A few months ago Taylor Swift did something totally un-Swiftian, and surprise released her latest record ‘Folklore’. The indie-inspired album, which featured collaborations with Bon Iver and The National‘s Aaron Dessner, was remarkable and unexpected, and another example of the bold moves Swift has navigated throughout her career.
From the country of her early albums to the glittering synth-pop of ‘1989’ and experimental sounds of ‘Reputation’, this is an artist who’s constantly reinvented her sound. Yet at the core of it one thing remains: Swift’s sheer songwriting talent. It’s worth remembering that Taylor is the person who wrote ‘Love Story’ in 20minutes on her bedroom floor when she was only a teenager.
Now, almost a decade-and-a-half into her career, we look back on Swift’s glittering discography and rank every single one of her songs. That’s right: all 162 of ’em.
A few caveats to begin with â no officially unreleased songs have been included, nor songs that are “featuring Taylor Swift”. Anything written under a pseudonym has also been forgone (so her credit as Nils Sjöberg ‘This Is What You Came For’ isn’t given a look in). We have, however, included officially released cover songs â so that includes all of the Swifty renditions on the ‘Speak Now World Tour Live’ record and her bevvy of Christmas covers.
Additional words: El Hunt, Nick Reilly
‘Christmases When You Were Mine’ (2007)
Thereâve been a handful of Swift-does-Christmas moments over the years. Some are truly lovely â but this original tune from 2007 EP âThe Taylor Swift Holiday Collectionâ is not one of them.
‘Superstar’ (2008)
A syrupy song about Swift fancying a celebrity, the puppy love of âSuperstarâ is innocuous but bland.
‘You Are in Love’ (2014)
 A sweet bonus track from â1989â, itâs inoffensive but you can see why it was only bunged on the end of the deluxe edition of the album.
‘White Christmas’ (2007)
This festive cover is absolutely fine â nothing more, nothing less.
‘Silent Night’ (2007)
A cover of the classic Christmas carol, Swift well and truly puts her stamp on Franz Xaver Gruber’s song. Growing to a melodramatic finale, it’s an overblown rendition.
‘Beautiful Ghosts’ (2019)
Written by Swift and musical theatre composer Andrew Lloyd Webber for last year’s film adaptation of Cats, this is a bit slushy. But, no, we wouldn’t say it’s a CAT-astrophe.
‘Christmas Must Be Something More’ (2007)
Another festive tune: this time Swift questions the commercial nature of Christmas over rootinâ tootinâ country instrumentals, concluding that December 25th is actually about âthe birthday boy who saved our livesâ. Happy birthday JC!
‘Umbrella’ (2008)
An acoustic cover from Swift’s ‘iTunes Live from SoHo’ EP. It’s nice, but little more to it.
‘American Girl’ (2009)
A cover of the Tom Petty classic, you can’t deny it’s a beast of a song. But this slowed down rendition saps some of the energy out of it.
‘Last Christmas’ (2007)
There’s plenty of Christmas joy in this cover, but it doesn’t have a patch on the Wham! classic.
‘King of My Heart’ (2017)
This electro-pop moment has a sweet sentiment: that the extravagance of past relationships isnât what Swift wants anymore, and now this new love interest could be The One (“Is this the end of all the endings? / My broken bones are mending”). But this soppiness is delivered over jittery instrumentation, which three years on already sounds dated.
‘If This Was A Movie’ (2010)
A bonus track from ‘Speak Now’, âIf This Was a Movieâ is frustratingly repetitive. With its droning guitar licks and dreary chorus, it stutters towards the finish line.
‘Last Kiss’ (2010)
A plodding waltz from ‘Speak Now’. Fine, but by no means vintage Taylor.
‘Santa Baby’ (2007)
A twee cover of the iconic Christmas song, it’s a sauceless version of the usually sultry festive bop.
‘I Did Something Bad’ (2017)
A cavernous slab of EDM, this was basically Swift proving that sheâs a good girl gone bad. The devilish lyrics are fun (âThey say I did something bad / Then why’s it feel so good?â), the dubstep-laced hook of “Ra-di-di-di-di-di-di-di-di-di-da-da” less so.
‘You’re Not Sorry’ (2008)
Imagine Swift doing Eurovision â this is what ‘You’re Not Sorry’ sounds like. Filled with melodramatic piano chords and overdone vocals, it’s a histrionic ballad that you can imagine accompanied with bombastic visuals and a ton of pyro.
‘Girl At Home’ (2012)
The bubbling ‘Girl at Home’ fuses the driving country of ‘Red’ with bleeping 8-bit sounds, and is a sweet but bland tune.
‘Come Back… Be Here’ (2012)
A weepy ballad where Swift reminisces over a lost love, this is uneventful â but fair play to Swift for managing to get “nonchalant” into a pop song.
‘I Want You Back’ (2011)
A cover of The Jackson 5 taken from the from live album ‘Speak Now World Tour â Live’, this 90-second cover is short, sweet and absolutely fine.
‘The Way I Loved You’ (2008)
A bit of a head-banging country moment, ‘The Way I Love You’ lacks the radio-ready hooks and megawatt moments of Swift’s other tunes.
‘So It Goes…’ (2017)
An ethereal synth-pop moment laced with EDM and trap, this ‘Reputation’ cut is sleepy filler.
‘Sweet Escape’ (2011)
This Gwen Stefani cover is deliciously entertaining, with Swift spitting out the tongue-twister pre-chorus of “Cause I’ve been acting like sour milk that fell on the floor / It’s your fault you didn’t shut the refrigerator” and almost nailing it. Taken from the Target DVD version of ‘Speak Now World Tour â Live’, is an intriguing rendition.
‘This Is Why We Can’t Have Nice Things’ (2017)
This song was written as a response to the media after they criticised her decision to throw big parties for her pals and get them up on stage during the tour for ‘1989’ â things she considered ânice thingsâ; a powerful sentiment, but an acquired taste.
