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Here Are The Producer Of The Year, Non-Classical GRAMMY Nominees At The 2024 GRAMMYs
The five nominees for Producer Of The Year at the 2024 GRAMMYs have been pivotal to the landscape of pop, rock and hip-hop. Read on for how Hit-Boy, Jack Antonoff, D'Mile, Metro Boomin and Daniel Nigro have raised the bar over the past year.
The golden gramophone for Producer Of The Year, Non-Classical is perhaps the ultimate accolade for anyone whose talents are best served behind a mixing desk. Phil Ramone, Rick Rubin, and Max Martin are just a few of the legendary behind-the-scenes names who've received the coveted award since it was added to the ceremony in 1975. But winners such as Pharrell Williams, Mark Ronson, and Stevie Wonder have also proven that the Recording Academy are open to honoring those who can take center stage, too.
This year's crop have undoubtedly all been pivotal to the pop, rock and hip-hop landscapes of the past 12 months. Two-time winner Jack Antonoff continued on his mission to conquer the charts for all of eternity by joining forces with two of his superstar regular cohorts, while first-time nominee Daniel Nigro helped not just one but two teen stars parlay their early success into adulthood.
Hit-Boy and Metro Boomin both vied for the title of hardest-working rap producer with an exhausting list of credits. At the other end of the scale, D'Mile, focused most of his attention on just one burgeoning talent.
Here's a closer look at the nominees for Producer Of The Year at the 2024 GRAMMYs.
Jack Antonoff
Jack Antonoff will be hoping to replicate Babyface's mid-'90s dominance by becoming only the second-ever artist to win the Producer Of The Year, Non-Classical GRAMMY three times in a row. The pop maestro is on the cusp of history thanks to fruitful working relationships with two of the era's most prolific female singer-songwriters.
Antonoff has been recognized for co-producing the entirety of Taylor Swift's Midnights, the dreamlike concept album which spawned a record-breaking 10 U.S. Top 10 singles in the same week including Lana Del Rey collaboration "Snow on the Beach." The latter's equally alluring Did You Know There's A Tunnel Under Ocean Blvd also benefited from Antonoff's magic touch on all but three of its 16 tracks including a guest appearance from his own alt-pop outfit Bleachers.
Antonoff's production empire further grew this year when he entered the studio with another Swift-adjacent (albeit briefly) act, The 1975, for their fifth LP, Being Funny In A Foreign Language. But despite his chart ubiquity, the New Jersey native insists he has little interest in courting the mainstream.
"I do think that there's a misconception about what I do and what pop music is," he told The Face in September. "There's a certain group of people who think it's about appealing to the masses, [which is] not how I feel. I've never made anything hoping that everyone would like it."
Alongside his own individual accolades, Antonoff has previously shared GRAMMYs with his first band fun. (Best New Artist, Song of the Year for "We Are Young") Swift (Album of the Year for both 1989 and Folklore), and St. Vincent (Best Rock Song for "Masseduction" and Best Alternative Music Album for Daddy's Home).
But proving that all the awards glory hasn't gone to his head, Antonoff dedicated much of his acceptance speech last year to the unsung hero who joined him on stage: "I sit in the studio all day with one person — this is Laura, who engineers and mixes the records with us. We just sit there all f—ing day. We were there yesterday, we'll be there tomorrow, and this is all completely for Laura."
Dernst "D'Mile" Emile II
While last year's nomination came for his work with a modern R&B legend, Mary J. Blige, this year's is courtesy of a relatively new diva on the block.
Dernst Emile II, a.k.a. R&B/hip-hop producer D'Mile took the production reins on 10 of the 11 tracks on Victoria Monét's long-awaited full-length debut Jaguar II. The lush melting pot of disco, dancehall, funk, and soul firmly established the Ariana Grande hitmaker as a star in her own right.
It certainly lived up to the expectations that D'Mile, who also worked on Monét's Jaguar EP, put forward to GRAMMY.com last year: "We dug a little deeper. She is an artist that I feel really comfortable with. There might be a couple of songs that you wouldn't expect from her, and then there are songs that are just incredible records."
Of course, D'Mile has already made GRAMMY history having become the first-ever songwriter to pick up consecutive Song Of The Year awards, first winning with H.E.R.'s "I Can't Breathe" and then with Silk Sonic's "Leave the Door Open."
D'Mile sadly didn't get to accept the former in person due to COVID-19 protocols. But thankfully, the hitmaker did get to join Bruno Mars and Anderson .Paak on stage for the latter where he dedicated the award to his late Haitian vocalist mother Yanick Étienne (the same Philly soul throwback also picked up Record Of The Year and Best R&B Song).
When asked about his pioneering feat by Vulture, D’Mile still appeared to be in a state of shock: "Man, these past two — even three — years have been just a wild ride for me. I definitely didn't expect to set a record. Even when I heard that it was possible, I was like, Wow, really? No one's ever done that? It's just wild to me that I'm at the GRAMMYs, let alone winning..."
D'Mile better get used to the feeling. The New Yorker was also victorious at the 2022 GRAMMYs thanks to his contributions on Lucky Daye's Best Progressive R&B Album Table for Two. And this second consecutive nod suggests it's only a matter of time before Producer of the Year - Non-Classical is added to the trophy cabinet that also includes an Academy Award for Best Original Song.
