topped charts internationally and won a Grammy for Best Pop Duo/Group Performance. Additional collaborations encompass "I Do" with Cardi B (2018), "Power is Power" with Travis Scott and The Weeknd (2019), and "Ghost in the Machine" with Phoebe Bridgers (2022), demonstrating her adaptability from high-energy rap features to atmospheric indie pairings.[77][78][79]Public image
Social media presence
SZA maintains an active presence across major social media platforms, primarily using them to promote her music releases, share personal insights, and engage with fans. On Instagram, under the handle @sza, she has amassed approximately 23.3 million followers as of October 2025, with around 494 posts featuring visuals from performances, behind-the-scenes content, and lifestyle updates.[80][81] Her Instagram activity often includes teasers for projects like the SOS deluxe edition LANA, contributing to high engagement rates averaging 5.45% per post, with likes exceeding 1.2 million on average.[82] On X (formerly Twitter), SZA operates the account @sza, where she shares direct announcements, such as the release of SOS DELUXE (LANA) in 2024, and more unfiltered personal reflections that have fostered a sense of intimacy with her audience.[83] This platform has played a role in her early career development, helping her build credibility through organic interactions after dropping out of college and "vibing aimlessly" online.[84] Her TikTok account, also @sza, has a comparatively smaller following of about 817,000 as of late 2025, with over 756,000 likes accumulated through short-form videos that occasionally tie into her music themes or trends. Overall, SZA's social media strategy emphasizes authenticity over polished curation, which has supported fan loyalty but also prompted her to discuss the anxiety induced by constant online observation and comparison.[85] This approach aligns with her gradual rise, leveraging platforms to cultivate a dedicated base without relying on aggressive marketing.[86]Controversies and feuds
In July 2025, SZA engaged in a public feud with rapper Nicki Minaj on X, sparked by Minaj's accusations against SZA's former manager, Terrence "Punch" Henderson, whom Minaj claimed had bullied her and that SZA remained silent on related abuse allegations involving ROC Nation CEO Desirae Perez.[87][88] Minaj escalated the dispute by resurfacing old tweets from SZA that appeared to criticize artists including Beyoncé, Rihanna, Madonna, and Ciara, and accused SZA of using bots to inflate streaming numbers while ignoring Minaj's prior requests for collaborations on two occasions.[89][90] SZA responded with counter-criticism, defending her position amid Minaj's personal attacks, which included comparing SZA's voice to a "f–king dead dog" and questioning her overall success relative to Minaj's self-described iconic status.[91][92] The exchange drew widespread media attention, with Minaj posting over a dozen messages on July 15, 2025, framing SZA as disingenuous toward other female artists and linking the conflict to broader industry tensions, including Minaj's ongoing disputes with entities like Top Dawg Entertainment.[93][94] SZA's replies emphasized her independence and dismissed Minaj's claims, though specifics of her retorts focused on rebutting the narrative of silence or complicity without directly addressing the resurfaced tweets.[95] Observers noted the feud's roots in perceived slights, such as Minaj interpreting a SZA tweet as a subtle jab, amid Minaj's history of public clashes with other female artists.[96] Earlier, in September 2023, SZA faced backlash after direct-messaging a fan on Instagram who had posted a photo captioned "SZA wack," leading to a leaked exchange where SZA expressed frustration over the criticism.[97] The fan shared screenshots of the DMs, prompting debates about celebrity-fan boundaries and SZA's emotional response, with some defending her humanity and others accusing her of overreacting to online trolling for content.[98] No formal resolution occurred, but the incident highlighted tensions between SZA's public vulnerability in her music and her handling of direct negativity.[97]Music leaks
