Hey Stephen

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

"Hey Stephen"
Song by Taylor Swift
from the album Fearless
ReleasedNovember 11, 2008 (2008-11-11)
Genre
Length4:14
LabelBig Machine
Songwriter(s)Taylor Swift
Producer(s)
"Hey Stephen (Taylor's Version)"
Song by Taylor Swift
from the album Fearless (Taylor's Version)
ReleasedApril 9, 2021 (2021-04-09)
Studio
  • Black Bird
  • Prime Recording
(Nashville)
Length4:14
LabelRepublic
Songwriter(s)Taylor Swift
Producer(s)
  • Taylor Swift
  • Christopher Rowe
Lyric video
"Hey Stephen (Taylor's Version)" on
YouTube

"Hey Stephen" is a song written and recorded by the American singer-songwriter

upright bass that propels its groove, and a subdued Hammond B-3 organ. In reviews of Fearless, critics who picked "Hey Stephen" as an album highlight praised what they deemed a catchy melody and earnest lyrics about adolescent feelings. The song peaked at number 94 on the US Billboard Hot 100 and was certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America
(RIAA).

Swift included "Hey Stephen" in the set list of her first headlining tour, the Fearless Tour (2009–2010). Following the 2019 dispute regarding the ownership of Swift's back catalog, she re-recorded the song as "Hey Stephen (Taylor's Version)" for her re-recorded album Fearless (Taylor's Version) (2021). "Hey Stephen (Taylor's Version)" charted in Australia and Canada. In retrospective rankings, some reviewers remained positive but others regarded the track as generic.

Background and writing

Taylor Swift wrote songs for her second studio album, Fearless, while touring as an opening act for other country musicians to promote her self-titled debut studio album during 2007–2008, when she was 17–18 years old.[1][2] Continuing the romantic themes of her first album, Swift wrote songs about love and personal experiences from the perspective of a teenage girl to ensure her fans could relate to Fearless. To this extent, Swift said that nearly every album track had a "face" that she associated with it.[3] The end product is a collection of songs about the challenges of love with prominent high-school and fairy-tale lyrical imagery.[4] Swift and the producer Nathan Chapman recorded over 50 songs for Fearless, and "Hey Stephen" was one of the 13 tracks that made the final cut.[5][6] They produced the track, and Justin Niebank mixed it at Blackbird Studios in Nashville.[7] In the album liner notes, the secret message for the song is "Love and Theft", referencing the eponymous group that opened shows for her in 2008.[8][a]

When asked by

The Boot (2009): "I was very relieved when it turned out to be a nice song, and it's actually one of the nicest things anybody's ever done for me."[14] He wrote "Try to Make It Anyway" as an answer song to Swift when they were touring together and released it for download and streaming in 2011.[15]

Releases

Swift wearing a blue dress and cowboy boots playing a guitar
Swift (pictured in 2010) on the Fearless Tour, whose set list included "Hey Stephen"

"Hey Stephen" was released as an album cut on Fearless, on November 11, 2008, by Big Machine Records.[16] It entered and peaked at number 94 on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart dated November 29, 2008.[17] The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) certified the song gold, denoting 500,000 units based on sales and streaming.[18] Swift performed the track live at her Australian concert debut at the Tivoli in Brisbane on March 5, 2009.[19] "Hey Stephen" was part of the mid-show acoustic session on Swift's first headlining tour, the Fearless Tour (2009–2010).[20] Midway through the performance, Swift would go down the aisle to greet and hug her fans.[21][22] She performed "Hey Stephen" as a "surprise song" outside the regular setlist on the September 18, 2018, St. Louis concert of the Reputation Stadium Tour[23] and the May 14, 2023, Philadelphia concert of the Eras Tour.[24]