Hit-Boy
From Ty Dolla $ign and Big Sean to Travis Scott and ASAP Rocky — name pretty much any major hip-hop star of the last 20 years and there's a good chance Chauncey Alexander Hollis Jr., a.k.a. Hit-Boy, has given them some audacious beats.
The Californian already has three GRAMMY Awards to his name, having co-produced Kanye West and Jay-Z's "N— in Paris," showcased his own lyrical flow on Nipsey Hussle's "Racks in the Middle," and worked on all 13 tracks on Nas' King's Disease.
Hit-Boy's prolific new partnership with the latter rap god has undoubtedly helped him pick up a second Producer Of The Year, Non-Classical GRAMMY nomination, specifically his work on the two Magic sequels and King's Disease III. Likewise, his production skills on Dreamville's "Just Face It" and Don Toliver's "Bus Stop."
But the aptly-named beatmaker has also been celebrated for his own headlining efforts, including the Surf and Drown mixtape, the Alchemist collaboration "Slipping Into Darkness," and the Victims and Villains LP recorded alongside nu-soul crooner Musiq Soulchild, all of which arrived within the space of just three months.
Hit-Boy's work schedule may sound truly exhausting, but as he told GRAMMY.com in 2020, the star thrives on keeping busy: "It's too many artists trying to tap in for me to just work on one thing at a time, but I still am able to give my focus. It's like quantity and quality. I don't know how to explain it right now."
And Hit-Boy will certainly be appreciative if it proves to be second time lucky. Discussing his first Producer of the Year nod, he told Variety, "It would definitely be a dream come true … Just to be recognized is amazing, but to win? That would be major, man. Just for the people that have followed my story and know how much I've stayed down, that would be major."
Metro Boomin
Perhaps surprisingly, considering he's been behind Hot 100 No.1s by Migos and The Weeknd, trap genius Metro Boomin is the only Producer Of The Year, Non-Classical nominee this year without a GRAMMY already to his name. In fact, he's only ever received one nomination — Album of the Year for his sole contribution to Coldplay's Music of the Spheres.
Could 2024 be the year this changes? Well, it wouldn't be for the want of trying. The man born Leland Tyler Wayne has laid down beats for everyone from Travis Scott ("Til Further Notice") and Lil Durk ("War Bout It") to Drake ("More M's") and Young Thug ("Oh U Went") over the period of eligibility.
And like his fellow studio wizard Hit-Boy, Metro Boomin has also been recognized for his own material including his Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse cuts "Am I Dreaming" and "Calling," and three tracks from his sophomore Heroes and Villains ("Creepin'," "Superhero," and "Trance"),
Luckily, the St. Louis native seems likely to take it in his stride if he once again misses out on a golden gramophone. Metro Boomin was seen as a shoo-in for the 2018 Producer Of The Year category but the award went to Greg Kurstin. The hitmaker told Billboard, "You know, we don't be tripping off stuff like that. We just keep it moving, man … I'm just here to service the people. As long as that happens what I do, that's really all that what matters to me."
That doesn't mean Boomin believes he's unworthy of the accolade, though, with the star recently telling Ebony, "I knew I was here to stay before I even really got here, because I knew how much time I was putting into this…..I'm always trying to outdo myself. This is one of the first times in my career that I can really feel the ascension; I can feel something happening, and I'm well aware of it."
Daniel Nigro
Mid-2000s emo rock outfit As Tall as Lions might not have got anywhere near the most prestigious night on the music industry calendar. But frontman Daniel Nigro is now racking up the GRAMMY nominations as one of the go-to guys for Gen-Z.
All four of the New Yorker's previous nods were for his work with Disney Channel graduate Olivia Rodrigo, including the Best Pop Album category in which Sour reigned supreme. But in his first Producer Of The Year, Non-Classical showing, Nigro has also been acknowledged for collaborating with some other cool names.
That includes Chappell Roan, the dark-pop singer-songwriter who called on Nigro to produce the entirety of her debut album The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess. Irish troubadour Dermot Kennedy ("Divide") and former Chairlift vocalist Caroline Polachek ("Welcome To My Island") have also helped the one-time jingle writer to build a GRAMMY-worthy discography over the past 12 months.
Of course, it's Nigro's second effort with Rodrigo, Guts, that may best put him in contention for the big prize. He produced and co-wrote all 12 tracks on the pop-punk chart-topper, a committed approach he told Billboard is far preferable to being a songwriter-for-hire: "I know I'm definitely a pop producer [now], but I think I struggled a long time with that whole, 'You're part of a record' … I never felt satisfied doing just a song or two with an artist. I always felt detached. I come from a world where when something happens I want to call you up and celebrate the wins and vent about the losses and be a part of it [all]."
Nigro seems keen to continue guiding the careers of those young enough to be his kids. "I think it's just about being honest and talking about what's going on in their lives," Nigro replied when asked by Vulture what he admires about artists such as Rodrigo and Conan Gray.
"I think in their generation, something that they gravitate towards is the specificity of lyrics and honesty, which is always interesting," he continued to Vulture. "Whereas our generation was much more about metaphor and vagueness in lyrics, something that's left for interpretation, you know? It seems this generation is much more into something that's right on the nose."
The 2024 GRAMMYs, officially known as the 66th GRAMMY Awards, returns to Los Angeles' Crypto.com Arena on Sunday, Feb. 4, 2024, and will broadcast live on the CBS Television Network and stream live and on-demand on Paramount+ at 8-11:30 p.m. ET/5-8:30 p.m. PT.
