Four new tracks, a world tour, and a Madison Square Garden finale push the album into a second act
Most deluxe albums feel contractual, like an artist squeezing one last cycle out of a successful record. Madison Beer is treating locket deluxe more of a second act.
The expanded edition of her 2024 album arrives with four new tracks, including “lovergirl,” which already has a music video in circulation. But the bigger story is not really the bonus songs. It’s the fact that Beer is extending an album cycle that quietly turned into the strongest commercial run of her career.

By the numbers alone, locket earned its victory lap. The album produced a string of breakout moments for Madison Beer, beginning with “make you mine,” which topped Billboard’s Dance Airplay chart and earned her a second GRAMMY nomination for Best Dance Pop Recording. That momentum carried into “yes baby,” while “bittersweet” became her fastest entry into Top 40 radio and her first appearance on the Billboard Hot 100. Its performance at the Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show reportedly drew 2.5 million concurrent viewers on YouTube. Elsewhere, “bad enough” received a late-night television debut on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.

The deluxe edition lands just days before Beer launches a 32-date tour across Europe, the UK, and North America beginning May 11 in Kraków. The run closes July 13 at Madison Square Garden, the kind of venue booking that signals an artist crossing into a different tier of pop visibility.
The full tracklist stretches to 15 songs, framed by an extended version of the “locket theme.” That detail makes the release feel less like a playlist update and more like a deliberate expansion of the album’s world.
Whether the new material reshapes the album’s legacy is still an open question. But commercially and culturally, Beer is no longer operating like an emerging internet-era pop act trying to prove she belongs. locket deluxe arrives sounding like an artist fully aware she already earned the room.
Madison Square Garden in July only raises the stakes.
