TAYLORâS GUITARS The Eras Tour â Glendale, Arizona (March 17, 2023)
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@swiftie-librarian
TAYLORâS GUITARS The Eras Tour â Glendale, Arizona (March 17, 2023)
donât blame me for what you made me do
just know how much it means to me⌠to say to you,
WELCOME TO THE ERAS TOUR!
âOh god, itâs not a chew toy. Itâs my face.â
If you donât let the spirit of yeehaw possess you while singing Our Song I donât know if I can trust you
lover (2019)
WHEN THE HELL WILL HITS DIFFERENT BE ON STREAMING SERVICES?!!!!!!
I am a mosaic of everyone I have ever known and loved and touched and I find fragments of them in my playlists and how I make my tea. we may not know each other any more but we will stay connected like this. I hope a fragment of me is with you too.
i can still make the whole place shimmer.
Taylor Swiftâs Best New Songs Arenât Technically on Midnights
She hid her rawest, messiest feelings in her bonus tracks.
In the final track of Midnights, Taylor Swift confesses to being a âmastermindâ who plans so carefully that she canât possibly lose. The song is addressed to her lover, but she might as well be singing about the meticulous rollout of her new album. Over the course of nearly two months, she posted cryptic videos teasing the music without allowing anyone to hear a single note. She put together a âmanifestâ that looked like something out of the metaverse. She sold multiple versions of the vinyl, encouraging fans to collect them all to form a clock. And she didnât release a single until the night the album dropped.
The strategy worked: When Midnights arrived, cresting on hype, listeners absorbed the album in full, spreading out the streams among its 13 tracks. As a result, Swiftâs 10th studio effort topped Billboardâs Hot 100 chart this week, with songs from the album occupying all of the top 10 slotsâmaking Swift the first artist to do so in history.
And yet, her most effective scheme may be the surprise she saved for her most ardent fans. A few hours after the standard version of Midnights hit airwaves, she released seven bonus songs she called the â3am tracksâ as a surprise, writing in an Instagram post, âLately Iâve been loving the feeling of sharing more of our creative process with you.â Written during the making of Midnights, the additional tunes are less polished than her singles. None of them appears to have been sent to critics in advance, which meant they were largely ignored in initial reviews. None of them is available to purchase physically. None of them made it onto Billboardâs top 10. But despite their relative invisibility and muted debut, theyâre the best songs from her Midnights era thus far.
Catchy and cathartic, soulful and snarky, the 3am edition of Midnights may as well be a separate album. Thematically, the lyrics fit the LPâs concept of what keeps Swift up at night, but the songs are structurally more complex than the initial batch of tracks. Unlike those first 13 songs, for which she enlisted the producer Jack Antonoff, three of the bonus songs feature the stylings of Aaron Dessner, Swiftâs main collaborator on Folklore and Evermore. The result is a collection that feels more experimental, as if Swift was deliberately noodling with rawer ideas. Swift cuts loose on these extra songs, pushing metaphors a step further than necessary, letting her voice go ragged, and spinning less-than-radio-friendly melodies.
Consider âWouldâve, Couldâve, Shouldâve,â the finest and most stirring track from the 3am selection. In it, Swift sings of regretâover how an ex treated her, and over her own naivete, at 19, in embarking on the relationship. The longest song on the extended album, its flood of vivid lyrics and its propulsive melody bring to mind her previous scorcher âAll Too Well.â Using religious imagery, Swift dwells on her loss of innocence, collapsing the time between her youth and her adulthood as she exhumes a truth she has long kept buried: âI canât let this go,â she concedes. âI regret you all the time.â Swiftâs voice, too, sounds uncontrolled and unprocessed as the song builds to a desperate climax, her breath catching as she wails, âLiving for the thrill of hitting you where it hurts / Give me back my girlhood. It was mine first.â
That line, like many in Swiftâs career, has drawn speculation about her personal life. Yet her best songs linger in a listenerâs mind not for the celebrity-gossip fodder they provide, but for the way they seem barely able to contain her emotions. âWouldâve, Couldâve, Shouldâveâ may be about a specific relationship, but the anguish in her voice cuts deep no matter the context, and the songâs brilliant tension comes from the way she seems to want to go on and onâand on. I wouldnât be surprised if, tucked away somewhere in a drawer, there rest half a dozen more verses. Maybe in 10 years thereâll be a 10-minute version sheâs ready to produce.