The Recording Academy and GRAMMY.com do not endorse any particular artist, submission or nominee over another. The results of the GRAMMY Awards, including winners and nominees, are solely dependent on the Recording Academy’s Voting Membership.

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How Future & Metro Boomin Became Trap Music's Greatest Duo
After two No. 1 albums and four nods at the 2025 GRAMMYs, look back at the formation of Future and Metro's friendship and musical partnership.
Watch highlights from the 2025 GRAMMYs on live.GRAMMY.com.
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The musical bond between Future and Metro Boomin blazed new paths in Atlanta's rap scene, and transformed trap music into one of music's most expansive exports. The duo first connected on the cult "Karate Chop" back in 2013, and have been on an unrelenting hit streak ever since.
Future's auto-tune-soaked melodies and Metro's ominous trap production has formed an inseparable linkage and some of the biggest records of the past decade. From "Honest" to "Jumpman" and 2024's "Type S**t," the pair have blossomed into music's most in-demand hitmakers and influencers.
Metro, born Leland Wayne, went from aimlessly sending beats as a teenager from his St. Louis home, to becoming one of the industry's most versatile music producers and a GRAMMY-nominated solo artist. Meanwhile Future, born Nayvadius Cash, has evolved into an international draw with a myriad of No. 1 records, multi-platinum albums, and GRAMMY wins under his belt.
The two stars have continued to ascend in lock-step, with a new medley of booming street hits and club anthems arriving with each collaboration. But 2024 was their most expansive year to date. The duo cranked out We Don't Trust You in March, and the sequel, We Still Don't Trust You, just weeks later.
Backed by the Kendrick Lamar-assisted hit "Like That," — and the seismic rap feud it ignited— We Don't Trust You debuted atop the Billboard 100, marking Future's second-largest opening week and Metro's biggest ever. Its follow-up, the more melodic-leaning We Still Don't Trust You, also claimed the No. 1 spot. Together, the joint projects earned the duo four nominations at the 2025 GRAMMYs, including Best Rap Album (We Don't Trust You) and Best Rap Song ("Like That").
Future and Metro have hit an artistic zenith unmatched by most rap duos, and it doesn't appear their streak is slowing down any time soon. As their legacy continues to grow, look back at the genesis of their artistic union over the years, and the series of hits that have formed in their wake:
2013
Before Metro became a top-end producer, he was a 17-year-old beatmaker with hopes one of his beats would fall into the hands of a mainstream artist. One faithful email to Brick Squad rapper OJ da Juiceman got him an invite to his Atlanta studio. With permission from his late mother Leslie Wayne, Metro made the eight and a half-hour voyage from St. Louis to the trap music capital. She continued to chaperone him almost weekly until Metro moved to Atlanta full-time to attend Morehouse College in 2012.
The first-year college student split his time in the classroom and in the studio with Juiceman's mentor Gucci Mane. He eventually crossed paths with Future, who ascended from the disbanded Atlanta group Da Connect and became his own musical entity. Future started meeting up with the teenage producer daily, and the "Tony Montana" rapper hopped on one of Metro's zippy trap beats. He laid down drug-sunken lyrics to the thunderous, heavy-synth instrumental that became 2013's "Karate Chop," but Metro wasn't convinced it was a worthy single.
"I had no clue from all the records we've done, that [that] s**t just sitting in the studio would be the one. But these days, the people and the streets produce the singles and they was fuckin' with it," Metro said in a 2013 interview with XXL.
Despite Metro's initial hesitancy, the remix featuring Lil Wayne became the lead single of Future's 2014 album, Honest, which featured three other songs from Metro, including the title track and "I Won" with Kanye West. The success of "Karate Chop" convinced Metro to drop out of college and capitalize on the rising momentum. And the musical alchemy between the rapper and producer only strengthened over time.
2015
By 2015, Metro and Future were no longer fighting for attention. The spotlight was keenly focused on the two artists, who, along with figures like Young Thug and Rich Homie Quan, were at the forefront of a booming, melody-infused trap sound. The proof of their collective powers was Future's trap masterwork DS2 and What a Time to Be Alive, an entertainingly disjointed mixtape with Canadian-born superstar Drake.
Following the release of 2014's Honest, Future dropped a trilogy of album-quality mixtapes. The first was Monster, a darker and more brooding project that saw Future return to his previous form. Metro executive produced the mixtape, and was credited for crafting "Radical," "Mad Luv," "Wesley Pressley" and other tracks.
The duo carried the momentum of Monster into Future's DS2, widely considered the rapper's masterstroke of bleak, self-medicated drug tales and fiery trap hits. Metro, alongside fellow Atlanta trap architects Southside, Zaytoven, and Sonny Digital, handled the bulk of the project. Some of the tracks he produced included the strip club anthem "Freak Hoe," the tranquilizing "Rich Sex," and "Where Ya At" with Drake.
After the recording session for "Where Ya At" wrapped, Drake and Future began working on the collaborative mixtape, What a Time to Be Alive. Drake flew to Atlanta for six days with the hopes of recording a handful of songs, but Future's relentless work ethic prompted the Toronto native to match his tenacity.
The 11-song mixtape surprisingly dropped in September 2015, and fans immediately swarmed to Metro-produced tracks like "Digital Dash," "Big Rings," and "Jumpman." The latter became a top 20 Billboard hit, and Metro's Future-assisted producer tag, "If Young Metro don't trust you I'm gon' shoot you," became the industry's most recognizable calling card.
