Dublin’s Jazzy announces debut album ‘Peace and Patience’ out October 23, previewed by new single ‘Invisible’ with Chris Lorenzo dropping June 19
Jazzy, real name Yasmine Byrne, announced her debut album Peace and Patience on June 15, 2026, with an October 23 release date confirmed. The Dublin producer and vocalist has spent the years since “Giving Me” made chart history building toward this moment, and the album announcement arrives alongside confirmation of a new single, “Invisible,” featuring bass-house architect Chris Lorenzo, due June 19. For an artist who has moved at a deliberate and carefully considered pace since the beginning, Peace and Patience is the record the whole trajectory has been building toward.
The chart history behind this announcement is substantial. “Giving Me” became the biggest debut single of 2023, peaking at Number 3 on the UK Official Singles Chart and earning a place in the Top 40 biggest songs of 2023. It also reached Number 1 on the Official Irish Singles Chart, making Jazzy the first Irish female solo artist to top the chart in over a decade. The BRIT Award nomination for International Song of the Year followed, as did a DJ Mag Top 100 DJs Future Star Award in 2025. She is now the most streamed female DJ and vocalist globally. Peace and Patience is the first album built from that foundation.
The Collaborators and What the Album Covers
The record was built with a series of close collaborators across sessions in Dublin, London, and Los Angeles. Producer Mark Ralph, who co-produced “Giving Me” and has worked with Years and Years and Clean Bandit, is among the key contributors. Tre Jean Marie, the Trinidadian-British artist and songwriter, is also involved, as is Theo Hutchcraft of Hurts, who previously co-wrote Jazzy and Rossi’s 2025 UK Top 20 single “High on Me.” The cross-continental, cross-disciplinary nature of the recording mirrors exactly the kind of career Jazzy has built since “Giving Me” first landed.
In a statement accompanying the announcement, Jazzy described the project with a precision that tells you exactly what to expect. “This album is everything I’ve been building toward. It’s about where I come from, the people who have held me down, and the patience it took to finally find my peace and my sound. Getting to create this between Dublin, London, and LA with producers and writers I’ve admired for years has been a dream.” That final phrase, “the patience it took to finally find my peace and my sound,” is also the album title. The naming is not accidental.
‘Invisible,’ Chris Lorenzo, and What June 19 Brings
The album preview is “Invisible,” arriving June 19 and made with Chris Lorenzo, the Bristol-born producer whose work in bass house and UK house has made him one of the genre’s most reliable operators over the past decade. Lorenzo’s fingerprints on club music run deep, from his early work on Night Bass to productions for Diplo and Duke Dumont, and his sound sits comfortably inside the space Jazzy has been developing across her catalog.
The context for Peace and Patience extends beyond chart statistics. In 2025 alone, Jazzy played Glastonbury, toured America, and DJed at Pacha Ibiza each Monday for seven weeks during the summer. She is currently confirmed to appear alongside Calvin Harris at Malahide Castle in Dublin on June 28, her home crowd in the weeks leading up to the album’s arrival. She recently learned she is a young Irish girl’s favourite artist. What comes with that kind of recognition is exactly the kind of responsibility that an album called Peace and Patience suggests she already understands. October 23 cannot come quickly enough.