SZA has encountered multiple unauthorized leaks of her unreleased music, disrupting her creative process and leading to public expressions of frustration. In December 2018, a purported album titled Comethru surfaced on Spotify and Apple Music under the pseudonym "Sister Solana," comprising older unreleased tracks rather than new material.[99] Leaks intensified in late 2023 and early 2024, targeting songs intended for her planned Lana album and SOS outtakes. On November 29, 2023, SZA stated that such leaks "ruin" tracks by undermining intended rollouts and exposing unfinished work prematurely.[100] In January 2024, following specific incidents, she posted on X (formerly Twitter) condemning the leakers as "thieves" and vowing legal action to address the breaches, which her manager attributed to hackers accessing her catalog.[101][102][103] By March 2024, after three tracks from Lana leaked, SZA announced she would incorporate the affected songs and additional SOS outtakes into a deluxe edition of SOS, releasing them officially rather than pursuing further delays. She simultaneously decided to restart Lana "from scratch" to produce entirely new, unheard material, emphasizing the need for fresh creative control amid ongoing vulnerabilities.[104][105] This approach reflected her adaptation to leaks as an inadvertent "rollout" mechanism, though she maintained that unauthorized distribution devalues her artistic intent.[106]Philanthropy and activism
SZA has focused much of her activism on environmental justice, particularly addressing environmental racism in Black and Brown communities. In 2021, she partnered with TAZO and American Forests to launch the TAZO Tree Corps initiative, which aimed to combat climate injustices by hiring and training 25 fellows from underserved areas including Richmond, Virginia; Minneapolis; the Bronx; San Francisco; and Detroit in tree planting, maintenance, and climate advocacy, with trees credited for absorbing significant air pollution annually in the U.S.[107][108] She has drawn from personal experiences in places like Newark, New Jersey, and Carson, California, to highlight disparities in environmental exposure.[108] In September 2023, during a talk at Princeton University, SZA discussed related issues including redlining, PFAS contamination in New Jersey water supplies, food deserts in Camden, and elevated cortisol levels among Black women linked to systemic stress.[109] More recently, in July 2025, she used social media to criticize the environmental toll of artificial intelligence infrastructure on Black cities such as Memphis.[110] In philanthropy, SZA has supported mental health initiatives, especially in marginalized communities. In May 2022, for Mental Health Awareness Month, she collaborated with Crocs on a limited-edition shoe line, directing proceeds to organizations including the Sad Girls Club, the Boris Lawrence Henson Foundation, and the National Alliance on Mental Illness.[111] She has also engaged in direct aid, such as donating to a fan battling Lupus and Crohn’s disease in 2019, covering chemotherapy costs, providing concert tickets and a Universal Studios trip, and assisting in the search for a kidney donor.[108] Other efforts include sustainable practices and disaster relief. In 2019, SZA co-launched Ctrl Fishing Co. with Slow Factory, promoting ocean conservation through upcycled and sustainable fabrics in fashion.[108] She donated $2,500 to a Maui family impacted by wildfires in August 2023.[112] In February 2024, SZA participated in Mastercard's Grammy Awards campaign for the Priceless Planet Coalition, performing to raise awareness for forest restoration efforts benefiting Conservation International.[113]Personal life
Relationships
SZA has maintained relative privacy regarding her romantic life, with much of the publicly available information stemming from her own interviews and lyrical references in her music. From approximately 2008 to 2019, she was in an 11-year relationship with an unnamed fashion designer, to whom she was engaged for the final five years; the pair met shortly after her high school graduation.[114] [115] This relationship, which ended amid infidelity on his part, heavily influenced themes of heartbreak and self-reflection in her debut album Ctrl (2017), including tracks like "The Weekend" and "Supermodel." [116] In a 2020 interview, SZA confirmed a brief romantic involvement with rapper Drake around 2009, describing it as not "hot and heavy" but rather casual, which she later referenced in her song "Snooze" from the album SOS (2022).[114] [117] Speculation about other flings has circulated, including unconfirmed rumors of a short-lived connection with rapper Travis Scott in mid-2023 following his guest appearance at one of her European tour dates, though SZA has not addressed it directly.[115] [116] As of late 2025, SZA has not publicly confirmed any ongoing romantic partnerships, despite recent tabloid speculation linking her to country-rap artist Shaboozey based on social media interactions, which remains unsubstantiated by her statements or verifiable evidence.[118] She has expressed in interviews a preference for independence post-breakup, emphasizing personal growth over new commitments.Health and personal views