‘Haunted’ (2010)
Sounding like it should be accompanying a wild fantasy movie, with over-the-top strings and belted vocals, âHauntedâ feels like the younger sibling to Swiftâs fairy-tale epics such as âLove Storyâ. Theyâre fine, but lack the nuance that some of her enchanting, happy ending filled romances boast.
‘Long Live’ (2010)
A fairly pedestrian song from âSpeak Nowâ, âLong Liveâ is a fairly generic slice.
‘You’re Not Sorry’ (2008)
A routine ballad complete with plodding piano chords and melodramatic strings.
‘Ours’ (2010)
With its muted acoustic instrumentals and mawkish lyrics, âSpeak Nowâ is sickly sweet.
‘Breathe’ feat. Colbie Caillat (2008)
A sleepy, acoustic number that sees Swift teaming up with American singer-songwriter Colbie Caillat, itâs a largely forgettable tune taken from âFearlessâ.
‘Drops of Jupiter’ (2011)
Another cover from the ‘Speak Now’ live album, this rendition of Train’s 2001 hit ‘Drops of Jupiter’ is a stripped-back version of the bombastic pop rock song.
‘âŠReady for It?’ (2017)
This slab of industrial pop opens Swift’s ‘Reputation’. With its dubstep wubs, EDM beats and trappy instrumentals, this messy number feels like a tug of war between this collection of different genres.
‘This Love’ (2014)
A weepy moment from â1989â, âThis Loveâ feels remarkably maudlin when nestled in-between the bevvy of synth-pop bops that Swiftâs fifth album holds.
‘A Place In This World’ (2006)
 Written when she was just 13 years old, âA Place In This Worldâ, it feels like a glimpse into a Swift’s secret diary. Opening with the wonderfully teenage: “I don’t know what I want, so don’t ask me”, itâs the musical equivalent of telling your mum that she just doesnât understand you!
‘Superman’ (2010)
If you were ever imagining what Taylor Swift covering McFly would sound like â this could be it. The cheesy âSpeak Nowâ bonus track is filled with adolescent lyrics (âI watch superman fly away / Come back, I’ll be with you somedayâ), and is topped off with a pop-punk tinged chorus.
‘I Heart?’ (2008)
Taken from Swift’s second EP ‘Beautiful Eyes’ â one that was exclusively released in Walmart in the US â this is a lovely country bop.
‘A Perfectly Good Heart’ (2006)
An absolutely fine slice of country-pop from TayTayâs first album. On ‘A Perfectly Good Heart’ Swift depicts her very first experience of heartbreak. Itâs one of her earliest breakup ballads, but quasi-emotive couplets like “It’s not unbroken anymore / How do I get it back the way it was before?” fail to pack the emotional punch some of Swiftâs later tunes do.
‘Untouchable’ (2008)
This cover of rock band Luna Haloâs âUntouchableâ is sweet, but largely unexciting.
‘Jump Then Fall’ (2008)
A bonus track taken from the platinum edition of ‘Fearless’. Swift herself has described the song as “really bouncy and happy and lovey”. It’s an accurate description, as the bouncing banjo-led number is sickly sweet, but lacks much depth.
‘Sad Beautiful Tragic’ (2012)
A weeper taken from âRedâ, this gloomy tune sees Swift reflect on a relationship that was a “sad, beautiful, tragic love affair”.
‘Bette Davis Eyes’ (2011)
A song popularised by Californian singer-songwriter Kim Carnes in 1981, Taylor’s live cover of ‘Bette Davis Eyes’ is nice but innocuous.
‘Look What You Made Me Do’ (2017)
It’s only TayTay sampling Right Said Fred’s ‘I’m Too Sexy’! The bolshy ‘Reputation’ lead single saw Swift giving a massive middle-finger up to the haters, and accompanied her comeback after a year-long hiatus. It impact was huge at the time, but in the meantime âLook What You Made Me Doâ feels like a bit of a mis-step.
‘Crazier’ (2009)
It appeared on the soundtrack for âHannah Montana: The Movieâ, and critics said it was the best song in the film. Bad luck, Miley.
‘Eyes Open’ (2012)
From the soundtrack to The Hunger Games, âEyes Openâ sees Swift go stadium rock. Too bad hair-whipping numberâs repetitive chorus begins to grate.
‘Nashville’ (2011)
A cover of Nashville-based singer-songwriter David Mead’s ‘Nashville’, this cover (taken from the Target exclusive version ‘Speak Now World Tour â Live’; yes, we’re really into the deep-cuts here) is pretty impassioned .
‘Invisible’ (2006)
On this lacklustre cut from Swiftâs eponymous debut album âInvisibleâ, she laments feeling invisible to the boy she fancies. Itâs a bleak sentiment, and the emotive instrumentals in âInvisibleâ mimic this.
‘Hoax’ (2020)
The least memorable moment from the fantastic âFolkloreâ, this slow, waltzing tune is inoffensive, but lacks excitement.
‘London Boy’ (2019)
The lyrics to this âLoverâ cut are wild. On âLondon Boyâ Swift proudly asserts her love for the nationâs capital, listing her fave places (including Brixton, Shoreditch, Highgate and for some God-forsaken reason âwalking Camden Market in the afternoonâ). With a bizarre spoken word intro from James Corden and Idris Elba, itâs cringe and weirdly entertaining in equal measures.
‘Wonderland’ (2014)
Itâs Swift does EDM, and itâs total chaos (albeit with a chorus thatâll be frustratingly caught in your head for weeks on end).
‘Tied Together with a Smile’ (2006)
A bonus track from the debut album, âTied Together With a Smileâ was written the day Swift found out one of her best mates was bulimic. An early indicator of Swift’s impressive turn of phrase (âAnd you’re tied together with a smile / But you’re coming undoneâ), itâs a lovely country moment.
‘Beautiful Eyes’ (2008)
The title track from Swift’s EP of the same name, ‘Beautiful Eyes’ is an underrated stomper from TayTay’s extended discography.
‘This Is Me Trying’ (2020)
A slow-burner from âFolkloreâ, this soft ballad sees Swift grapple with accepting blame for a crumbling relationship.