ts1989fanatic if is even slightly possible @taylorswift donât make us wait 10 years for it
That irrepressible quality, along with an unvarnished richness and fearlessness, can be found across the 3am songs. On the elegiac âBigger Than the Whole Sky,â another track that has found resonant, personal meaning for some listeners, Swift repeatedly sings the word goodbye in a breathy upper register, like sheâs drifting away. On the sexy, strange, and showy âGlitch,â Swiftâs voice jumps an octave after the bridge, as if sheâs malfunctioning from her lust. The poppy âParisâ tickles the ear; it sounds like a deep cut off 1989, all bouncy pleasures and bubblegum cheer, until the lyrics betray a darker tinge to Swiftâs thoughts. âIâm so in love that I might stop breathing,â she sings. Later in the song, she goes further: âI wanna brainwash you,â she cries, âinto loving me forever.â
Midnights, the standard edition, is not lacking in interiority. âI really donât think Iâve delved this far into my insecurities in this detail before,â Swift said about âAnti-Hero,â her lead single. And sheâs not wrong: Her songs on the LP explore deeply personal territory, expressing her self-loathing and inner conflicts in punchy, poignant lyrics. But even so, the self-awareness of those tracks comes with a cheeky self-consciousnessâitâs her, hi; sheâs the problem, itâs her!âthat the 3am songs avoid. In âDear Reader,â the final track of the extended edition of Midnights, Swift addresses her fans directlyâand tells them to stop looking to her as a âguiding light.â The immense scrutiny she feels is a subject sheâs covered since 2014, when she satirized her notoriety as a serial dater in âBlank Spaceâ; later, she devoted much of her 2017 album, Reputation, to unpacking her overwhelming fame via snarling, defensive earworms. In âDear Reader,â though, she puts her distress plainly over a melancholic melody: âDarling, darling, please,â she sings. âYou wouldnât take my word for it if you knew who was talking / If you knew where I was walking.â
These extra cuts are, in other words, disarmingly candid; theyâre the ones in which she allows herself to be truly messy. In the long lead-up to Midnightsâ release, Swift explained that her songs belong in three categories, based on the implement she imagines sheâs using as she writes: âQuill Penâ songs use old-fashioned wording, âFountain Penâ songs offer detailed modern poetry, and âGlitter Gel Penâ songs are playful, even saucy. In the 3am songs, it doesnât matter what tool she has in her hand. The ink spills all over, bleeding everywhere.
ts1989fanatic donât get me wrong I love midnights and the work Taylor and Jack do together is (despite all the complaints) spectacular.
But there is also something really special when Taylor and Aaron work together, I agree with the writer that the work they do on the 3 AM tracks are more experimental not as pop and polished as the work with Jack but the rawness in these collaborations really works for me.
âIâve spoken a lot about why Iâm remaking my first six albums, but the way Iâve chosen to do this will hopefully illuminate where Iâm coming from. Artists should own their work for so many reasons, but the most screamingly obvious one is that the artist is really the only one who knows that body of work.â
TS1 - TS6 (Taylorâs Version)
rep era taylor: capital one commercialÂ
Me thinking about how Taylor owns 6 released albums now
Me thinking about how Taylor owns 6 released albums now
I get that some people have different opinions but you either love karma or youâre wrong
@brucedaisley : OMZG Taylor Swift comes on with Bon Iver
Best track for me
@taylorswift