Once a week after school in 2005, teenage Taylor Swift would bounce into Nashville songwriter Liz Rose’s office, blond curls everywhere, chatting excitedly about her day. She liked to grab water and maybe a handful of M&M’s before she settled in behind a guitar or piano. Then, abruptly, she would snap into work mode and start to write a song, with a laserlike focus that might surprise anyone who has spent time with a teen.
One afternoon, Swift told Rose, “I had this idea in math class today.” The song was about her boyfriend who was going off to college, and how she hoped he would think of her every time he heard a Tim McGraw ballad. Swift sang her opening line: “He said the way my blue eyes shine put those Georgia stars to shame that night/I said, ‘That’s a lie.’ ”
Of course, that became “Tim McGraw,” Swift’s debut single released 10 years ago on June 19, 2006. Little did anyone know that song would trigger the start of Swift’s career, as in the last decade, she’s gone from teenage country singer to the most famous pop star on the planet.
“I mean, I was catching flak: ‘What are you doing writing with a 14-year-old?’ ” her co-writer Rose, one of the top songwriters in Nashville, recalled recently by phone. “I was like, ‘Hey, this kid’s brilliant, and it’s the easiest, funnest thing I do all week. And too bad y’all are not a part of it.’ ”