Why Fans Are Wondering Whether Taylor Swift Will Change the Lyrics to One ‘Speak Now’ Song

Taylor Swift’s long awaited Speak Now (Taylor’s Version) is due on July 7, and many fans are speculating as to whether the 33-year-old pop star has changed the lyrics to one of the album’s more controversial songs, “Better Than Revenge.”

Part of Swift’s original Speak Now album, which was released in 2010, the pop-punk track is about seeking revenge against a romantic rival. In it, Swift sings, “She’s not a saint and she’s not what you think/ She’s an actress/ She’s better known for the things that she does on the mattress … She should keep in mind there is nothing I do better than revenge.” Critics have called the lyrics misogynistic, reading them as slut-shaming another woman.

At the time of its release, the song was rumored to be about Camilla Belle, an actor who dated Joe Jonas shortly after he dated Swift. The singer has never confirmed who the song is about—nor has she ever acknowledged the criticized lyrics publicly.

But the song has remained a popular Taylor Swift track, a dynamic perhaps best explained by a viral TikTok in which the song is played alongside the text, “Feminism leaving my body for 3:37 minutes whenever I hear this song.”

Ahead of Speak Now’s re-release, buzz is spreading online about whether Swift will change the lyrics to read as less “woman-blaming,” as one Reddit user wrote.

Some fans are hoping nothing changes. “Feminism on pause, Taylor’s Better Than Revenge still hits hard even to this day,” one fan tweeted. “As problematic as it is, I do hope she doesn’t change any of the lyrics.” Another joked, “When Taylor changes the lyrics of Better Than Revenge to ‘He’s better known for the things that he does with my masters’ what then?” This joke references the singer’s overall project of re-recording her old albums, part of a larger effort of Swift reclaiming ownership of her discography after her master recordings with her original label Big Machine were sold to a private-equity group owned by music industry mogul Scooter Braun. Speak Now will mark Swift’s third re-recorded album.

Swift has yet to change any significant lyrics in her prior two re-recorded albums. In 2006, however, she promptly changed a lyric in the radio edit and future versions of her song “Picture To Burn” after criticism that it was derogatory. The lyric went from “So go and tell your friends that I’m obsessive and crazy/ That’s fine, I’ll tell mine you’re gay,” to, “That’s fine, you won’t mind if I say.” Swift was 16 at the time of the original album’s release and later told MTV News that now that she’s older, she reacts differently to being hurt: “Now, the way that I would say that and the way that I would feel that kind of pain is a lot different.”

Music critics have remarked on how interesting it is to hear Swift, now in her 30s, singing songs she wrote when she was much younger. In Pitchfork’s review of Fearless (Taylor’s Version)Dani Blum wrote, “Instead of cosplaying a caricature of her 18-year-old self, we get present-day Taylor in conversation with the Taylor of the past with a wrenching intimacy.”

Swift has not addressed potential lyric changes and rarely comments on speculation. But at her stop in Minneapolis during the Eras Tour she spoke on her evolution, urging her fans not to jump to conclusions, seeming to refer to the song, “Dear John,” another popular track from the album thought to be about John Mayer. “I’m 33 years old, I don’t care about anything that happened to me when I was 19,” she said. “I’m not putting this album out so you can go on the internet and defend me against someone you think I wrote a song about 14 million years ago.”

Write to Mariah Espada at mariah.espada@time.com.

Note: This article have been indexed to our site. We do not claim legitimacy, ownership or copyright of any of the content above. To see the article at original source Click Here

Related Posts
memory oriented thumbnail

memory oriented

“Dos medias verdades no hacen una verdad” (Multatuli).El 27 de enero del año 1945 las tropas aliadas liberaban a los prisioneros supervivientes del campo de concentración de Auschwitz-Birkenau.  Por este motivo, esa fecha ha sido designada como el Día Internacional de Conmemoración en Memoria de las Víctimas del Holocausto.Es justo y necesario que así sea.…
Read More
Hardship: Wike linked with T-Pain, full details emerge thumbnail

Hardship: Wike linked with T-Pain, full details emerge

The camp of Atiku Abubakar has tackled Nyesom Wike over the latter’s comment that he has no regret for supporting President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s emergence in 2023In a statement addressing Wike's fresh jibe, Atiku described Wike’s comments as "another theatrical outburst”Atiku stated that the minister spoke from a place of bitterness harboured from his defeat
Read More
Cambodian leader to make controversial visit to Myanmar thumbnail

Cambodian leader to make controversial visit to Myanmar

BANGKOK (AP) — Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen begins a visit to strife-torn Myanmar on Friday that he hopes will invigorate efforts by Southeast Asian nations to start a peace process, but critics say will legitimize the rule of the military that seized power last year and its campaign of violence.Hun Sen, whose country holds…
Read More
Alabama House and Senate approve bills to protect IVF service providers thumbnail

Alabama House and Senate approve bills to protect IVF service providers

The bills will give civil and criminal immunity to providers of in vitro fertilization, retroactively Published February 29, 2024 5:26PM (EST) Rep. Susan Wild (D-PA) speaks during a news conference on In Vitro Fertilization treatment on February 29, 2024 in Washington, DC. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images) The Alabama House and Senate passed bills on Thursday that would
Read More
US nuclear submarine collides with 'unknown object' in South China Sea thumbnail

US nuclear submarine collides with ‘unknown object’ in South China Sea

A US nuclear submarine was damaged after hitting an unidentified object while operating underwater in Asia, the US Navy said on Thursday. The USS Connecticut, a nuclear-powered fast-attack submarine, "struck an object while submerged on the afternoon of Oct 2, while operating in international waters in the Indo-Pacific region," the navy said in a statement.…
Read More
Index Of News
Total
0
Share