I hadnāt done a Rolling Stone cover in 5 years, and hadnāt seen Brian Hiatt since I got in 2 car crashes while driving him around during our interview in 2012. š¤¦āāļø There were no cars driven this time, but we had a lot to catch up on. Thank you Rolling Stone and Brian for everything you did to make this cover happen. And Erik Madigan Heck for taking these photos, absolutely loved working with you!-Taylor Swift.
According to the magazine ''Taylor Swift bursts into her momās Nashville kitchen, smiling, looking remarkably like Taylor Swift. (That red-lip, classic thing? Check.) āI need someone to help dye my hair pink,ā she says, and moments later, her ends match her sparkly nail polish, sneakers, and the stripes on her button-down. Itās all in keeping with the pastel aesthetic of her new album, Lover; black-leather combat-Taylor from her previous album cycle has handed back the phone. Around the black-granite kitchen island, all is calm and normal, as Swiftās mom, dad, and younger brother pass through. Her momās two dogs, one very small, one very large, pounce upon visitors with slurping glee. It could be any 29-year-oldās weekend visit with her parents, if not for the madness looming a few feet down the hall.
In an airy terrace, 113 giddy, weepy, shaky, still-in-disbelief fans are waiting for the start of one of Swiftās secret sessions, sacred rituals in Swift-dom. Sheās about to play them her seventh album, as-yet unreleased on this Sunday afternoon in early August, and offer copious commentary. Also, she made cookies. Just before the session, Swift sits down in her momās study (where she āoperates the Google,ā per her daughter) to chat for a few minutes. The black-walled room is decorated with black-and-white classic-rock photos, including shots of Bruce Springsteen and, unsurprisingly, James Taylor; there are also more recent shots of Swift posing with Kris Kristofferson and playing with Def Leppard, her momās favorite band.
In a corner is an acoustic guitar Swift played as a teenager. She almost certainly wrote some well-known songs on it, but canāt recall which ones. āIt would be kind of weird to finish a song and be like, āAnd this moment, I shall remember,ā'ā she says, laughing. āāThis guitar hath been anointed with my sacred tuneage!'ā
The secret session itself is, as the name suggests, deeply off-the-record; it can be confirmed that she drank some white wine, since her glass pops up in some Instagram pictures. She stays until 5 a.m., chatting and taking photos with every one of the fans. Five hours later, we continue our talk at length in Swiftās Nashville condo, in almost exactly the same spot where we did one of our interviews for her 2012 Rolling Stone cover story. Sheās hardly changed its whimsical decor in the past seven years (one of the few additions is a pool table replacing the couch where we sat last time), so itās an old-Taylor time capsule. Thereās still a huge bunny made of moss in one corner, and a human-size birdcage in the living room, though the view from the latter is now of generic new condo buildings instead of just distant green hills. Swift is barefoot now, in pale-blue jeans and a blue button-down tied at the waist; her hair is pulled back, her makeup minimal.
How to sum up the past three years of Taylor Swift? In July 2016, after Swift expressed discontent with Kanye Westās āFamous,ā Kim Kardashian did her best to destroy her, unleashing clandestine recordings of a phone conversation between Swift and West. In the piecemeal audio, Swift can be heard agreeing to the line āā¦me and Taylor might still have sex.ā We donāt hear her learning about the next lyric, the one she says bothered her ā āI made that bitch famousā ā and as sheāll explain, thereās more to her side of the story. The backlash was, well, swift, and overwhelming. It still hasnāt altogether subsided. Later that year, Swift chose not to make an endorsement in the 2016 election, which definitely didnāt help. In the face of it all, she made Reputation ā fierce, witty, almost-industrial pop offset by love songs of crystalline beauty ā and had a wildly successful stadium tour. Somewhere in there, she met her current boyfriend, Joe Alwyn, and judging by certain songs on Lover, the relationship is serious indeed.