SZA has openly addressed her mental health challenges, including anxiety and depression, which intensified during the COVID-19 pandemic amid grief over her grandmother's death and periods of isolation, during which she reported not eating.[119] She has described debilitating anxiety affecting her at events like the 2021 Billboard Music Awards and contributing to her decision in August 2024 to pause performing in order to "get my life together."[120] [121] To manage these issues, SZA employs strategies such as outdoor physical activity, prayer, and songwriting, while experimenting with therapies including hypnotherapy, psychiatry, and talk therapy—though she once unknowingly consulted a life coach instead of a licensed therapist, which she said did not improve her condition.[122] [123] [124] Physically, SZA experienced significant hair loss in early 2021 due to an adverse reaction to spironolactone, a medication she was taking, prompting her to adopt braids and wigs temporarily.[125] Regarding body image, she has reflected on weighing approximately 190 pounds earlier in her career and undergoing a Brazilian butt lift (BBL), which she later regretted, stating that prioritizing mental health over cosmetic procedures would have been wiser and emphasizing natural self-acceptance.[126] [127] SZA has criticized body-shaming comments from fans and the public, attributing some of her social withdrawal to such scrutiny and asserting that these "weird" remarks hinder her engagement online.[128] [129] [130] In her personal views, SZA advocates for self-defined beauty standards, refusing to conform to external expectations on hair or body presentation, and promotes self-love as a journey independent of societal validation.[131] On relationships, she has discussed the emotional toll of breakups, including one with an ex-fiancé who reportedly "hates" her, framing fame as exacerbating personal relational strains akin to a "toxic" dynamic.[132] [133]Reception
Critical analysis
SZA's music, characterized by alternative R&B with elements of soul, neo-soul, and pop, draws from diverse influences including Ella Fitzgerald's jazz phrasing, Lauryn Hill's introspective lyricism, and even rock acts like Creed, enabling a genre-blending approach that prioritizes emotional rawness over conventional polish.[49] Her debut album Ctrl (2017) exemplifies this through its exploration of relational ambivalence and self-doubt, with tracks like "The Weekend" employing fragmented narratives that mirror psychological turmoil, earning praise for testing R&B boundaries via opulent production and raw vulnerability.[134] However, earlier works like the EP Z (2014) suffer from bleakness without sufficient cohesion, failing to justify their grandiose atmosphere and resulting in a lack of presence.[135] In SOS (2022), SZA expands stylistically with looser, more confident structures, chronicling themes of self-affirmation amid longing and fallibility, as in "Kill Bill," where vengeful introspection yields addictive choruses and soothing vocals.[136][137] Yet, the album's midtempo dominance leads to wonky pacing and abbreviated tracks, frustratingly undermining transcendent moments, particularly in its acidic opening quarter lacking innovation.[138][139] This inconsistency highlights a reliance on experimental arrangements and humor for resonance, but exposes weaknesses in narrative arc resolution, where initial anger dissipates without full catharsis.[140] SZA's vocal technique embraces imperfection—conversational delivery, falsetto inflections, and minimal vibrato—for authenticity, diverging from classical training to convey emotional honesty, though critics note unclear enunciation and strained phrasing that can evoke an affected "indie girl" affectation.[55][64] Songwriting strengths lie in inner-monologue precision, transforming personal observations into relatable anthems, but some argue the content promotes toxic relational dynamics, potentially unhealthy for impressionable listeners despite its therapeutic intent.[141][142] Overall, while mainstream acclaim from outlets like Pitchfork underscores her cultural resonance, independent analyses reveal structural flaws that temper her status as an R&B innovator, suggesting growth in cohesion could elevate future output beyond hype-driven reception.[141][138]Commercial performance
