
Sabrina Carpenter Will Make Her Opry Debut Because Apparently That’s Country Enough
The Grand Ole Opry is turning 100, and guess who is walking into that circle. Sabrina Carpenter.
This is the same Sabrina Carpenter who just dropped a pop record called Man’s Best Friend and racked up 180 million streams in a single week. It is also the same Sabrina Carpenter who headlined arenas, topped Billboard, and snagged a Grammy nomination for pop, even though she is not known as a country artist. Now she is booked for October 7 at the Mother Church of country music.
Some fans are scratching their heads, but Nashville insiders will tell you this move did not come out of nowhere. Carpenter has been dipping her boots into country for years. She has co-written with Nashville heavy-hitters like Amy Allen and Steph Jones. She has performed Shania Twain’s “That Don’t Impress Me Much” on tour, and she surprised a Nashville crowd with a cover of Dolly Parton’s “9 to 5.” She even cut a remix of her hit “Please Please Please” with Dolly earlier this year.
Dolly said she laid down the rules before they recorded together. She told Sabrina there would be no cussing, no mocking Jesus, and no trashing God. Sabrina agreed, and Dolly called her “so sweet.” That is about as close to a Nashville blessing as it gets.
It is not just the collaborations either. Her recent albums slip in little twangs inside the pop polish. Songs like “Slim Pickins” and “Go Go Juice” sneak in fiddle, banjo, and even a southern lilt in her voice. At Bridgestone Arena, she wore the hat and leaned into it. She may not be Patsy Cline, but she is at least showing up with respect for the culture.
Still, walking onto the Opry stage is different. That circle has seen Johnny Cash, Loretta Lynn, George Jones, Patsy, Hank, Dolly, and Garth. It is sacred ground. It is not just a gig, it is an initiation. And for a lot of fans, the question is whether Sabrina Carpenter has earned it yet.
The Opry thinks she has. To mark its 100th anniversary, they are stacking the bill with a mix of legends and curveballs. Laci Kaye Booth and Kameron Marlowe will be on the same lineup as Carpenter that night, and more artists are expected to be announced. The Opry is promising bigger shows, bolder moments, and surprise guests. Clearly, Carpenter is part of that gamble.
This is not the first time the Opry stretched its definition of country. Remember when Post Malone showed up? Or when rappers and pop stars joined the party? Nashville has always been protective of its traditions, but the Opry has also chased new audiences. That push and pull is part of what has kept it alive for a century.
Love it or hate it, Sabrina Carpenter is about to stand in the same circle that Hank Williams once owned. She will sing her songs, and fans will either cross their arms or clap along, maybe even both. But when Dolly Parton says you can sing her lines and Shania Twain invites you onstage, you are no longer just a pop outsider. You are part of the conversation.
So is Sabrina Carpenter country enough for the Opry? The answer, at least from the Opry itself, is yes. And on October 7, she will find out if the crowd agrees.