SZA dropped a caption on Instagram Thursday that gave her followers two things to work with: a title and a collaborator tag. She wrote “Drafts we never finished part 20585969437” and tagged Bradley Calder.
The joke in that part number is obvious. Nobody has 20 billion parts of anything. But the framing lands as more than a gag. It signals something real: she and Calder have been putting in studio time together, and the output has been building up.
SZA has recorded for Top Dawg Entertainment since her early career, building a reputation for sitting on more material than she releases. Her 2022 album “SOS” was the biggest moment of her career by almost any measure. It spent weeks atop the Billboard 200 and broke streaming records at the time. Still, fans have always known she records far more than she ships. The “Ctrl” era became legendary in R&B circles. Unreleased tracks from those sessions circulated online for years. Public acknowledgment came only after the fact.
That vault culture is clearly still part of how she works. The Thursday post pulled in nearly 178,000 likes, impressive for a caption with no hints about a release date. SZA’s fanbase doesn’t need a trailer. They respond to the suggestion, and she knows it.
Bradley Calder isn’t a household name for most casual listeners, but his tag in the post puts him squarely in focus. The mention suggests this creative connection carries real weight for her, beyond a passing session.
The phrase “drafts we never finished” is worth sitting with. It’s unusually direct. There’s no spin about “upcoming projects” or “something cooking.” She’s naming them what they are: unfinished things, maybe permanently, maybe not. It’s a more candid framing than most artists use for unreleased material, and that’s part of what makes it land.
As of mid-2026, SZA hasn’t announced a follow-up to “SOS.” The appetite for new music from her hasn’t cooled. Her live performances have consistently drawn strong reviews, and she’s stayed one of the most talked-about artists in R&B without a new project to promote. A brief post from her tends to move through fan communities fast.
She kept the details vague. No date, no tracklist. The post simply confirmed that sessions with Calder happened and that recordings exist, wherever they land next.
This might be a preview of something coming. Or it might be a warm nod at studio work that hasn’t found its shape yet. Either way, if there are drafts with SZA’s name on them, her fans are going to want to hear them.