SZA's debut studio album Ctrl (2017) debuted at number three on the Billboard 200 chart, selling 60,000 album-equivalent units in its first week.[143] By February 2025, it had been certified five times platinum by the RIAA, representing 5 million units in the United States, including sales and streaming equivalents.[143] [144] The album's singles, such as "Love Galore" featuring Travis Scott, achieved platinum status, contributing to its sustained chart presence, including a return to number one on the Top R&B Albums chart in 2022 after the deluxe edition release.[145] Her second studio album SOS (2022) entered the Billboard 200 at number one with 318,000 album-equivalent units in its debut week and accumulated 13 nonconsecutive weeks at the top position across multiple years.[33] By August 2025, SOS reached eight times platinum certification from the RIAA for 8 million units sold in the US.[146] It broke records on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart, spending 38 weeks at number one by June 2025 and later surpassing 100 weeks at number one on the Top R&B Albums chart.[34] [147] Prominent singles from SOS, including "Kill Bill" and "Snooze," drove significant streaming revenue, with "Kill Bill" amassing over 2.6 billion Spotify streams and peaking at number one on the Billboard Hot 100.[148] "Snooze" followed with 1.7 billion Spotify streams and also topped the Hot 100, while collaborations like "Luther" with Kendrick Lamar held the number one spot for 10 weeks in 2025.[148] [149] Overall, SZA surpassed 100 million RIAA-certified units across her catalog by February 2025, reflecting combined album, single, and feature performance.[150]| Album | US Peak (Billboard 200) | Weeks at No. 1 | RIAA Certification (2025) | Equivalent Units (US) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ctrl (2017) | 3 | 0 (R&B charts later) | 5× Platinum | 5 million[143] |
| SOS (2022) | 1 | 13 | 8× Platinum | 8 million[146] |
Achievements and awards
SZA has received five Grammy Awards from 26 nominations, recognizing her contributions to R&B and pop music.[151] Her first win came in 2022 for Best Pop Duo/Group Performance on "Kiss Me More" by Doja Cat featuring SZA. In 2024, she secured three awards: Best Progressive R&B Album for SOS, Best R&B Song for "Snooze", and Best Pop Duo/Group Performance for "Ghost in the Machine" featuring Phoebe Bridgers.[152] Her fifth Grammy arrived in 2025 for Best R&B Song on "Saturn".[7]| Year | Category | Work |
|---|---|---|
| 2022 | Best Pop Duo/Group Performance | "Kiss Me More" (Doja Cat feat. SZA) |
| 2024 | Best Progressive R&B Album | SOS[152] |
| 2024 | Best R&B Song | "Snooze"[152] |
| 2024 | Best Pop Duo/Group Performance | "Ghost in the Machine" (SZA feat. Phoebe Bridgers)[152] |
| 2025 | Best R&B Song | "Saturn"[7] |
Criticisms
SZA's lyrics have drawn criticism for portraying themes of toxicity, infidelity, and violence in relationships, with some commentators arguing they normalize unhealthy behaviors for listeners, particularly young women. For instance, in the track "The Weekend" from her 2017 album Ctrl, SZA describes knowingly sharing a romantic partner, prompting backlash for seemingly endorsing polyamory or side relationships without consequence.[162] Similarly, "Kill Bill" from SOS (2022) faced debate over its depiction of murderous fantasies toward an ex and their new partner, with detractors viewing the content as glamorizing extreme emotional responses rather than critiquing them.[163] Public scrutiny has also targeted SZA's social media activity and past statements. In October 2025, she sparked online controversy by liking a post accusing Taylor Swift of appropriating African American Vernacular English (AAVE) in her song "Eldest Daughter" while referencing the Megan Thee Stallion shooting incident, leading to accusations of stirring unnecessary division.[164] Resurfaced tweets from earlier in her career, including disparaging remarks about artists like Beyoncé, Rihanna, and Madonna, as well as a 2014 post stating "My pus*y so fat I call it Lizzo," reignited backlash in 2024 and 2025 for insensitivity and body-related vulgarity.