Lover is Swiftās most adult album, a rebalancing of sound and persona that opens doors to the next decade of her career; itās also a welcome return to the sonic diversity of 2012ās Red, with tracks ranging from the St. Vincent-assisted Ć¼ber-bop āCruel Summerā to the unbearably poignant country-fied āSoon Youāll Get Betterā (with the Dixie Chicks) and the āShake It Offā-worthy pep of āPaper Rings.ā
She wants to talk about the music, of course, but she is also ready to explain the past three years of her life, in depth, for the first time. The conversation is often not a light one. Sheās built up more armor in the past few years, but still has the opposite of a poker face ā you can see every micro-emotion wash over her as she ponders a question, her nose wrinkling in semi-ironic offense at the term āold-school pop stars,ā her preposterously blue eyes glistening as she turns to darker subjects. In her worst moments, she says, āYou feel like youāre being completely pulled into a riptide. So what are you going to do? Splash a lot? Or hold your breath and hope you somehow resurface? And thatās what I did. And it took three years. Sitting here doing an interview ā the fact that weāve done an interview before is the only reason Iām not in a full body sweat.ā
When we talked seven years ago, everything was going so well for you, and you were very worried that something would go wrong.
Yeah, I kind of knew it would. I felt like I was walking along the sidewalk, knowing eventually the pavement was going to crumble and I was gonna fall through. You canāt keep winning and have people like it. People love ānewā so much ā they raise you up the flagpole, and youāre waving at the top of the flagpole for a while. And then theyāre like, āWait, this new flag is what we actually love.ā They decide something youāre doing is incorrect, that youāre not standing for what you should stand for. Youāre a bad example. Then if you keep making music and you survive, and you keep connecting with people, eventually they raise you a little bit up the flagpole again, and then they take you back down, and back up again. And it happens to women more than it happens to men in music.
It also happened to you a few times on a smaller scale, didnāt it?
Iāve had several upheavals in my career. When I was 18, they were like, āShe doesnāt really write those songs.ā So my third album I wrote by myself as a reaction to that. Then they decided I was a serial dater ā a boy-crazy man-eater ā when I was 22. And so I didnāt date anyone for, like, two years. And then they decided in 2016 that absolutely everything about me was wrong. If I did something good, it was for the wrong reasons. If I did something brave, I didnāt do it correctly. If I stood up for myself, I was throwing a tantrum. And so I found myself in this endless mockery echo chamber. Itās just like ā I have a brother whoās two and a half years younger, and we spent the first half of our lives trying to kill each other and the second half as best friends. You know that game kids play? Iād be like, āMom, can I have some water?ā And Austin would be like, āMom, can I have some water?ā And Iām like, āHeās copying me.ā And heād be like, āHeās copying me.ā Always in a really obnoxious voice that sounds all twisted. Thatās what it felt like in 2016. So I decided to just say nothing. It wasnāt really a decision. It was completely involuntary.
But you also had good things happen in your life at the same time ā thatās part of Reputation.
The moments of my true story on that album are songs like āDelicate,ā āNew Yearās Day,ā āCall It What You Want,ā āDress.ā The one-two punch, bait-and-switch of Reputation is that it was actually a love story. It was a love story in amongst chaos. All the weaponized sort of metallic battle anthems were what was going on outside. That was the battle raging on that I could see from the windows, and then there was what was happening inside my world ā my newly quiet, cozy world that was happening on my own terms for the first time.ā.ā.ā.āItās weird, because in some of the worst times of my career, and reputation, dare I say, I had some of the most beautiful times ā in my quiet life that I chose to have. And I had some of the most incredible memories with the friends I now knew cared about me, even if everyone hated me. The bad stuff was really significant and damaging. But the good stuff will endure. The good lessons ā you realize that you canāt just show your life to people.
Meaning?
I used to be like a golden retriever, just walking up to everybody, like, wagging my tail. āSure, yeah, of course! What do you want to know? What do you need?ā Now, I guess, I have to be a little bit more like a fox.
Do your regrets on that extend to the way the āgirl squadā thing was perceived?
Yeah, I never would have imagined that people would have thought, āThis is a clique that wouldnāt have accepted me if I wanted to be in it.ā Holy shit, that hit me like a ton of bricks. I was like, āOh, this did not go the way that I thought it was going to go.ā I thought it was going to be we can still stick together, just like men are allowed to do. The patriarchy allows men to have bro packs. If youāre a male artist, thereās an understanding that you have respect for your counterparts.