After signing a new contract with Republic Records, Swift began re-recording her first six studio albums in November 2020.[25] The decision followed a public 2019 dispute between Swift and the talent manager Scooter Braun, who acquired Big Machine Records, including the masters of Swift's albums which the label had released.[26][27] By re-recording the albums, Swift had full ownership of the new masters, which enabled her to control the licensing of her songs for commercial use and therefore substituted the Big Machine–owned masters.[28] Swift and Christopher Rowe produced the re-recorded track, which was recorded by David Payne at Black Bird and Prime Recording Studios in Nashville. Rowe recorded Swift's lead vocals at her home studio in London, and Serban Ghenea mixed the track at MixStar Studios in Virginia Beach, Virginia.[29]

The re-recording of "Hey Stephen", subtitled "Taylor's Version", was released as part of Fearless's re-recording, Fearless (Taylor's Version).[30] Swift released a snippet of "Hey Stephen (Taylor's Version)" on her Twitter account on April 8, 2021,[31] one day before Republic Records released Fearless (Taylor's Version).[32] "Hey Stephen (Taylor's Version)" charted in Australia (86)[33] and Canada (68).[34] It peaked at number 105 on the Billboard Global 200.[35] In the United States, "Hey Stephen (Taylor's Version)" peaked at number one on Bubbling Under Hot 100[36] and number 28 on Billboard's Hot Country Songs chart.[37]

Music and lyrics

"Hey Stephen" is a

upright bass that propels its groove,[6] and a subdued Hammond B-3.[42] The track incorporates a drum beat that Rob Sheffield of Rolling Stone found reminiscent of the Ronettes' "Be My Baby" (1963),[43] and Maria Sherman of NPR Music said it evoked classic Motown girl-group records.[44] Swift uses ad-libs[45] and chuckles before the final refrain.[46] The track both starts and ends with Swift humming.[43] In the original 2008 song, the finger snaps are credited to country musician Martina McBride's children and their friends, who visited Swift one day when she was at the recording studio of McBride's husband, John.[6][47] The re-recorded "Hey Stephen (Taylor's Version)" features the same arrangement, which led to The New York Times journalist Joe Coscarelli commenting it sounded "more remastered than rerecorded".[48] Michael A. Lee, a professor in commercial music, identified some minor changes: Swift's voice is richer and less breathy, and the cymbals in the break are louder.[49]

The lyrics are about an unrequited love for a seemingly out-of-reach boy.[50][51] The title character is a boy in whom "all the girls" are interested, and although they toss stones at his window to get his attention, Swift's character tells Stephen that she is the only one "waiting there even when it's cold".[52] "Hey Stephen" incorporates some lyrical motifs that recur in many of Swift's other songs, such as rain ("Can't help it if I wanna kiss you in the rain so")[c] and waiting for somebody by the window.[d] At one point, Swift sings, "Hey Stephen, why are people always leaving/ I think you and I should stay the same". Biographer Liv Spencer attributed this lyric to the impact of Swift's touring that "sometimes means too many goodbyes".[8] In the bridge, Swift's character mentions the reason why Stephen should date her: "All those other girls, well they're beautiful, but would they write a song for you?"[13] Critic Ken Tucker found this lyric to showcase Swift's "confident sense of humor",[54] and musicologist James E. Perone commented that it aligned Swift with the 1970s singer-songwriter tradition of mentioning their songwriting profession in their own works.[55] In a 2021 article for Gigwise, journalist Kelsey Barnes said "Hey Stephen" was an example of Swift's songwriting tropes: the track reflected her desire to be "seen, understood, and loved by others", a recurring theme on many of her later songs. For Barnes, it offered a glimpse into Swift's personal life before it became sensationalized in the press.[13]

Critical reception

In album reviews of Fearless, many critics picked "Hey Stephen" as a highlight.[e] They positively remarked how "Hey Stephen" portrays universal teenage feelings towards love and infatuation[f]—Craig S. Sermon of the Telegram & Gazette said, "Swift's loose and playful confession is enough to make anybody blush."[59] Others praised Swift's songwriting for creating what they deemed a catchy melody.[g] Larry Rodgers in The Arizona Republic wrote the track was "hummable pop"[40] and Chris Richards in The Washington Post praised its "irresistible smile" that could "permanently [lodge] itself in your hippocampus".[38] Jody Rosen in a review for Rolling Stone selected the song as an example of Swift's songwriting that highlighted her "peculiar charm" on Fearless: "Her music mixes an almost impersonal professionalism—it's so rigorously crafted it sounds like it has been scientifically engineered in a hit factory—with confessions that are squirmingly intimate and true."[63] In Slant Magazine, Jonathan Keefe picked "Hey Stephen" as one of the album's most charming cuts and praised the emotional sentiments that resonated with Swift's main audience of teenagers, but he felt it lacked the sophistication that others credited her with.[39]