[165][166] SZA has encountered performance-related criticism, notably during her June 28, 2024, headline set at Glastonbury Festival, where technical glitches, including sound issues, and a smaller-than-expected crowd led to reports of her appearing "scared and freaked out," with some attendees and reviewers deeming the show underwhelming.[167] Additionally, she has faced ongoing body-shaming and speculation about cosmetic procedures, such as Brazilian butt lifts (BBL), with online commentators criticizing perceived changes to her physique since earlier in her career, prompting her to publicly decry such "weird" harassment in December 2024.[168][169]Discography
Studio albums
 | First-Week Units (US) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ctrl | June 9, 2017 | 3 | 60,000 |
| SOS | December 9, 2022 | 1 | 318,000 |
Extended plays and mixtapes
SZA self-released her debut extended play, See.SZA.Run, on October 29, 2012, following her college graduation as a means to generate income.[20] The seven-track project, produced independently, showcased her early alternative R&B style with songs including "Bed", "Euphraxia", "Advil", "Time Travel Undone", "Crack Dreams", "Country", and "Once Upon a Time".[173] It received positive initial reception for its introspective lyrics and lo-fi production, though commercial metrics were limited due to its independent digital distribution.[174] On April 10, 2013, SZA issued her second extended play, S, also self-released via platforms like SoundCloud.[175] This four-track EP, featuring production from Felix Snow, Waren Vaughn, and WNDRBRD, included "Castles", "Terror.Dome", "Aftermath", and "The Odyssey", emphasizing themes of emotional vulnerability and cosmic imagery.[176] The release built on her growing underground buzz, with tracks like "Castles" gaining traction for their atmospheric soundscapes, though it remained non-commercial and freely downloadable.[22] SZA's third extended play, Z, marked her debut under Top Dawg Entertainment and was commercially released on April 8, 2014.[25] The ten-track project featured collaborations with Chance the Rapper on "Childs Play" and Isaiah Rashad on "Warm Winds", alongside solo cuts like "Ur", "Julia", and "HiiiJack", blending neo-soul elements with hip-hop influences.[26] Produced by a team including TDE affiliates, Z achieved wider distribution and streaming availability, contributing to her signing with RCA Records later that year, with tracks demonstrating her evolving vocal range and thematic focus on relationships and self-doubt.[177]Singles and features
SZA's entry into the singles market coincided with the release of her debut studio album Ctrl in 2017, with "Love Galore" featuring Travis Scott serving as a prominent single that peaked at number two on the Billboard Hot 100 and achieved diamond certification from the RIAA for 10 million units sold in the United States.[1] [178] Subsequent singles from Ctrl, such as "The Weekend," also garnered significant airplay and streaming, reaching number nine on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart. Her 2020 single "Good Days," initially from the Ctrl deluxe edition, marked her first top-five Hot 100 entry at number four and was certified quadruple platinum.[179] [178] The 2022 album SOS propelled SZA to multiple chart-toppers, including "Kill Bill," which debuted as a post-release single on December 9, 2022, ascended to number one on the Hot 100 for three nonconsecutive weeks, and earned eight-times platinum certification by February 2025.[1] [180] "Snooze" followed as the second single, peaking at number two for eight weeks and receiving quadruple platinum status, while "Shirt" reached number 11.[179] [178] In 2023, "Saturn" from the SOS deluxe reissue Lana entered the Hot 100 at number four, contributing to her streak of top-10 hits.[179] By 2025, additional singles like "BMF" peaked at number 29, reflecting ongoing commercial momentum amid new music releases.[181]| Title | Release Date | Album | Peak Billboard Hot 100 | RIAA Certification |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Love Galore (feat. Travis Scott) | June 13, 2017 | Ctrl | 2 | Diamond (10× Platinum)[178] [161] |
| The Weekend | April 13, 2018 | Ctrl | 28 | 2× Platinum[178] |
| Good Days | December 4, 2020 | Ctrl (Deluxe) | 4 | 4× Platinum[178] [180] |
