
Taylor Swift Reclaims Her Legacy: Owns All Her Music At Last
Hey everyone, I just have to talk about one of the biggest moments in music history—Taylor Swift has officially bought back the rights to her first six albums. Let that sink in. After a six-year battle full of twists, heartbreak, and fierce determination, she finally owns the master recordings of her early music. This is more than just a business deal—this is personal triumph, poetic justice, and a massive win for artists everywhere.
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If you’ve followed Taylor’s journey, you know this saga started back in 2019 when music mogul Scooter Braun bought Big Machine, the label Taylor was originally signed to. That purchase included the master rights to Taylor Swift , Fearless , Speak Now , Red , 1989 , and Reputation . Taylor was devastated—not just because she lost control over the music she wrote and recorded, but because she felt silenced and sidelined in the process. She accused Braun of enabling years of public bullying, particularly tied to her feud with Kanye West.
But instead of giving up, she got creative. Taylor began re-recording all those albums, giving us the now-iconic “Taylor’s Versions” with bonus vault tracks that deepened our love for those eras. Her fans rallied hard. The re-recordings were hits, and the Eras Tour—a celebration of every phase of her career—became a cultural phenomenon and a financial juggernaut. In her own words, that success gave her the means to finally buy back her music, and she’s been “bursting into tears of joy” ever since.
Now, Taylor Swift doesn’t just perform her songs—she owns them. All of them. From the lyrics she penned at 14 to the records that built her empire, it’s all hers. She said this was her “greatest dream come true,” and it’s honestly inspiring. It shows the power of persistence, creativity, and knowing your worth. Even her most delayed re-recordings like Reputation might still surface later—not out of sadness or spite, but as a celebration.
This isn’t just a win for Taylor; it’s a landmark moment for all artists who’ve been told they don't have a say in their own legacy. As she said herself, every time a new artist negotiates for their masters because of what she went through, it makes the fight worth it. And now, her music can live on—on her terms. Taylor Swift owning her masters isn't just a headline. It’s history.
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