‘My Tears Ricochet’ (2020)
This Jack Antonoff co-write from ‘Folklore’ is about an âembittered tormentor showing up at the funeral of his fallen object of obsession.â Although fairly unremarkable, it does include the brilliantly Swiftian put-down: âAnd if I’m dead to you, why are you at the wake?” Ooft.
‘Me!’ feat. Brendon Urie of Panic! at the Disco (2019)
A saccharine collaboration with Panic! at the Discoâs Brendon Urie, this semi-irritating (and unbearably catchy) tune is an absolutely fine single from Miss Swift. Although it gained several places in our ranking after Swift removed the âSpelling is fun!â lyric.
‘Come In With the Rain’ (2008)
‘Come In With The Rain’ sees Taylor showing off the country-pop that defined her early years. It’s a nostalgic snapshot at Taylor’s life before world domination became the main priority. NR
‘Better Than Revenge’ (2010)
“She’s not a saint and she’s not what you think / She’s an actress,â Swift savagely sings on âBetter than Revengeâ before delivering the seething kiss-off: âShe’s better known for the things that she does / On the mattress, whoa”. Itâs a ruthless take-down of the girl who stole your man, and comes with a roaring guitar riffs thatâll make you want to open a mosh-pit.
‘Cold As You’ (2006)
As Shakespeare once wrote in ‘Sonnet 18’ â âShall I compare thee to a summer’s day?â If itâs Tay Tay youâre asking, then absolutely not. Instead, this break-up ballad compares thee to a grey, dreary and completely sodden wash-out of a day. EH
‘Never Grow Up’ (2010)
Taken from âSpeak Nowâ, this ballad moment peers out into a dimly lit crowd, and sees Swift dealing out her best life advice for younger fans in particular. âI look out into a crowd every night and I see a lot of girls that are my age and going through exactly the same things as I’m going through,” she’s said. “Every once in a while I look down and I see a little girl who is seven or eight, and I wish I could tell her all of this. There she is becoming who she is going to be and forming her thoughts and dreams and opinions. I wrote this song for those little girls.â EH
‘Bad Blood’ feat. Kendrick Lamar (2017)
This Kendrick Lamar-featuring cut is right at home on Taylor Swiftâs villainous âReputationâ â a record on which she embraced her false depictions in the media, and ran with them. Swift herself said that itâs a song about a friendship with a fellow pop star that turned sour: âShe basically tried to sabotage an entire arena tour,â she told Rolling Stone. âShe tried to hire a bunch of people out from under me.” EH
‘Afterglow’ (2019)
It’s a crying shame that the track fails to live up to its title. There’s little that live longs in the memory about this drum-driven number from ‘Lover’. NR
‘The Other Side of the Door’ (2008)
A slightly slept-on fan favourite, âThe Other Side of the Doorâ features a deliciously dramatic guitar solo and even more melodrama. Like so: âI said, âleaveâ, but all I really want is you to stand outside my window throwing pebbles screaming ‘I’m in love with you’â. Exquisite. EH
‘Soon You’ll Get Better’ feat. the Chicks (2019)
Featuring country music icons The Chicks, âSoon Youâll Get Betterâ is one of Swiftâs most personal songs; both of her parents have had cancer, and this year the singer confirmed that her mother Andrea has been diagnosed with a brain tumour. Itâs a difficult listen precisely because itâs so incredibly honest. âI hate to make this all about me but who am I supposed to talk to?â she asks. âWhat am I supposed to do if there’s no you?â EH
‘Miss Americana & the Heartbreak Prince’ (2019)
A slow burning, electro-pop moment thatâs meant for soundtracking a moody walk to the shops in the rain.
‘Ronan’ (2012)
One of Swiftâs most affecting ballads, this song pieces together quotes from a blog by a mother named Maya Thompson, who wrote about her journey with four-year-old son Ronan, who died from a rare cancer called neuroblastoma in 2011. Swift credited his mum as a co-writer and donated all the proceeds to charity. EH
‘Stay Beautiful’ (2006)
This twanging debut cut is dedicated to the high school crush that Swifty never worked up the courage to ask out; and by the time he moved away, it was too late. âAfter hearing my songs, a lot of people ask me, `How many boyfriends have you had?’â she said of the song. âAnd I always tell them that more of my songs come from observation than actual experience. In other words, you don’t have to date someone to write a song about them. This is a song I wrote about a guy I never dated!â EH
‘A Place in This World’ (2006)
Written by Swift when she was 13 â another one! â ‘A Place In This World’ saw her discussing the dream of becoming a world famous musician. 17 years on, it’s fair to say that teenage TayTay would be damn proud of herself. NR
‘Tell Me Why’ (2008)
Despite including the brilliantly searing take-down of “You could write a book on how to ruin someone’s perfect day” this up-tempo bop is errs on the side of humdrum.
