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Who Is Taylor Swift?
Musician
Taylor Swift was earning renown as a country music singer by the age of 16.
Early hits like "Love Story" and "You Belong With Me"
appealed to country and pop fans alike and helped fuel the multi-platinum
success of her albums, including the Grammy-winning Fearless (2008). Swift
continued to top the charts with her 2014 studio effort 1989, which featured
the No. 1 singles "Shake it Off" and "Blank Space" and won
Grammys for Album of the Year and Best Pop Vocal Album. Her follow-up albums
reputation (2018) and Lover (2019) also achieved immense commercial success.
Early Life
Taylor
Alison Swift was born on December 13, 1989, in Reading, Pennsylvania. Swift
spent her early years on her family's Christmas tree farm in nearby Wyoming.
Her grandmother had been a professional opera singer, and Swift soon followed
in her musical footsteps. By the age of 10, Swift was singing at a variety of
local events, including fairs and contests. She sang "The Star-Spangled
Banner" at a Philadelphia 76ers basketball game at the age of 11, and
began writing her own songs and learning guitar at 12 years old. To pursue her
music career, Swift often visited Nashville, Tennessee, the country music
capital. There she co-wrote songs and tried to land a recording contract.
Noting her dedication, Swift and her family moved to nearby Hendersonville,
Tennessee, in an attempt to further Swift's career.
Country Music Career
A
stellar performance at The Bluebird Café in Nashville helped Swift get a
contract with Scott Borchetta's Big Machine Records. She released her first
single, "Tim McGraw," in 2006, and the song became a Top 10 hit on
the country charts. It also appeared on her self-titled debut album in October
of that same year, which went on to sell more than 5 million copies. More
popular singles soon followed, including "Our Song," a No. 1 country
music hit. "Teardrops on My Guitar," "Picture to Burn" and
"Should've Said No" were also successful tracks. Swift also received
critical praise for her debut effort. She won the Horizon Award from the
Country Music Association (CMA) and the Academy of Country Music (ACM) Award
for Top New Female Vocalist in 2007. Swift next released Sounds of the Season:
The Taylor Swift Holiday Collection that year. Her renditions of "Silent
Night" and "Santa Baby" were modest hits on the country charts.
'Fearless'
In
2008, Swift was nominated for a Grammy in the Best New Artist category and won
other accolades, including the ACM's Female Vocalist of the Year Award. Around
this same time, Swift released her next album, Fearless, which hit the top of
both the country and pop charts and stayed there for 11 weeks. By the end of
the year, Swift had become the highest-selling country artist of 2008.
2009 VMAs and Kanye West
Swift
netted several awards for her work on Fearless, including Video of the Year and
Female Video of the Year for "Love Story" at the 2009 CMT Music
Awards. That year Swift also won the MTV Video Music Award's Best Female Video,
for "You Belong With Me," making her the first country music star to
earn a VMA. The win stirred controversy when rapper Kanye West leaped to the
stage during Swift's speech, took the microphone and declared that R&B
singer Beyoncé should have won Swift's award. The stunned Swift was unable to make
her acceptance speech, and West was removed from the show. When Beyoncé
accepted her award for Best Video of the Year later in the show, she called
Swift to the stage to finish her speech. West later apologized to Swift
privately and made a public apology on The Jay Leno Show.
'Speak Now' and 'Red'
Swift
soon became an even hotter commodity. Her concert tickets began selling out in
less than two minutes, and she also made her second appearance on the comedy
show Saturday Night Live, this time as both the host and musical guest.
Additionally, in 2010 she became the youngest artist to win the Grammy Award
for Album of the Year, for Fearless. That year Swift released a new album,
Speak Now, which featured the hit songs "Mean," "Ours" and "Sparks
Fly." The album was a success, debuting at No. 1 on the Billboard 200
chart and selling more than 1 million copies in its first week. She followed
with Red (2012), which featured the hit single "We Are Never Ever Getting
Back Together" and also topped 1 million in its first week of sales.
Philanthropic Efforts and More
Accolades
Swift
was ranked Forbes magazine's highest-paid celebrity under 30 in 2012, beating
out Justin Bieber, Rihanna and Lady Gaga with earnings of $57 million. The
following year, the musician shared some of her fortune to help others, funding
the $4 million Taylor Swift Education Center at the Country Music Hall of Fame
in Nashville. The facility opened with three classrooms, a learning lab and a
space dedicated to exhibits for children. In an interview with CMT Hot 20
Countdown, she explained that "music education is really such an important
part of my life. My life changed so completely when I discovered writing my own
songs and playing guitar, and that can't necessarily all be taught to you in
school because there aren't enough hours in the day." In 2013, Swift was
also honored with the CMA Pinnacle Award for her achievements as a country
music performer and for her "positive impact" on country music,
according to the CMA website. She picked up two other wins for her
collaboration with Tim McGraw and Keith Urban at the CMA Awards ceremony held
that November. Swift's winning streak continued at the American Music Awards,
as she picked up the AMA Award for Artist of the Year for the third consecutive
time, among other wins.
'1989'
With
her next effort, Swift seemed to step further away from her country music
roots. She released 1989 in October 2014. "Shake It Off" proved to be
one of the catchiest tracks of the year, reaching the top of the pop charts,
and she immediately followed with a second chart-topping single, "Blank
Space." In an age of low album sales, 1989 moved more than 1.2 million copies
in its first week, making Swift the first artist to top the 1 million mark in
opening-week sales for three albums. Swift continued to play with her public
persona with the track "Bad Blood," which features Kendrick Lamar. In
the video for the song, which debuted at the 2015 Billboard Music Awards and
doubles as a noir action short, she appears as a tough, cutthroat character
called "Catastrophe." Swift recruited other celebrities to appear in
the video as well, including Karlie Kloss, Cindy Crawford and Lena Dunham. In
February 2016, Swift opened up the 58th Annual Grammy Awards with another track
from 1989, "Out of the Woods." Having received pre-telecast awards
for Best Music Video and Best Pop Vocal Album, later in the evening, Swift won
another Grammy for Album of the Year, making music history as the first woman
to win the award twice. In what was seen as a sharp rebuke to a new West song
in which he took credit for her fame, Swift used her acceptance speech to issue
an empowerment statement. "I wanna say to all the young women out there,
there are going to be people along the way who will try to undercut your
success or take credit for your accomplishments or your fame," she said.
"But if you just focus on the work, and you don't let those people sidetrack
you, someday when you get where you're going, you’ll look around and you will
know that it was you and the people who loved you who put you there. And that
will be the greatest feeling in the world."
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