Carla's Song

Album: Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally (2026)
Charted: 38
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • Pop songs are often named after lovers, ex-lovers, or hypothetical lovers , but Harry Styles took a slightly different route with "Carla's Song." The title refers not to a grand romantic muse but to a real-life friend named Carla. It closes his fourth album, Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally, and according to Styles it ended up being "the most important part of the record... a song that answered so many questions."
  • The story begins with Styles and a group of friends gathered at someone's house, waiting to go to an afterparty. Carla mentions she had recently discovered Paul Simon; specifically, she had been feeling down and stumbled upon "50 Ways To Leave Your Lover" via a Norah Jones playlist, and had become obsessed with it. Styles asked her if she had heard Simon & Garfunkel. She hadn't, so he played her "Bridge Over Troubled Water."

    "When I lived in a pub a little bit when I was younger, there was a 4CD changer that I think the 'Bridge Over Troubled Water' record was in the whole time I lived there," Styles told Apple Music's Zane Lowe. "So I think it's why I like harmonies, listening to them so much."

    The sight of Carla experiencing that song for the first time reminded Harry what making music is actually for. "Watching her listen to it having never heard that song felt like I was just watching someone see something in technicolor; discover magic," he said. "There was something in that moment that reminded me of what, by making music, you're investing in. And it's songs that go so beyond our lifetime."
  • The conversation continued, and Styles played Carla another favorite: "Kathy's Song" from the 1966 Sounds of Silence album. That track, written by Paul Simon for his English girlfriend Kathy Chitty, is among Simon's most intimate compositions, a rumination on distance and longing that ends with the quietly devastating line, "There but for the grace of you go I."

    The naming of Styles' "Carla's Song" creates a direct lineage, a new song named in tribute to a friend, just as Simon named his after a woman who shaped his life.
  • "Carla's Song" is a character-driven piece that stands apart from the more personal, first-person material elsewhere on the album. Where songs like "Coming Up Roses" and "American Girls" put Styles' own anxieties and desires at the center, "Carla's Song" is shaped around someone else's experience: a friend's moment of discovery that reflected something back to Styles about his own purpose. It echoes the observational tone of the Harry's House track "Satellite," where Styles also explores connection from a slight narrative distance.
  • As the closing track of Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally, "Carla's Song" is the album's emotional resolution. After 11 tracks that move through desire, loneliness, self-examination, hedonism, and ambivalence, the album ends on a note of acceptance and gratitude for the quiet, enduring magic of a song finding the right person at the right moment.

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

Marvin Gaye

Marvin GayeFact or Fiction

Did Marvin try out with the Detroit Lions? Did he fake crazy to get out of military service? And what about the cross-dressing?

Corey Hart

Corey HartSongwriter Interviews

The Canadian superstar talks about his sudden rise to fame, and tells the stories behind his hits "Sunglasses At Night," "Boy In The Box" and "Never Surrender."

Lori McKenna

Lori McKennaSongwriter Interviews

Lori's songs have been recorded by Faith Hill and Sara Evans. She's performed on the CMAs and on Oprah. She also has five kids.

Gary LeVox

Gary LeVoxSongwriter Interviews

On "Life Is A Highway," his burgeoning solo career, and the Rascal Flatts song he most connects with.

Protest Songs

Protest SongsMusic Quiz

How well do you know your protest songs (including the one that went to #1)?

The Untold Story Of Fiona Apple's Extraordinary Machine

The Untold Story Of Fiona Apple's Extraordinary MachineSong Writing

Fiona's highly-anticipated third album almost didn't make it. Here's how it finally came together after two years and a leak.