Angélique Kidjo has announced HOPE!!, her new album to be released April 24 (Warner Music France). The full-length follow-up to 2021’s GRAMMY-winning Mother Nature, HOPE!! positions Kidjo once again as one of Africa’s most influential and inspiring artists. Kidjo offers up a revelatory body of work across 16 new recordings, transmitting an unbridled joy that also serves as a unifying force, a conduit for healing, and a much-needed antidote to despair in troubled times. Hope!! also finds Kidjo collaborating with a wide range of artists and reflects a new partnership with Pharrell — who is not only featured, but produced three songs on the album — and recently outfitted her in custom Louis Vuitton for the GRAMMY Awards last month. Guests including Quavo, Ayra Starr, Davido, Nile Rodgers, Charlie Wilson and PJ Morton appear on the album, which Kidjo has dedicated to her late mother.
Listen to ‘Fall On Me feat. PJ Morton’
Kidjo, the 5-time GRAMMY winner, has had a tremendous past few years, including being named to TIME’s 100 Most Influential People list, and winning the Polar Music Prize in 2023. She also performed “Jerusalema,” a song featured on HOPE!! that earned Kidjo her 16th GRAMMY nomination, at the reopening ceremony of Notre Dame in Paris in 2024.
“I started singing when I was six years old, and I’m grateful every day that I still get to live my passion and do what I love with my life,” says Kidjo, who hails from the West African nation of Benin. “At the same time I know that many people struggle to find joy, especially when there’s so much to worry about in our world today. With this album I wanted to put some fire back in people’s hearts, and show how much we need that joy and hope to keep our humanity going.”
In September 2025, Pharrell Williams invited Kidjo to his Grace For The World concert in St Peter Square of Vatican City. From that encounter were born three original songs produced and written by Pharrell in his Parisian studio and tailored to Kidjo’s personality and voice. “For Me” is an anthem to self-celebration of one’s accomplishment in the face of challenge featuring Charlie Wilson from The Gap Band. “No Stopping Us” was born out of a conversation between Kidjo and Pharrell on the future of social change. “Bando,” a slang word for an abandoned house, is a celebration of the true roots of popular trends born out of street life, and features Quavo.
HOPE!! is dedicated to Kidjo’s late mother Yvonne, an homage to her resilience and optimism. Kidjo says that her mother’s favorite song was “Malaika,” and the album concludes with an emotional, philharmonic rendition of the song arranged by Derrick Hodge and featuring French singer Florent Pagny. Recorded in Paris and Los Angeles over the past three years, HOPE!! was crafted alongside many of Africa’s most electrifying musical voices, including Lagos-based neo-High Life duo The Cavemen (“I’m On Fire”), Congolese legend Fally Ipupa on “Nadi Balance,” along with horns from Kokoroko’s Sheila Maurice-Grey, Franco-Congolese artist Dadju (“Superwoman”), Tanzanian musician Diamond Platnumz (“Kakua”) and more. Made with producers like Shizzi (a Nigerian musician who’s worked with Fireboy DML, DaBaby, and Meek Mill), French jazz musician/composer Philippe Saisse, fast-rising Nigerian producer Louddaaa, and more, the result is a groove-heavy and galvanizing album that boldly transcends genre while endlessly showcasing Kidjo’s larger-than-life presence and captivating voice.
Written by Diane Warren (a 17-time Oscar nominee who’s penned songs for Whitney Houston, Mariah Carey, and Rihanna), the Grammy-nominated “Sunlight To My Soul” brings Kidjo’s force-of-nature voice to a full-hearted expression of gratitude and love—an element echoed by the exuberant harmonies of the Soweto Gospel Choir, a world-renowned South African group who contributed to several songs on HOPE!! and first performed with Kidjo at a 2003 benefit concert hosted by Nelson Mandela.
As the latest offering in a catalog that’s continually shown the transformative power of music, HOPE!! solidifies Kidjo’s legacy as a visionary artist whose sense of purpose has only grown stronger over time. “Sometimes it feels as though the world is losing hope at such a rapid pace that it’s endangering our humanity,” says Kidjo. “With all the music that I create, I want to show that anything and everything is possible—and that despite what the political rhetoric might have us believe, we are all deeply connected. My hope is that these songs bring happiness to everyone, but also remind them that we were all put here to help and love each other.”
With that sentiment in mind, it’s important to highlight that Kidjo has passionately devoted herself to humanitarian work all throughout her career—an undertaking that’s included launching her own charitable foundation, Batonga (an organization dedicated to fostering the education of adolescent girls on the African continent), as well as advocating on behalf of children all over the world through her work as a UNICEF goodwill ambassador. She has earned recognition as one of the 100 most inspiring women in the world (The Guardian) and the most influential woman in Africa (Forbes), in addition to winning the admiration of such prominent cultural figures as musician/actor/civil-rights activist Harry Belafonte, who commended for Kidjo “using her work and growing fame to change the way the world perceives Africa.”







