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Taylor Swift Was Inspired to Write ‘Elizabeth Taylor’ After a Drive With Travis Kelce

Maya Georgi· ·4 min read · 0 reactions · 0 comments · 1 view
Taylor Swift Was Inspired to Write ‘Elizabeth Taylor’ After a Drive With Travis Kelce

Taylor Swift revealed how a car ride with Travis Kelce inspired her to write 'Elizabeth Taylor' in an interview with the New York Times Magazine

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Rolling Stone · Maya Georgi
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Musing Along blogherads.adq.push(function () { blogherads .defineSlot( 'inlineoop', 'gpt-rslogo-140-article-dsk-tab-uid4' ) .setTargeting( 'pos', 'rslogo140' ) .setSubAdUnitPath("music\/article\/logo") .addSize([[1,1]]) ; }); Taylor Swift Was Inspired to Write ‘Elizabeth Taylor’ After a Drive With Travis Kelce "I go on and on and explaining to Travis, like why I love Elizabeth Taylor so much," the superstar revealed in a new songwriting-focused interview By Maya Georgi Maya Georgi Contact Maya Georgi on X Contact Maya Georgi by Email Kacey Musgraves Delivers Bewitching Rendition of SZA’s ‘Kill Bill’ Becky G Reimagines Selena’s ‘Dreaming of You’ With a Rock Edge Lucy Dacus Releases Record Store Day Exclusive ‘Planting Tomatoes’ on Streaming Services View all posts by Maya Georgi April 28, 2026 Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce at the 2026 iHeartRadio Music Awards Christopher Polk/Billboard Taylor Swift can truly find inspiration anywhere she goes. In the past, she’s shared how her neighbors’ love story and movies informed her early songwriting. Now, in a new interview with The New York Times Magazine, the superstar went deep on how her songwriting process has evolved in her two decades in the music industry. “There are so many different ways that a song begins in my world,” Swift said. She cited the latest single, “Elizabeth Taylor,” from her most recent LP The Life of a Showgirl as an example of when a song “comes as if from nowhere.” While her ode to the Hollywood starlet may sound like a track that was years in the making, Swift shared how a car ride with fiancee Travis Kelce inspired her to put pen to paper. Or, rather, open the voice memo app. “I’m riding in the car with Travis. I go on and on and explaining to Travis, like why I love Elizabeth Taylor so much,” she recalled. “She fought for artist rights. She was exploited in so many ways, and yet she kept her humanity, she kept her humor, she kept her passion for life, and I was just going on and on.” blogherads.adq.push(function () { blogherads .defineSlot( 'medrec', 'gpt-dsk-tab-article-inbody-uid0' ) .setTargeting( 'pos', ["mid-article","mid","in-article1","mid-article1","inbody","inbody1"] ) .setTargeting( 'viewable', 'yes' ) .setSubAdUnitPath("music\/article\/inbody1") .addSize([[300,250],[620,350],[2,2],[3,3],[2,4],[4,2],[640,250],[6,6],[620,366]]) .setClsOptimization("minsize") ; }); Swift continued: “I’m like, her eyes were violet. Some people said they were blue. Some people said they were violet. I think they were violet. And we arrive, we get home, he gets out of the car, and I’m just in my head. I’m like, this intrusive melody of like, ‘I cry my eyes violet, Elizabeth Taylor,’ and I’m just like scrambling to open my my record like app on my phone.” This kind of spontaneous experience “where it floats down like a cloud in front of you, and all you have to do is grab it, and the song transpires from there” isn’t that rare, Swift said. “That’s the way it happens most of the time.” Elsewhere in the 30-minute interview, the esteemed songwriter shared the stories behind some of her most ambitious and vulnerable songs, like the fan-favorite “All Too Well (10 Minute Version).” According to Swift, the original five-minute version came from “a very emotional rant that I did in like a sound check when we were rehearsing for the Speak Now tour.” Thankfully, a sound guy captured that session, which turned into the 2012 Red track. But nearly ten years later when she was piecing together…

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