Skip to content
Search

Jack White Responds After Uproar Over Taylor Swift Songwriting Comment

"I didn't say that I think Taylor Swift's music was 'boring' or whatever click bait the net is trying to scrape together,' wrote White in a since-deleted Instagram post

Jack White Responds After Uproar Over Taylor Swift Songwriting Comment
Frazer Harrison/Getty Images for RRHOF

This is why we can’t have nice things.

Jack White posted a statement on Instagram Monday evening after numerous publications took his comments in an interview with The Guardian out of context. When discussing poetry and songwriting, White mentioned fellow musician Taylor Swift‘s style of songwriting, and explored his own approach to storytelling when creating music. Unfortunately, online outlets framed his words as a critique of the Tortured Poets star, especially when it came to headlines that quickly circulated on the internet.


“Putting this up for a day and then taking down to just put this to bed,” wrote White in the since-deleted post. “I didn’t say that I think Taylor Swift’s music was ‘boring’ or whatever click bait the net is trying to scrape together. What I was trying to say in an interview I did about poetry and lyric writing, was that I don’t find it interesting at all for ME to write about MYSELF in my own lyric writing and poetry because I think that it could be repetitive for ME to always write about and It could be uninteresting for people who listen to my music to delve into, and that imaginary characters are more attractive to me as a writer.”

White went on to acknowledge the “tremendous success” of Swift and other songwriters who have their own process, while stating that just “because I say I have a way of doing things doesn’t mean that I think that EVERYONE should do it the same way.” He added, “They should do what works for them, And they do, and it is obviously appealing to many people, and I’m glad to hear that.”

When asked by The Guardian in the article published Sunday, if any of any of his songs were entirely autobiographical, White replied, “Not too much. Now it’s become very popular in the Taylor Swift way of pop singers writing about all of their publicly aired break-ups, which I don’t find interesting at all. I think it’s a little bit boring for me to write about myself.”

White further explained, “Even if I’ve had a really interesting day, I feel like I’ve already lived that, I don’t need to go through it every time I sing this song. If it’s something really painful, I’m not going to put this important, painful thing that I went through out there for some idiot on the internet to stomp all over. So I put a percentage of that into what I do and then morph it into somebody else’s character. I can’t really learn about myself until I put it into somebody else’s shoes.”

Editor’s picks

The 250 Greatest Albums of the 21st Century So Far

The 100 Best TV Episodes of All Time

The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time

100 Best Movies of the 21st Century

In his Monday statement, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee said that at times he has been “made less and less interested in doing interviews” amid the “age of this massive demand for click bait and content.” Any “scrape of anything interesting” can be used as drama and “spit out as bait,” he continued, leading White to “not want to answer questions with any sort of romance or passion or reflection as I’m too busy having to worry about accidentally triggering nonsense like this from so called ‘journalists’ and ‘editors.'”

Trending Stories

Jack White Responds After Uproar Over Taylor Swift Songwriting Comment

Watch Hilary Duff's Intimate Performance of 'Roommates' on 'Fallon'

Rihanna Shooting Suspect Held for Attempted Murder on $10.2 Million Bail

Amy Klobuchar Slams Live Nation Settlement: 'Every Sign Points to a Backroom Deal'

He ended his response to the wave of backlash following his interview by saying, “This has always been a problem as it encourages artists to give ‘safe’ answers to any question and stifles artistic vision and imagination and pushes all of us to not share anything interesting, which was one of the points I made about keeping private things private in that same interview. But yeah, content.”

ADVERTISEMENT

White recently released Jack White: Collected Lyrics & Selected Writing Volume 1, a collection of lyrics from the artist’s solo recordings including No Name, The Raconteurs, and more, plus selected poems and writings by White, and essays by poet Adrian Matejka.

More Stories

Metallica Prep Fully Loaded ‘ReLoad’ Box Set Reissue for This Summer

Metallica

Anton Corbijn*

Metallica Prep Fully Loaded ‘ReLoad’ Box Set Reissue for This Summer

A year ahead of the album’s 30th anniversary, Metallica will release a super deluxe “ReIssue” of their seventh album, ReLoad. As with previous box sets, the ReLoad collection, out June 26, will come fully loaded (pun intended) with 15 CDs and four DVDs filled with live recordings, rough mixes of songs, and songwriting demos. (The original album will be in there, as well.)