‘The Outside’ (2006)
One of the first songs Swift ever wrote, âThe Outsideâ speaks to the feeling of being a misfit growing up: âSo how can I ever try to be better?â Â she asks, âNobody ever lets me inâ. EH
‘Getaway Car’ (2017)
This banger from âReputationâ references novelist Charles Dickens, epic war film The Great Escape, a runaway Bonnie and Clyde and even various meta details from Swiftâs own romantic life. EH
‘Mirrorball’ (2020)
In her candid 2020 documentary Miss Americana, Taylor Swift speaks about the struggle of your every move being followed by an audience and remarks that many women, particularly in pop, are âdiscarded in an elephant graveyard by the time theyâre 35.â Broadly, this is what âMirrorballâ seems to be about; balancing her skill for performing with the huge pressure of constant reinvention. âAll I do is try, try, try I’m still on that trapeze,â she says, âI’m still trying everything, to keep you looking at meââ. EH
‘Change’ (2008)
Delivered as an official anthem for the 2008 US Olympic Team, here’s a track that sees Swift exploring the idea of overcoming adversity on the road to success. It’s easy to be cynical about it all, but it gave Swift her first US top 10, so maybe that message got through after all. NR
‘Innocent’ (2010)
Sometimes the best revenge is to take the moral high ground. And performing at the MTV VMAs â where Kanye West infamously snatched the mic from Taylor Swift mid-acceptance speech â Swift appeared to get hers by playing âInnocentâ. âYou’re 32 and still growing up now,” she sings. Guess how old West was when he declared âIâmma let you finish, butâŠâ Yep. EH
‘Begin Again’ (2012)
Marking one of âRed’âs more pointed returns to her country roots, âBegin Again is, according to Swift, âabout when you’ve gotten through a really bad relationship and you finally dust yourself off and go on that first date after a horrible breakup, and the vulnerability that goes along with all that”. EH
‘I Know Places’ (2014)
Ahead of making â1989â Swift long harboured ambitions of working with Ryan Tedder â most recognisable as the lead vocalist of One Republic and record producer for everyone from Adele to Lady Gaga. And their eventual collaboration came about on âI Know Placesâ â a song that explores falling in love amid high pressure fame, and finding places to outrun the cameras. EH
‘The Lucky One’ (2012)
Speculation orbits around âThe Lucky Oneâ â which dissects the more taxing sides of fame that people donât speak about. âNow it’s big black cars, and Riviera views, and your lover in the foyer doesn’t even know you,â Swift sings, âand your secrets end up splashed on the news front pageâ. Fans reckon itâs about everyone from Joni Mitchell and Shania Twain to Kim Wilde. Possibly, it could also be a reflection of Swiftâs future fears. EH
‘You Need to Calm Down’ (2019)
Delivering an effective riposte to endless streams of internet trolls can often prove to be the toughest of tasks. It’s testament to Swift then, that she managed to deliver a swift fuck you, all packaged up in the shape of a bonafide banger. Bow down. NR
‘How You Get the Girl’ (2014)
The 10th track from â1989â is like the less sabotage-hungry answer to Robynâs âCall Your Girlfriendâ â here, Taylorâs full with useful tips for winning an ex back after an unwise dumping. Sheâs even got a script ready. âAnd then you say: “I want you for worse or for better, I would wait forever and ever,â she sings, âbroke your heart / I’ll put it back together.â EH
‘New Year’s Day’ (2017)
The groggy clear up that takes place after a raucous New Yearâs house party has never sounded so idyllic â despite the fact their entire floor is splattered with glitter and stale old beer spilling out of half-empty bottles, Swiftâs just happy to have a worthy clean-up buddy. âI want your midnights,â she sings, âbut I’ll be cleaning up bottles with you on New Year’s Dayâ Sometimes those small, mundane moments are just as romantic. EH
‘Dress’ (2017)
By a mile the steamiest cut from âReputationâ, this slinking song details the pang of secret lust in breathy falsetto. âCarve your name into my bedpost, âcause I donât want you like a best friend,â Swifty pleads. âOnly bought this dress so you could take it off.â Get it, girl! EH
‘Mary’s Song (Oh My My My)’ (2006)
This debut album cut is archetypal vintage Swift, drawing on the people around her for storytelling material. Twanging and country-pop, âMary’s Song (Oh My My My)â borrows Swiftâs next door neighbour â and her long, rock-solid marriage â as a protagonist. âI’ll be 87, you’ll be 89,â she sings wistfully, âI’ll still look at you like the stars that shine in the sky.â EH
‘Christmas Tree Farm’ (2019)
Sure, it’s cheesier than an explosion at the Kraft factory, but this track sees Taylor successfully using the festive season to look back on her own childhood (she grew up on a Christmas tree farm). Christmas is now Swiftmas. NR
‘Everything Has Changed’ feat. Ed Sheeran (2012)
Warm, fuzzy, and firmly hanging onto its rose-tinted glasses, this collaboration from âRedâ has a cutesy video to match, featuring miniature child versions of the pop stars. EH
‘Should’ve Said No’ (2006)
âIt’s strange to think the songs we used to sing, the smiles, the flowers, everything is gone; yesterday I found out about you,â sings Swift in the opening lines of this debut album cut â which exposes a boyfriend for cheating, and proceeds to rip him apart atop country-rock guitars and a ripper of a string solo. EH
‘The Last Time’ feat. Gary Lightbody (2012)
On this intensely catchy anthem from âRedâ, Swift teams up with none other than gruff-vocaled Gary Lightbody from Snow Patrol â lighters in the air, everyone. EH
‘Starlight’ (2012)
This âRedâ cut sees Swift transporting back to the 1940s â inspired by a photo of two loved-up teenagers dancing together. The teenagers in the photograph were actually US senator Bobby Kennedy and his future wife Ethel, and âStarlightâ imagines their adventures early on. âI ended up meeting Ethel and going and playing it for her,â she wrote of the song, âand she just loved it,â. EH
‘The Best Day’ (2009)
R’The Best Day’ is one of Swift’s earliest odes to her mother Andrea. Recalling her happy childhood, it’s a sweet, if somewhat cloying look at the early years of the planet’s biggest pop star. NR
‘I’m Only Me When I’m With You’ (2006)
Easily one of the more head-banging moments of Swiftâs debut â with the hardest slapping violin solo of 2006 â âI’m Only Me When I’m with Youâ is dedicated to the singerâs best mate Abigail Anderson, who also features in the video. EH
‘It’s Nice to Have a Friend’ (2019
A minimal intermingling of steel drums and choral backing vocals, âItâs Nice to Have a Friendâ arrives near the end of Swiftâs âLoverâ â and also features some snow-tinted nostalgia, and slightly rogue but highly enjoyable brass solo. EH
‘The Moment I Knew’ (2012)
Nine years ago, Taylor Swift had a right stinker of a 21st birthday â her ex boyfriend never showed, and left her sobbing beneath the Christmas lights (her birthday is on the 13th December). Still, at least it inspired this deluxe edition âRedâ song. EH
‘Paper Rings’ (2019)
This fidgety cut from âLoverâ is Swiftyâs big jitterbug moment â singing about her current boyfriend Joe Aldwyn , she declares that sheâs willing to chuck aside all her magpie tendencies just to be with him. âI like shiny things, but I’d marry you with paper rings,â she sings. Loved up â and thrifty! EH
‘Only The Young’ (2020)
