Becca Harvey approached Sweetness, her second girlpuppy album, with a newfound creative independence. Unlike her 2022 debut When I’m Alone, where she often deferred to collaborators, Sweetness was built entirely from her own lyrical and melodic ideas. Emerging from a relationship where she felt sidelined, she embraced a more personal, texturally rich sound, crafting a record about pushing back against self-doubt.
Harvey started by recording acapella voice memos, and, together with producer/co-writer Alex Farrar and additional collaborators, she found a balance between shoegaze, dream-pop, and early-2000s pop-rock. Sweetness pulses with distorted guitars and poison-sweet-hooks laced with both defiance and longing.
Lyrically, Sweetness is sharp and evocative, drawing from influences like Leonard Cohen and Avril Lavigne. Harvey captures heartbreak in vivid snapshots—on “I Just Do!,” she reminisces about making her partner’s friends laugh, while “I Was Her Too” humorously questions a cryptic song dedication from an ex. In “Windows,” she nods to Fleetwood Mac’s “Silver Springs,” emphasizing how personal interpretation shapes meaning.
At its core, Sweetness is about self-discovery—finding your voice, standing by it, and defining what matters on your own terms. With a mix of wit, catharsis, and towering melodies, Harvey cements herself as one of indie pop’s most compelling new voices.