Sabrina Carpenter’s career is anything but wooden. Last August she released Short n’ Sweet, one of the albums of the summer, which topped the charts in 19 countries. Three songs from the record, Espresso, Please Please Please and Taste, ranked in the top five of the Billboard chart in America simultaneously. Carpenter became the first solo performer to achieve this feat; the Beatles are the only other act to have managed it.

Her status has built up quickly. In the first half of 2022, Carpenter’s songs were streamed 73 million times in America; in the same period this year, that number had jumped to 1.9 billion. In April, Luminate, a data firm, found that Carpenter’s fandom was growing faster than any other musician’s. (Their index looks at things such as social media engagement and public awareness as well as streaming data.)

Sabrina Carpenter (pictured at the Met Gala in May) has had quite the year since touring as Taylor Swift’s supporting act.

Sabrina Carpenter (pictured at the Met Gala in May) has had quite the year since touring as Taylor Swift’s supporting act.Credit: Getty Images

Carpenter is hoping to follow up on that success with Man’s Best Friend, a new album released on August 29. Its lead single, Manchild, has already topped the charts in America and Britain. In coming months, you can expect to hear her effervescent melodies and sultry lyrics blasting from every car radio and teenager’s bedroom. How has Carpenter established herself as pop’s new princess?

Three factors explain her ascendancy. First, her music is compulsively catchy. Carpenter has spent a long time finding the right sound. (Man’s Best Friend is her seventh studio album.) Like pop stars Miley Cyrus and Olivia Rodrigo, Carpenter started her career as a child actor on the Disney Channel. Her first song was released in 2014, when she was just 14 years old; she spent the next decade exploring modes as varied as folk and electronic dance music.

‘Everything she does is with that knowing wink at the audience.’

Glenn Fosbraey

This experimentation came to fruition on Short n’ Sweet. The record is a paragon of pop in 36 minutes, incorporating sounds from disco to country to hip-hop. Even as Carpenter borrows from different genres, her songs have a distinctive, whimsical quality.

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Jack Antonoff, a producer who works with Carpenter (as well as Taylor Swift), has said the appeal of Please Please Please lies in the “push and pull” between the regimented percussion and “bubbly … floating” synthesisers: “It makes you feel like a little bit drunk, a little bit dreamlike.”

The second reason for her popularity is her witty lyrics. Carpenter stands out because she makes “really fun, really flirty, sometimes silly, literally nonsensical songs”, notes Erica Campbell, author of a forthcoming book about the star. Take Espresso, Carpenter’s biggest hit, in which she croons: “Say you can’t sleep, baby, I know / That’s that me espresso.” Or this, from Bed Chem: “Where art thou? Why not uponeth me?”