Nothing New

Album: Red (Taylor's Version) (2021)
Charted: 43
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • This alternative-rock duet finds Taylor Swift and Phoebe Bridgers trading rhetorical questions and wresting with change.
  • In the first verse, Swift criticizes the sexism young female pop stars often experience in the music industry.

    They tell you while you're young
    "Girls, go out and have your fun"
    Then they hunt and slay the ones who actually do it


    During the chorus, Swift questions why life seems more complicated at 22 than during her innocent teenage years.

    How can a person know everything at 18
    But nothing at 22?
    And will you still want me when I'm nothing new?


    Bridgers' verse finds her also worrying about becoming a has-been once she loses her novelty.

    How long will it be cute, all this crying in my room?
    When you can't blame it on my youth


    During the bridge, the two artists ruminate on meeting a young starlet who has replaced them in the spotlight.

    She'll know the way and then she'll say she got the map from me
    I'll say I'm happy for her then I'll cry myself to sleep
  • In the journals released alongside her 2019 album Lover, Swift explained that "Nothing New" is about "being scared of aging and things changing and losing what you have."
  • Swift originally wrote "Nothing New" in 2012 for Red. She'd just learned to play the Appalachian dulcimer because that's what her hero Joni Mitchell played on Blue. Swift penned this song on a flight from Sydney to Perth using the instrument, inspired by Mitchell's "A Case Of You."
  • The song didn't make the cut on the original version of Red, but Swift re-recorded it for Red (Taylor's Version). The record is part of a sweeping effort to regain control of the master tapes of her first six albums following their controversial sale.
  • Upon revisiting the song, Swift immediately thought of Bridgers. "I really wanted another female artist who I loved to do it with me because I think it has a very female-artist perspective," she told Seth Meyers.

    When Swift texted Bridgers asking her to sing on the song, the Californian artist responded: "I've been waiting for this text my entire life."
  • Swift tapped her Folklore and Evermore collaborator Aaron Dessner to help her produce the track. He recruited Yuki Numata Resnick to play the violin and Clarice Jensen the cello.
  • When Phoebe Bridgers received a text from Swift inviting her to collaborate on a song called "Nothing New," she blacked out. "We'd never met or interacted in any way, so to be asked as our first interaction was crazy," Bridgers recalled to The Guardian.
  • Swift described the song to Bridgers as about her "very first brush with the fear of aging, irrelevance, and replacement."

    "How young women are taught by society that our youth is a rapidly depleting commodity," she continued.

    The superstar singer added that Phoebe's interpretation of it was "profound and insightful - she was talking about how not only do older men and culture fetishes a girl's youth, but we in turn begin to internalize that ideology and genuinely believe it about ourselves."
  • Phoebe Bridgers joined Taylor Swift onstage at Nashville's Nissan Stadium on May 5, 2023, to give "Nothing New" its live debut.

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

Director Mark Pellington ("Jeremy," "Best Of You")

Director Mark Pellington ("Jeremy," "Best Of You")Song Writing

Director Mark Pellington on Pearl Jam's "Jeremy," and music videos he made for U2, Jon Bon Jovi and Imagine Dragons.

Why Does Everybody Hate Nu-Metal? Your Metal Questions Answered

Why Does Everybody Hate Nu-Metal? Your Metal Questions AnsweredSong Writing

10 Questions for the author of Precious Metal: Decibel Presents the Stories Behind 25 Extreme Metal Masterpieces

Greg Lake of Emerson, Lake & Palmer

Greg Lake of Emerson, Lake & PalmerSongwriter Interviews

Greg talks about writing songs of "universal truth" for King Crimson and ELP, and tells us about his most memorable stage moment (it involves fireworks).

Paul Williams

Paul WilliamsSongwriter Interviews

He's a singer and an actor, but as a songwriter Paul helped make Kermit a cultured frog, turned a bank commercial into a huge hit and made love both "exciting and new" and "soft as an easy chair."

Harry Wayne Casey of KC and The Sunshine Band

Harry Wayne Casey of KC and The Sunshine BandSongwriter Interviews

Harry Wayne Casey tells the stories behind KC and The Sunshine Band hits like "Get Down Tonight," "That's The Way (I Like It)," and "Give It Up."

Tony Iommi of Black Sabbath, Heaven And Hell

Tony Iommi of Black Sabbath, Heaven And HellSongwriter Interviews

Guitarist Tony Iommi on the "Iron Man" riff, the definitive Black Sabbath song, and how Ozzy and Dio compared as songwriters.