‘Only The Young’ saw Taylor truly nailing her political colours to the mast for the first time. Tackling gun violence and providing a message of hope for the next generation, Taylor emerged as the activist we all need right now. NR
‘Treacherous’ (2012)
One of the quieter moments from âRedâ, âTreacherousâ eventually grows to a subtle roar, and details a pairing thatâs gradually unravelling like a ball of twine. âAll we are is skin and bone, trained to get along / Forever going with the flow,â she sings, âbut you’re frictionâ. EH
‘Better Than Revenge’ (201)
Across Taylor Swiftâs entire back catalogue, âBetter than Revengeâ is perhaps best suited to soundtracking an angsty high school drama; think along the lines of 10 Things I Hate About You. It has its fair share of cutting one-liners, too. Case in point: âno amount of vintage dresses gives you dignityâ. Burn. EH
‘I Wish You Would’ (2014)
Co-written with frequent collaborator Jack Antonoff, âI Wish You Wouldâ started with a guitar line Antonoff sent to Swift during her Red tour â and it eventually evolved into this slightly Haim-ish pop juggernaut. Lyrically, it tells the story of a heartbroken protagonist who watches her window in the middle of the night and notices that headlights keep flickering past at the same time. âIt’s two AM, here we are,â she sings for the big reveal, âI see your face, hear my voice in the dark.â EH
‘Stay Stay Stay’ (2012)
If thereâs anyone who specialises in nailing the many sides of romance, itâs Tay Tay â case in point, âStay Stay Stayâ. The songâs placed immediately after the defiant break-up anthem âWe Are Never Getting Back Togetherâ on âRedâ â and in many ways, itâs that songâs foil. Atop chronically catchy ukulele, she details a more generous kind of love thatâs still worth fighting for. EH
‘Sweeter Than Fiction’ (2013)
Taken from the soundtrack for the movie One Chance, this John Hughes-channelling tune is a new-wave belter that forecast the shimmering synth-pop of Swiftâs fifth album â1989â.
‘False God’ (2019)
A sultry, R&B ballad filled with religious imagery and trap beats, âFalse Godâ finds Swift all grown up.
‘Don’t Blame Me’ (2017)
This thundering, foot-stomping, fist-pumping moment from âReputationâ will make you want to set fire to your exâs car (in the best possible way).
‘August’ (2020)
This Jack Antonoff co-write from ‘Folklore’ is a melancholic dream-pop ballad. Part of a trio of songs that Swift has dubbed the Teenage Love Triangle, âAugustâ is the tune that comes from the point of view of the other woman, telling the story of forbidden love.
‘The Lakes’ (2020)
The ethereal âFolkloreâ bonus track sees TayTay channel the Lake Poets in a romantic number about love, resilience and the Lake District.
‘Daylight’ (2019)
The lovely final song on âLoverâ is wistful number about healing, hope and healthy new relationships.
‘Welcome to New York’ (2014)
The opening track on â1989â, âWelcome to New Yorkâ ushers you into the sleek synth-pop world of Swiftâs fifth album. With its bouncing bassline and hand-clapped beats, itâs a bombastic tribute to the Big Apple.
‘I Forgot That You Existed’ (2019)
There comes a moment while growing up when you just stop caring about what everybody else thinks of you. The fizzing opening track on âLoverâ celebrates this, with TayTay rejoicing in the peace and quiet brought on by not giving a shit about the haters.
‘Hey Stephen’ (2008)
‘Hey Stephen’ is the stuff of gooey rom-coms. “‘Cause I can’t help it if you look like an angel,” Swift sings over warm instrumentation, “can’t help it if I wanna kiss you in the rain”. Itâs wonderfully schmaltzy stuff, and comes with a chorus youâll sing full belt after a Tinder-date-gone-right â just donât let the date hear you.
‘I Almost Do’ (2012)
‘I Almost Do’, Swift’s explained, is “about the conflict that you feel when you want to take someone back, and you want to give it another try, but you know you can’tâ. Exploring the internal battle between moving forward and looking back, the poignant ballad fuses country-pop with soft-rock, and the result is a brutally honest and quietly powerful song.
‘I Think He Knows’ (2019)
This sharp-edged, upbeat moment from âLoverâ would have stood up well as a single â charting those early will-they-wonât-they moments complete with suggestive sighs. EH
‘Mad Woman’ (2020)
This âFolkloreâ track skewers the sexist trope of angry women being branded hysterical. âEvery time you call me crazy, I get more crazy,â she claps back, rising to the challenge, âwhat about that?â EH
‘Peace’ (2020)
Like much of âFolkloreâ, the sparse âPeaceâ ponders how much life has changed, and celebrates a partnership strong enough to withstand the soaring highs and painful lows alike. EH
‘Picture to Burn’ (2006)
Peak debut album angst, âPicture to Burnâ is jam-packed with sizzlingly mean one liners. Case in point: âI hate that stupid old pickup truck you never let me drive / You’re a redneck heartbreak who’s really bad at lyingâ. EH
‘Fearless’ (2008)
Taylor Swift wrote the title track for her second album while touring her self-titled debut â whisked away from everyday life, the song muses on the perfect rainy first date. âI wanna ask you to dance right there, in the middle of the parking lot,â she says. EH
‘Seven’ (2020)
Chiming and reflective, this string-adorned âFolkloreâ track sees Swift hark back to childhood: âplease picture me in the trees,â goes the opening line, throwing back to the Pennsylvanian Christmas tree farm where she grew up. Itâs a snapshot of being young and carefree while real life gradually creeps into the picture â the song appears to be addressed to a friend who had a difficult upbringing. EH
‘Call It What You Want’ (2017)
As far as years go, Taylor Swiftâs 2016 was relatively tumultuous, featuring the whole âFamousâ lyrics debacle feud with Kanye West and Kim Kardashian and two very public break-ups. âCall It What You Wantâ appears to address the singer weathering that particular series of storms, and finding quiet contentment with partner Joe Aldwyn. âCall it what you want,â sings a smitten Swifty: she doesnât care what people think any more. EH
‘Death By A Thousand Cuts’ (2019)
Apparently inspired by the 2019 film Someone Great (which in part took influence from Swiftâs â1989â closer âCleanâ) this upbeat track from âLoverâ seems to get inside the head of the filmâs music journalist protagonist right before she flees heartbreak to another city. âI ask the traffic lights if it’ll be alright,â Swift sings, âthey say, “I don’t know”. EH
‘Dear John’ (2010)
Is âDear Johnâ about Taylor Swiftâs short-lived relationship with the musician John Mayer? Well â John Mayer certainly thinks so: he told Rolling Stone he was âhumiliatedâ by the song, and added that âit was a really lousy thing for her to do.â Â Tay Tay remained tight-lippedL âHow presumptuous!â she told New York Daily News. EH
‘End Game’ feat. Ed Sheeran and Future (2017)
Taylorâs own homage to the R&B-laced slow jam, âEnd Gameâ is less spiky than the rest of âReputationâ â instead Swift muses on wanting her relationship to last forever, while Ed Sheeran and Future chip in with punny takes on reputations that precede them. EH
‘White Horse’ (2008)
The dual-Grammy winning ‘White Horse’ is wonderfully understated moment. Filled with romantic, fairy-tale imagery, it’s run through a realist filter that makes it like the older, more sceptical sister to ‘Love Story’. Itâs one of the best Swift heart-break ballads.
