Music News
Aug 14, 2025
Taylor Swift has officially unveiled her 12th studio album, The Life of a Showgirl, set for release October 3 via Republic Records. Fans — or Swifties — have already crowned it TS12, and the announcement arrived with Swift’s signature mix of spectacle and surprise.
The pop star revealed the project simultaneously across all her social channels at 7 p.m. ET, timed with her guest appearance on boyfriend Travis Kelce’s New Heights podcast. Swift read out the tracklist live on air, explaining she had crafted much of the record while physically drained yet creatively sparked during the European leg of The Eras Tour.
The album boasts 12 songs, including a buzzy collaboration: The Life of a Showgirl featuring Sabrina Carpenter — a full-circle moment, as Carpenter previously opened for Swift on The Eras Tour.
Complete Tracklist:
The Fate of Ophelia
Elizabeth Taylor
Opalite
Father Figure
Eldest Daughter
Ruin the Friendship
Actually Romantic
Wi$h Li$t
Wood
Cancelled!
Honey
The Life of a Showgirl (feat. Sabrina Carpenter)
“This is the record I’ve been wanting to make for a very long time,” Swift said. “It meant the world to me to have this creative experience where we knew we had to bring the best ideas we’ve ever had.” Unlike her sprawling Tortured Poet’s Department with 31 songs, Swift emphasized Showgirl is “tight, focused, and intentional — there’s not a 13th or 14th track waiting.”
Swift confirmed she reunited with powerhouse collaborators Max Martin and Shellback, flying back and forth to Sweden to make the record. While the trio has shaped some of her biggest pop moments (1989, Reputation), she stressed this is their first time creating an “isolated” album together — a detail that raises expectations sky-high.
The album cover arrived in tandem with the announcement: Swift submerged in water wearing a silvery-white beaded dress. Additional variant covers, like It’s Frightening and It’s Rapturous, carry equally layered imagery.
Fashion, as always, is an extension of Swift’s storytelling. The It’s Frightening cover shows her stripped back — slicked hair, quilted bodysuit, undone glamour — save for one undeniable showgirl flourish: jeweled Manolo heels. Critics and fans alike are already dissecting these visuals as metaphors for fame, vulnerability, and reinvention.
“The shiny, perfect, smoothed artifice of the showgirl fractured apart,” one fan account noted, “is exactly what we’ll hear in these songs.”
Swift described The Life of a Showgirl as “everything that was going on behind the curtain” during the glittering chaos of The Eras Tour. If true, the record could serve as both diary and deconstruction — a look at the toll and triumph of life lived in the spotlight.
For an artist who has continually redefined her sound and self-image, Showgirl looks poised to be another pivot point — a statement album that strips away the artifice while doubling down on spectacle.
October 3 can’t come soon enough.