| I Hate U | December 3, 2020 | Non-album single | 6 | 4× Platinum[179] [180] |
| Shirt | October 28, 2022 | SOS | 11 | 2× Platinum[178] |
| Nobody Gets Me | November 11, 2022 | SOS | 10 | 2× Platinum[182] [178] |
| Kill Bill | December 9, 2022 | SOS | 1 | 8× Platinum[1] [180] |
| Snooze | November 18, 2022 | SOS | 2 | 4× Platinum[179] [178] |
| Saturn | October 6, 2023 | Lana | 4 | Platinum[179] [178] |
| BMF | January 2025 | Non-album single | 29 | Gold[181] [178] |
Tours
Headlining tours
Ctrl the Tour served as SZA's debut headlining concert tour, promoting her debut studio album Ctrl (2017). Announced on July 5, 2017, the tour initially featured 44 dates across North America and Canada, beginning August 20, 2017, at Fête Music Hall in Providence, Rhode Island, and originally set to conclude December 22, 2017, at The Fillmore in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.[185] It was subsequently extended to include shows in Oceania, ending February 8, 2018, for a total of approximately 55 performances.[186] Opening acts included Smino and Ravyn Lenae on select dates.[185] The SOS Tour marked SZA's second major headlining outing and her first arena tour, undertaken to support her second studio album SOS (2022). Announced December 13, 2022, it launched February 21, 2023, at Nationwide Arena in Columbus, Ohio, and encompassed multiple legs across North America, Europe, South America, and Oceania.[187] Initial North American dates ran through April 2023, with an extension announced April 11, 2023, adding fall shows from September 20, 2023, in Miami, Florida, to October 29, 2023, in Phoenix, Arizona.[188] European dates followed in 2024, alongside international expansions concluding primary legs by mid-2024, though select extensions persisted, including a December 5, 2025, performance at Scotiabank Arena in Toronto, Canada.[45] The tour totaled over 70 shows, with opening acts such as Omar Apollo and RAYE.[189]Collaborative tours
SZA's early collaborative tour experience included serving as the opening act for the European leg of Bryson Tiller's Set It Off Tour in 2017. Announced on July 10, 2017, the tour featured 24 dates across 13 countries, starting October 17 in Marseille, France, and including stops in Italy, Belgium, Poland, and the United Kingdom.[190] [191] Several dates were canceled, but SZA performed selections from her debut album Ctrl at the remaining shows, such as at London's Eventim Apollo.[192] [193] In 2025, SZA co-headlined the Grand National Tour with Kendrick Lamar, a 39-date stadium production spanning North America and Europe, promoted by Live Nation.[194] [195] Announced December 3, 2024, the tour supported Lamar's GNX and SZA's SOS Deluxe: Lana, opening April 19 at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis, Minnesota, with subsequent legs including seven solo Lamar shows.[194] [196] DJ Mustard provided opening DJ sets for the initial U.S., Canadian, and European stretches.[197] [198] The production incorporated thematic elements, with Lamar's sets featuring Anita Baker segments and SZA's including covers of other artists' works. Guest appearances enhanced select dates, including Baby Keem, Kaytranada, and Doechii.[199] By its conclusion in late June 2025, the tour grossed $256.4 million across sold-out stadiums, establishing it as the highest-grossing co-headlining tour in history.[200] [201]Other media appearances
Filmography
SZA's acting career began with a cameo appearance in the HBO series Insecure, where she portrayed the missing person LaToya Thompson in the fictional true-crime show-within-a-show "Looking for Latoya" during the episode "Lowkey Movin' On" in season 4, aired on May 17, 2020.[202][203] Her feature film debut came in the 2025 buddy comedy One of Them Days, in which she played Alyssa, one of two best friends (alongside Keke Palmer as Dreux) who scramble to recover stolen rent money amid escalating mishaps involving a homeless ex-boyfriend and shady dealings.[204][205] The film, directed by Lawrence Lamont and produced in association with Issa Rae, premiered on Netflix on April 1, 2025, marking SZA's first lead role.[206]| Year | Title | Role | Type | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2020 | Insecure | LaToya Thompson | TV series (episode: "Lowkey Movin' On") | Cameo in fictional show-within-show[202] |
| 2025 | One of Them Days | Alyssa | Film | Lead role; Netflix release[204][205] |