June 12, 2026 5:47 pm EDT

Olivia Rodrigo is back and in love — or at least, she was for a little while.

The 23-year-old details the promising beginnings, honeymoon phase, challenges and eventual heartbreak of a romantic relationship across her much-anticipated third album You Seem Pretty Sad for a Girl So In Love, released on Friday.

You Seem Pretty Sad for a Girl So In Love blends pop with ‘80s new wave, with Rodrigo enlisting The Cure icon Robert Smith as the lone featured artist on the project on standout “What’s Wrong With Me.” The singer’s two pre-release tracks, “Drop Dead” and “The Cure,” both perfectly set the stage for the album’s emotional highs-and-lows.

It’s an intimate, honest and ambitious album from one of the world’s biggest superstars, and it’s unequivocally some of the strongest work Rodrigo has put out to date since she burst on the scene in 2021 with her global smash “Driver’s License” from the Sour album. The whole record chronicles the promise of new love, and how complicated emotions like jealousy, self-doubt and unreciprocated effort can overshadow it.

The album is a notable departure from her last two albums — Sour and Guts, which both followed a similar formula, the latter leaning heavily into a harder sound. You Seem Pretty Sad for a Girl So In Love not only wades into sonic waters, but also leans into a new color scheme, aesthetic and overall feel. Rodrigo’s first two albums were steeped in purple, her signature color at the time, but this album is baby pink — both in its aesthetic and sound.

You Seem Pretty Sad for a Girl So In Love shows a different side to the singer, one that comes naturally in the adolescence to adulthood transition. While Sour chronicled teenage heartbreak and Guts was the edgy older sister that experimented with a more intense sound and look, Rodrigo’s new album leans into a more devastating take on heartbreak.

But You Seem Pretty Sad for a Girl So In Love comes across as simultaneously more personal than her previous two albums and more universal. Rodrigo may be older and wiser, but she’s still a woman scorned.

The Hollywood Reporter broke down all 13 of Rodrigo’s new songs below.



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