Sweet Fortune
Ryan Beatty
Sweet Fortune is Ryan Beatty’s fourth studio album, released June 26, 2026 on Atlantic Records and following his critically acclaimed 2023 LP Calico. Across 10 tracks and about 37 minutes—Phantom, White Lightning, Virtuoso, Secret Language, Sweet Fortune, Too Many Ways, Delancey, Annie, Anything, Dust, and Fleur De Lis—the record deepens the Americana, soft‑rock, and singer‑songwriter palette he explored on Calico, adding richer horn and wind arrangements and a punchier, more live‑band mix. Produced with longtime collaborator Ethan Gruska and recorded largely after Beatty moved from Los Angeles to New York for a change of scenery, Sweet Fortune doubles as both a sonic evolution and a document of a new chapter in his personal life.
Thematically, the album is Beatty’s most openly joyful yet, even as it obsessively circles the fragility of happiness in love. Written out of a long‑distance relationship that brought him genuine contentment for the first time, the songs try to “hold on to the present” and to love that might not last beyond the moment, mixing reluctant optimism with fear of abandonment. On Secret Language, he admits his emotional messiness and difficulty expressing “I love you,” while White Lightning and Too Many Ways wrestle with the push‑pull between needing closeness and worrying it will disappear. Throughout, he also interrogates lingering religious shame and anxiety around being alone, but never gives in to defeat; intimate ballads like Dust cradle his most delicate vocal writing, and the title track Sweet Fortune—co‑written and subtly sung with Clairo, who appears as a “secret weapon” across several songs—captures a moment of full emotional surrender. Critics are mixed on the album’s sonic adventurousness but broadly agree that, four records in, Beatty is finding new angles on vulnerability: Sweet Fortune revels in its intimacy without over‑intellectualizing it, trusting the full spectrum of emotion even when the music itself stays cozy and understated.
Sweet Fortune is Ryan Beatty’s fourth studio album, released June 26, 2026 on Atlantic Records and following his critically acclaimed 2023 LP Calico. Across 10 tracks and about 37 minutes—Phantom, White Lightning, Virtuoso, Secret Language, Sweet Fortune, Too Many Ways, Delancey, Annie, Anything, Dust, and Fleur De Lis—the record deepens the Americana, soft‑rock, and singer‑songwriter palette he explored on Calico, adding richer horn and wind arrangements and a punchier, more live‑band mix. Produced with longtime collaborator Ethan Gruska and recorded largely after Beatty moved from Los Angeles to New York for a change of scenery, Sweet Fortune doubles as both a sonic evolution and a document of a new chapter in his personal life.
Thematically, the album is Beatty’s most openly joyful yet, even as it obsessively circles the fragility of happiness in love. Written out of a long‑distance relationship that brought him genuine contentment for the first time, the songs try to “hold on to the present” and to love that might not last beyond the moment, mixing reluctant optimism with fear of abandonment. On Secret Language, he admits his emotional messiness and difficulty expressing “I love you,” while White Lightning and Too Many Ways wrestle with the push‑pull between needing closeness and worrying it will disappear. Throughout, he also interrogates lingering religious shame and anxiety around being alone, but never gives in to defeat; intimate ballads like Dust cradle his most delicate vocal writing, and the title track Sweet Fortune—co‑written and subtly sung with Clairo, who appears as a “secret weapon” across several songs—captures a moment of full emotional surrender. Critics are mixed on the album’s sonic adventurousness but broadly agree that, four records in, Beatty is finding new angles on vulnerability: Sweet Fortune revels in its intimacy without over‑intellectualizing it, trusting the full spectrum of emotion even when the music itself stays cozy and understated.
Sweet Fortune
Ryan Beatty
Sweet Fortune is Ryan Beatty’s fourth studio album, released June 26, 2026 on Atlantic Records and following his critically acclaimed 2023 LP Calico. Across 10 tracks and about 37 minutes—Phantom, White Lightning, Virtuoso, Secret Language, Sweet Fortune, Too Many Ways, Delancey, Annie, Anything, Dust, and Fleur De Lis—the record deepens the Americana, soft‑rock, and singer‑songwriter palette he explored on Calico, adding richer horn and wind arrangements and a punchier, more live‑band mix. Produced with longtime collaborator Ethan Gruska and recorded largely after Beatty moved from Los Angeles to New York for a change of scenery, Sweet Fortune doubles as both a sonic evolution and a document of a new chapter in his personal life.
Thematically, the album is Beatty’s most openly joyful yet, even as it obsessively circles the fragility of happiness in love. Written out of a long‑distance relationship that brought him genuine contentment for the first time, the songs try to “hold on to the present” and to love that might not last beyond the moment, mixing reluctant optimism with fear of abandonment. On Secret Language, he admits his emotional messiness and difficulty expressing “I love you,” while White Lightning and Too Many Ways wrestle with the push‑pull between needing closeness and worrying it will disappear. Throughout, he also interrogates lingering religious shame and anxiety around being alone, but never gives in to defeat; intimate ballads like Dust cradle his most delicate vocal writing, and the title track Sweet Fortune—co‑written and subtly sung with Clairo, who appears as a “secret weapon” across several songs—captures a moment of full emotional surrender. Critics are mixed on the album’s sonic adventurousness but broadly agree that, four records in, Beatty is finding new angles on vulnerability: Sweet Fortune revels in its intimacy without over‑intellectualizing it, trusting the full spectrum of emotion even when the music itself stays cozy and understated.
Sweet Fortune is Ryan Beatty’s fourth studio album, released June 26, 2026 on Atlantic Records and following his critically acclaimed 2023 LP Calico. Across 10 tracks and about 37 minutes—Phantom, White Lightning, Virtuoso, Secret Language, Sweet Fortune, Too Many Ways, Delancey, Annie, Anything, Dust, and Fleur De Lis—the record deepens the Americana, soft‑rock, and singer‑songwriter palette he explored on Calico, adding richer horn and wind arrangements and a punchier, more live‑band mix. Produced with longtime collaborator Ethan Gruska and recorded largely after Beatty moved from Los Angeles to New York for a change of scenery, Sweet Fortune doubles as both a sonic evolution and a document of a new chapter in his personal life.
Thematically, the album is Beatty’s most openly joyful yet, even as it obsessively circles the fragility of happiness in love. Written out of a long‑distance relationship that brought him genuine contentment for the first time, the songs try to “hold on to the present” and to love that might not last beyond the moment, mixing reluctant optimism with fear of abandonment. On Secret Language, he admits his emotional messiness and difficulty expressing “I love you,” while White Lightning and Too Many Ways wrestle with the push‑pull between needing closeness and worrying it will disappear. Throughout, he also interrogates lingering religious shame and anxiety around being alone, but never gives in to defeat; intimate ballads like Dust cradle his most delicate vocal writing, and the title track Sweet Fortune—co‑written and subtly sung with Clairo, who appears as a “secret weapon” across several songs—captures a moment of full emotional surrender. Critics are mixed on the album’s sonic adventurousness but broadly agree that, four records in, Beatty is finding new angles on vulnerability: Sweet Fortune revels in its intimacy without over‑intellectualizing it, trusting the full spectrum of emotion even when the music itself stays cozy and understated.
