
Taylor Swift has received mixed reviews for her highly anticipated 12th studio album, The Life Of A Showgirl.
Written during the European leg of her Eras Tour, the album pulls back the curtain on the singerâs life and romance with fiance and NFL star Travis Kelce, indulging listeners with a fun and playful 12-track pop record.
Released on Friday, the album was made with Swedish duo Max Martin and Shellback, reuniting the singer with the producers she worked with in 2017 for her album Reputation and 2014âs pop juggernaut album 1989.
The new record received five stars from Rolling Stone Magazine, which described it as having ânew, exciting sonic turnsâ and âincisive storytellingâ, while the Times, which gave the album four stars, said it was Swift at her âhappiest, and most funâ with âsolid, hook-filled tunesâ.
The Times said: âThe Life Of A Showgirl is essentially a companion piece to Reputation, but where that album railed against the vagaries of fame, this one accepts them, possibly because a fairy-tale love story has made Swift a lot happier and more capable of handling it all. Thatâs why it is so much fun.â
Some, however, were less impressed, notably The Guardian and The Financial Times, who gave the album two stars.
The Telegraph, which gave it three stars, said: âIt is a fine album â a witty, literate, mellifluous collection of overwhelmingly romantic singer-songwriter-style pop songs about the triumph of love, almost certainly spelled L-U-R-V-E. But for all its sophistication, Showgirl showcases Swift at her least dramatically intense.
âIts 12 songs are all perfectly formed, smoothly sung and sweetly delivered in pastel musical shades, elegant melodies perked up by clever turns of phrase, with a tang of spikiness and raunch occasionally breaking through to remind us Swift is a 21st-century woman and not a superannuated Disney princess.â
The FT described the record as lacking âsparkleâ and said the âpromised bangers fail to materialiseâ, with The Guardian concluding there is a âdistinct lack of undeniable hooks and nailed-on melodiesâ.
Despite praising some of the key changes, lyricism and chord sequences in some of the songs, The Guardian said the rest of the album âfloats in one ear and out the other: not unpleasantly, but you might reasonably expect more given the amassed songwriting firepower behind it, and Swiftâs claims of âkeeping the bar really highâ.â
The Life Of A Showgirl is the first album since Swift announced her engagement to Kelce earlier this year and it follows her 11th album, The Tortured Poets Department, in April 2024.