the original got deleted but i finally managed to find a screenshot of the tweet that’s been living in my mind since july of last year
Show & Tell
No title available
occasionally subtle
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
Cosimo Galluzzi
Stranger Things
cherry valley forever

if i look back, i am lost
noise dept.
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

titsay
ojovivo
$LAYYYTER
Today's Document
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
sheepfilms

Product Placement
h
todays bird
we're not kids anymore.

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from United States

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

seen from Malaysia
seen from Argentina

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Indonesia

seen from Ireland
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from India

seen from United States
seen from Italy
@pardonmeimagemini
the original got deleted but i finally managed to find a screenshot of the tweet that’s been living in my mind since july of last year
driving 🚘 out into the sun ☀️let the ultraviolet 🌈 cover me up 🛌 went looking 👀 for a creation myth ✨ ended up with a pair of cracked lips 💋 windows down 🚙 scream along 😫 to some america-first 🇺🇸 rap country 🤠 song 🎵 a slaughterhouse 🔪 an outlet mall 🛒 slot machines 🤑 fear of god 😢 windows down 🚙 heater on ♨️ big bolts of lightning ⚡ hanging low ⛈️ over the coast 🌊 everyone's convinced 🧐 it's a government drone 🚡 or an alien spaceship 🛸 either way 🤷♀️ we're not alone 👩👩👦 i'll find a new place 🚘 to be from 🏡 a haunted house ☠️ with a picket fence 📪 to float around and ghost 👻 my friends 👯 no i'm not 🙅♀️ afraid 😖 to disappear 🕳️ the billboard ⚠️ said the end is near 🔥 i turned around 💃 there was nothing there ⚫ yeah i guess ❓ the end is here 💥 AAAAAAAA 💥💣🔥🙀💥⚡⚠️💥🔥🔪🔪🔪⚠️⚡🙀🔥💥⚠️🔥💣
Matt Berninger for Apple Music on The Alcott
“I was imagining a scene—a contained moment and narrative between two people. Someone meeting someone at a place they used to hang out, or maybe the other person wasn't expecting them, but knew they'd be there. It’s just two people that maybe have a chance to reconnect and maybe they don’t. I wrote and I sent it to Aaron, and when he sent Taylor a few things, she heard that one and was able to instantly get into the mindset of the person I was talking about. So she wrote all her stuff as a response to me, and very much from the perspective of my wife, who I was writing about. So when Carin heard that one, and heard Taylor Swift embodying her character in a song, writing responses to me, that was really fun for everybody. It was a really cool moment. It was like walking down a path and thinking you're alone, and all of a sudden somebody appears out of nowhere and joins you on this path.”
Aaron Dessner to Vulture on how finished The Alcott was when it was sent to Taylor
It was in the late stage of making First Two Pages of Frankenstein. We had so much music we had been working on. There were, like, 25 ideas. To be honest, it wasn’t the kind of song we intended to write for the record. We had been making a lot of other things — up-tempo or loud rock songs. This was more my version of a Leonard Cohen or a Nick Cave song. Then Matt wrote this beautiful song to it, and it suddenly felt like this might be the one I could share with Taylor. We hadn’t even talked about inviting her to be on the record, partially because no one was on the record at that point and, also, I never want to put pressure on anybody unless it really makes sense. But there was something about that song I thought she’d really respond to. She quickly rewrote it as this conversation or dialogue between two lovers. That helped shape where we went with the production of it. We added a lot of the other elements — the orchestration and the drums. We always experiment and try a lot of things. I think when she first heard it, it was just piano and Matt.
Aaron Dessner to Vulture on how Taylor got involved with The First Two Pages of Frankenstein
We’ve been collaborating so consistently since folklore that I think it’s natural. She loves the National and had heard a lot of what we were working on. I’d send it to her. I wasn’t openly saying, “I’d love if you could do something,” and she wasn’t saying that either. It’d just depend on the song. Before I sent it to her, I talked to Matt, and he agreed it might be the one to see if she had ideas.There’s a long history of the National opening up to other people and benefiting from it. Back to even the very beginning of the band, there’s always been these other people who influence us and help solve riddles. It was like that. You’re lucky when you happen to have a friend who is one of the greatest songwriters ever — and fast.
Aaron Dessner to Vulture on Taylor’s touch on the songs she collaborates on
There’s a clarity in her ideation and her lyricism and her sense of melody. It cuts like a knife. Compositionally, it’s very intentional. Her countermelodies in the chorus and the bridge — it’s like two lovers almost talking over each other. It’s something that’s much bolder than someone singing along or just harmonizing. That is her gift: She has a storyteller’s mind and a musical sense of boldness. Something about her phrasing … you can hear it even in the original voice note. She’s not coloring it in; she’s fully another character in the story. It makes sense. In the verse, Matt is talking about finding someone and they’re writing in their golden notebook. In a way, I was like, 'Is that Taylor? Who is it? Or is it some fictional character?' She inhabits this story as her own character. That makes it a true feature.