Whereas women are expected to be feuding with each other?
Itās assumed that we hate each other. Even if weāre smiling and photographed together with our arms around each other, itās assumed thereās a knife in our pocket.
How much of a danger was there of falling into that thought pattern yourself?
The messaging is dangerous, yes. Nobody is immune, because weāre a product of what society and peer groups and now the internet tells us, unless we learn differently from experience.
You once sang about a star who ātook the money and your dignity, and got the hell out.ā In 2016, you wrote in your journal, āThis summer is the apocalypse.ā How close did you come to quitting altogether?
I definitely thought about that a lot. I thought about how words are my only way of making sense of the world and expressing myself ā and now any words I say or write are being twisted against me. People love a hate frenzy. Itās like piranhas. People had so much fun hating me, and they didnāt really need very many reasons to do it. I felt like the situation was pretty hopeless. I wrote a lot of really aggressively bitter poems constantly. I wrote a lot of think pieces that I knew Iād never publish, about what itās like to feel like youāre in a shame spiral. And I couldnāt figure out how to learn from it. Because I wasnāt sure exactly what I did that was so wrong. That was really hard for me, because I cannot stand it when people canāt take criticism. So I try to self-examine, and even though thatās really hard and hurts a lot sometimes, I really try to understand where people are coming from when they donāt like me. And I completely get why people wouldnāt like me. Because, you know, Iāve had my insecurities say those things ā and things 1,000 times worse.
But some of your former critics have become your friends, right?
Some of my best friendships came from people publicly criticizing me and then it opening up a conversation. Hayley Kiyoko was doing an interview and she made an example about how I get away with singing about straight relationships and people donāt give me shit the way they give her shit for singing about girls ā and itās totally valid. Like, Ella ā Lorde ā the first thing she ever said about me publicly was a criticism of my image or whatever. But I canāt really respond to someone saying, āYou, as a human being, are fake.ā And if they say youāre playing the victim, that completely undermines your ability to ever verbalize how you feel unless itās positive. So, OK, should I just smile all the time and never say anything hurts me? Because thatās really fake. Or should I be real about how Iām feeling and have valid, legitimate responses to things that happened to me in my life? But wait, would that be playing the victim?
How do you escape that mental trap?
Since I was 15 years old, if people criticized me for something, I changed it. So you realize you might be this amalgamation of criticisms that were hurled at you, and not an actual person whoās made any of these choices themselves. And so I decided I needed to live a quiet life, because a quiet personal life invites no discussion, dissection, and debate. I didnāt realize I was inviting people to feel they had the right to sort of play my life like a video game.
āThe old Taylor canāt come to the phone right now. Why? Because sheās dead!ā was funny ā but how seriously should we take it?
Thereās a part of me that definitely is always going to be different. I needed to grow up in many ways. I needed to make boundaries, to figure out what was mine and what was the publicās. That old version of me that shares unfailingly and unblinkingly with a world that is probably not fit to be shared with? I think thatās gone. But it was definitely just, like, a fun moment in the studio with me and Jack [Antonoff] where I wanted to play on the idea of a phone call ā because thatās how all of this started, a stupid phone call I shouldnāt have picked up.
It would have been much easier if thatās what youād just said.
It would have been so, so great if I would have just said that [laughs].
Some of the Lover iconography does suggest old Taylorās return, though.
I donāt think Iāve ever leaned into the old version of myself more creatively than I have on this album, where itās very, very autobiographical. But also moments of extreme catchiness and moments of extreme personal confession.
Did you do anything wrong from your perspective in dealing with that phone call? Is there anything you regret?
The world didnāt understand the context and the events that led up to it. Because nothing ever just happens like that without some lead-up. Some events took place to cause me to be pissed off when he called me a bitch. That was not just a singular event. Basically, I got really sick of the dynamic between he and I. And that wasnāt just based on what happened on that phone call and with that song ā it was kind of a chain reaction of things.
