Sam Smith Essentials
Sam Smith first gained significant traction singing on a pair of dance hits—Disclosure’s 2012 single “Latch” and Naughty Boy’s “La La La” the following year. The London-born singer revealed that elastic falsetto, but didn’t <i>quite</i> hint at the sadness that would define their outrageous success to come. That arrived with “Stay With Me,” on 2014’s Grammy Award-winning <i>In the Lonely Hour</i>, a meditation on unrequited love, and “Too Good at Goodbyes,” from the heartbreak-inspired follow-up <i>The Thrill of It All</I>. This second album saw Smith—by then an Oscar winner for 2015’s Bond theme “Writing’s on the Wall”—open up about instant fame and embrace their status as a gay role model, against a backdrop of stirring, gospel-infused balladry.
Smith’s third album should have arrived in early 2020 in the form of <i>To Die For</i>, but, amid the global pandemic, it was delayed, reworked, and renamed with the more sensitive title of <i>Love Goes</i>. “When I look back at <i>Love Goes</i>, it reminds me of the courage it took,” Smith told Apple Music. “Each time I make an album, I learn to like myself a little more. The more I make music, the closer to myself I feel.”
Indeed, they very much accomplished that on their fourth album, 2023’s <i>Gloria</i>, which featured “Love Me More” and the transgressive Kim Petras collab “Unholy.” “I don’t want to sound cheesy, but <i>Gloria</i>, for me, is like when a butterfly leaves a cocoon,” Smith said. “That’s what I wanted this record to feel like all the way through. I wanted there to be strength within every single song. I feel like my true artist self has arrived, in a way.” A year later, to celebrate the 10th anniversary of <i>In the Lonely Hour</i>, they reissued the album with a new recording of “Stay With Me,” some of its lyrics rewritten to reflect Smith’s nonbinary identity.