Aaron Dessner to Vulture on if he was nervous about bringing Taylor into The National’s world
I wouldn’t say I was more nervous. It does feel like the National is this dysfunctional band of brothers, and I feel like my and Taylor’s work has been much more focused. Big Red Machine is not a typical band dynamic. But in another way, the whole reason I know Taylor is the National and her being a fan. It felt very natural. I think we’re one of her favourite bands, and she has inspired us.
Aaron Dessner to Vulture on how his time spent working with Taylor during the pandemic impacted his ambition with The National
We all went away from it for a long time. I did all this work. I really had such an amazing experience and learned so much. I think, coming back to the National, there was a feeling that everyone was leaning in in a different way, because we were missing it and also because we were appreciating each other. It was a difficult time during the pandemic. To find the thread again … Taylor had said this. Around the time we were working, she was asking me about the National and I was saying, “I don’t know where we are.” She kind of predicted we’d come back and lean on each other and make our best record. That’s, to me, how it feels. All the DNA of the band, and some future version of it, the evolution of it — it’s in there. People always debate our records. No matter what, we have collections of ugly ducklings. We’re never going to write a perfect rock song. We’re never going to do the thing we set out to do. All we can do is this uncovering of these awkward songs. They grow on us and grow on other people. It takes a while to hear them, and that’s what makes them special. They feel sculptural eventually, but when we first do it, it’s like, Are we even a good band? [Laughs.] I feel really proud of it, and I feel like we did benefit from things we learned [with other people], but I also think the well filled up again and we had a lot of creative energy.
Aaron Dessner to Vulture on whether The National felt like including Taylor on the album would be too divisive
In the beginning of the National, the ’90s-era indie bands we idolized … you can’t imagine Pavement or somebody back then collaborating across the pop sphere. But I think that’s changed so radically. Like Taylor, she’s more hands-on and craft oriented than anyone I’ve ever met. I never felt like she was a major-label superstar. Working with her was not unlike working with an indie artist. In actual fact, she’s one of the biggest artists in the world, but the connections and musical chemistry that were organically there make it work and make it make sense. Yeah, it’s great to think her fans might hear our band. I know a lot of our fans fell in love with her music. I’m personally tired of that feeling, indie or alternative — it doesn’t mean anything anymore. A lot of my favorite music is on giant labels. Some indie labels operate like major labels now. It’s a blurry thing. If someone’s making something authentic and is an amazing artist, I would appreciate and collaborate with them regardless of genre walls. I know certain parts of our fan base will maybe … it’s the same thing as our records: It’s never going to be what everybody wants. We have no interest in that. And honestly, it kind of bugs us sometimes. Nobody’s resistant to any of the guests, but I think sometimes people would love it if we’d make exactly the kind of record they want to hear. But the only kind of record we can make is what the five of us manage to create and feel is compelling.
Aaron Dessner to Vulture on feeling protective of Taylor
Only in the sense of like … she is by far the biggest artist that’s part of the record. It’s important to allow the record to be itself and hear the song in context. Of course we had to be careful to not let it leak. It’s just the reality of her life; people constantly try to get her one way or another. Any shred of information about her is catnip for the media. The glare can be quite intense, so as a friend, we do try to be really sensitive to how much, and in what ways, we shine that light. With this song, it made more sense to let it be part of the whole record rather than pulling it out and being like, 'Here’s the Taylor song.'
Anis Mojgani, from “Closer”, Songs from Under the River: A Collection of Poetry
THE BEAR | 2.03
I think when I was a kid, anything that would give me any sort of excitement or amusement or enjoyment, it always got kinda f*cked. You know, I don’t think my family meant to ruin it or anything like that, you know. I don’t think they did it on purpose. But I think… Sometimes they just, they try too hard. You know, or they’d make promises that they weren’t able to keep.
Aftersun, 2022
emily henry, my beloved ❤️
be mean to me
(1) hedgehog's dilemma via wikipedia // (2) untitled - charles avery // (3) i don't smoke - mitski // (4) playing czechoslovakian-wolfdogs via wikimedia commons // (5) fighting dogs - george morland // (6) cop car - mitski // (7) bite inhibition via wikipedia // (8) glepnir - walton ford // (9) diogenes of sinope via wikipedia // (10) try to find your way out of my wizard maze - @wizardsisananimal
Guess who's listening to Bury Me at Makeout Creek again 🙃
Iain Reid, I'm Thinking of Ending Things
Little Weirds, Jenny Slate
- a story when we were kids || fairytales and dreaming as escapism
[ - agnes callard - oliver jeffers - anne carson - anais nin - pinterest - laura miller - pinterest - shirley jackson - holly warburton - patti smith - pinterest - patti smith - pinterest - shirley jackson - iyo okumi - ]
Village of Debno, on the foothill of the Tatra mountains. A romani family 1981, Poland, Bruno Barbey.
Take It Or Leave It Wien © Dragana Dimitrijević