I started to feel like we reconnected, which felt great for me ā because all I ever wanted my whole career after that thing happened in 2009 was for him to respect me. When someone doesnāt respect you so loudly and says you literally donāt deserve to be here ā I just so badly wanted that respect from him, and I hate that about myself, that I was like, āThis guy whoās antagonizing me, I just want his approval.ā But thatās where I was. And so weād go to dinner and stuff. And I was so happy, because he would say really nice things about my music. It just felt like I was healing some childhood rejection or something from when I was 19. But the 2015 VMAs come around. Heās getting the Vanguard Award. He called me up beforehand ā I didnāt illegally record it, so I canāt play it for you. But he called me up, maybe a week or so before the event, and we had maybe over an hourlong conversation, and heās like, āI really, really would like for you to present this Vanguard Award to me, this would mean so much to me,ā and went into all the reasons why it means so much, because he can be so sweet. He can be the sweetest. And I was so stoked that he asked me that. And so I wrote this speech up, and then we get to the VMAs and I make this speech and he screams, āMTV got Taylor Swift up here to present me this award for ratings!ā [His exact words: āYou know how many times they announced Taylor was going to give me the award ācause it got them more ratings?ā] And Iām standing in the audience with my arm around his wife, and this chill ran through my body. I realized he is so two-faced. That he wants to be nice to me behind the scenes, but then he wants to look cool, get up in front of everyone and talk shit. And I was so upset. He wanted me to come talk to him after the event in his dressing room. I wouldnāt go. So then he sent this big, big thing of flowers the next day to apologize. And I was like, āYou know what? I really donāt want us to be on bad terms again. So whatever, Iām just going to move past this.ā So when he gets on the phone with me, and I was so touched that he would be respectful and, like, tell me about this one line in the song.
The line being ā.ā.ā.āme and Taylor might still have sexā?
[Nods] And I was like, āOK, good. Weāre back on good terms.ā And then when I heard the song, I was like, āIām done with this. If you want to be on bad terms, letās be on bad terms, but just be real about it.ā And then he literally did the same thing to Drake. He gravely affected the trajectory of Drakeās family and their lives. Itās the same thing. Getting close to you, earning your trust, detonating you. I really donāt want to talk about it anymore because I get worked up, and I donāt want to just talk about negative shit all day, but itās the same thing. Go watch Drake talk about what happened. [West denied any involvement in Pusha-Tās revelation of Drakeās child and apologized for sending ānegative energyā toward Drake.]
When did you get to the place thatās described on the opening track of Lover, āI Forgot That You Existedā?
It was sometime on the Reputation tour, which was the most transformative emotional experience of my career. That tour put me in the healthiest, most balanced place Iāve ever been. After that tour, bad stuff can happen to me, but it doesnāt level me anymore. The stuff that happened a couple of months ago with Scott [Borchetta] would have leveled me three years ago and silenced me. I would have been too afraid to speak up. Something about that tour made me disengage from some part of public perception I used to hang my entire identity on, which I now know is incredibly unhealthy.
What was the actual revelation?
Itās almost like I feel more clear about the fact that my job is to be an entertainer. Itās not like this massive thing that sometimes my brain makes it into, and sometimes the media makes it into, where weāre all on this battlefield and everyoneās gonna die except one person, who wins. Itās like, āNo, do you know what? Katy is going to be legendary. Gaga is going to be legendary. BeyoncĆ© is going to be legendary. Rihanna is going to be legendary. Because the work that they made completely overshadows the myopia of this 24-hour news cycle of clickbait.ā And somehow I realized that on tour, as I was looking at peopleās faces. Weāre just entertaining people, and itās supposed to be fun.
Itās interesting to look at these albums as a trilogy. 1989 was really a reset button.
Oh, in every way. Iāve been very vocal about the fact that that decision was mine and mine alone, and it was definitely met with a lot of resistance. Internally.
After realizing that things were not all smiles with your former label boss, Scott Borchetta, itās hard not to wonder how much additional conflict there was over things like that.