The “Bad Seed” to its 1996 predecessor, Load, the album found Metallica continuing their quest to simplify their sound as they moved away from thrash metal to explore hard rock, punk, and blues influences. Highlights from ReLoad include the punk-ish “Fuel,” which is still a set list staple; an eerie duet with Marianne Faithfull, “The Memory Remains”; a sequel to the Black Album hit “The Unforgiven”; and the snaky “Carpe Diem Baby.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Ariana Grande Announces New Album ‘Petal’ — and It’s Coming Sooner Than You Think

Grande described the album as "something that is full of life and growing through the cracks of something cold and hard and challenging"

Katia Temkin*

Ariana Grande Announces New Album ‘Petal’ — and It’s Coming Sooner Than You Think

Ariana Grande has announced her eighth studio album, Petal, which will arrive July 31.

Grande executive produced and co-wrote the album with Ilya, the Swedish writer/producer who has been a frequent collaborator since 2018’s Sweetener.

Keep ReadingShow less
NBA YoungBoy Fans Turn Movie Theaters Into Concerts for ‘American YoungBoy’

NBA YoungBoy's tour documentary is a hit.NBA YoungBoy's tour documentary is a hit.

Prince Williams/WireImage/Getty Images

NBA YoungBoy Fans Turn Movie Theaters Into Concerts for ‘American YoungBoy’

NBA YoungBoy’s sold-out arena tour last year solidified the rapper’s place as a leader of his generation. Clips of packed-out venues filled with screaming young fans spread like wildfire on social media, as YoungBoy defied the ongoing gloom around hip-hop touring by grossing more than $69 million across 42 arena shows. Fittingly, the Baton Rouge-born rapper just dropped a tour documentary, American YoungBoy, allowing fans to relive the excitement.

Even with the weekend’s crowded field — including the box-office juggernaut Michael — YoungBoy’s film landed at Number 10 on the domestic weekend chart, while only playing in 583 theaters. Directed by Nico Ballesteros, who notably helmed the Ye documentary In Whose Name, YoungBoy’s film is packed with concert footage, behind-the-scenes production moments, and glimpses of the rapper’s home and family life between shows. NBA YoungBoy is also listed among the documentary’s producers alongside Patrick Hughes, Antoine Banks, and Kyle Claiborne.

Keep ReadingShow less
Kneecap Make the Most of their Spotlight on ‘Fenian’
Tom Beard*

Kneecap Make the Most of their Spotlight on ‘Fenian’

Kneecap are a politically charged, hard-partying, musically explosive rap crew from the north of Ireland who’ve been at it for nearly a decade. But it wouldn’t be your fault if you knew more about the controversies they’ve been embroiled in than the music they’ve put out. Rappers Mo Chara and Móglaí Bap, along with DJ Próvaí, have always put their leftist sympathies front and center on their music. At Coachella in 2025, the group projected the phrase “Israel is committing genocide” on screens behind their performance. In the annals of button-pushing statements by musicians, that sentiment doesn’t necessarily seem that extreme, but in our touchy times it led to the loss of their U.S. visas and the cancellation of a North American tour. A few months earlier in 2024, during a London show, Mo Chara held up a Hezbollah flag. (He claimed a fan threw it onstage.) In response, he was prosecuted under the U.K.’s 2006 Terrorism Act. The charges were later thrown out, and the group issued a statement denouncing “all attacks on civilians, always,” but the scandal was big enough news that British Prime Minister Keir Starmer stepped in to claim that Kneecap’s upcoming performance at the 2025 Glastonbury festival was “not appropriate.” Undeterred, the band fired back, “You know what’s ‘not appropriate’ Keir? Arming a fucking genocide.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Megan Thee Stallion Bows Out of ‘Moulin Rouge’ Early Following Hospitalization

Megan Thee Stallion's last performance as Zidler in 'Moulin Rouge' will be May 1.

Theo Wargo/Getty Images for Hot Girl Productions

Megan Thee Stallion Bows Out of ‘Moulin Rouge’ Early Following Hospitalization

Megan Thee Stallion will be departing the cast of Moulin Rouge! The Musical early. On Monday, the Grammy-winner announced that her final performance as Moulin Rouge’s owner and MC, Zidler, will be on May 1. Megan was originally slated to stay with the production until May 17.

“It’s been such an honor to be part of thee Moulin Rouge family and I’ve met so many amazing people in this theater!” said the rapper in a statement posted to Instagram. “Y’all work so hard and I have so much respect for the dedication, the stamina, the work ethic, the time and the effort y’all put into the work! I’m so grateful for the cast and crew that made this experience so meaningful. And to all the Hotties that showed up or planned to attend, thank you for supporting me during this incredible journey! I LOVE YALL. See you soon.”

Keep ReadingShow less