Taylor Swift once again dominates the music industry with the release of The Life of a Showgirl, her highly anticipated twelfth album on the pop planet. The artist, who recently wrapped the highest-grossing concert tour in music history, worked with producers Max Martin and Shellback, having previously collaborated on Reputation, Red, and 1989.
Here is a bouquet of twelve songs with which the star has acquired even more maturity, and with elegance.
Filled with loving lyrics, catchy melodies and scintillating choruses that are her signature, the artist also slips in some incisive rhymes and reflections on the pressures of fame and the industry.
“This album is about what was going on behind the scenes in my inner life during this tour, which was so exhuberant and electric and vibrant,” she announced, speaking of her latest album, while invited to her fiancé Travis Kelce’s podcast.
As promised, Taylor delivers, clearly at the top of her artistic game, as all of these characteristics are evident in her new songs.
The album begins with The Fate of Ophelia, a pop piece with darker inclinations where Swift sings her emotional rescue by Travis Kelce “If you’d never come for me, I might have drowned in the melancholy” leaving a free bar to live the moment. Nicely joined by a piano in the bridge, the piece immediately establishes the density of sonic atmospheres and mixed inspirations.
Self-deprecation comes in Elizabeth Taylor, the songwriter transposing her own relationship with fame with an energetic chorus and arrangements that give a nice nod to the decade.
The ode to budding love continues with the light and catchy Opalite, which offers us one of the album’s most effective earworms while allowing us to perceive its country roots. Father Figure stands out by reappropriating George Michael’s original melody to tell the heartbreaking story of a disloyal protégé with a touch of humor – in the same drawer as Bad Blood and Vigilante Shit.
Eldest Daughter begins quietly with piano and voice to tell us about the impossibility of living with the constant pressure induced by her oversized persona. In All Too Well or The Black Dog, she addresses herself and admits “I’ve been dying just from trying to seem cool”. In Ruin The Friendship, a piece filled with folk guitar and sunshine, she leans with musical delicacy on the subject of a friend who died tragically, with whom she never dared to follow her heart.
Enter the solid Actually Romantic, the official diss track that many are saying would be a response to Charli XCX’s Sympathy is a knife. The song starts off in a rock band style (a nod to The 1975?) and gives us a glimpse of what an alternative Taylor could be. One of the strongest tracks, filled with the pop-rock sound of the early 2000s, touching on Weezer and Fall Out Boys along the way. Wi$h Li$t, with its chiseled flow where she escapes stardom to find a happy home, and the danceable Wood on which she candidly sings about sex and superstitions with the welcome presence of a Jackson 5 riff, closing right after the celebratory half of the album on love.
Then comes CANCELLED!, perhaps or not about Blake Lively, a polished production in which the artist serves up the second seriously rock-tinged track on the album to defend her friendly choices – “I like ’em cloaked in Gucci and in scandal / Like my whiskey sour, and poison thorny flowers.”
Honey follows, the sensual atmosphere and saxophone setting the perfect stage for the finale with Sabrina Carpenter on the title track, The Life of a Showgirl. It’s a warning about fame alongside the woman who opened The Eras Tour with her and made a name for herself on YouTube with Taylor covers. It’s a beautiful duet, which could be interpreted as a passing of the torch. The listen ends with a recording of Taylor leaving the audience during the last show of her record-breaking tour.
A complete turnaround from her previous album filled with deep, dark songs about toxicity, her two broken relationships, and her insecurities, Taylor Swift returns with a light, bright album enriched by the new perspectives and happiness of newfound love.
Although it’s the shortest album of his career, the powerful visuals, sharp poetry, and deeply personal storytelling so beloved by fans are all there. The concise and meticulous production does justice to the material while blending influences from the 80s, pop-rock, folk-pop, disco, and some hints of Ariana Grande’s latest album. There’s no doubt about it: Max Martin remains the undisputed king of modern pop, and Taylor, the queen who is never satisfied with one artistic direction for long.