2017
Just when it felt Future's smoldering hit streak was beginning to cool, he released back-to-back albums FUTURE and HNDRXX in February of 2017. The two projects teetered between pop-inspired tunes and heavy-handed street records, and Metro was the unsurprising maestro behind the biggest song from the two records.
The Metro-produced "Mask Off" peaked at No. 5 on the Billboard Hot 100, making it Future's highest charting single at the time of its release. A remix of the track, which samples Carlton Williams' "Prison Song" from the 1978 Selma musical, featured Kendrick Lamar.
The massive hit encouraged generations of hip-hop fans to chant the song's drug-filled hook "Percocets (ya), molly, Percocets (Percocets)." And while Future's HNDRXX takes a more R&B and bright-eyed musical approach compared to the dreadful trap sound of his previous works, Metro was credited for the album opener "My Collection" and closer "Sorry."
2022
After five years without a collaboration, the super-duo linked back up for Metro's "Superhero (Heroes & Villains)." Future's gravelly and unpolished delivery contrasted the song's more cinematic and orchestral production. It was the first single off the producer's comic book-themed album, Heroes & Villains, which echoed an evolutionary turn for the producer-turned-solo artist.
His transition from rugged trap sounds to grander production was first demonstrated on 2018's Not All Heroes Wear Capes, but his second album and expansion into film showcased it at a larger scale. Metro went on to produce Sony's Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse soundtrack, which featured A$AP Rocky, NAV, Travis Scott, Don Tolliver, Lil Uzi Vert, 21 Savage, and his other frequent collaborations.
In the years since their last record, Future was also expanding his musical reach. He cranked out joint projects with Young Thug, Zaytoven, Juice WRLD, and Lil Uzi Vert, and released another collection of projects while taking a few momentary breaks in between. "That's because I'm happy," Future said of his occasional hiatuses in a 2022 interview with GQ. "I'm genuinely happy with life. And there was a time where I was only happy when I was on the stage, and in the studio. Like it was my escape." After an album-less 2021, he followed up the next year with I Never Liked You, which earned the rapper his eighth chart-topping album and a GRAMMY win for the mega hit "Wait For U" with Drake and Tems.
Metro wasn't credited on I Never Liked You, but the "Puffin On Zootiez" emcee circled back with his musical companion later that year. The two reunited on other tracks from Metro's Heroes & Villains album, including "Too Many Nights," "I Can't Save You (Interlude)," and ""Lock On Me." And while it may have seemed like Future and Metro disbanded during the five-year stretch, the producer said they never stopped working together.
"It's crazy, public perception makes it look like we went our separate ways," Metro said in a 2023 interview with Gangsta Grills Radio. "But neither one of us really went nowhere. It's just about the right moment, and I feel like God just brought this moment together."
2024
More than a year before the release of their joint albums, Future hinted at a potential project with his long-time collaborator. In January 2023, the rapper reshared an Instagram post that read, "Future x Metro OTW with the album of the year." But the subtle endorsement failed to highlight how big the joint effort the following year would be.
In March 2024, Future and Metro confirmed a two-part album release in a 44-second trailer. The duo is seen hopping out of luxury SUVs in the desert, with the late Mobb Deep rapper Prodigy providing the video's contentious narration. "A lot of f**king garbage ass rappers running around. These n****s ain't supposed to be rapping, man. This game is meant for a select few."
The first in the series was We Don't Trust You, a 17-song project that combined Metro's cinematic production with Future's street poetics. Kendrick's verse on the single "Like That" sparked a series of diss records between Lamar, Cole, and Drake, with the Comtpon rapper declaring, "Motherf**k the big three, n***a, it's just big me."
The result was weeks of musical exchanges between the three artists, including a Drake-directed instrumental from Metro called "BBL Drizzy," which the producer encouraged fans to rap over for a chance to win a free beat. The hotly-contested battle, paired with songs like "Type S**t" and The Weeknd-assisted "We Still Don't Trust You," pushed both albums atop the sales and music charts.
The pair capped off the year with a 27-date North American tour and a handful of nominations at the 2025 GRAMMYs.
2025
While Metro and Boomin went home from the 2025 GRAMMYs empty handed, the duo’s influence remains undeniable. Between the No. 1 records and recognition redefining modern trap music, they have influenced a new generation while staying true to their signature sound. With undeniable chemistry, their legacy is already cemented — but their reign is far from over.
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How Sabrina Carpenter Became A GRAMMY-Winning Pop Queen: Tracing Her Journey To 'Short N' Sweet'
More than a decade in the making, Sabrina Carpenter is living out her superstar dreams. Following her two wins at the 2025 GRAMMYs, look back on the chart-topping star's journey and how every venture helped her evolve into a pop phenom.
Editor’s Note: This article was originally published on Aug. 23, 2024 and was updated on Feb. 4, 2025 to reflect Carpenter’s wins at the 2025 GRAMMYs.
Sabrina Carpenter is the first to admit that it's taken her a bit of time to find her way to the top of the music industry. She even likens herself to the tortoise in the fable "The Tortoise and the Hare" — even if she didn't want to believe the metaphor growing up.
