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"You Belong with Me" is a song by the American singer-songwriter Taylor Swift and the third single from her second studio album Fearless (2008). Big Machine Records released the song to radio on April 20, 2009.
[note 5] Similar to "Love Story", "You Belong with Me" was a crossover success, [20] [102] becoming the first country song to top the all-genre Radio Songs chart, driven mostly by non-country airplay. [103] According to Nielsen SoundScan, "Love Story" and "You Belong with Me" were the two most-played songs on US radio throughout 2009. [104]
Swift and Rose co-wrote the singles, "White Horse" and "You Belong with Me" [5] as well as the title track. "White Horse" won both of them the Grammy Award for Best Country Song in 2010, [ 6 ] and "You Belong with Me" was nominated for Grammy Award for Song of the Year . [ 7 ]
"That's When" [a] is a song by Taylor Swift featuring Keith Urban. It was released as part of Fearless (Taylor's Version) (2021), a re-recording of Swift's second studio album Fearless (2008). She wrote the track with the Warren Brothers at age 14 and handled the production with Jack Antonoff.
The lyrics of "So High School" revolves around careless teenage romance reminiscent of high-school love. [19] [20] The lover is portrayed as a football player, a lyrical motif that evokes Swift's Fearless songs like "You Belong with Me" or "Fifteen". [16]
Taylor Swift performs onstage during The Eras Tour at Hard Rock Stadium on Friday, Oct. 18, 2024, in Miami Gardens, Fla. ... Taylor’s Version album.) ... You Belong With Me.
Taylor Swift was head over heels when Travis Kelce stepped up to the DJ booth at a Super Bowl LVIII afterparty so he could jam out to “You Belong With Me,” a Swift classic from her 2008 album ...
Taylor Swift wrote her third studio album, Speak Now, entirely herself [1] and produced it with Nathan Chapman, who had produced both of her previous albums. [2] Released in October 2010, Speak Now continued the country pop sound of Swift's previous records, with a radio-friendly pop crossover production and elements from various rock subgenres of the 1970s and 1980s decades.