I Said I Love You First

1. I Said I Love You First
2. Younger And Hotter Than Me Single
3. Call Me When You Break Up (with Gracie Abrams) Single
4. Ojos Tristes (with The Marias)
5. Don’t Wanna Cry
6. Sunset Blvd Single
7. Cowboy
8. Bluest Flame
9. How Does It Feel To Be Forgotten
10. Do You Wanna Be Perfect
11. You Said You Were Sorry
12. I Can’t Get Enough (feat Tainy)
13. Dont Take It Personally
14. Scared Of Loving You
15. Stained (Special Edition)
16. Talk (Special Edition)
17. That’s When I’ll Care (Seven Heavens Version)
iTunes Review:
The fourth album from Selena Gomez—the 32-year-old multi-hyphenate who needs no introduction, having been famous for approximately two-thirds of her life—doubles as her first album with her fiancé, benny blanco, who has produced and written more hit singles than you’ve had hot dinners. (It’s blanco’s third album, following 2018’s feature-happy Friends Keep Secrets and its 2021 sequel.) The 14-track collaboration, which the pair announced shortly after their late-2024 engagement, seemed to come together much like their relationship—comfortably, without being planned or forced. “This was just an idea that started in our bedroom—like, ‘Let’s just make something fun,’” blanco tells Apple Music’s Zane Lowe, describing the ease with which the songs unfolded, often collaborating with songwriters (Julia Michaels, Justin Tranter) whose relationships with both Gomez and blanco went back years. “Everything felt right. It almost felt too good.”
Written and recorded mostly at blanco’s house, shows the power couple’s love story through a wide-angle lens, zooming out to include past heartbreaks, mistakes, and self-doubts. On “Younger and Hotter Than Me,” Gomez strikes a Lana-esque chord between vulnerable and withering, sniping gently at an old fling: “We’re not getting any younger/But your girlfriends seem to.” Meanwhile, blanco sets the tone at “dynamically moody” with ’80s synth-pop beats ideal for crying on the dance floor, or for highlighting Gomez’s legacy as one of modern pop’s iconic Sad Girls. Here, she sings in Spanish on the slow-burning “Ojos Tristes,” leaves ill-considered voicemails with Gracie Abrams on “Call Me When You Break Up,” and pulls off a respectfully bratty Charli xcx impression on “Bluest Flame.” Potential sappiness is countered by tongue-in-cheek humor: On the entendre-heavy “Sunset Blvd,” the couple embrace naked on a Hollywood street while concerned bystanders call the police. “This whole experience has been cathartic and beautiful,” Gomez says. “And I got to do it with my best friend.”
Release Date:
March 21, 2025
Genres:
Pop
Producers, Writers:
Benny Blanco, Dylan Brady, Cashmere Cat, Chrome Sparks, Josh Conway, Finneas, Sebastian, Blake Slatkin, Tainy, María Zardoya
Length:
34:38
Label:
SMG Music LLC & Friends Keep Secrets, under exclusive license to Interscope Records
