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Sabrina Carpenter Reveals Full ‘Man's Best Friend' Tracklist With Help From a Furry Friend
Sabrina Carpenter Reveals Full ‘Man's Best Friend' Tracklist With Help From a Furry Friend

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Sabrina Carpenter Reveals Full ‘Man's Best Friend' Tracklist With Help From a Furry Friend

Sabrina Carpenter has loosened her leash on the Man's Best Friend tracklist, with the pop star finally unveiling all of the 12 song titles on her upcoming seventh studio album. In a Friday (Aug. 1) Instagram post, Carpenter shared a photo of the tracklist handwritten on a piece of paper stained with red liquid. The announcement comes after the singer spent the past couple of weeks sharing individual song names one by one on social media with help from fans. In each of the fans' posts, they posed next to a golden retriever puppy sitting on a director's chair embroidered with one of the 12 titles; in her new post, Carpenter did the same, revealing the final track to be called 'Tears.' More from Billboard Sabrina Carpenter Unveils Alternate 'Man's Best Friend' Artwork Following Cover Controversy Sabrina Carpenter Calls 'Emails I Can't Send' the 'Gateway' for Her Career on Album's 3-Year Anniversary Sabrina Carpenter Raises $1 Million for Mental Health Initiatives & LGBTQ+ Rights in Less Than a Year 'thank you to all my beautiful perfect fans that helped me reveal the tracklist for Man's Best Friend,' she wrote in her caption. 'can't believe the album will be in your ears in exactly 4 weeks.' The tracklist news comes more than a month after Carpenter first announced Man's Best Friend, which will arrive Aug. 29 via Island Records. So far, fans have heard only one song from the LP: 'Manchild,' which dropped in June and reached No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100. In addition to 'Manchild' and 'Tears,' Man's Best Friend will feature songs called 'My Man on Willpower,' 'Sugar Talking,' 'We Almost Broke Up Again Last Night,' 'Nobody's Son,' 'Never Getting Laid,' 'When Did You Get Hot?,' 'Go Go Juice,' 'Don't Worry I'll Make You Worry,' 'House Tour' and 'Goodbye.' See Carpenter's post below. Best of Billboard Chart Rewind: In 1989, New Kids on the Block Were 'Hangin' Tough' at No. 1 Janet Jackson's Biggest Billboard Hot 100 Hits H.E.R. & Chris Brown 'Come Through' to No. 1 on Adult R&B Airplay Chart Solve the daily Crossword

Pop music: Do you prefer songs to be longer or shorter?
Pop music: Do you prefer songs to be longer or shorter?

BBC News

time31-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • BBC News

Pop music: Do you prefer songs to be longer or shorter?

Research has revealed that pop songs are getting longer had been a trend in recent years for shorter songs, to fit in with streaming services and video sharing apps such as artists like Sabrina Carpenter mostly keeping songs under three minutes, analysis by the BBC has shown other artists such as Chappell Roan, are increasingly dropping songs that push past the four and even five minute mark. Different trends in terms of the length of pop songs is nothing new. When famous British band The Beatles released their debut single Love Me Do in 1962, it was a little over two minutes years later, another of their songs, Hey Jude became one of the UK's longest chart hits, lasting over seven perfect duration for a pop song has been debated ever part in our vote below and let us know what you think in the comments, do you prefer longer or shorter songs? For comparison, recent hits like Chappell Roan's Pink Pony Club is four minutes 18 seconds long, while one of her shorter tracks, HOT TO GO, is just over three minutes fellow chart-topper Sabrina Carpenter's Espresso is just two minutes 55 seconds and her song Taste is even Savage, music reporter for BBC News, says things like TikTok and Spotify have encouraged artists to make their songs as short and as catchy as possible."So people would drop the introduction to a song. They would start with a chorus. The idea was that on Spotify, and other services like that, you only get paid when a song is being played for 30 seconds. So you've got to avoid being skipped."But what seems to be happening now from the songwriters I've been talking to is there's a bit of a pushback against that. Artists like Chappell Roan have a message that they want to convey."And it feels like listeners are responding to that. They want songs of substance again." What do you think? Do you enjoy longer songs or short ones? Let us know your thoughts...

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