in the tags: what is the song you instantly related to the first time listening to folklore?
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in the tags: what is the song you instantly related to the first time listening to folklore?
please, picture me in the weeds before I learned civility, I used to scream ferociously any time I wanted.
painting 2 //?
Which Classic You Should Read Next Based Off Your Favorite Song From Folklore
the 1 - Mrs. Dalloway by Virgina Woolf
cardigan - The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett
the last great american dynasty - The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald
exile - Frankenstein by Mary Shelley
my tears ricochet - Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë
mirrorball - The Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka
seven - Little Women by Louisa May Alcott
august - A Midsummer Night’s Dream by William Shakespeare
this is me trying - Death of A Salesman by Arthur Miller
illicit affairs - Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy
invisible string - Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë
mad woman - The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath
epiphany - The Sun Also Rises by Ernest Hemingway
betty - A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens
peace - Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier
hoax - The Sorrows of Young Werther by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
August 8th I am proposing we fill our pages with nothing but
Taylor, I love you to the moon and Saturn.
For one day, and reblog nothing else! Reblog yours and everyone else’s. Hoping Taylor will see an entire fandom come together with love for her.
Please spread the word, and use hash tag #weloveyoutaylor
“godforsaken mess” and “idiotic fool”? very kind of taylor to mention me in folklore
The second to last song on Taylor Swift’s quiet, exquisite album 'folklore' is called 'peace'. A once-vindictive Swift, once at the mercy of
The second to last song on Taylor Swift’s quiet, exquisite album 'folklore' is called 'peace'. A once-vindictive Swift, once at the mercy of her come-and-go lovers, has finally found peace. Peace can be used to describe everything about folklore, from the sonic atmosphere it creates, to the creative period in which she’s written it, to the cocoon of misplaced longing and self-reflective mental housekeeping that quarantine forces you into.
That the fast-paced nature of our lives has finally fallen away in favor of something much more deliberate has birthed 'folklore', an album that favours self-actualisation - the long-awaited second chance that we give ourselves as we make peace with what is and allow something beautiful to come out of it. Quarantine has become a time for crafts, isolation, self-reflection, longing, and realisation. And it has become all of these things at once for Swift, whose rather delicate eighth album came together on a whim in the seething, never-ending throes of isolation.
A lucky addition to Swift’s catalogue - one borne only out of the fractious uncertainty of our current era - it is quite frankly a miracle that this album ever came to fruition. Had the world never turned upside down three months ago, had we still been living our high-speed, touch-and-go lives, Lover would still be the last album to grace her discography, the perfume-sweet stickiness of 'ME! (ft. Brendan Urie)' still lingering in the summer air.
But 'folklore', Taylor’s grandiose musical start to the roaring ‘20s (which have started, by all other accounts, terribly) has done much to make the impact of a tumultuous new decade a little softer. A serene, wintery album released smack in the middle of summer, folklore is Red but gentler, reputation but more insightful, Speak Now but more lyrically complex. It reverberates with the energy of a former pop-star finally navigating production without grasping for a hit, and forces us to slow down and take stock of where we are now in love and life.
The devil is indeed in the details: folklore unabashedly champions cinematic grace in a time of turbulent unease. It prioritizes the feelings that make themselves known in times of quiet reflection, in the tranquil darkness of the night, in between the longing stares of clandestine “meetings in parking lots”.
While in the past, Swift’s works have tended to sucker-punch with euphemisms rather than with blunt, bold statements, there is a refreshing directness to some of the songs here. Where she was once shaky with metaphors and a victim of “fake-deep” lyrics, she seems to smooth out the kinks of her lyrical composition, turning her already masterful storytelling into an even more deft game of saying the most with the least words.
The gentle, unhurried pace of the songs as she tells her stories in rich, hidden metaphors shows us an unanticipated side of her, one that now appreciates the nuances of life and accepts that not everything is cut-and-dry. From twisted waltzes to tried-and-true ‘80s-inspired pop, her musical repertoire has expanded to unexpected directions, and she, too, has grown - to be more blunt, more unapologetic, and at the same time, more self-reflective.
The sonic beauty on folklore really comes on 'Exile'. Another Jack Antonoff-produced track, Swift’s scintillating duet with Justin Vernon (Bon Iver) whisks us right back to the beautiful harmonies on her 2012 duet with Snow Patrol’s Gary Lightbody on 'Red'. Taken line by line, the conversational lyrics of Swift and Bon Iver’s impassioned duet - a beautiful, wintry, tortured monster of a song - seems to be told from the perspectives of two lovers walking away from a whirlwind relationship right before they get roped into something inescapable.
That alone is new ground for her - where she once used to plunge wholeheartedly into things she knew would hurt her, the resulting lyrics a necessary catharsis as she searched for the pieces of herself lost at sea, she now is careful, calculated, guarded with her heart. Deep down, the song is more of Swift’s closing the chapter on the last decade, looking back at her past relationships with the benefit of hindsight and maturity, vowing not to make the same mistakes again. The powerful bridge brings us what is an obvious nod to 'If This A Was A Movie': she has indeed seen this film before in her past six albums. And never once did she like the ending.