In retrospective reviews of the song, Sheffield[43] and Nate Jones from Vulture complimented its catchy melody. Jones wrote: "Swift is in the zone as a writer, performer, and producer on this winning deep cut."[45] Jon Bream of the Star Tribune described "Hey Stephen" as "perfect high school pop" and picked it as a highlight on Fearless.[64] Reviewing the re-recorded "Hey Stephen (Taylor's Version)", Exclaim!'s Heather Taylor-Singh said it retained the original's earnest emotion[65] and The Line of Best Fit's Ross Horton wrote it remained "superb" as it was before.[66] Some others were not as complimentary. Hazel Cills of Pitchfork said the track's "extreme specificity", which felt like "a copy of Swift’s yearbook we're somehow privy to", was too much for an already personal album.[67] Mary Siroky in Consequence called "Hey Stephen" a catchy song but wrote its "repetitive melody" and "cliched" lyrical motifs make it the album's least compelling.[68] For Perone, although the lyrics are conventional and generic, "Swift's performance and her melodic writing make the song enjoyable and engaging anyway".[52]

Personnel

"Hey Stephen" (2008)[7]

  • Taylor Swift – writer, producer
  • Nathan Chapman – producer
  • Drew Bollman – assistant mixer
  • Chad Carlson – recording engineer
  • Justin Niebank – mixer
  • Andrew Bowers – finger snaps
  • Burrus Cox – finger snaps
  • Carolyn Cooper – finger snaps
  • Lauren Elcan – finger snaps
  • Delaney McBride – finger snaps
  • Emma McBride – finger snaps
  • Nicholas Brown – instruments

"Hey Stephen (Taylor's Version)" (2021)[29]

  • Taylor Swift – writer, producer, lead vocals
  • Christopher Rowe – vocal recording, producer
  • Max Bernstein – vibraphone
  • Matt Billingslea – drums, finger snaps
  • Caitlin Evanson – background vocals
  • Derek Garten – additional engineer
  • Serban Ghenea – mixing
  • John Hanes – engineer
  • Amos Heller – bass guitar
  • Mike Meadows – acoustic guitar,
    Hammond B3
    , finger snaps, background vocals
  • David Payne – recording
  • Lowell Reynolds – assistant recording engineer
  • Jonathan Yudkin – fiddle, fiddle recording

Charts

Certification

Certification for "Hey Stephen"
Region Certification Certified units/sales
United States (RIAA)[18] Gold 500,000

Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

Notes

  1. ^ The "secret messages" of Swift's songs are decoded by arranging certain capitalized letters in each song's lyrics, printed in the album booklet, in the order they appear to spell out a certain word or phrase.[9]
  2. ^ Attributed respectively to Larry Rodgers for The Arizona Republic[40] and Jonathan Keefe for Slant Magazine[39]
  3. ^ This imagery features on songs such as "Fearless" ("There's something 'bout the way the street looks when it just rained"), "Forever & Always" ("It rains when you're here and it rains when you're gone"), and "Sparks Fly" ("Drop everything now/ Meet me in the pouring rain").[53]
  4. ^ This imagery features on songs such as "Our Song", "Love Story", and "Come In with the Rain".[8]
  5. The Edmonton Sun,[56] Joe Breen for The Irish Times,[57] and Rob Sheffield for Blender[58]
  6. ^ Attributed to reviews by Hubbard,[60] Ash Amanda for the Edmonton Journal,[62] and Chris Richards for The Washington Post[38]

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Sources