Latest Release
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- 14 FEB 2025
- 17 Songs
- Espresso - Single · 2024
- Short n' Sweet (Deluxe) · 2025
- Short n' Sweet (Deluxe) · 2025
- Short n' Sweet (Deluxe) · 2025
- Short n' Sweet (Deluxe) · 2025
- Short n' Sweet · 2024
- Short n' Sweet · 2024
- Short n' Sweet · 2024
- Short n' Sweet · 2024
- Short n' Sweet (Deluxe) · 2025
Essential Albums
- Some people kill their nemeses with kindness; Sabrina Carpenter, the breakout pop star of summer 2024, takes the opposite tack, shooting withering one-liners at loser exes via feather-light melodies, a wink and a smile. The former Disney Channel star began her music career at age 15 with her 2014 debut single “Can’t Blame a Girl for Trying”. Now 25, the singer-songwriter is making the catchiest, funniest and most honest music of her career at a moment when all the world’s watching. But on songs like “Please Please Please”, on which she begs her boyfriend not to embarrass her (again), she’s poking fun at herself, too. “A lot of what I really love about this album is the accountability,” she tells Apple Music’s Zane Lowe. “I will call myself out just as much as I will call out someone else.” It’s not because Carpenter’s “vertically challenged”, as she puts it, that she named her sixth album Short n’ Sweet. “I thought about some of these relationships, how some of them were the shortest I’ve ever had and they affected me the most,” she tells Lowe. “And I thought about the way that I respond to situations: Sometimes it is very nice, and sometimes it’s not very nice.” Hence songs like “Dumb & Poetic”, a gentle acoustic ballad that’s also a blistering takedown of a guy who masks his sleazy tendencies with therapy buzzwords and a highbrow record collection, or the twangy, hilarious “Slim Pickins”, on which she croons: “Jesus, what’s a girl to do?/This boy doesn’t even know the difference between there, their and they are/Yet he’s naked in my room.” With good humour and good taste (channelling Rilo Kiley here, Kacey Musgraves there, and on “Sharpest Tool”, a bit of The Postal Service), Carpenter reframes heartbreak through the lens of life’s absurdity. “When you’re at this point in your life where you’re almost at your wits’ end, everything is funny,” Carpenter tells Lowe. “So much of this album was made in the moments where there was something that I just couldn’t stop laughing about. And I was like, well, that might as well just be a whole song.” Carpenter wrote a good deal of the album on an 11-day trip to a tiny town in rural France, where the isolation unlocked her brutally honest side, resulting in unprecedentedly vulnerable music and one song she readily admits shouldn’t work on paper but hits anyway: “Espresso”, the song that catapulted her career with four delightfully strange-sounding words: “That’s that me espresso.” “There really are no rules to the things you say,” she tells Lowe on the songwriting process. “You’re just like, what sounds awesome? What feels awesome? And what gets the story across, whatever story that is?” Still, she’s painted herself in a bit of a corner when it comes to placing an order at coffee shops worldwide: “They’re just waiting for me to say it,” she laughs. “And I’m like, ‘Tea.’”
Artist Playlists
- That’s that her espresso: All the hits that have propelled Sabrina Carpenter to pop’s top table.
- Get a “Taste” of Sabrina Carpenter’s new tour.
- Sabrina Carpenter curates the “perfect mix of vibes” for the summer.
- 2024
Appears On
More To Hear
- Releases from the pop star, Coldplay, and Lainey Wilson.
- Conversation around her album Short n’ Sweet.
- Is this summer smash about caffeine—or confidence?
- Chats with the artist, Maggie Rogers, and Billie Eilish.
- The artist on her latest project, 'emails i can't send.'
- Conversation around her personal playlist.
- More of Travis' favorite chats, including Ali Gatie, Kim Petras.
More To See
About Sabrina Carpenter
Sabrina Carpenter has made the transition from teen-TV star to pop-dominating force look remarkably easy. It helps that the actor and singer-songwriter—born in 1999 in Lehigh Valley, Pennsylvania—pursued both sides of her career in tandem, releasing music while establishing a regular presence on the Disney Channel and through other acting gigs, including on Broadway. And on her first two albums—2015’s Eyes Wide Open and 2016’s EVOLution—Carpenter set herself apart from her teenage peers with her deft delivery and her eagerness to embrace plenty of dance music sounds. Singular Act I and Singular Act II—a two-part album that dropped in 2018 and 2019—provided yet more proof of her fast-developing abilities as a singer and songwriter who had moved past teen-star stereotypes to become a full-fledged club powerhouse. Later, Carpenter stepped back sonically to express herself more personally, as on the intimately acoustic “skinny dipping”, from her fifth album, emails i can’t send. Still, the sheer fun of it all has never waned. Just listen to one of the many ad-libbed outros in her live performances of the album’s pop hit “Nonsense”, or indeed the lyrical playfulness of “Espresso”, the flirty funk banger that became summer 2024’s defining hit—and which provided Carpenter’s official breakout moment. Next came the Jack Antonoff-produced “Please Please Please” (which became the summer’s second-biggest hit) and her sixth record Short n’ Sweet, a showcase of the most winking, witty music of Carpenter’s career so far. But if it saw the newly crowned pop princess take aim at past relationships, it also saw her take aim at herself. “A lot of what I really love about this album is the accountability,” she told Apple Music’s Zane Lowe. “I will call myself out just as much as I will call out someone else.”
- FROM
- Quakertown, PA, United States of America
- BORN
- 11 May 1999
- GENRE
- Pop