It’s these new perspectives that give this record a new dimension unlike any of her others. Further down the tracklist is 'illicit affairs', a brilliant follow-up to 'this is me trying', that manages to turn a tale of infidelity - one that 2006 Taylor would’ve explicitly condemned - into a tale of impassioned, embittered, jagged love. Similarly 'betty', whose harmonicas bring you to near tears as Swift paints a picture of a sapphic love triangle through the lens of naive adolescence, describes a complicated tale of cheating and emotional entanglement that ends in heartbreak and shattered dreams. Listening to the lyrics on “august” feels almost vouyeristic, as we lean in to hear all the stories that “innocent-era” Swift would’ve kept secret.
Immediately noticeable is that there are no quintessentially “pop” songs on this album. There’s enough material for you to float around your room longingly in white garb, to sit and think about relationships past, to look at life in the rearview, wondering what things would be like had things been done differently, but nothing to dance around and pretend like everything is and will be alright.
Arguably, we don’t need this. It will come, Swift urges, once we’ve made peace with the battle within ourselves. Simply put, folklore is a speed bump. It is a small sliver of familiarity and nostalgia that broadcasts openness without resentment, mockery or one-sided representations, and finds Swift finally committing to shedding the brash, poppy sound in favor of the soft, tonal glow of reverb and contemplation.
But fans of '1989', 'Reputation', and 'The Archer' on Lover, will be thrilled to hear that the synthy, sugarcoated drama and breathy vocals of yore ('Wildest Dreams', 'Getaway Car', 'Dress') have once again returned to Taylor Swift’s tracklist in earnest, albeit buried under a layer of bright, folksy guitars and ringing pianos. folklore indeed lives up to its title by being completely devoid of any beats faster than that of “invisible string”, and presents Swift almost like a children’s storybook: melodically fresh-faced, lyrically bare.
Swift’s penchant for blending the last remnants of her country roots with a more modern edge shines through the most on synth powerhouses 'this is me trying' and 'mirrorball', the ethereal children of the album. 'my tears ricochet' is a similarly gentle track with hints of synth pop that are a little more on the subtle side, and according to Swift is about “an embittered tormentor showing up at the funeral of his fallen object of affection”. And 'hoax', almost entirely piano, takes the album out with a whisper, Swift’s voice dovetailing over soft piano notes that sound almost like her tip-toeing away as she plays those closing notes, wisping away forever.
And 'cardigan[', which begs for a seat at its own table, is a tranquil love song of hope. Part of “the collection of three songs [she] refers to as The Teenage Love Triangle,” that “explore a love triangle from all three people’s perspectives at different times in their lives,” cardigan was “inspired by the feeling of isolation and how it is freeing and terrifying and causes you to reminisce.”
The visuals, a dark and stormy cross between 'Out Of The Woods' and 'Safe And Sound', sees Swift grasping onto her piano, about to be swept away by a storm surge in the middle of the sea. But the video, instead, has a happy ending: Swift escapes troubled waters by climbing into the magical realm of her piano, which opens to a quiet room lit only by candlelight. She puts on her weathered cardigan, and sits delicately at her piano.
For an isolated moment, she finds peace.
9/10
my tears ricochet..... off the guitar
the way they try to light her up in attempt to burn her in i did something bad for her to now breathe flames every time she talks in mad woman
who wants to tell taylor she made the sonically cohesive album of her dreams
There’s not enough love shown for illicit affairs, invisible string, or this is me trying but they’re like so fucking good
“I texted her yesterday and I was like, ‘Alright. Am I red wine-ing? Am I Manhattan-ing? Am I tequila shooting? Where are we going?’ And she was like, ‘Red wine; buckle up.’”
— Kelsea Ballerini on what Taylor told her to drink while listening to folklore (x)
heLP
ok, i know most people think that august, betty, and cardigan are the songs depicting the love triangle and the three titles start with “a, b, c” which are usually how sides of the triangle are labeled in math... like is this really taylor taking everything to the next level with her attention to detail? should i be surprised at this point? she’s scary.
woah
There are different ranges of maturity in folklore. Teenagers learning hard life lesson, trying to figure out how to love and to be loved, accepting innner demons and growing from them. This album does not reflect a particular “era”, its a lifetime of learning, feeling and growing. And that’s important because we’re never just living in the moment, we’re always carrying our scars with us. And how we allow those scars to shape us is the real lesson.
stop it right now she knew he’d linger like a tattoo kiss and then he made a mark on her a golden tattoo....because their love is golden and this will be around forever
My gut is telling me If you make something you LOVE, you should put it out into the world....Here is a poem I wrote I hope you like it Taylor @taylorswift @taylornation
My color verses Folklore version ❤
the reason why the 1 socks me in the gut every time I hear it is because she’s trying so hard to be casual about it, from the bouncy beat, to a lot of the lyrics (“it would’ve been fun” / “it would’ve been sweet” / “I’m doing good, I’m on some new sh*t” / “I thought I saw you at the bus stop I didn’t though” etc) but there are moments when you hear how invested she was, looking for validation that it was important to the other person too (“we were something, don’t you think so?”) and just how badly she wanted this to work out (“resist the temptation to ask you, if one thing had been different, would everything be different?” / “rosé flowing with your chosen family” / “digging up the grave another time”) and the juxtaposition of pretending to be over it but clearly still being haunted by your what-ifs is really what makes the song