Sabrina Carpenter Short and sweet It's going to get some extras after the release! On Thursday, the “Taste” pop star surprisingly dropped a new album Sweet A new version of her album with an additional song titled “Busy Woman”.
“Surprise, dear! I wrote 'The Busy Woman' with Jack. [Antonoff] And Amy [Allen] “After I delivered the album, I was so sad that I couldn’t include it,” she wrote in a note to fans. “It’s one of my favorite songs, so I wanted to give it to you as a thank you for all the love!!!!! I hope you enjoy it!”
Fans interested in hearing the new song will need to purchase a digital copy of the album titled Short and sweetAmerican singer Carpenter has released her new album “Busy Woman” on her digital store, which will feature the album’s standard track list, along with the new song “Busy Woman.” The new release also features an alternate version of the album cover, this time a digital camera shot of Carpenter while she was being photographed in the Gulf, biting her nails with a smile.
The new release of the album comes after she released a digital version of her album with a bonus track titled “Needless to Say,” which was originally included on a limited-edition vinyl release of the album. “Come on, you know you can't resist… plus there's something extra sweet!” reads the description of the bonus track.
The original album, released last week, featured 12 songs, including “Taste,” “Good Graces” and “Coincidence,” which brought Carpenter into the writing room with Amy Allen and Julia Michaels. “These songs are usually dirty, always funny, often wicked, and yet they burn themselves out with everyone,” the album’s caption reads. Rolling Stone Album review that got four stars.
Carpenter celebrated the album's release by releasing a gory video alongside Jenna Ortega for her single “Taste.”
“I feel like there’s a thin thread running through this album, not just of self-discovery, but also of getting through the pain and the grief that can really break you… man, it can really break you for a long time,” she told Zane Lowe on Apple Music 1 last week. “And I feel like, even with the humor and the healthy dose of judgment in some of these songs, you were really hurting.”