For much of her career, Bebe Rexha has existed between pop superstar and industry underdog. She has written chart-topping hits, collaborated with some of the biggest names in music and amassed billions of streams worldwide, yet she has often spoken openly about the frustrations of navigating the modern music industry. Now, with the release of Dirty Blonde, Bebe Rexha finally gets to tell her story entirely on her own terms.
Released via EMPIRE, Dirty Blonde marks Bebe’s first album as a fully independent artist and represents one of the boldest creative reinventions of her career. More than just a collection of songs, the 13-track project arrives as a visual album, with each track supported by its own visual component, reflecting the ambitious rollout that has defined the era from the beginning. For Bebe, independence appears to have unlocked something powerful.
“Dirty Blonde became so much more monumental to me than I ever expected,” she explains in a recent media release. “Making this album independently reminded me why I fell in love with music in the first place. I had the freedom to trust my instincts, take risks and create something that feels completely mine.”
Built around Euro-inspired dance music, club-ready production and emotionally direct songwriting, Dirty Blonde embraces the tension that has always existed at the centre of Bebe’s best work. The album thrives on contradiction. It is euphoric yet vulnerable, glamorous yet self-aware, escapist yet deeply personal. The campaign began with I Like You Better Than Me, a brutally honest reflection on self-comparison, insecurity and the pressures placed on women in the entertainment industry. Bebe described the song as a response to impossible expectations and the feeling of never being enough, setting the tone for an era built around transparency and emotional honesty.
From there, she shifted gears with Çike Çike, a euphoric house anthem inspired by her Albanian heritage. Blending Albanian and English lyrics over pulsating dance production, the track paid tribute to the culture that helped shape her identity while demonstrating her willingness to embrace every aspect of who she is.
The momentum continued with New Religion, one of the album’s defining moments. Built around the iconic bassline from Faithless’ legendary club classic Insomnia, the song transforms the dancefloor into a place of healing and escape. Rexha described it as a love letter to music itself; a reminder of the comfort and salvation music can provide during difficult periods of life.
Elsewhere, Hysteria captures the chaos and exhilaration of losing yourself in a packed club at peak hour. Hyperpop influences collide with EDM energy to create one of the album’s most immediate rushes, perfectly encapsulating the hedonistic spirit running throughout the project.
Then comes Sad Girls, a reunion with longtime collaborator David Guetta. Built on soaring progressive house production, the track turns heartbreak into empowerment, celebrating resilience in the face of emotional turmoil. It also serves as a reminder of one of dance music’s most successful creative partnerships, with Bebe and David Guetta continuing a collaboration that has already produced global hits.
After years spent navigating major-label expectations, public scrutiny and industry pressures, Bebe Rexha sounds liberated, as the album feels less concerned with fitting into a particular trend and more focused on documenting an artist rediscovering her confidence. Whether she’s confronting insecurity, celebrating her cultural roots, embracing chaos on the dancefloor or transforming heartbreak into empowerment, Rexha consistently returns to the same message: authenticity is strength.
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