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Tate McRae TRYING ON SHOES Review: Revenge in Glitter

By Alex HarrisNovember 22, 2025
Tate McRae TRYING ON SHOES Review: Revenge in Glitter

Tate McRae returns with “TRYING ON SHOES,” the opening salvo from her deluxe edition of SO CLOSE TO WHAT, and it cuts deeper than anything on “Anything But Love” or “Nobody’s Girl.”

Where those tracks explored heartbreak’s immediate aftermath, this one dissects the desperate, almost vengeful transformation that follows.

The trying on shoes lyrics meaning centres on reinvention as revenge, or perhaps self-preservation. McRae chronicles the frantic costume changes we perform when relationships crumble, slipping into different versions of ourselves like garments we’re testing in a fitting room.

“Tryin’ on shoes, puttin’ on glitter / Anything to make me a little less bitter,” she croons, and the admission stings with its honesty. This isn’t growth; it’s theatre.

Producers Emile Haynie and Grant craft something unexpectedly cinematic here. Orchestral swells bloom beneath McRae’s vocals, lending the track a grandeur that contradicts its petty, bitter core.

Strings swell and recede like waves of emotion, whilst subtle electronic textures shimmer in the background (glitter in sonic form).

The production walks a tightrope between lush and sparse, letting McRae’s voice command the space with that trademark sultry sharpness.

The lyrics in this track are sharp in it’s refusal to play the victim. “I can fall in love hard, turn around and delete it,” she declares, and the line lands with arctic precision.

There’s no wallowing here, no tearful ballad. Instead, McRae channels her hurt into something calculating, almost cruel.

She acknowledges the relationship’s toxicity (“You piss me off and I’ll turn it out”) whilst simultaneously admitting her own complicity in the charade.

The bridge offers the song’s most vulnerable moment, questioning whether she was ever truly known: “And maybe I’m not the girl that you thought / Or maybe you loved me once, but forgot.” Yet even this confession arrives wrapped in defiance, never quite tipping into self-pity.

“TRYING ON SHOES” doesn’t offer closure or catharsis, just the raw, uncomfortable truth about how we pattern ourselves in relationships, trying on different identities until someone fits the part.

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