Teenage Dream

Album: Guts (2023)
Charted: 39
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Songfacts®:

  • Having just turned 19, Olivia Rodrigo reflects here on the twists and turns of growing up and the sky-high expectations society places on young people.

    I'll blow out the candles, happy birthday to me
    Got your whole life ahead of you, you're only nineteen
    But I fear that they already got all the best parts of me
    And I'm sorry that I couldn't always be your teenage dream


    The lyric parallels Rodrigo's 2021 track, "Brutal" in which she laments the pressure to be perfect.

    And I'm so sick of seventeen
    Where's my f---ing teenage dream?
  • In the first verse, Rodrigo dives headfirst into a world that's boxing in her artistry. She throws out a series of rhetorical questions, challenging a world that seems dead set on pigeonholing her. She's tired of being wise beyond her years, yearning for just plain old wisdom. When does she shed the "pretty young thing" label and become more than just "great for her age"? And when will society stop romanticizing her quiet misunderstandings?

    "They always used to praise me for being this precocious young girl, that's so much of the praise I get, that I'm so impressive 'cause I'm so young doing this," Rodrigo told The Guardian.
  • The second verse delves deeper into the harsh reality of not meeting those sky-high expectations. When does wide-eyed affection and good intentions no longer cut it? When will everyone see through her façade? And what about all those lessons she's supposed to learn? Will they just lead to a lifetime of regret?

    Rodrigo explained to The Guardian how she realized "it wasn't always going to be that way and wondering what I would lose or how I would become less attractive in certain ways to people."
  • Rodrigo's anxiety about growing up shines the brightest in the bridge. People keep saying, "It gets better," but she's not buying it. What if it doesn't? What if age strips away the magic, leaving her hollow?

    "The last line is a line that I really love and it ends the album on a question mark," Rodrigo told Apple Music. "'They all say that it gets better. It gets better the more you grow. They all say that it gets better. What if I don't?' I like that it's like an ending, but it's also a question mark and it's leaving it up in the air what this next chapter is going to be. It's still confused, but it feels like a final note to that confusion, a final question."
  • Rodrigo was 7 years old when Katy Perry's "Teenage Dream" topped the Hot 100 in 2010. They are two completely different songs: Perry's starry-eyed smash is the euphoria of teenage love, while Rodrigo's "Teenage Dream" is a more wistful and melancholy song about the doubts involved with growing out of teen-icon status.

    Though Katy Perry's Teenage Dream album is one of Rodrigo's favorite sophomore collections, she didn't title the song after it. "We thought about changing the name," Rodrigo told Rolling Stone. "If someone looks up 'Teenage Dream' on Spotify, there's no way in heck that my song's going to pull up first."
  • Rodrigo wrote "Teenage Dream" with her producer, Dan Nigro. The intimate piano ballad closes her second album, Guts, but was the first song they wrote for the record.
  • "Teenage Dream", and by extension, the entire album, concludes with Rodrigo sharing laughter and conversation with producer Dan Nigro's baby, Saoirse Raine. As the little one babbles and coos, it's a touching way to wrap up a track that delves deep into the theme of growing up. In the end, it circles back to the pure innocence of childhood.
  • "Teenage Dream" shares the same key as Sour's closing track, "Hope Ur Ok," ensuring a heartfelt, familiar connection for the album's grand finale.

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