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Review: Sabrina Carpenter gives a 'Short n’ Sweet' exploration of heartbreak, self-discovery

Sabrina Carpenter kept it Short n’ Sweet with a runtime of 36 minutes and 13 seconds, “to be exact,” on her sixth studio album. Carpenter gave fans 12 tracks of heartbreak, self-discovery and confidence to listen to Friday, along with her viral summer hits “Espresso” and “Please Please Please.” Those who ordered the limited edition vinyl version of the album will hear an additional 13th track, “Needless to Say.” In comparison to her fifth studio album, emails i can’t send, Carpenter said Short n’ Sweet is its “hot older sister” and her second “big girl” album, according to Variety. Death becomes Carpenter and actress Jenna Ortega as they star in the thrilling music video for “Taste,” highlighting cult-classic scenes from movies like Kill Bill, Psycho, Death Becomes Her and Child’s Play. Horror and humor blend as Carpenter sings about how if her ex-partner has a new girlfriend, played by Ortega, then she’ll have to taste Carpenter too, as they fight to the death. She writes, “I heard you’re back together and if that’s true/ You’ll just have to taste me when he’s kissin’ you/ If you want forever, I bet you do/ Just know you’ll taste me too.” While Carpenter and Ortega share a kiss in the “Taste” music video, she serves up some “moanin’ and bitchin’” in her country song “Slim Pickins” where she sings about how there aren’t many good men left to pick from. The 25-year-old singer introduced upbeat synth-pop tempos with finger-picking rhythms in a personal favorite, “Good Graces,” as well as “Sharpest Tool” and “Coincidence,” where she combines country with pop like Madonna’s 2000 “Don’t Tell Me,” from the Music album. As she did in “Please Please Please,” the former Disney Channel actress likely addresses her relationship with Irish actor Barry Keoghan in “Bed Chem.” She sings, “Who’s the cute boy with the white jacket and the thick accent,” and “Who’s the cute guy with the wide, blue eyes,” which speak to the likeness of Keoghan’s characteristics. The love story continues with “Espresso,” where she sings about someone thinking about her every night and continuously calling her. Carpenter’s raunchy, synth-pop and upbeat 10th track possibly references Juno, the 2007 coming-of-age movie about teen pregnancy. Some fans believe Carpenter means she’s so attracted to the person she’s singing about, she would let him get her pregnant. She sings, “If you love me right, then who knows?/ I might let you make me Juno/ You know I just might/ Let you lock me down tonight.” While this album holds soon-to-be pop hits, Carpenter rounds out “Sabrina Summer,” with a slowed tempo in “Dumb & Poetic,” “Lie to Girls” and “Don’t Smile.” In these, Carpenter addresses her heartache and mistakes from past relationships. As Short n’ Sweet starts with Carpenter’s hatred for the new girl her ex-partner is with, it ends with her mourning a relationship, saying she wants him to miss her in “Don’t Smile.” She sings, “Don’t smile because it happened, baby/ Cry because it’s over/ Oh, you’re supposed to think about me/ Every time you hold her.” When announcing the album in June, Carpenter said in an Instagram post, “This project is quite special to me and I hope it’ll be something special to you too.” After giving her album a “Taste,” I can say with confidence that Carpenter made Short n’ Sweet something she and her fans can be proud of. It’s no “Coincidence” that the “pop princess” has kept fans in her “Good Graces,” after releasing another hit album. @amandaLaldridge news-editor.shorthorn@uta.edu

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Sabrina Carpenter kept it Short n’ Sweet with a runtime of 36 minutes and 13 seconds, “to be exact,” on her sixth studio album.

Carpenter gave fans 12 tracks of heartbreak, self-discovery and confidence to listen to Friday, along with her viral summer hits “Espresso” and “Please Please Please.” Those who ordered the limited edition vinyl version of the album will hear an additional 13th track, “Needless to Say.”

In comparison to her fifth studio album, emails i can’t send, Carpenter said Short n’ Sweet is its “hot older sister” and her second “big girl” album, according to Variety.

Death becomes Carpenter and actress Jenna Ortega as they star in the thrilling music video for “Taste,” highlighting cult-classic scenes from movies like Kill Bill, Psycho, Death Becomes Her and Child’s Play.

Horror and humor blend as Carpenter sings about how if her ex-partner has a new girlfriend, played by Ortega, then she’ll have to taste Carpenter too, as they fight to the death. She writes, “I heard you’re back together and if that’s true/ You’ll just have to taste me when he’s kissin’ you/ If you want forever, I bet you do/ Just know you’ll taste me too.”

While Carpenter and Ortega share a kiss in the “Taste” music video, she serves up some “moanin’ and bitchin’” in her country song “Slim Pickins” where she sings about how there aren’t many good men left to pick from.

The 25-year-old singer introduced upbeat synth-pop tempos with finger-picking rhythms in a personal favorite, “Good Graces,” as well as “Sharpest Tool” and “Coincidence,” where she combines country with pop like Madonna’s 2000 “Don’t Tell Me,” from the Music album.

As she did in “Please Please Please,” the former Disney Channel actress likely addresses her relationship with Irish actor Barry Keoghan in “Bed Chem.” She sings, “Who’s the cute boy with the white jacket and the thick accent,” and “Who’s the cute guy with the wide, blue eyes,” which speak to the likeness of Keoghan’s characteristics.

The love story continues with “Espresso,” where she sings about someone thinking about her every night and continuously calling her.

Carpenter’s raunchy, synth-pop and upbeat 10th track possibly references Juno, the 2007 coming-of-age movie about teen pregnancy. Some fans believe Carpenter means she’s so attracted to the person she’s singing about, she would let him get her pregnant.

She sings, “If you love me right, then who knows?/ I might let you make me Juno/ You know I just might/ Let you lock me down tonight.”

While this album holds soon-to-be pop hits, Carpenter rounds out “Sabrina Summer,” with a slowed tempo in “Dumb & Poetic,” “Lie to Girls” and “Don’t Smile.” In these, Carpenter addresses her heartache and mistakes from past relationships.

As Short n’ Sweet starts with Carpenter’s hatred for the new girl her ex-partner is with, it ends with her mourning a relationship, saying she wants him to miss her in “Don’t Smile.” She sings, “Don’t smile because it happened, baby/ Cry because it’s over/ Oh, you’re supposed to think about me/ Every time you hold her.”

When announcing the album in June, Carpenter said in an Instagram post, “This project is quite special to me and I hope it’ll be something special to you too.” 

After giving her album a “Taste,” I can say with confidence that Carpenter made Short n’ Sweet something she and her fans can be proud of. It’s no “Coincidence” that the “pop princess” has kept fans in her “Good Graces,” after releasing another hit album.

@amandaLaldridge

news-editor.shorthorn@uta.edu

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