"Something that my mom always said to me as a little girl that really annoyed me was that I am the tortoise… throughout my life, [I was] being told, 'Sabrina, you're the tortoise, just chill,'" Carpenter recalled while accepting the Variety Hitmakers Rising Artist Award in December 2023. "In moments of frustration and confusion it can feel like a letdown, but it turns out it's actually a very good thing."
It's been a very good thing for Carpenter, indeed. A decade since the release of her debut single, the singer/songwriter is now one of pop's new reigning queens — and a GRAMMY-winning one at that.
At the 2025 GRAMMYs, Carpenter’s chart-topping sixth album, Short n’ Sweet, was awarded Best Pop Vocal Album. It was one of two victories for the star, as she also took home Best Pop Solo Performance for the album’s viral hit "Espresso." The wins — as well as a highly entertaining performance of "Espresso" and "Please Please Please" — capped off a major breakthrough year for Carpenter, who earned six nominations in total including all four General Field Categories (Album Of The Year, Record Of The Year, Song Of The Year, and Best New Artist).
As Carpenter celebrates her first GRAMMY wins, take a deep dive into her decade-long journey to pop stardom.
Getting Started: Disney Breakthrough
Growing up, Carpenter filled the sounds of her family home in Pennsylvania with covers of songs like Adele's "Set Fire To The Rain" and "Picture to Burn" by future Eras Tour companion Taylor Swift (more on that later). After submitting videos for a singing contest spearheaded by Miley Cyrus, Carpenter would get her first taste of success. Placing third, she caught the eye of Hollywood Records, who signed her following the competition.
Simultaneously, Carpenter also began pursuing acting, landing guest spots on series like "Law & Order: Special Victims Unit" in 2011 and joining "The Goodwin Games" in 2012. In 2014, she landed a lead role in the Disney Channel series "Girl Meets World," a spin-off of the beloved '90s series "Boy Meets World," which served as a breakthrough moment for the burgeoning star — and a catalyst for her music career.
Just before the show debuted, Carpenter released her debut single, "Can't Blame A Girl for Trying," the title track to her debut EP that arrived a month later. While the four-track EP was the typical output of a teenage Disney star — bubblegum pop sounds with digestible, family-friendly lyricism — it showed off her youthful timbre and offered themes that would become prevalent later in Carpenter's songwriting: love, heartache, and navigating life.
A year later, she released her debut album, Eyes Wide Open. A mix of pop with folk and country influences — a soundscape that remains on Short n' Sweet — Carpenter's debut showed maturity and growth following Can't Blame A Girl For Trying; songs like "Eyes Wide Open" and "We'll Be the Stars" showed a more introspective side, reflecting on the pressures of being in the spotlight and the journey of finding her identity. Eyes Wide Open also hinted that Carpenter was beginning to hone her songwriting skills, penning four of the 12 tracks.
It would be on her 2016 sophomore album, EVOLution, where Carpenter would find confidence as a songwriter, co-writing all but one song on the 10-track project. In turn, the lyrics reflected her growing sense of self and a new perspective on past themes, like embracing non-romantic forms of love in "All We Have is Love," being there for a struggling friend in "Shadows," and learning to assert boundaries in "Space."
EVOLution transitioned Carpenter out of the teen pop aesthetic into a more sophisticated sound, experimenting with dance-pop and techno sonics. Genre versatility would become a throughline of sorts for Carpenter, and EVOLution foreshadowed the multifaceted musicality that was to come.
Shedding Disney: From Child Actor To Pop Star
After "Girl Meets World" came to an end at the beginning of 2017, Carpenter was ready for reinvention. Much like Britney Spears' Britney and Cyrus' Can't Be Tamed before her, as Carpenter grew into an adult, she felt like she needed to shed the Disney-fied image that has become a rite of passage for teen stars. Thus began the Singular era.
Released in 2018 and 2019, respectively, Singular: Act I and Singular: Act II featured songs that were more risqué and mature in nature. A far cry from her tamer work of the past, the R&B track "Hold Tight" is equal parts sultry and evocative with Carpenter singing, "Wanna keep you in, wanna keep you in right/ Wanna feel your skin, wanna feel it on mine."
As she noted in an interview with Billboard, Singular: Act I was a natural progression for a girl now in her late teens — even if it was against the squeaky-clean image of her beginnings.
"I was known as a fictional character on television with lines that were written for her with an attitude that was portrayed in a way by other people. So for a lot of people, their first impression of me was as a 13-year-old girl [singing] the kinds of songs that she should be singing," she said. "Then, flash forward to 19, and people are asking why I am not singing about the same things that I did when I was 13, as if that's normal."
One of the more notable Singular tracks is from Act I, "Sue Me." Sneakily disguised as a story about a romantic relationship, the song is Carpenter's response to being sued by her ex music managers: "That's my shape, I made the shadow/ That's my name, don't wear it out though/ Feelin' myself can't be illegal." Its tongue-in-cheek and snarky nature would inevitably embolden Carpenter to continue writing more confessional songs with attitude, whether she's responding to media scrutiny in "because i liked a boy" from 2022's emails i can't send, or warning a suitor to be careful in Short n' Sweet's "Please, Please, Please."
Singular: Act I and Act II further helped demonstrate different facets of Carpenter's musicality, with the former leaning into pop tendencies and the latter embracing an R&B flair. And as her final albums with Hollywood Records, she used Singular: Act I and Act II to indicate that she wasn't going to let any sort of previous perceptions hold her back. Their coming-of-age themes showcased Carpenter as an artist coming into her own — regardless of whether listeners wanted to keep her in the Disney box or not.