A lot of the best things I ever did creatively were things that I had to really fight ā and I mean aggressively fight ā to have happen. But, you know, Iām not like him, making crazy, petty accusations about the past.ā.ā.ā.āWhen you have a business relationship with someone for 15 years, there are going to be a lot of ups and a lot of downs. But I truly, legitimately thought he looked at me as the daughter he never had. And so even though we had a lot of really bad times and creative differences, I was going to hang my hat on the good stuff. I wanted to be friends with him. I thought I knew what betrayal felt like, but this stuff that happened with him was a redefinition of betrayal for me, just because it felt like it was family. To go from feeling like youāre being looked at as a daughter to this grotesque feeling of āOh, I was actually his prized calf that he was fattening up to sell to the slaughterhouse that would pay the most.ā
He accused you of declining the Parkland march and Manchester benefit show.
Unbelievable. Hereās the thing: Everyone in my team knew if Scooter Braun brings us something, do not bring it to me. The fact that those two are in business together after the things he said about Scooter Braun ā itās really hard to shock me. And this was utterly shocking. These are two very rich, very powerful men, using $300 million of other peopleās money to purchase, like, the most feminine body of work. And then theyāre standing in a wood-panel bar doing a tacky photo shoot, raising a glass of scotch to themselves. Because they pulled one over on me and got this done so sneakily that I didnāt even see it coming. And I couldnāt say anything about it.
In some ways, on a musical level, Lover feels like the most indie-ish of your albums.
Thatās amazing, thank you. Itās definitely a quirky record. With this album, I felt like I sort of gave myself permission to revisit older themes that I used to write about, maybe look at them with fresh eyes. And to revisit older instruments ā older in terms of when I used to use them. Because when I was making 1989, I was so obsessed with it being this concept of Eighties big pop, whether it was Eighties in its production or Eighties in its nature, just having these big choruses ā being unapologetically big. And then Reputation, there was a reason why I had it all in lowercase. I felt like it wasnāt unapologetically commercial. Itās weird, because that is the album that took the most amount of explanation, and yet itās the one I didnāt talk about. In the Reputation secret sessions I kind of had to explain to my fans, āI know weāre doing a new thing here that Iād never done before.ā Iād never played with characters before. For a lot of pop stars, thatās a really fun trick, where theyāre like, āThis is my alter ego.ā I had never played with that before. Itās really fun. And it was just so fun to play with on tour ā the darkness and the bombast and the bitterness and the love and the ups and the downs of an emotional-turmoil record.
āDaylightā is a beautiful song. It feels like it could have been the title track.
It almost was. I thought it might be a little bit too sentimental.
And I guess maybe too on-the-nose.
Right, yeah, way too on-the-nose. Thatās what I thought, because I was kind of in my head referring to the album as Daylight for a while. But Lover, to me, was a more interesting title, more of an accurate theme in my head, and more elastic as a concept. Thatās why āYou Need to Calm Downā can make sense within the theme of the album ā one of the things it addresses is how certain people are not allowed to live their lives without discrimination just based on who they love.
For the more organic songs on this album, like āLoverā and āPaper Rings,ā you said you were imagining a wedding band playing them. How often does that kind of visualization shape a songās production style?
Sometimes Iāll have a strange sort of fantasy of where the songs would be played. And so for songs like āPaper Ringsā or āLoverā I was imagining a wedding-reception band, but in the Seventies, so they couldnāt play instruments that wouldnāt have been invented yet. I have all these visuals. For Reputation, it was nighttime cityscape. I didnāt really want any ā or very minimal ā traditional acoustic instruments. I imagined old warehouse buildings that had been deserted and factory spaces and all this industrial kind of imagery. So I wanted the production to have nothing wooden. Thereās no wood floors on that album. Lover is, like, completely just a barn wood floor and some ripped curtains flowing in the breeze, and fields of flowers and, you know, velvet.
How did you come to use high school metaphors to touch on politics with āMiss Americana & the Heartbreak Princeā?
There are so many influences that go into that particular song. I wrote it a couple of months after midterm elections, and I wanted to take the idea of politics and pick a metaphorical place for that to exist. And so I was thinking about a traditional American high school, where thereās all these kinds of social events that could make someone feel completely alienated. And I think a lot of people in our political landscape are just feeling like we need to huddle up under the bleachers and figure out a plan to make things better.
I feel like your Fall Out Boy fandom mightāve slipped out in that title.
