Arab Times

Swift back with vengeful mind

Singer takes aim at haters with ‘Look’

-

NEW YORK, Aug 26, (Agencies): Pop superstar Taylor Swift is back with a new dance-club beat -- and a stonecold warning that she is out for vengeance against an undisclose­d person who crossed her.

The 27-year-old, who commands one of pop music’s most avid fan bases, on Friday released “Look What You Made Me Do,” the first single from her latest album “Reputation” which comes out on November 10.

Other than a duet with Zayn Malik for the erotic thriller “Fifty Shades Darker,” the song marks Swift’s first new music since her 2014 album “1989” -- one of the top-selling works of the past decade.

“Look What You Made Me Do” picks up much where the Grammy-winning “1989” left off with Swift, who had her start strumming her own country songs, heading definitive­ly in a pop direction.

The latest track goes beyond the bubble-gum melodies of “1989” to reach into house music, with Swift sounding like a club DJ as she repeatedly states sternly over the beat, “Oo, look what you made me do.”

One thing that she was apparently made to do -- accept the fast-growing format of streaming. Swift made waves in the music industry by refusing to stream “1989” as she accused leading platform Spotify of short-changing artists.

She ended her boycott in July and her new track appeared on major platforms including Spotify.

“Look What You Made Me Do” opens with unadultera­ted anger against an unnamed villain.

Target

Her fans immediatel­y speculated online as to the target of Swift’s ire -- if the song, like much of her previous work, is indeed autobiogra­phical.

One likely candidate is rapper Kanye West. He outraged Swift with a song last year.

West’s wife, reality television star Kim Kardashian, hit back at Swift by posting a recording of a phone call in which West appears to receive Swift’s blessing for the song, although Swift insisted she had not heard his full lyrics.

In supporting evidence for the Kanye theory, “Look What You Made Me Do” ends with a mock call in which Swift says, “the old Taylor can’t come to the phone right now... because she’s dead.”

Swift -- the fourth most followed person on Twitter and fifth on Instagram -- reinforced the idea of a fresh start by wiping clean her social media accounts in recent days, instead posting images of snakes showing their fangs.

The song could also refer to an exboyfrien­d of Swift, whose love life is of frequent fascinatio­n to tabloids, or to a recent court case.

Last week Swift triumphed in a sexual assault lawsuit against a radio DJ who she said fondled her during a routine photo opportunit­y.

A self-styled feminist, Swift said she had shocked herself by instinctiv­ely acting politely toward the aggressor after the incident.

While cultivatin­g her image as a fearless fighter, Swift -- whose country roots have endeared her to conservati­ve swathes of the United States -- has steered clear of political commentary at a time of intense divisions in the country.

Her non-partisansh­ip is increasing­ly rare in the entertainm­ent world -- and a marked contrast to her sometime rival Katy Perry, an outspoken critic of President Donald Trump.

After a year in which she went through a high-profile breakup, a shortlived fling, celebrity feuds and a court battle, Swift is coming for her haters with a mad, bad, edgy new single.

Swift in her new track takes aim at unnamed subjects who have tried to bring her down, singing “Maybe I got mine, but you’ll all get yours.”

“The role you made me play of the fool, no I don’t like you ... But I got smarter, I got harder in the nick of time/ Honey I rose up from the dead, I do it all the time/ I’ve got a list of names and yours is in red underlined/ I check it once and then I check it twice,” Swift sings.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait