News | Entertainment
7 Oct 2025 10:56
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > Entertainment

    Taylor Swift praised her mother and brother as "the smartest, most compassionate, and kindest" people she knows after they helped her to get her master recordings back

    In 2019, music ex ecutive Scooter Braun acquired the masters of Taylor's early discography - Taylor Swift, Fearless, Speak Now, Red, 1989 and Reputation - for $300 million, a move the artist publicly criticised, claiming she was not given the opportunity to purchase them herself


    The rights were later sold to the investment firm Shamrock Capital and Taylor revealed she only trusted her mother Andrea and brother Austin to get them back for her.

    During an interview on The Graham Norton Show, Graham said: "You bought it all back from a corporate entity, you imagine there'd be an army of lawyers talking to another army of lawyers, but that is not how it went down."

    Taylor, 35, replied: "No, I sent in my mum and my brother. So basically my music was owned by a company called Shamrock Capital.

    "We had to try figure out how to convince them to sell a very lucrative entity to us, even though it was still making them loads of money.

    "So I was like the only people for the job are the people who have known me my entire life, know this entire journey I've been on, who've been supporting me, and who I work with everyday.

    "They both work with me and they are the smartest people I know.

    "And also the most compassionate, the kindest, the people who could tell the story of what we've been through as a family.

    "So they went in and got my music back for me."

    Taylor previously revealed she was "in heaven crying" when she found out the news that she owned her works again.

    Appearing on her fiance Travis Kelce's New Heights podcast, she recalled: "A couple of months after the Super Bowl in Kansas City, I get a call from my mom. She's like, 'You got your music.' I very dramatically hit the floor for real. Bawling my eyes out, weeping, like 'Really!?'"

    She continued: "I said to myself, 'Go tell Travis in a normal way,' he was playing video games, and he put his headset down. I was like 'I got my music back!' And I was in heaven crying. This changed my life."

    © 2025 Bang Showbiz, NZCity

     Other Entertainment News
     07 Oct: Shailene Woodley's sibling cats have made her not feel "lonely anymore"
     07 Oct: Aimee Lou Wood "learned to express [herself]" by "always doing impressions" growing up
     07 Oct: William, Prince of Wales, is a "big fan" of American Pie
     07 Oct: The Skids frontman Richard Jobson has paid tribute to his hometown roots in The Story of The Skids - a new documentary directed by punk artist Mark Sloper which premiered last week to packed audiences across Scotland
     07 Oct: Lily James creates a scent for each character she plays
     07 Oct: Sylvester Stallone was "nervous" to work with Samuel L. Jackson in Tulsa King
     07 Oct: Rebel Wilson has denied an accusation that she ordered the creation of "malicious websites" about The Deb producer Amanda Ghost
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    Yvette McCausland-Durie's extending her time with the Silver Ferns, away from her full-time co-principal job at the revamped Tipene school in Bombay More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    All major banks have lowered interest rates, ahead of this afternoon's review of the OCR More...



     Today's News

    Law and Order:
    Claims a lack of mental health support is leading to a surge in violence against police 10:47

    Entertainment:
    Shailene Woodley's sibling cats have made her not feel "lonely anymore" 10:30

    Living & Travel:
    Ian McEwan’s new novel explores resentment and vengeance in a fractured world 10:27

    Law and Order:
    New details have been revealed six months on from the unsolved death of a 63-year-old Wellington man 10:27

    National:
    On a grim anniversary, an end to Gaza’s violence is suddenly clear – if both sides can make sacrifices 10:17

    Rugby:
    Yvette McCausland-Durie's extending her time with the Silver Ferns, away from her full-time co-principal job at the revamped Tipene school in Bombay 10:07

    Law and Order:
    A man's been charged following yesterday's three-hour stand-off in Auckland's Flat Bush, that saw a Police officer shot and injured 10:07

    National:
    From the telegraph to AI, our communications systems have always had hidden environmental cost 10:07

    Law and Order:
    The Wellington woman found guilty of brutally murdering her elderly mother is appealing 10:07

    Entertainment:
    Aimee Lou Wood "learned to express [herself]" by "always doing impressions" growing up 10:00


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2025 New Zealand City Ltd