‘Epiphany’ (2020)
The warm, unpretentious âEpiphanyâ is an exquisite âFolkloreâ song. Filled with powerful instrumentals that could have fallen off the latest Bon Iver record and Aaron Dessnerâs glittering production, it sees Swift go full-on indie.
‘The Archer’ (2019)
The minimalist The Archer is a meditative moment from âLoverâ. Filled with ambient synths and soft instrumentals, as Swift discloses her own insecurities in a remarkably vulnerable way.
‘Holy Ground’ (2012)
This galloping soft-rock moment celebrates whirlwind romances, and comes with a chorus perfect for shouting along to on road trips.
‘I Donât Wanna Live Forever’ with Zayn Malik (2017)
Look, it might have come from the soundtrack to the Fifty Shades of Grey sequel; but that doesn’t mean that Taylor’s collab with ex-1D member Zayn isn’t a bit of a banger. All sensual electro-pop and breathless vocals, this sultry number deserved better than the film it was soundtracking.
‘Betty’ (2020)
This swaying folk-rock tune tells the tale of a cheating boyfriend trying to apologise for his indiscretions is a highlight of ‘Folklore’. With its woozy harmonica riffs and chiming vocals, itâs a beaut.
‘All You Had to Do Was Stay’ (2014)
A sweltering synth-pop banger that comes off like Carly Rae Jepsenâs âEmotionâ meets Lordeâs âMelodramaâ.
‘Fifteen’ (2008)
âFifteenâ is one of Swiftâs greatest ever songwriting moments. The cautionary tale of young love it as a country epic â complete with the utterly shattering line âAbigail gave everything she had to a boy / Who changed his mind and we both criedâ.
‘Back To December’ (2010)
‘Back To December’ is a musical apology, with Swift explaining that she decided to write it as âsometimes you learn a lesson too late and at that point you need to apologise because you were careless,â. With an accompanying orchestra and grandiose instrumentals, itâs unflinching and honest, with Swift taking responsibility and asking for forgiveness after a breakup.
‘Cornelia Street’ (2019)
A highlight from âLoverâ, âCornelia Streetâ is a dazzling tune thatâs made even more powerful in this acoustic version performed in Paris last year.
‘Safe & Sound’ (2012)
Before Swift took a trip to a metaphorical cabin in the woods for recent album ‘Folklore’, she dabbled in writing indie-folk tunes with ‘Safe & Sound’. Taken from the soundtrack to The Hunger Games, this pretty, stripped-back track is enthralling.
‘Red’ (2012)
The hair-whipping, chorus-screaming title track of Swiftâs fourth album is an adrenaline-charged ride.
‘Gorgeous’ (2017)
‘Gorgeous’ is about having your head turned. It’s about seeing somebody who is so unbelievably hot that you develop a massive crush, existing partner be damned. Itâs the perfect song to soundtrack a particularly juicy episode of Love Island and comes with a killer chorus to-boot.
‘Today Was A Fairytale’ (2010)
Written for the soundtrack to 2010 film Valentine’s Day, this song was one of the only redeeming moments of the trite rom-com. A classically Swiftian country ballad stuffed full of romantic lyrics, itâs lovely.
‘Forever & Always’ (2008)
On ‘Forever & Always’ Swift manages to evoke the crushing feeling of a crumbling relationship in under four minutes, but no couplet cuts as deep as the utterly millennial “And I stare at the phone, he still hasn’t called / And then you feel so low you can’t feel nothing at all”.
‘The Story of Us’ (2010)
Swift was inspired to write âThe Story of Usâ after running into an ex at an event and both of them trying to ignore the other. A break-neck tune, itâs a catchy nugget of country-pop.
‘New Romantics’ (2014)
‘New Romantics’ was done dirty. The stomping synth-pop knockout was relegated to bonus track on ‘1989’, when it deserved pride of place. Hell, it should have even been a single! The sparkling success is pure euphoria.
‘Dancing with Our Hands Tied’ (2017)
This electronic, beat-heavy song from âReputationâ is basically as close as weâve ever come to a Swiftie club remix.
‘Invisible String’ (2020)
Filled with unusual turn of phrase (“Green was the colour of the grass / Where I used to read at Centennial Park“), âInvisible Stringâ is a sweet ode to Swiftâs past relationships, and how they lead her to where she currently is.
‘Illicit Affairs’ (2020)
Taken from Swift’s most recent record ‘Folklore’, ‘Illicit Affairs’ is a heart-wrenching story of complicated infidelity. Over scintillating stripped back production courtesy of Jack Antonoff, Swift manages to spin a whole tale of secret meetings, lies and clandestine romance, and the emotional impacts it can have.
