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Sabrina Carpenter’s ‘Short n’ Sweet’ is flirty, fun and wholly unserious








Say you can’t sleep? Sabrina Carpenter knows. That’s that her espresso.

The 25-year-old pop sensation’s smash hit of the summer, “Espresso” — with its grammatical mystery of an earworm line, “That’s that my espresso” — gave listeners a taste of her newest album, “Short n’ Sweet.” The former Disney Channel actor’s sixth studio album follows an explosive year marked with successes, from opening for Taylor Swift on her Eras Tour to performing at Coachella.

She’s confident, she’s radiant, and she’ll air out all your dirty laundry in a breakup song if you wrong her.

In the flirty, fun, and wholly unserious “Short n’ Sweet,” Carpenter’s soprano vocals take humorous jabs at exes and drop innuendos with an air of cheeky innocence. Sugary songs like “Taste” and “Juno” incorporate enough NSFW references to have listeners blushing almost as much as the rosy-cheeked singer.

There’s a country twang to some tracks, like “Slim Pickins,” an acoustic number bemoaning the difficulties of finding a good man and having to settle for a guy who “doesn’t even know the difference between ‘there,’ ‘their’ and ‘they are.’”

Carpenter shows a more vulnerable side with ballads like “Dumb & Poetic” and “Lie to Girls,” in which she drops her carefree front to sing unguarded lyrics airing out grievances against an ex.

“Don’t think you understand,” she sings in “Dumb & Poetic.” “Just ’cause you act like one doesn’t make you a man.”

But it’s when pop tracks blend into R&B that Carpenter really shines. Her breathy vocals work so well on such tracks as “Good Graces” and “Don’t Smile,” reminiscent of Ariana Grande or Mariah Carey.

Which direction will she take next? Only Carpenter knows. Isn’t that sweet? Carpenter guesses so. That is, after all, that her espresso. 

In the first few seconds of her new music video, “Taste,” Sabrina Carpenter is suiting up for battle. There are weapons aplenty—but the first thing she picks up from her collection is a silver tube any beauty aficionado (or packaging geek) would recognize as a lipstick from Prada Beauty.

With a chef’s knife as a handy stand-in for a mirror, Carpenter applies the Soft Matte Lipstick in mauve-brown Tonka and then gets to business. References to Death Becomes Her and Kill Bill (in this case, co-starring scream queen Jenna Ortega) ensue.

This isn’t the first time Carpenter has given Prada Beauty a prime-time spot in one of her videos. A tube of Prada Beauty’s Astral Pink lip balm was spotted in the “Please, Please, Please,” video when Carpenter was sprung from jail, applying it right before spotting fictional and IRL beau Barry Keoghan.

In Carpenter’s world, the devil doesn’t wear Prada—she does.

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