so happy/excited that i was finally able to get a signed cd after being a swiftie for 14 years ♡ @taylorswift @taylornation
we're not kids anymore.
Cosmic Funnies
Monterey Bay Aquarium

Kaledo Art
wallacepolsom

blake kathryn
official daine visual archive
cherry valley forever
Mike Driver

⁂
trying on a metaphor
untitled

Janaina Medeiros
RMH

Origami Around
almost home
🪼

oozey mess

Love Begins

JVL
seen from Germany

seen from Malaysia

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

seen from Malaysia

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

seen from Chile

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Jamaica
seen from Jamaica
seen from Jamaica
seen from United States
seen from India
@sampagneproblem
so happy/excited that i was finally able to get a signed cd after being a swiftie for 14 years ♡ @taylorswift @taylornation
Taylor performing “Blank Space” in Dublin, Ireland
I’ll love you forevermore @taylorswift @taylornation
i still see it all in my head, in burning red.
In the garden, would you trust me If I told you it was just a summer thing?
Taylor Swift - Look What You Made Me Do (x)
Taylor Swift Alignment Chart (insp.)
Congratulations @taylorswift 💖💕💐🎊
my favorite lyrics from folklore + scenes from rural pennsylvania
I think it’s strange that you think I’m funny ’cause he never did.
the whole folklore album is the escapism chapter for me hbshsvs
2012//2020
RED//folklore
no, they never get far
remember hearing “and then it was bought by me” for the first time
I love art
The Story Behind Every Song on folklore - According to Aaron Dessner
By: Brady Gerber for Vulture Date: July 27th 2020
The National multi-instrumentalist spoke to Vulture over the phone from upstate New York a few hours after the surprise release of Swift’s eighth studio album. (“A pretty wild ride,” he admits, sounding tired yet happy.) He was clear that he can’t speak on behalf of Swift’s lyrics, much like he can’t for The National frontman Matt Berninger’s either, or the thinking behind Jack Antonoff’s songs. (Here’s a cheat sheet: Jack’s songs soar, Aaron’s glide.) But Dessner was game to speak to his specific contributions, influences, and own interpretations of each song on folklore, a record you can sum up by two words that came up often during our conversation: nostalgic and wry.
“the 1″
“the 1” and “hoax,” the first song and the last song, were the last songs we did. The album was sort of finished before that. We thought it was complete, but Taylor then went back into the folder of ideas that I had shared. I think in a way, she didn’t realize she was writing for this album or a future something. She wrote “the 1,” and then she wrote “hoax” a couple of hours later and sent them in the middle of the night. When I woke up in the morning, I wrote her before she woke up in LA and said, “These have to be on the record.” She woke up and said, “I agree” [laughs] These are the bookends, you know?
It’s clear that “the 1” is not written from her perspective. It’s written from another friend’s perspective. There’s an emotional wryness and rawness, while also to this kind of wink in her eyes. There’s a little bit of her sense of humor in there, in addition to this kind of sadness that exists both underneath and on the surface. I enjoy that about her writing.
The song began from the voice memo she sent me, and then I worked on the music some and we tracked her vocals, and then my brother added orchestration. There are a few other little bits, but basically that was one of the very last things we did.
“cardigan“
That’s the first song we wrote [in early May]. After Taylor asked if I would be interested in writing with her remotely and working on songs, I said, “Are you interested in a certain kind of sound?” She said, “I’m just interested in what you do and what you’re up to. Just send anything, literally anything, it could be the weirdest thing you’ve ever done,” so I sent a folder of stuff I had done that I was really excited about recently. “cardigan” was one of those sketches; it was originally called “Maple.” It was basically exactly what it is on the record, except we added orchestration later that my brother wrote.
I sent [the file] at 9 p.m., and around 2 a.m. or something, there was “cardigan,” fully written. That’s when I realized something crazy was happening. She just dialed directly into the heart of the music and wrote an incredible song and fully conceived of it and then kept going. It harkens back to lessons learned, or experiences in your youth, in a really beautiful way and this sense of longing and sadness, but ultimately, it’s cathartic. I thought it was a perfect match for the music, and how her voice feels. It was kind of a guide. It had these lower register parts, and I think we both realized that this was a bit of a lightning rod for a lot of the rest of the record.
Keep reading