

Taylor Swift
Taylor Swift is an American singer, songwriter, and actress. Hailing from a Christmas tree farm in West Reading, Pennsylvania, Swift moved to Nashville as a teen to jumpstart her career. Her 2006 self-titled debut quickly took the country world by storm, and she’d later switch genres to dominate the pop space as well. Her second album, Fearless, won the Grammy Award for Album of the Year, an accolade she’s received three more times for 1989, folklore, and Midnights, making her the first artist in history to receive the award four times.
In total, she’s released 11 studio albums, and in 2021, she began re-recording her first six records, known as Taylor’s Versions. (1989 (Taylor’s Version) was listed at no. 19 on Apple Music’s 100 Best Albums list.) In 2023, she embarked on her blockbuster Eras Tour, which took audiences on an ambitious journey through her work, highlighting her vast catalog of chart-topping hits—such as We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together, Shake It Off, Blank Space, and Cruel Summer—as well as fan-favorite deep cuts. She also counts Ed Sheeran, Post Malone, Future, Kendrick Lamar, Lana del Rey, The Chicks, Zayn Malik, Ice Spice, and more on her list of collaborators.
Swift—who was named Apple Music’s Songwriter of the Year in 2020 and Artist of the Year in 2023—has appeared in the films Valentine's Day, Cats, and Amsterdam, as well as Taylor Swift | The Eras Tour (Taylor's Version), which became the No. 1 concert film and documentary of all time.
Latest Release

- OCT 3, 2025 The Life of a Showgirl
What’s a girl gonna do after the record-smashing Eras Tour? Well, its success sparked the flame inside Taylor Swift that led to a reunion with former collaborators Max Martin and Shellback for her 12th full-length The Life of a Showgirl. Indeed, in a very showgirl manner, Swift flew back and forth to Sweden between stops on her European leg—remember, the singer-songwriter believes “jet lag is a choice”—to join Martin and Shellback, Swift’s co-writers and producers on some of the most memorable and popular hits of her career (“We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together,” “22,” “Shake It Off,” “Blank Space,” “Don’t Blame Me,” and “Delicate,” to name a few). The result? A confident, dazzling, at times elegant, at times cheeky, at times sensual pop explosion that examines Swift’s relationships and her fame, which is both deeply personal yet extremely relatable...mostly. (The struggles of “Elizabeth Taylor”—with its thumping rock vibes—can understandably be reserved for the uber-famous showgirls in the room.) “This album, by personality, was a funnier album,” she tells Apple Music’s Zane Lowe. “It was coming off of TORTURED POETS DEPARTMENT—the character attributes I was highlighting in that writing process were much more serious and sensitive and introspective, and oftentimes more earnest and stoic, and the characteristics of a poet. This one was like, showgirls are mischievous, fun, scandalous, sexy, fun, flirty, hilarious.” On the album’s first single “The Fate of Ophelia,” Swift tests that theory by dipping back into the Shakespearean well that earned her crossover success and adoring fans, and once again, she turns the Bard’s tale into a romance rather than a tragedy. But this time, it’s more mature and fierce—as the acceptant heroine resigns herself to solitude before the hero ever comes around: “I swore my loyalty to me, myself, and I/Right before you lit my sky up.” Her muses, of course, will be well-dissected. The aforementioned savior in “Ophelia” is most likely Swift’s husband-to-be, the three-time Super Bowl champion Travis Kelce. (She did, after all, announce the album on his podcast.) And he probably has a few more cuts dedicated to him—the most direct being the saucy, ’70s-funk-infused “Wood” and its “new heights of manhood” revelation. “When I met Travis, I started to feel a little bit like I could be like a person who could have romantic whims and have these dreams,” she says. “Actually Romantic,” with its semi-stripped-down production, deals not with a lover but with a certain hater. “You think I’m tacky, baby/Stop talking dirty to me/It sounded nasty but it feels like you’re flirting with me/I mind my business, God’s my witness that I don’t provoke it/It’s kind of making me wet,” Swift teases. And “Father Figure” pays homage to George Michael with Swift’s breathy vocals, ending with a menacing act of betrayal by a protégé: “You made a deal with this devil/Turns out my dick’s bigger/You want a fight, you found it/I got the place surrounded.” Importantly, though, remove Swift’s own personal inspirations and score-settling and you get what she does best: vibrant songs that speak to universal emotions through her storytelling. The buoyant “Opalite” shows two people finding each other at the right time; baroque-pop “Wi$h Li$t” portrays someone who knows what her heart desires. And “Eldest Daughter,” the famous track 5—generally one of Swift’s most vulnerable on each of her albums—reveals a promise of devotion. Swift ends the record on its title track, an epic duet with Sabrina Carpenter where the women volley back and forth about a girl named Kitty, perhaps alluding to their own places in the world. “And all the headshots on the walls of the dance hall are of the bitches who wish I’d hurry up and die/But I’m immortal now, baby dolls, I couldn’t if I tried,” Swift sings proudly. In other words, as she’s proven time and time again, she’ll never go out of style. “Making this was really something I’ve been wanting to do for my entire career, because I have always wanted to have fun in this type of way,” she says. “To have fun, to exhibit mischief and be flirty and fun and make jokes—that’s a huge part of my personality. Oftentimes, I get so serious, or I’m really known for a lot of my sad songs, my cathartic songs or breakup songs or whatever, because I love to write those things—but that’s not the place I’m in my life. So what I have left behind is something that really exhibits who I am in this moment.”
Discover More
Taylor Swift on Apple Music

Taylor Swift on Apple TV

Taylor Swift on Apple Podcasts

About
- FROM
- West Reading, PA, United States
- BORN
- December 13, 1989
- GENRE
- Pop