Whether or not you've listened to her debut album The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess , you've likely heard the name Chappell Roan if you've been even slightly online in the last handful of months. Unless you live under a rock, you've definitely heard "Hot to Go!" The Missouri-born singer has been making music for nearly a decade now, but her stardom has undeniably skyrocketed since March of this year. Since then, she's opened for Olivia Rodrigo on tour, performed at Coachella, released her single "Good Luck, Babe!" had the biggest daytime set Lollapalooza has ever seen, and watched her nearly year-old album enter the top 10 of the Billboard 200 .

Today, she has nearly 40 million monthly listeners on Spotify. According to Billboard , her weekly streams are almost 20 times what they were at the beginning of this year. Chappell has been very open about how her meteoric rise to fame has affected her life and mental health thus far, both online and at her shows.

At a tour stop in Raleigh, North Carolina, she tearfully spoke to her audience , saying, “I just want to be honest with the crowd. I feel a little off today, because I think my career is going really fast and it’s hard to keep up. I’m just being honest, I’m having a hard time today.

” Last month, as a guest on Drew Afualo's podcast, The Comment Section , Chappell spoke about mistreatment from her fans, saying, "People have started to be freaks — like, follow me and know where my parents live, and where my s.