this lyrically might be her best album
Mmm ACCRUATE
almost home
sheepfilms
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
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he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

roma★

Andulka
macklin celebrini has autism

titsay

Kaledo Art
Monterey Bay Aquarium
cherry valley forever

#extradirty
NASA
Show & Tell

Origami Around

shark vs the universe

Janaina Medeiros
we're not kids anymore.
KIROKAZE

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@lordvoldysnort
this lyrically might be her best album
Mmm ACCRUATE
Favourite song on Folklore?
folklore sounds like RED and Speak Now but at the same time it doesn’t. It’s like revisiting your old home only to find that it has changed completely, but you still feel the warm embrace. Guys this album is a journey back home.
mirrorball is about trying hard to win someone’s heart by absorbing his traits and *performing* it back to him, because you just love him so much and you think that he would love you if you’re just like him
this is going to be album that people years from now will quote as their push towards poetry, as their awakening to romance, and as the match that lit the fire inside them
Safe and sound walked so folklore could run
august is a breakup song for people who went through a breakup with someone they never dated. “you were never mine to lose” yet you lost them anyways and nobody really gets that pain because they didn’t realize how much this person meant to you, or at least THAT person doesn’t know and fuck i needed this song
This is an unconventional record – at least for the world’s biggest pop star. It’s also brilliant
Until this week, Taylor Swift had executed her album campaigns with all the meticulous planning of a military general. Clues were dropped months in advance; there were easter eggs, picture puzzles and obscure social media references. For her eighth album, announced less than 24 hours in advance, all of that went out the window. This is an unconventional record – at least for the world’s biggest pop star. It’s also brilliant.
Swift’s 2019 album, Lover, was a return of sorts to her lush, romantic compositions of old. Those songs were visions of spring in pastel pink and purple, following the winter storms raging on Reputation. Folklore, then, is the hot ache of late summer, where infatuation and nostalgia thrive; the scent of woodsmoke and red wine hangs in the air. Written and recorded in isolation, it includes collaborations with Swift’s “musical heroes” – The National’s Aaron Dessner, Bon Iver, and her frequent songwriting partner and co-producer Jack Antonoff. There are no pop bangers here, just exquisite, piano-based poetry.
There are characters Swift has never introduced before. Some are fictional, it seems; some are inspired by family members; some are people Swift wishes she hadn’t met. Folklore’s songs care less for those showstopping one-liners and more about the small details. “I have this dream/ You’re doing cool s***,” Swift sings on “the 1”. “Having adventures on your own/ You meet some woman on the internet/ And take her home.”
“Cardigan” continues what was touched upon on Reputation highlight “Call It What You Want”. Scarred by the public’s constant scrutiny of her personal life, Swift is overjoyed to have found someone who doesn’t care about her past. The stark chords playfully reference The National’s “Light Years”, while Swift’s yearning cadence on the chorus emulates Lana Del Rey’s “Young and Beautiful”. Justin Vernon’s pummelling lower register contrasts perfectly with her ethereal intonations on “exile”. Swift’s vengeful streak appears on “mad woman”, not least with her debut use of the word “f***” in a song. Unlike “Look What You Made Me Do”, though, her anger now doesn’t sound so brittle – she’s a witch from Macbeth, weaving fates while powerful men prove to be their own worst enemies.
“Mirrorball”, written with Antonoff, is one of their best collaborations – it’s uninhibited, dreamlike, shimmering. The instrumentation builds like the swell of waves before they crash against the shore. Swift has always had a particular talent for describing secret behaviour in exquisite detail – on Folklore she’s outdone herself. “Look at this idiotic fool that you made me,” she despairs on “illicit affairs”. “You taught me a secret language I can’t speak with anyone else/ And you know damn well/ For you I would ruin myself.” Arguably the most moving song on the album is “seven” – with its filigrees of violin and acoustic guitar – paying tribute to eternal childhood friendships.
“Before this year,” Swift wrote on Instagram, “I probably would’ve overthought when to release this music as the ‘perfect’ time, but the times we’re living in keep reminding me that nothing is guaranteed. My gut is telling me that if you make something you love, you should just put it out into the world.” Maybe there wasn’t a perfect time to release Folklore. But it’s a near-perfect album.
Mmm yes this album is so RAW. THANK YOU 🥺🥺🥺 @taylorswift
also her voice has never sounded like this before..... it’s velvet........
this genre and production fits her so so well it sounds more natural than anything she’s ever done, she slides into this so easily and completely.... taylor swift the woman... oh my god i’m fully like. shivering.
the FLAVOR of taylor having 5 explicit tracks on folklore
*listens to a song off folklore* oh shit this is my favourite track *listens to the next song* oh shit this is my favourite track *listens to the next song* oh shit this is my favourite track *listens to the next song* oh shit this is my favourite track* listens to the next song* oh shit this is my favourite track *listens to the next song* oh shit this is my-
taylor going from country to pop to folk throughout her career:
THIS IS WHAT IVE BEEN WAITING DOR
that look of relief at the end
hearing Taylor Swift say fuck in a song just warms my heart
rebecca:
http://chng.it/yHRShcFR8S
Reinstate laws that protect LGBT people's right to healthcare