Showbiz!
Showbiz! is the seventh studio album by American rapper Mike, released on January 31, 2025 via 10k. It features guest appearances from Venna, 454, duendita, and Surf Gang. Mike primarily handled production under his DJ Blackpower alias, with additional contributions from Thelonious Martin, RedLee, and Louis Shungu, among others. The album was released to positive critical reception.
Release
On October 18, 2024, Mike released the album's first single, "Pieces of a Dream", alongside a music video. He also announced the #AOTC Tour, to begin on February 27, 2025 in Dublin and conclude on May 31, 2025 in New York City. On November 29, 2024, Mike announced the announced the album's release alongside its second single and music video, "You're the Only One Watching". The album's third single, "Bear Trap", was released on January 17, 2025 with a music video. On January 30, 2025 Mike released a double music video for "Man In The Mirror" and "Artist Of The Century." A deluxe edition of the album, featuring live recordings from his Tiny Desk performance, was released on December 11, 2025.
Critical reception
Dash Lewis of Pitchfork described the album as Mike's "most spiritual-sounding album, full of '80s boogie bands pitch-shifted to resemble gospel choirs, reverberant saxophones reaching up to the heavens, and keyboards that shine like parting clouds at dawn." The Guardian Will Pritchard praised the album's lyrics, writing: "his lyrics, often written freely in streams of consciousness, sit in cosy corners of cut-and-stitched samples, comparable with the drifting verses of his friend and mentor Earl Sweatshirt or the smoother edges of Buffalo's Westside Gunn." Writing for Slant Magazine, Paul Attard wrote that the album "with its rough-edged aesthetic and fragmented presentation" felt like "the culmination of years spent turning ongoing pain into poetry." J. Krueger of Consequence wrote that the album "boasts 24 tracks of woozy, left-field beats; contemplative bars delivered from deep in the pocket; and a relaxed but attention-demanding tone." Arusa Qureshi's review for The Quietus concludes that the album "is significant not only for underlining Mike's continued evolution as a rapper and composer, but also as a producer and beat-maker." Writing for Hypebeast, Elaina Bernstein describes Mike as "introspective as ever before" on the album, with him posing "hard questions about himself and the world around him." Raphael Helfand of The Fader writes that Mike "brings a raw creative process and an openness with which he addresses the most painful, intimate details of his personal life, his mic a conduit through which complex emotions and awe-striking insights flow." Grant Sharples of Paste glazed the album's production, describing it as "a tapestry of woozy samples, shimmering keyboards, and shapeshifting drums" that "orbits his unmistakable voice, built on a compelling hybrid of somnambulant delivery and dextrous wordplay."