I love Fall Out Boy so much. Their songwriting really influenced me, lyrically, maybe more than anyone else. They take a phrase and they twist it. āLoaded God complex/Cock it and pull itā? When I heard that, I was like, āIām dreaming.ā
You sing about āAmerican stories burning before me.ā Do you mean the illusions of what America is?
Itās about the illusions of what I thought America was before our political landscape took this turn, and that naivete that we used to have about it. And itās also the idea of people who live in America, who just want to live their lives, make a living, have a family, love who they love, and watching those people lose their rights, or watching those people feel not at home in their home. I have that line āI see the high-fives between the bad guysā because not only are some really racist, horrific undertones now becoming overtones in our political climate, but the people who are representing those concepts and that way of looking at the world are celebrating loudly, and itās horrific.
Youāre in this weird place of being a blond, blue-eyed pop star in this era ā to the point where until you endorsed some Democratic candidates, right-wingers, and worse, assumed you were on their side.
I donāt think they do anymore. Yeah, that was jarring, and I didnāt hear about that until after it had happened. Because at this point, I, for a very long time, I didnāt have the internet on my phone, and my team and my family were really worried about me because I was not in a good place. And there was a lot of stuff that they just dealt with without telling me about it. Which is the only time thatās ever happened in my career. Iām always in the pilot seat, trying to fly the plane that is my career in exactly the direction I want to take it. But there was a time when I just had to throw my hands up and say, āGuys, I canāt. I canāt do this. I need you to just take over for me and Iām just going to disappear.ā
Are you referring to when a white-supremacist site suggested you were on their team?
I didnāt even see that, but, like, if that happened, thatās just disgusting. Thereās literally nothing worse than white supremacy. Itās repulsive. There should be no place for it. Really, I keep trying to learn as much as I can about politics, and itās become something Iām now obsessed with, whereas before, I was living in this sort of political ambivalence, because the person I voted for had always won. We were in such an amazing time when Obama was president because foreign nations respected us. We were so excited to have this dignified person in the White House. My first election was voting for him when he made it into office, and then voting to re-elect him. I think a lot of people are like me, where they just didnāt really know that this could happen. But Iām just focused on the 2020 election. Iām really focused on it. Iām really focused on how I can help and not hinder. Because I also donāt want it to backfire again, because I do feel that the celebrity involvement with Hillaryās campaign was used against her in a lot of ways.
You took a lot of heat for not getting involved. Does any part of you regret that you just didnāt say āfuck itā and gotten more specific when you said to vote that November?
Totally. Yeah, I regret a lot of things all the time. Itās like a daily ritual.
Were you just convinced that it would backfire?
Thatās literally what it was. Yeah. Itās a very powerful thing when you legitimately feel like numbers have proven that pretty much everyone hates you. Like, quantifiably. Thatās not me being dramatic. And you know that.
There were a lot of people in those stadiums.
Itās true. But that was two years later.ā.ā.ā.āI do think, as a party, we need to be more of a team. With Republicans, if youāre wearing that red hat, youāre one of them. And if weāre going to do anything to change whatās happening, we need to stick together. We need to stop dissecting why someoneās on our side or if theyāre on our side in the right way or if they phrased it correctly. We need to not have the right kind of Democrat and the wrong kind of Democrat. We need to just be like, āYouāre a Democrat? Sick. Get in the car. Weāre going to the mall.
Hereās a hard question for you: As a superfan, what did you think of the Game of Thrones finale?
Oh, my God. Iāve spent a lot of time thinking about this. So, clinically our brain responds to our favorite show ending the same way we feel when a breakup occurs. I read that. Thereās no good way for it to end. No matter what would have happened in that finale, people still would have been really upset because of the fact that itās over.
I was glad to see you confirm that your line about a ālist of namesā was a reference to Arya.
I like to be influenced by movies and shows and books and stuff. I love to write about a character dynamic. And not all of my life is going to be as kind of complex as these intricate webs of characters on TV shows and movies.
There was a time when it was.
Thatās amazing.
But is the idea that as your own life becomes less dramatic, youāll need to pull ideas from other places?
I donāt feel like that yet. I think I might feel like that possibly when I have a family. If I have a family. [Pauses] I donāt know why I said that! But thatās what Iāve heard from other artists, that they were very protective of their personal life, so they had to draw inspiration from other things. But again, I donāt know why I said that. Because I donāt know how my life is going to go or what Iām going to do. But right now, I feel like itās easier for me to write than it ever was.
