Jack Antonoff couldn't be more prouder of Taylor Swift and Sabrina Carpenter's successes.
In an interview on Today, Antonoff discussed Swift and Carpenter's recent achievements in the music industry.
"It's wild," Antonoff said of the pop star's success, describing both as "the best."
Antonoff was responsible for producing Taylor Swift's record-shattering album, The Tortured Poets Department, calling its success "crazy."
In addition, he revealed his creative process behind the two records.
"I work not very far away, I work at a studio called Electric Lady and I'm up at the roof - it's sort of like a little bit of a small apartment up there," Antonoff explained. "We make all the records up there and when lots of people hear them, it feels amazing because we're sort of contained up there."
As for his writing process, Antonoff detailed how he gets inspired to write.
"You don't hear a lot of great songs about like, one's lunch order. So the things you don't really understand and cause you pain are usually things worth writing about," the Grammy-winning producer said, adding that he needs to be "compelled" to write music.
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Antonoff's production style has been criticized by the public very recently, especially after he was announced as one of the producers of Carpenter's upcoming new album, Short N' Sweet.
Carpenter had something to say to Antonoff's haters in a Rolling Stone interview.
"F**k them all," Carpenter said. "I think he's one of the most talented people I've ever met. When he's in a room, he's able to literally touch every instrument in the room and make it sound magical. He also works very fast, which I really appreciate because I work very fast."
Antonoff raved about Carpenter in the same Rolling Stone profile, saying she's becoming "one of the biggest young pop stars."
"..that song is such a statement of expressing yourself, not just lyrically, but sonically," Antonoff said about Carpenter's "Please Please Please." "I think that the aesthetic of not giving a fuck or the aesthetic of telling it like it is has become so popular that there's a lot of people who pander to that concept rather than are that concept. Sabrina actually is."
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