Reintroducing Herself: Artistic Authenticity & The "Nonsense" Effect
While the world was going through a period of change amid the COVID-19 pandemic, so was Carpenter. She signed with Universal Music Group's Island Records in 2021, and soon she would be able to fully introduce the world to who Sabrina Carpenter is as an artist.
As she noted herself to Variety earlier this year, her 2022 LP, emails i can't send, "marked the beginning of a really freeing and artistic time for me." Once again, she co-wrote every song on the album; this time, though, she only had one co-writer for each track, and even wrote two songs solo ("emails i can't send" and "how many things") — proving that she was more assured as a songwriter than ever.
As a result, Carpenter's knack for confessional songwriting is on full display. emails i can't send represents a reflective time capsule of sorts; one that brings the curiosity of her earlier work with the perspective and wisdom of a young adult. Her growing fame meant there was more attention on her personal life, and emails i can't send allowed her to reclaim her narrative and express her side of the story.
Carpenter's candidness struck a chord with listeners, and upon the release of emails i can't send in July 2022, it was clear Carpenter was on a new trajectory. The album debuted at No. 23 on the Billboard 200, which marked her highest entry on the chart to date (as of press time); the 2022 stretch of her Emails I Can't Send Tour sold out in less than a day. And once "Nonsense" was released as a single that November, her place as a rapidly rising star was solidified.
"Nonsense" was initially written as a means to an end after Carpenter was writing a sad song and had writer's block. Now, the track is the epitome of Carpenter's lyricism, weaving together her wit and humor with an infectious hook. First gaining traction on TikTok because of its catchiness, it's become a beloved part of Carpenter's canon thanks to her inventive and bespoke outros during her live shows. It's since become a tradition for fans to check to see what outro she created for each performance, adding to the fan fervor.
Carpenter further satiated fans' taste for her cheeky lyricism in March 2023, when she released emails i can't send fwd:, the deluxe version of her album, which featured a new track called "Feather." She took the playful, flirting energy of "Nonsense" and infused "Feather" with buoyant, airy production that mimics the feeling of self-liberation after moving on from a relationship. Earning Carpenter her first pop radio No. 1, "Feather" proved that the singer's audacious style was taking hold — and it set the stage for an even bigger 2024.
Becoming A Superstar: Eras Tour, "Espresso" & Beyond
After her own extensive — and very sold out — tour in support of emails i can't send, Carpenter's rising star status was further confirmed by pop's current queen, Taylor Swift. The singer earned a coveted opening slot on Swift's monumental Eras Tour in Mexico, South America, Australia, and Asia.
Just after her last Eras Tour show in March 2024, Carpenter hinted that her own new era was beginning. "I'm starting to feel like I've outgrown the songs I'm singing," she admitted to Cosmopolitan, "which is always an exciting feeling because I think that means the next chapter is right around the corner."
That chapter began with "Espresso," which dropped a day before her debut Coachella performance. Doubling down on the playful, self-assured vibe of "Nonsense," the song immediately hinted that big things were coming for Carpenter, debuting at No. 7 on the Billboard Hot 100, where it peaked at No. 3.
Upon announcing her sixth album, Short n' Sweet, Carpenter released "Please Please Please." Combining her now-signature playful, carefree lyricism with an airy, disco-tinged sound, "Please Please Please" didn't just present Carpenter as a confident superstar — it became her first Hot 100-topping smash.
Carpenter has referred to Short n' Sweet as the "hot older sister" of emails i can't send. "It's my second 'big girl' album; it's a companion but it's not the same," she explained to Variety, to whom she also admitted she feels a "sense of separation" from her work prior to emails. "When it comes to having full creative control and being a full-fledged adult, I would consider this a sophomore album."
It's apt, then, that her Short n' Sweet collaborators — including songwriters Julia Michaels, Amy Allen and Steph Jones — are largely the same as the team from emails i can't send. "I've really honed in on the people that I love making music with," she told Rolling Stone in June 2024.
As "Espresso" and "Please Please Please" indicated, Carpenter's knack for infectious and edgy lyrics isn't just the throughline across Short n' Sweet — it's become the epitome of both her artistry and her stardom. Her signature style ultimately helped her earn six nominations at the 2025 GRAMMYs, and shone through in both her performance and her heartfelt acceptance speech for Best Pop Vocal Album.
Just like her metaphorical friend the tortoise, Carpenter's long but steady journey has clearly paid off. As she's figured out who she is on her own terms, she's manifested the bonafide superstardom she's always imagined.
"I never had the plan B, and it wasn't even a thought in my mind that it wouldn't work out," she told Rolling Stone last year. "I just always knew it was about not if it would happen but when it would happen."
For Carpenter, every chapter of her artistry has built on the last; she's refused to rest on her laurels and continuously pursued new directions. She's creating work that wholeheartedly reflects her, and growing a loyal fan base because of it. Her first GRAMMY-winning album might be named Short n' Sweet, but her time as a pop superstar will be anything but.
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news
2025 GRAMMYs: Dan Nigro Wins Producer Of The Year
Recognized for his work with Chappell Roan and others, Nigro takes home the golden gramophone after being nominated in the Category for the second time.
Watch highlights from the 2025 GRAMMYs on live.GRAMMY.com.