‘Tim McGraw’ (2006)
Swiftâs debut single ‘Tim McGraw’ isn’t actually about country legend Tim McGraw, but instead about a boyfriend she had whilst at school who was a senior. In it, she warmly reminisces on their past relationship, with Swift knowing he was going to break up with her when he headed off to uni. Itâs pretty emotionally astute stuff for the then-teenage songwriter.
‘Mean’ (2010)
The dual-Grammy winning celebration of self-empowerment sees Swift slamming bullies over joyous banjo strums, reminding them that: “Someday, I’ll be living in a big old city / And all you’re ever gonna be is mean”.
’22’ (2014)
Before ’22’ nobody cared when you celebrated your 22nd birthday â but then along came this gargantuan cut of bubble-gum pop, and somehow Swift turned it into a milestone.
‘Sparks Fly’ (2010)
Swift wrote ‘Sparks Fly’ when she was only 16 years old, when she performed at small bar shows back in the late noughties. A video of one of these SHOWS made it onto the internet and fans started to request she released it. This lead to her reworking it for her third album of the same name, with euphoric results.
‘Wildest Dreams’ (2014)
Channelling her inner Lana Del Rey, this breathless â1989â moment is a synth-pop beauty.
‘Speak Now’ (2010
âSpeak Nowâ features some of Swiftâs most vibrant storytelling. With lyrics that detail a wedding, giving you the full picture of the snotty bride âdressed in a gown shaped like a pastryâ and how the groomâs marrying the wrong girl, itâs a brilliantly intricate story.
‘The Man’ (2019)
A searing take-down of sexist double standards wrapped up in a synth-pop bow, âThe Manâ sees Swift getting seriously feminist.
‘You Belong With Me’ (2008)
A country-pop thumper from Swiftâs second album ‘Fearless’, Swift was inspired to write ‘You Belong With Me’ after hearing a friend arguing with his girlfriend on the phone. Rotten for him â but we got this catchy number out of it.
‘Enchanted’ (2010)
‘Enchanted’ is one of Taylor’s most underrated songs. A fairy-tale epic that acts as an elder sibling to âLove Storyâ, it captures the dizzy infatuation of a new romance, with huge swooning instrumentals and a heartfelt chorus.
‘Exile’ feat. Bon Iver (2020)
2020âs been a strange year and brought with it a ton of surprises â one of these being Taylor Swiftâs eighth album, and another that she managed to wrangle Bon Iverâs Justin Vernon for a guest appearance on the cinematic âExileâ. The gorgeous duet sees the two singers singing over each other, as the two portray ex-lovers seeing each other after a breakup. Itâs an emotive cut, and one of Swiftâs most impressive collaborations.
‘Our Song’ (2006)
Taylor wrote ‘Our Song’ as she needed something to perform at her high school talent show. Built around a jangling banjo riff, with bouncing vocals which see Swift dissect how her and the lad she was dating didn’t have a song, it went down such a treat with her classmates that she stuck it on her debut album. With its enthralling lyrics, that paint a vivid picture of the young couple, it was an early indicator of Swiftâs songwriting capabilities.
‘Shake It Off’ (2014)
Thereâs no two ways about it: âShake It Offâ is a stone-cold smash. Itâs got bolshy brass, several hooks that are catchier than a rash and Tay Tay even does a rap. The uptempo tune ushered in Swift’s sixth album ‘1989’, paving the way for her new era of pop belters â but none of them slapped quite this hard.
‘Teardrops On My Guitar’ (2007)
Swift’s breakthrough single, ‘Teardrops on My Guitar’ is pure country-crossover star. With its soft guitars, and Swift’s early earnestness, unrequited love has never sounded so good.
‘Clean’ (2014)
âCleanâ, the Imogen Heap co-written closer to ‘1989’, is an understated moment of clarity. Itâs the feeling when youâve started to move on with your life post-breakup and you realise you havenât thought about your ex for several weeks, and when you do, you donât want to key their car. With chiming soft-rock instrumentals, and gorgeous layered vocals, itâs an unfussy song thatâs filled with Swiftâs impressive turn of phrase, including the particularly devastating: âTen months sober, I must admit/Just because you’re clean, don’t mean you don’t miss itâ.
‘We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together’ (2012)
There’s a lot of reasons that Swift’s Billboard Hot 100 topping, Grammy-nominated ‘We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together’ is excellent. There are the snarky lyrics, the ear-worm guitar riff and the megalithic chorus. But perhaps the best moment in the entire song is the delicious spoken word interlude in the middle-eight, where Swift deadpans: “Ugh, so he calls me up and he’s like, “I still love you” / And I’m like… I mean, this is exhausting, you know?/ Like, we are never getting back together â like, ever.” Wickedly savage.
‘I Knew You Were Trouble’ (2012)
Back in 2012 things were different. David Cameron was still Prime Minster; Corona was only a type of beer and Taylor Swift experimented with dubstep. ‘I Knew You Were Trouble’ was a bold step for Swift, marking a departure from her trademark country crossover songs, but somehow the genre-melding smasher just works. From the icy kiss-off lyrics that raise a middle finger to fuck-boys everywhere to the thumping dub bass, itâs Swiftâs most brilliantly bombastic release.
‘The 1’ (2020)
“I’m doing good, I’m on some new shit” Taylor begins on ‘The 1’. It’s a punchy way to begin a song, let alone ‘Folklore’. The new shit could be Swift accepting her past fights over her discography, or the indie-folk direction she took for her most recent album. But whatever ânew shitâ TayTay is on, if it means she makes songs as good as this, we back it.
‘Lover’ (2019)
The slow-dancing title track of Swiftâs seventh album is a celebration of being smugly, head-over-heels in love. Ready-made for waltzing at a wedding, this enchanting, romantic tune is a sepia-tinged dream.
