Taste Back

Album: Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally (2026)
Charted: 17
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • Pop songs about exes usually come in two varieties: the furious "never speak to me again" kind and the misty "we were young and foolish but lovely" kind. Harry Styles tries something more psychologically complicated on "Taste Back," a song about that awkward situation in which someone from your past wanders back into your life.
  • The song appears as track 6 on Styles' fourth album, Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally., positioned roughly at the hinge between the more danceable, outward-facing opening and the more reflective second half. Its cooler, more guarded emotional temperature acts as a counterpoint to the warmer "Coming Up Roses" two tracks later.
  • At the heart of the song is a deceptively simple question:

    Did you get your taste back?
    Or do you just need a little love?


    The word "taste" functions on multiple levels: taste as discernment, taste as desire, taste as the capacity to recognize something good when you have it. There is a mildly teasing, gently sarcastic undertone; the suggestion being that the ex left (or behaved badly) precisely because they had lost their taste, and Styles is now asking, with wry skepticism, whether they've recovered it, or whether they're simply lonely.
  • "Taste Back" is widely believed to reference Camille Rowe, the French-American model Styles dated from 2017 to 2018. The lyrics offer a few clues:

    Must be lonely out in Paris if you talk like that

    Rowe is French and Paris-based. Styles previously wrote about her explicitly on Fine Line's "Cherry," which features her voice. "Taste Back" feels almost like a sequel; less heartbroken, more amused.

    Handling it like a European

    A pointed, almost winking phrase when directed at someone who literally is European.

    Always been a consequence when you call me baby

    On "Cherry," Styles sings, "Don't you call him what you used to call me." The reappearance of the word "baby" as a trigger in "Taste Back" reinforces the connection to the same relationship.

    The word "taste" itself may also carry an echo of "Cherry." Both songs deal in sensory, almost gustatory metaphors for a relationship that left a complicated aftertaste.
  • Another lyric raises eyebrows in a slightly different direction:

    You on white so sweet and sour
    Just like old times


    The "white" is widely interpreted as cocaine use, suggesting the relationship had complicated dynamics that contributed to its end. This isn't the first time Harry has spoken about a woman doing cocaine in his music. In his Harry's House song "Daylight," he sings:

    You were just doing cocaine in my kitchen
    You never listen
    I hope you're missing me by now


    While Styles never confirmed who "Daylight" was about, it isn't clear if this is even the same woman Harry is referring to, since cocaine use is common in celebrity spheres.
  • "Taste Back" is one of three tracks on the album with backing vocals from Ellie Rowsell, lead singer of the British rock band Wolf Alice. Rowsell also contributes backing vocals to "Aperture" and "Season 2 Weight Loss."

    Her involvement with Styles dates to the summer of 2022, when Wolf Alice was the support act for the European leg of his Love On Tour. On the final night in Lisbon, Rowsell joined Styles on stage for a duet of Wolf Alice's 2021 track "No Hard Feelings."

    Speaking at the 2026 Brit Awards (where Wolf Alice received three nominations), Rowsell said of the collaboration: "I'm not really featured, I just did some backing vocals. But I love doing harmonies and I love Harry, so it was just a pleasure to be part of it."

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

Paul Stanley of Kiss, Soul Station

Paul Stanley of Kiss, Soul StationSongwriter Interviews

Paul Stanley on his soul music project, the Kiss songs with the biggest soul influence, and the non-make-up era of the band.

Alan Merrill of The Arrows

Alan Merrill of The ArrowsSongwriter Interviews

In her days with The Runaways, Joan Jett saw The Arrows perform "I Love Rock And Roll," which Alan Merrill co-wrote - that story and much more from this glam rock pioneer.

Matthew Wilder - "Break My Stride"

Matthew Wilder - "Break My Stride"They're Playing My Song

Wilder's hit "Break My Stride" had an unlikely inspiration: a famous record mogul who rejected it.

Angelo Moore of Fishbone

Angelo Moore of FishboneSongwriter Interviews

Fishbone has always enjoyed much more acclaim than popularity - Angelo might know why.

Ben Kowalewicz of Billy Talent

Ben Kowalewicz of Billy TalentSongwriter Interviews

The frontman for one of Canada's most well-known punk rock bands talks about his Eddie Vedder encounter, Billy Talent's new album, and the importance of rock and roll.

Who Wrote That Song?

Who Wrote That Song?Music Quiz

Do you know who wrote Patti Smith's biggest hit? How about the Grease theme song? See if you can match the song to the writer.