Three-Time GRAMMY Winner Victoria Monét Returns With “Let Me” and Joins Bruno Mars Across European Stadiums This Summer

Victoria Monét has been quiet for two years since ‘JAGUAR II: Deluxe,’ and “Let Me” is how she breaks the silence. Out now via Lovett Music/RCA Records, the single is produced by Camper with co-production from Jeff “Gitty” Gitelman, Branden “B Mack” Rowell, and Cashmere Brown. It’s the first look at a new era, and the timing couldn’t be sharper.

The JAGUAR chapter earned Monét three GRAMMYs in 2024, including Best New Artist, Best R&B Album, and Best Engineered Album, Non-Classical, making her the first Black woman to win that last category. ‘JAGUAR II’ crossed one billion streams worldwide. “On My Mama” alone sits at over 123 million streams with 69 million video views and viral content reaching 804 million. That’s the platform “Let Me” is launching from.

The new single marks a deliberate step forward. The JAGUAR era closed with ‘A Jaguar II Christmas: The Orchestral Arrangements’ in December 2024, transforming fan favorites into live orchestral pieces alongside holiday classics. What comes next is what Monét has been building toward, and “Let Me” opens that door.

This summer, Monét joins Bruno Mars as special guest on ‘The Romantic Tour’ across Europe and the UK, starting June 20 in Paris. The run covers stadium dates in Berlin, Amsterdam, Madrid, Milan, and six dates at Wembley Stadium in London. Anderson .Paak appears as DJ Pee .Wee across all dates.

Beyoncé, Janet Jackson, Adele, SZA, and Anita Baker are among the artists who have publicly praised Monét’s work. Rolling Stone named ‘JAGUAR II’ one of the top 10 albums of its year. TIME named her to the Time 100 list as one of the most influential figures of 2024. The critical and commercial record behind her is substantial. “Let Me” signals she’s ready to add to it.

“Let Me” is out now on Lovett Music/RCA Records.

2026 Tour Dates (w/ Bruno Mars and Anderson .Paak as DJ Pee .Wee):

18 Jun — Paris, FR — Stade de France

20 Jun — Paris, FR — Stade de France

21 Jun — Paris, FR — Stade de France

26 Jun — Berlin, DE — Olympiastadion

28 Jun — Berlin, DE — Olympiastadion

29 Jun — Berlin, DE — Olympiastadion

2 Jul — Amsterdam, NL — Johan Cruijff ArenA

4 Jul — Amsterdam, NL — Johan Cruijff ArenA

5 Jul — Amsterdam, NL — Johan Cruijff ArenA

7 Jul — Amsterdam, NL — Johan Cruijff ArenA

10 Jul — Madrid, ES — Riyadh Air Metropolitano

11 Jul — Madrid, ES — Riyadh Air Metropolitano

14 Jul — Milan, IT — Stadio San Siro

15 Jul — Milan, IT — Stadio San Siro

18 Jul — London, UK — Wembley Stadium

19 Jul — London, UK — Wembley Stadium

22 Jul — London, UK — Wembley Stadium

24 Jul — London, UK — Wembley Stadium

25 Jul — London, UK — Wembley Stadium

28 Jul — London, UK — Wembley Stadium