You donāt talk about your relationship, but youāll sing about it in wildly revealing detail. Whatās the difference for you?
Singing about something helps you to express it in a way that feels more accurate. You cannot, no matter what, put words in a quote and have it move someone the same way as if you heard those words with the perfect sonic representation of that feeling.ā.ā.ā.āThere is that weird conflict in being a confessional songwriter and then also having my life, you know, 10 years ago, be catapulted into this strange pop-culture thing.
Iāve heard you say that people got too interested in which song was about who, which I can understand ā at the same time, to be fair, it was a game you played into, wasnāt it?.
I realized very early on that no matter what, that was going to happen to me regardless. So when you realize the rules of the game youāre playing and how it will affect you, you got to look at the board and make your strategy. But at the same time, writing songs has never been a strategic element of my career. But Iām not scared anymore to say that other things in my career, like how to market an album, are strictly strategic. And Iām sick of women not being able to say that they have strategic business minds ā because male artists are allowed to. And so Iām sick and tired of having to pretend like I donāt mastermind my own business. But, itās a different part of my brain than I use to write.
Youāve been masterminding your business since you were a teenager.
Yeah, but Iāve also tried very hard ā and this is one thing I regret ā to convince people that I wasnāt the one holding the puppet strings of my marketing existence, or the fact that I sit in a conference room several times a week and come up with these ideas. I felt for a very long time that people donāt want to think of a woman in music who isnāt just a happy, talented accident. Weāre all forced to kind of be like, āAw, shucks, this happened again! Weāre still doing well! Aw, thatās so great.ā Alex Morgan celebrating scoring a goal at the World Cup and getting shit for it is a perfect example of why weāre not allowed to flaunt or celebrate, or reveal that, like, āOh, yeah, it was me. I came up with this stuff.ā I think itās really unfair. People love new female artists so much because theyāre able to explain that womanās success. Thereās an easy trajectory. Look at the Game of Thrones finale. I specifically really related to Daenerysā storyline because for me it portrayed that it is a lot easier for a woman to attain power than to maintain it.
I mean, she did murderā.ā.ā.
Itās a total metaphor! Like, obviously I didnāt want Daenerys to become that kind of character, but in taking away what I chose to take away from it, I thought maybe theyāre trying to portray her climbing the ladder to the top was a lot easier than maintaining it, because for me, the times when I felt like I was going insane was when I was trying to maintain my career in the same way that I ascended. Itās easier to get power than to keep it. Itās easier to get acclaim than to keep it. Itās easier to get attention than to keep it.
Well, I guess we should be glad you didnāt have a dragon in 2016.ā.ā.ā.
[Fiercely] I told you I donāt like that she did that! But, I mean, watching the show, though, maybe this is a reflection on how we treat women in power, how we are totally going to conspire against them and tear at them until they feel this ā this insane shift, where you wonder, like, āWhat changed?ā And Iāve had that happen, like, 60 times in my career where Iām like, āOK, you liked me last year, what changed? I guess Iāll change so I can keep entertaining you guys.ā
You once said that your mom could never punish you when you were little because youād punish yourself. This idea of changing in the face of criticism and needing approval ā thatās all part of wanting to be good, right? Whatever that means. But that seems to be a real driving force in your life.
Yeah, thatās definitely very perceptive of you. And the question posed to me is, if you kept trying to do good things, but everyone saw those things in a cynical way and assumed them to be done with bad motivation and bad intent, would you still do good things, even though nothing that you did was looked at as good? And the answer is, yes. Criticism thatās constructive is helpful to my character growth. Baseless criticism is stuff Iāve got to toss out now.
That sounds healthy. Is this therapy talking or is this just experience?
No, Iāve never been to therapy. I talk to my mom a lot, because my mom is the one whoās seen everything. God, it takes so long to download somebody on the last 29 years of my life, and my mom has seen it all. She knows exactly where Iām coming from. And we talk endlessly. There were times when I used to have really, really, really bad days where we would just be on the phone for hours and hours and hours. Iād write something that I wanted to say, and instead of posting it, Iād just read it to her.