The 2025 GRAMMYs telecast has been reimagined to raise funds for MusiCares Fire Relief, a dedicated campaign to support the people affected by the recent wildfires in the Greater Los Angeles Area. Donate now.
During the 2025 GRAMMYs Premiere Ceremony, Daniel Nigro was awarded Producer Of The Year, Non-Classical. The award is first golden gramophone in the Category and his second overall.
The producer was nominated for hit songs by Olivia Rodrigo and Chappell Roan, and was previously nominated in the Category last year. Keeping his speech short and sweet, Nigro thanked his wife, daughter, and musical partners for his win.
Nigro is nominated this year in four additional categories, including Song Of The Year and Record Of The Year for “Good Luck, Babe!” and Album Of The Year for The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess, both by Chappell Roan. He was nominated alongside Alissia, Dernst "D’Mile" Emile II, Ian Fitchuk, and Mustard for the award. It was given out by two-time GRAMMY winning producer and mixing engineer Bob Clearmountain.
Learn more: 2025 GRAMMY Nominations: See The Full Nominees List
Starting his career as part of the indie rock band As Tall As Lions, Nigro is credited on songs by Sky Ferreira, Caroline Polachek, and many others. He already has one GRAMMY Award under his belt for his work on Olivia Rodrigo’s Sour, which won Best Pop Vocal Album in 2022. He has 14 total nominations across his career, with five at this year’s GRAMMYs.
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interview
Producer Of The Year Nominee Mustard Talks "Not Like Us," Kendrick & Always Being A "10"
Mustard has been faithfully planting seeds in hip-hop and R&B for years and, at the 2025 GRAMMYs, is seeing the fruits of his labor. The L.A. native reflects on his nominations and the impact of wildfires on his hometown.
The 2025 GRAMMYs, officially known as the 67th GRAMMY Awards, will air live on CBS and Paramount+ on Sunday, Feb. 2. Watch highlights from the 2025 GRAMMYs on live.GRAMMY.com.
The 2025 GRAMMYs telecast will be reimagined to raise funds to support wildfire relief efforts and aid music professionals impacted by the wildfires in Los Angeles. Donate to the Recording Academy's and MusiCares' Los Angeles Fire Relief Effort To Support Music Professionals.
Editor’s Note: This interview was conducted before the onset of the wildfires in Los Angeles. The artist has since addressed the situation.
If you don't know who Mustard is by now, listen closely. His iconic tagline, "Mustard on the beat, hoe!", has appeared on tracks by R&B stars and popular rappers alike, while major brands like McDonald’s, Pixar, and the NFL have also shouted him out.
As of late, the GRAMMY-winning DJ, producer and rapper is best known for his work on Kendrick Lamar's Record Of The Year-nominated hit "Not Like Us" — one of multiple tracks submitted for Mustard's Producer Of The Year, Non-Classical nod at the 2025 GRAMMYs.
"All these awards mean a lot to me, but Producer Of The Year feels really special," Mustard tells GRAMMY.com. "If I win that one, I don't know what I'll do — probably cry or something."
Read more: 2025 GRAMMYs: See The OFFICIAL Full Nominations List
The Los Angeles native has long shown his versatility and vision, and that inventiveness has helped reshape the sound of an era. Mustard knew exactly what he wanted to do from a young age, and placed music at the center of his world. He planted a seed in his hometown, nurtured it with faith, and that faith took him far beyond Los Angeles.
Born Dijon McFarlane, Mustard first got behind the turntables at age 12, taking inspiration from his uncle Tyrei "DJ Tee" Lacy — a father figure who once DJed for Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg. He scored his first Top 10 hit, Tyga's "Rack City," when he was just 21. Soon, DJing parties at Dorsey High School in L.A.'s Baldwin Hills neighborhood, became headlining slots at Camp Flog Gnaw and, this April, a slot at Coachella.
Mustard won his first golden gramophone in 2019 for his work on "Boo'd Up," the breakout hit from Ella Mai — the first artist signed to his Ten Summers label. The following year, he scored a GRAMMY nomination for the chart-topping hip-hop anthem "Ballin" by Roddy Rich. Although he has yet to be nominated in the intervening years, Mustard kept busy with other artists and his own work; in 2024, Mustard released his fourth studio album, Faith Of A Mustard Seed. The album marked a turning point in Mustard's artistry as he raps for the first time, using his lyrics to share stories of his life challenges and growth. With a title given by the late Nipsey Hussle, Faith features standout collaborations with Travis Scott and Kirk Franklin that offer a new depth of sound.
Mustard dropped the word "DJ" from his name, but his roots have been far from forgotten — roots that became ever more important following the series of wildfires that rocked Los Angeles. "L.A. is home, and it's been a surreal feeling to see whole neighborhoods wiped out," Mustard says. "I know a lot of people think L.A. is superficial, but these families and businesses lost more than material things, so seeing people come together in our toughest moment, that's the real L.A.
"I always say L.A. is different because you really have people from all backgrounds and status showing up to help rebuild and regrow our communities," he continues. "It's a long road ahead of us, and this has impacted everyone in different ways. So I hope people continue to support and help rebuild once the fires are out and the news around it dies down a bit. The city needs us."
That spirit and commitment in the face of hardship is core to who Mustard is. He's continuously reinvented himself and his hunger for more pushed him to expand into new realms — as a CEO, producer, and artist — and his recognition at the 2025 GRAMMYs feels almost poetic. A decade in the making, this milestone aligns perfectly with his favorite number and the title of his record label. It's the ultimate full-circle moment for an artist who's always strived for greatness.