‘Mine’ (2010)
The lead single from ‘Speak Now’ is pure Swift. In under four minutes Swift manages to spin an expansive story of a girl who’s parents’ broken marriage caused her to put up walls and avoid putting themselves out there â who gradually falls in love and has to deal with the fear of something potentially going wrong. Itâs a country-pop epic, with more of a narrative in each verse than an entire Nicholas Sparks novel.
‘Delicate’ (2019)
This vocoded beauty was a highlight of ‘Reputation’. Whilst the bulk of Swift’s seventh album was bold and brash, ‘Delicate’ offered a gorgeous moment of vulnerability. From the exposed opening (“This ain’t for the best / My reputation’s never been worse, so /You must like me for me⊔) to the lush instrumentals that mesh the woozy vocals with tropical twinkles and slinky house beats, âDelicateâ is dazzling.
‘Style’ (2014)
This slice of ’80s pop from ‘1989’ embodies the change in Swift’s sound for her fifth album. Filled with chugging synths, strutting guitar licks and glittering production, itâs an effervescent, hook-laden nugget filled with sleek electronics that dissects an unhealthy on-again off-again relationship (that ânever goes out of styleâ). Itâs Swift at her best: clever lyrics? Check! Earworm melodies? Check! A chorus that you want to sing at the top of your lungs? You bet.
‘State of Grace’ (2012)
Ever wondered what Swift singing a massive arena-rock song would sound like? Well, just listen to ‘State of Grace’ and youâll find out. The huge, U2-flecked opener to ‘Red’ is filled with guitar reverb and vocals that are meant to be screamed back by a stadium full of fans.
‘Out Of The Woods’ (2014)
With shimmering indie-tronica-laced production and its anthemic, exhilarating chorus, âOut of the Woodsâ is another belter from â1989â. Written about a high-profile relationship that was cut short due to fear of the media’s reaction to it (Swift explained it “that song touches on a huge sense of anxiety that was, kind of, coursing through that particular relationshipâ), itâs a breathless, honest depiction of a lost relationship; and one of Swiftâs greatest triumphs.
‘Cruel Summer’ (2019)
âCruel Summerâ should have been a single. It could have been the lead single. We all know itâs true; yet it was cast aside for the likes of âMe!â and ‘You Need to Calm Down’. A standout moment on Swiftâs seventh album âLoverâ, this synth-pop bop was co-written with indie legend St Vincent and Jack Antonoff.
It was written about “the feeling of a summer romance, and how often times a summer romance can be layered with all these feelings of pining away and sometimes even secrecy”. Swift recounts the feelings of anxiety and uncertainty that plague a new relationship; before revealing her feelings and finding them reciprocated: “And I scream, ‘For whatever it’s worth/I love you, ain’t that the worst thing you ever heard?’”
Itâs the musical version of a perfect romantic comedy ending, complete with a chorus perfect for riding off into the sunset on a lawnmower a la Can’t Buy Me Love.
‘Love Story’ (2008)
What would you do with a spare 20 minutes? Watch an episode of Friends? Aimlessly scroll through Instagram? Well, if you’re Taylor Swift, you can use that time to write ‘Love Story’. Her 2008 country-pop fairy-tale epic remains one of her biggest hits â climbing charts worldwide and receiving near-constant radio rotation. Itâs still one of the biggest-selling songs ever. With its Shakespearean narrative (it sees Swift reinterpret Romeo and Juliet), and huge, megawatt chorus, âLove Storyâ remains a classic from Swiftâs bountiful back catalogue.
‘Cardigan’ (2020)
The lead single from Swift’s latest record is a swirling amalgam of glittering production, swooning strings with flickering piano, and lyrics that evoke the pain of young love. From the searing “When you are young, they assumeâ you know nothing”, to the heart-wrenching “And when I felt like I was an old cardigan / Under someone’s bed / You put me on and said I was your favourite”, Swift conjures up a story of teenage love and betrayal, all anchored by the Aaron Dessner’s jittery production.
We’ve all felt like someone’s old cardigan at one point in our lives, and Swift stunningly manages to convey these complex mixed emotions â the hurt, jealousy and heartbreak â in a gorgeous folk-laced package.
‘Blank Space’ (2014)
Swiftâs got a lot of chart-smashing pop gems in her armoury, but âBlank Spaceâ is surely one of her crown jewels. This megawatt electro-pop tune sees her most cutting, satirising the mediaâs perception of her dating life and relationships. Knowingly spitting out wry couplets that hit back at the mediaâs portrayal of her reputation as a man-eater (“Got a long list of ex lovers / They’ll tell you I’m insane / But I’ve got a blank space, baby / And I’ll write your name”), itâs brilliantly wicked â and it absolutely slaps! A work of art.
‘The Last Great American Dynasty’ (2020)
Swiftâs latest album, âFolkloreâ, saw her write more regularly from the point of view of other people, telling their stories as opposed to her own. âThe Last Great American Dynastyâ was an intriguing case of this â as Swift depicts the life of American artist and socialite Rebekah Harkness, who had previously owned Swift’s Rhode Island, dubbed ‘Holiday House’. Detailing how Harkness married into a wealthy family, was hated by the town and then blamed for the downfall of the Harkness family (including the death of her husband) , Swift pithily compares her scrutiny in the media to the criticism Harkness has experienced.
Itâs an impressive song, managing to communicate a huge amount of Harknessâ life across in only a few minutes; and Swift does all of this and tops it off with a banging chorus.
‘All Too Well’ (2012)
‘All Too Well’ is Swift’s magnum opus. Beginning life as a deep-cut on ‘Red’, it’s become a favourite of both critics and fans â and there’s good reason for it: it’s the perfect example of Swift’s song-writing skills. On it she movingly conveys the heartbreak of a painful break-up, spinning a tale of lost scarves and autumn days as she jumps between different points â both good and bad â in a relationship.
Thereâs a focus on small, painful details, which are offset by some of Swift’s best ever couplets: “And you call me up again just to break me like a promise / So casually cruel in the name of being honest” can’t be beaten, can it?. Swift takes you on the entire journey of a relationship, and its masterful â just as we’ve come to expect from her.
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