Ella Eyre returns with everything, in time, a soulful, funk-charged comeback that turns resilience into rhythm and marks her most fearless, fully realized work yet.
Ten years after her platinum-selling debut Feline and a string of chart-topping collaborations with Rudimental, Sigala, and DJ Fresh, Ella Eyre returns with everything, in time, a triumphant second act that sounds like freedom. The new album captures a decade’s worth of growth, recovery, and self-discovery, with Eyre reclaiming her creative direction and rediscovering the voice that made her one of the most compelling forces in modern British pop.
Born and raised in West London to a Jamaican father and English mother, Eyre first broke through in 2013 on Rudimental’s hit “Waiting All Night,” winning a BRIT Award and setting the stage for her powerhouse debut two years later. But after years of touring and reinvention, the singer faced her most personal test during the lockdown: vocal surgery that forced her to relearn how to speak and sing. “I had to start again,” she’s said, and that reset became the catalyst for everything, in time, a record of renewal and self-definition.
The 15-track collection is a bold mix of soul, R&B, retro funk, and gospel-tinged pop, rooted in emotional truth and shaped by Eyre’s own hand. From the swaggering breakup anthem “Space” to the shimmering self-reflection of “Kintsugi,” she threads her story through grooves and melodies that feel both classic and current. Critics have already praised the album’s depth and vitality, with The Line of Best Fit calling it “her most confident and creatively fulfilled work yet,” while Hot Press hailed it as “a stunning reminder of what made Eyre one of Britain’s brightest voices.”
Everything, in time is the sound of an artist unafraid to stand in her truth, to embrace her scars, and to sing louder than ever. After all this time, Ella Eyre hasn’t just found her voice again; she’s found her purpose.