Taylor Swift says she's has regained control over her entire body of work. In a lengthy note posted to her official website on Friday, Swift announced that all the music she's ever made now belongs to her. According to the note, the pop star has purchased her catalog of recordings — originally released through Big Machine Records — from their most recent owner, the private equity firm Shamrock Capital. She did not disclose the amount. Over the last few years, Swift has been rerecording and releasing her early albums in an attempt to regain control of her music.

Taylor Swift fans enjoy parsing the singer-songwriter's lyrics for references to her romantic life and insights into her state of her mind. But Swifties in the U.K. didn't have to listen closely to her latest album to get the sense that Swift had soured on the country's capital after making it her second home. The record's fifth track is titled "So Long, London." As Swift brings her Eras Tour to the city on Friday, some fans wonder if it's the beginning of an extended goodbye. London is the only city on the tour where Swift is stopping twice. She is scheduled to return for six nights in August to close the tour's European leg.