Read more: Where Do You Keep Your GRAMMY? | Mustard
GRAMMY.com recently sat down with the visionary producer and hitmaker to explore the driving force behind his Ten Summers label, the stories that shaped his recent productions, and the inspiration fueling Faith of a Mustard Seed.
You've shared before that the name of your record label, Ten Summers, was inspired by a Rick Ross lyric and your lucky number — tied to your birthday, your sister's, and your mother's. Now that it's officially been 10 summers, is there a new milestone you're aiming for?
I try to take it day by day because, honestly, these days, I don't know what's coming next. Sometimes, I look at what's happening and think, I can't believe this is real. So, I don't set limits or put a cap on it. It's really just about striving to be the best I can every single day.
Why only 10 Summers? Why not 100? Why not 200? Why not forever?
When you're younger, you don't really think about things in the long term. Ten years feels like forever, so you're not thinking about changing something after that or wondering why not make it a hundred years. You think about young people–– someone in their twenties, they see someone 34 and they might look at that as “older” to them.
I just thought if I could be on for Ten Summers, then I should be able to make a living and take care of my family. That's why I stopped at ten.
I have to ask you about "tv off." In previous interviews, you mentioned sending Kendrick Lamar beats every day. Was this included in one of your beat packages? Who's idea was it to scream your name?
Even after "Not Like Us," I continue — still to this day — sending him five or six beats a day. We have this folder where I just drop new stuff in. The first half of "tv off" and the second half are two different beats that he connected; I didn't send it to him like that. It was just like, out of those five beats, he picked two.
I didn't hear the song until it came out. I had heard "Hey Now" during the "Not Like Us" video shoot; he played me a snippet. I asked him, "Man, what made you do that?" And he said, "When I heard the beat, I just felt like Goku or something." I was like, "What?" And he explained, "Yeah, when I hear certain s— on your beats, it brings out something else in me, so I just did whatever I felt." I was like, "Wow, that's crazy."
You didn't know "Not Like Us"was coming out. You were on your way to a baby shower, and suddenly, you received messages from people telling you that Kendrick Lamar had dropped another song. How long ago did you make that beat before it was released?
My manager's birthday was April 7, and that track was made on his birthday. I remember it because it was the last beat I made before heading to his dinner. I remember Kendrick replying, saying, "This one is crazy," but I didn't think it was the craziest out of the pack.
Later on, his team asked about the sample in it or something like that. So, I knew he had rapped over it, but I didn't know it was "Not Like Us." People always ask for samples, and sometimes they can't clear them, so it doesn't come out. The sample is from the same jazz player, Monk Higgins, sampled in "tv off." It's the same band playing different songs.
How do you balance being a CEO and an artist, especially when it's album time?
I'm not sure I've fully mastered the balance yet. With Ella [Mai] and even Amirah, when I'm working on their album, I'm only working on their album. I can't really do two things at once with anything I do. So, I try to manage my time.
But when it's Ella's time, it's all about her. I don't do anything else outside of her music. I want to give her my full, undivided attention. I try to do that with all my artists, but Ella and I just have a rhythm.
After your 2019 album Perfect Ten, there was a significant break before you released Faith of a Mustard Seed. Why did it take so long to release your next album, and what was your mindset during those five years?
I was definitely overthinking a lot, and with me being a bit of a perfectionist, I had a clear vision of how I wanted it to sound. That was one of the challenges. On top of that, I switched labels, and then COVID hit, which threw everything off. I started working on this album before COVID, and it just became a lot. But I don't think it'll take me another five years to release another one — I'll never do that again.
How does it feel to be nominated for Producer Of The Year, especially for a select body of work that made such a big impact?
I mean, all these awards mean a lot to me, but Producer Of The Year feels really special. If I win that one, I don't know what I'll do — probably cry or something.
Last year, I was just trying to get Kendrick on my album, and now we've got one of the biggest songs ever together. Nobody could've told me this would play out like this. I just contribute it to God, staying on the right path and being a good person, and it's all coming back tenfold.
Do you feel pressure to stick to the formula that made you famous, and do you feel that pressure from the West Coast, especially L.A. fans?
I don't really feel pressure because, if you think about Faith Of A Mustard Seed, it's not the usual turned-up, ratchet Mustard. It's a conceptual album — a story where I'm rapping, stepping out of the box, and diving deeper into production. It's not just me making tracks that I can do with my eyes closed.
That project took time, and it took a lot out of me to create something of that caliber. I focus on what I think is best and what I know people will like. At the end of the day, I know who I am. If you like it, cool. If not, fast-forward.
What does your team look like these days, and how do you create?
When I had a lot of people, like a big team, helping with music, it just wasn't as productive as it is now. I'm on a full schedule: I get up in the morning, work out at seven, play tennis at ten, and I'm in the studio by two. I might call [producer] Sean Momberger and say,""Hey, can you chop me up some samples?" Or I might ask someone else, "Hey, just give me some keys."
When Sean sent me the sample for "Not Like Us," I was in the studio alone and did the whole thing solo. I think I'm working better now because I'm challenging myself to actually go in and make five beats a day. Even if it's four, I tell myself, You might not think it's the best, but Kendrick might. So, I'm in the studio every day, making beats — no engineer, nobody — just me, the mixing board, and the speakers.
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