The Eras Tour: Folklore Set + Danzatrici (I sec.)
(insp) - (x, x, x, x)
trying on a metaphor
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

Origami Around
Three Goblin Art
will byers stan first human second
One Nice Bug Per Day
Xuebing Du

Andulka
Keni
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
Show & Tell
art blog(derogatory)
NASA

shark vs the universe
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
Cosimo Galluzzi

★
Claire Keane
Peter Solarz

seen from Argentina

seen from China

seen from Cambodia
seen from Brazil
seen from Malaysia

seen from Mexico

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Italy
seen from United States

seen from Italy

seen from United States

seen from Singapore
seen from Malaysia
seen from India

seen from Netherlands

seen from Malaysia
@mirrorballglistens
The Eras Tour: Folklore Set + Danzatrici (I sec.)
(insp) - (x, x, x, x)
lexy styles
i know places — t.s
When you think Tim McGraw I hope you think of me
In my Eras era. 💅
Taylor Swift in Bridge City Swift City, Arizona
SPEAK NOW TOUR (2011) THE ERAS TOUR (2023)
The Eras Tour Lockscreens
Taylor Swift performing at Glendale, AZ
Ok swifties reblog with the song choice that surprised you most from the eras setlist
TAYLOR SWIFT the opening night of "The Eras Tour" at State Farm Stadium on March 17, 2023 in Glendale, Arizona.
The ending when she’s reading her book to other people who are crying, this is a metaphor for her work. It’s a metaphor about how painful it was for her but she wrote about it and decided to share with people, that’s us. That’s her sharing her story years later.
the key difference between Fearless TV and RED TV is that while the Fearless vault tracks were beautiful and creatively insightful, they didn’t recontextualise the narrative of that album at all. Fearless has a less definitive mythology than RED - new additions have a weaker effect altering the overall album - whereas RED, whose settings and characters and storyline have always been crystal clear, is pretty fundamentally changed by the vault tracks.
RED is a beloved oddity - it’s her most concrete imagery, paired with a near-incoherent emotional and sonic fluctuation. it’s campy singles and country ballads and EDM-esque pop back-to-back. and we’ve known for a long time that the instabilities - the wild genre choices and the lyrics reframing the same moments totally differently - are an intentional device reflecting the volatile relationship the album is centred around.
but if RED was an album of contradictions, it was better for it - it captured perfectly the hysterical rambling of a 22 year old recounting a bitter break up. the missing pieces in the half-stuttered story simply showed the true grief in it. the vault tracks fill in the some of the emotional gaps (between Stay Stay Stay and WANEGBT), the sonic gaps (between IKYWT and I Almost Do), the chronological gaps (between All Too Well and 22), but more than that, they confirm what her audience often wondered as we rode RED’s roller coaster - was the hurt at the core of the album actually more crushing than RED’s most dramatic lyrics? was the noxious heartbreak too raw and left on the cutting room floor? this is the question the vault tracks answer. reopening a wound. in 2012 this generation’s heartbreak songwriter wrote her definitive heartbreak album and told us the where, when, who and how. in 2021, RED finally has its why. the other core difference between the Fearless and RED vaults is that any of the Fearless tracks probably could have gone on the original 2008 release. RED’s, for various reasons (too mature, too unfiltered, too drunk, too humiliated, too painful, too incompatible with Taylor Swift’s 2012 brand image), could never have gone on the original album. the bodies can only be exhumed now because the general public’s perception of both Taylor Swift’s songwriting process and her dating life has changed significantly in the last 10 years. it seems strange from the outside, this retroactive vulnerability, but it also retrofits the album with a closure it maybe never had. the vault tracks put a lid on the narrative; reflective, older and wiser, it’s Taylor Swift’s last confession of damage - just how bad that age (and the power-imbalance in that relationship) was for her. to many, the new context the vault tracks provide is going to feel like petty revisionism. her fans though, who remember Taylor Swift at 22, who have now been 22 themselves, well, you were there, you remember it all.
This is very well said!
Taylor Swift performing All Too Well (10 minute version) (Taylor's Version) for the FIRST time!!
Dylan O'Brien auditioning for All Too Well: The Short Film
no bc the way she wore red lipstick and straightened her hair to seem more mature and older around his friends im feeling all kinds of sick