Nashville is a co-writing town, which usually means that with every new superstar/songwriter who turns the music world on its ear, there comes at least one nonperforming songwriter. Clint Black had his Hayden Nicholas. Garth Brooks had his Kim Williams. Alan Jackson had his Jim McBride. Taylor Swift has her Liz Rose.
When Swift found success as a teenager singing songs of adolescent angst and celebration, her co-writer, amazingly enough, was a middle-aged mother with a 30-year-old son and two daughters of Swiftโs generation. Liz Rose understood what was going on in her young co-writerโs head.
Liz moved to Tennessee from Irving, Texas, in 1994. โI was an independent songplugger, then I started an independent songplugging company and then started a publishing company called King Lizard Music,โ Rose recalls.
She benefited from her association with a group of female Nashville publishers and songpluggers known as โChicks with Hits.โ โIโm still part of Chicks with Hits,โ she says. โTheyโre a great organization.โ
Soon, she began writing with a couple of writers in her publishing company. โWeโd just be hanging out and weโd write a song.โ Then, her company closed, and one of her writers caught the attention of Jody Williams, a publishing veteran, who, at the time, had his own company, Jody Williams Music. โJody was thinking about signing one of my writers, and he called me and said, โYou know, I have a list of these songs and some of my favorites are the things that you wrote with her. Have you ever thought about being a writer?โ He had to convince me to write for him. So he bought the King Lizard catalog, signed me as a new writer and hired me to pitch the catalog. Then, after about a year of me writing and pitching, he said, โYou know, you just need to be writing full time.โ
โAnd it took me like five or six years,โ she adds. โI think it wasnโt until I had the Gary Allan single that I could really say I was a songwriter.โ The song was โSongs About Rain.โ
โJody talked me into being a writer. I just started writing. I wrote every day, twice a day, three times a day, anybody that wanted to write I would write [with them]. I wrote a lot. And I learned a lot. When I didnโt know what I was doing, people were very patient with me: Stephanie Smith and Pam Rose, Pat McLaughlinโfantastic writers. Because I donโt sing and play, I donโt have a sound per se, where you walk in and I have to write it my way. So I can write with anybody. One of my friends says I have the best career โcause I get to write with Taylor Swift and Mary Gauthier.โ
During those early years with Jody Williams, her songs were recorded by Tim McGraw, Billy Gilman, Trisha Yearwood, Bonnie Raitt and Gary Allan. Those cuts were enough to sustain her writing career, and then Taylor Swift happened to her.
โShe was barely 14 and she had a development deal on RCA,โ Rose says. โRCA had this really cool thing down in their basement they called ROG Cafรฉ. I went over there and did one of their rounds and itโs so funny because I donโt sing, but I got up and did a couple of songs, kind of struggled through โem. I did a song that I wrote with Mark Narmore called โNothing Will,โ and Taylor came up to me afterwards and introduced herself and told me that she loved the song. โWould you write [with me] sometime?โ I said, โSureโ and we wrote a song called โNever Mind,โ and I remember writing with her and thinking, why am I here? She was so fast and we had fun, and I remember we turned it in and someone said, โYou know, this is really good but do you think you could get her to write something a little more country?โ And I said, โYouโre not going to get her to do anything she doesnโt feel; this kid knows exactly what sheโs doing.โ
โI think she ended up just writing with me because I didnโt change what she was doing. I tried to make it better and mold it and hone it, and hang on there and write it down; thatโs why it worked with us. I really respected and got what she was trying to do and I didnโt want to make her write in the Nashville cookie-cutter songwriting mold.
โI remember her coming in and saying, โI wanna write a song called โWhen You Think Tim McGraw,โ and the first thing that went through my mind was, โOK, weโre gonna write this song, and you donโt have a record deal, and nobody else is gonna cut it.โโ Rose recalls. โI said, โOK! Iโm not gonna argue!โโ
Enter Nathan Chapman. โNathan has a little shack studio behind our publishing company and he was making all my demos,โ says Rose. After Swift and Rose would write a song, they would bring it to Chapman, and the result was a rather distinctive sound that was not easily categorized. It would be up to the label to convince country radio that Taylor Swift would fit the format.
โTim McGraw,โ โPictures To Burn,โ and โTeardrops on My Guitarโ were all big hits for Rose off Taylorโs first album. โI was so proud of her,โ Rose recalls. โItโs so great to watch her grow up and with such grace and handle everything so well and sheโs not changed a bit.โ
As for her own success, Rose takes it all in stride. โIโm just so thankful that I can pay my bills and put my kids through college. I donโt walk around and go, โOohh, look what Iโm a part of,โ you know. Iโll tell you when it hits me. It hits me at her shows, when Iโm sitting there with my daughter, and I hear tens of thousands of people singing a song that happened when Swift and I sat in a room one afternoon and she was just telling me about her day.โ