I somehow connect all this to the lyric in āDaylight,ā the idea of āso many lines that Iāve crossed unforgivenā ā itās a different kind of confession.
I am really glad you liked that line, because thatās something that does bother me, looking back at life and realizing that no matter what, you screw things up. Sometimes there are people that were in your life and theyāre not anymore ā and thereās nothing you can do about it. You canāt fix it, you canāt change it. I told the fans last night that sometimes on my bad days, I feel like my life is a pile of crap accumulated of only the bad headlines or the bad things that have happened, or the mistakes Iāve made or clichĆ©s or rumors or things that people think about me or have thought for the last 15 years. And that was part of the āLook What You Made Me Doā music video, where I had a pile of literal old selves fighting each other.
But, yeah, that line is indicative of my anxiety about how in life you canāt get everything right. A lot of times you make the wrong call, make the wrong decision. Say the wrong thing. Hurt people, even if you didnāt mean to. You donāt really know how to fix all of that. When itās, like, 29 yearsā worth.
To be Mr. āRolling Stoneā for a second, thereās a Springsteen lyric, āAināt no one leaving this world, buddy/Without their shirttail dirty or hands a little bloody.ā
Thatās really good! No one gets through it unscathed. No one gets through in one piece. I think thatās a hard thing for a lot of people to grasp. I know it was hard for me, because I kind of grew up thinking, āIf Iām nice, and if I try to do the right thing, you know, maybe I can just, like, ace this whole thing.ā And it turns out I canāt.
Itās interesting to look at āI Did Something Badā in this context.
You pointing that out is really interesting because itās something Iāve had to reconcile within myself in the last couple of years ā that sort of āgoodā complex. Because from the time I was a kid Iād try to be kind, be a good person. Try really hard. But you get walked all over sometimes. And how do you respond to being walked all over? You canāt just sit there and eat your salad and let it happen. āI Did Something Badā was about doing something that was so against what I would usually do. Katy [Perry] and I were talking about our signs.ā.ā.ā.ā[Laughs] Of course we were.
Thatās the greatest sentence ever.
[Laughs] I hate you. We were talking about our signs because we had this really, really long talk when we were reconnecting and stuff. And I remember in the long talk, she was like, āIf we had one glass of white wine right now, weād both be crying.ā Because we were drinking tea. Weāve had some really good conversations.
We were talking about how weāve had miscommunications with people in the past, not even specifically with each other. Sheās like, āIām a Scorpio. Scorpios just strike when they feel threatened.ā And I was like, āWell, Iām an archer. We literally stand back, assess the situation, process how we feel about it, raise a bow, pull it back, and fire.ā So itās completely different ways of processing pain, confusion, misconception. And oftentimes Iāve had this delay in feeling something that hurts me and then saying that it hurts me. Do you know what I mean? And so I can understand how people in my life would have been like, āWhoa, I didnāt know that was how you felt.ā Because it takes me a second.
If you watch the video of the 2009 VMAs, I literally freeze. I literally stand there. And that is how I handle any discomfort, any pain. I stand there, I freeze. And then five minutes later, I know how I feel. But in the moment, Iām probably overreacting and I should be nice. Then I process it, and in five minutes, if itās gone, itās past, and Iām like, āI was overreacting, everythingās fine. I can get through this. Iām glad I didnāt say anything harsh in the moment.ā But when itās actually something bad that happened, and I feel really, really hurt or upset about it, I only know after the fact. Because Iāve tried so hard to squash it: āThis probably isnāt what you think.ā Thatās something I had to work on.
You could end up gaslighting yourself.
Yeah, for sure. āCause so many situations where if I would have said the first thing that came to my mind, people would have been like, āWhoa!ā And maybe I would have been wrong or combative. So a couple of years ago I started working on actually just responding to my emotions in a quicker fashion. And itās really helped with stuff. Itās helped so much because sometimes you get in arguments. But conflict in the moment is so much better than combat after the fact.
Well, thanks.
I do feel like I just did a therapy session. As someone whoās never been to therapy, I can safely say that was the best therapy session''.More photos below.
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