Taylor Swift Sings about Travis Kelce Romance on ‘The Life Of A Showgirl’

Image courtesy of Taylor Swift’s FB

LONDON, Oct 3: Taylor Swift sings about her romance with NFL star Travis Kelce on her highly anticipated 12th studio album The Life Of A Showgirl.

The album, expected to top charts around the world, dropped at 5 am (0400 GMT) in the United Kingdom, with many Swifties likely setting early alarms to be among the first to hear it.

The record features 12 tracks including Opalite, which fans have speculated could be about her fiance Kelce, whose birth stone is opal.

It sees the 35-year-old sing that she “had a bad habit of missing lovers past” before singing the song’s cheery “now the sky is Opalite” chorus, before adding “oh my god, never made no-one like you before” to a Fleetwood Mac-style soft rock backing.

The Life Of A Showgirl is Swift’s first record since she announced her engagement to NFL star Kelce, and also the first since she revealed in May that she had regained control over her back catalogue.

Eldest Daughter, the fifth song on the track list, which is always the most significant song on Swift’s albums, sees the star sing: “I’m not a bad b**ch, and this isn’t savage, but I’m never gonna let you down” to a slow piano track, before confessing “when I said I don’t believe in marriage that was a lie.”

The Fate of Ophelia, which opens the album and is expected to be its first single, also has Swift singing about a character called Ophelia being “the eldest daughter of a noble man.”

Actually Romantic sees the star take a swipe at an unnamed character, which fans have speculated could be a fellow musical artist, with the lyrics: “I heard you call me ‘Boring Barbie’ when the coke’s got you brave.”

Ruin The Friendship sees Swift sing about prom and school days to a smooth bassline, with the chorus “it was not an invitation, should’ve kissed you anyway.”

The stomping title track, which features pop singer Sabrina Carpenter, sees the pair trade vocals before singing its “you don’t know the life of a showgirl” chorus together.

Elizabeth Taylor, most likely named after the Cleopatra actress, follows in a long history of her songs referencing other famous people.

The electronic track sees Swift sing “all the right guys promised they’d stay” before later adding: “Hollywood hates me, only as hot as your last hit baby.”

Her debut album featured track Tim McGraw, about the famous country singer, while her most recent album The Tortured Poets Department featured Clara Bow, named after the silent film actress who rose to fame in the 1920s.

She has also penned tracks about socialite Rebekah Harkness” (The Last Great American Dynasty), Ethel Kennedy (Starlight), as well as numerous romantic partners, including John Mayer, Harry Styles, Joe Jonas, Jake Gyllenhaal, and Conor Kennedy.

In a post on Instagram, the pop superstar said she was “so proud” of the new record which she described as a “self portrait.”

Swift said: “I can’t tell you how proud I am to share this with you, an album that just feels so right.

“A forever thank you goes out to my mentors and friends Max and Shellback for helping me paint this self portrait.

“If you thought the big show was wild, perhaps you should come and take a look behind the curtain…”

Swift previously said she recorded it while in Europe on the Eras Tour, reuniting with producers Max Martin and Shellback.

The singer last worked with the Swedish duo in 2017 on her album Reputation but has since favoured collaborations with Jack Antonoff and The National’s Aaron Dessner.

It follows 2024’s The Tortured Poets Department, which was released in the middle of her record-breaking Eras Tour.

Friday night will also see the launch of The Official Release Party of A Showgirl in cinemas, which features the world premiere of the music video for the single The Fate of Ophelia, as well as behind-the-scenes footage, lyric videos from the album and “cut-by-cut explanations” of what inspired the music.

Swift announced her new album on the “New Heights” podcast, hosted by Kansas City Chiefs tight end Kelce and his brother Jason, who formerly played for the Philadelphia Eagles.

— BERNAMA-PA MEDIA/dpa