NEW YORK — Amy Allen might not yet be a household name, but her work lives in your brain rent-free. And it's grabbed the attention of the Grammys.
The 32-year-old songwriter has composed enduring hits with Halsey (''Without Me''), Selena Gomez (''Back to You'') and Tate McRae (''Greedy''). Her contributions to Harry Styles' ''Harry's House'' earned her a Grammy for album of the year in 2023. Other credits include songs from Olivia Rodrigo, Charli XCX, Rosé, Reneé Rapp, Shawn Mendes, Leon Bridges and Justin Timberlake.
2024, however, was the year Allen's work became inescapable — thanks in large part to her collaboration with another rising star. Allen co-wrote all 12 tracks of Sabrina Carpenter's bubbly ''Short n' Sweet,'' including ''Espresso,'' an instant song of the summer that propelled Carpenter to a new stratosphere of stardom, and ''Please Please Please,'' the follow-up single that proved that her winking, quotable pop had staying power. (Everyone's favorite lyric? ''Heartbreak is one thing, my ego's another / I beg you, don't embarrass me,'' followed by a rhyming profanity rasped with a smirk.)
This fall, Allen's work sent her to No. 1 on Billboard's Hot 100 Songwriters chart for seven weeks — an impressive feat, considering her competition includes artists like Carpenter herself and Kendrick Lamar.
''Once the songs are out of my hands, I just try to let them go to the world,'' Allen told The Associated Press. It helps that the world has, in turn, embraced them.
When nominations for the 67th Grammy Awards were announced, Allen was in the midst of a writing session in London. The news came in a text from her manager: She was nominated four times, including her second nomination in the songwriter of the year, non-classical, category that has only existed for three years. If she wins, she will become the first woman to take home that trophy. ''Short n' Sweet'' is up for album of the year and ''Please Please Please'' for song of the year.
Her fourth nod is in the song written for visual media category, for ''Better Place,'' a collaboration with NSYNC for ''Trolls: Band Together.''
''People really gravitate toward her energy, as well as obviously her talent. That just goes without saying,'' said Julia Michaels, another hit songwriter, artist and collaborator on ''Short n' Sweet,'' of Allen.