Taylor Swift - Folklore

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I said to Brad to that i hope the Vernon link leads to some work with Jenn Wasner.

Tim F, Friday, 24 July 2020 21:22 (three years ago) link

yeah don't let these boring men write your music, listen to your critic friends and recruit weyes blood lol

imago, Friday, 24 July 2020 21:22 (three years ago) link

re: other folk from this year
I loved the Christian Lee Hutson record (produced by Phoebe Bridgers)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Lg1-xTV4xk

DJI, Friday, 24 July 2020 21:22 (three years ago) link

this gonna be rep stans listening to folklore pic.twitter.com/9jbFxLwuJQ

— george (@ursogeorgeous) July 23, 2020

Tim F, Friday, 24 July 2020 21:24 (three years ago) link

also if you're going to do a big major-label melodramatic response to strange times then do it like The 1975 imo: crazed, desperate, ambitious, bursting with nonsense and barely logical. when is taytay gonna lose it properly i ask? when will she release her 'piece of me'? (no, 'look what you made me do' was not it)

this album feels safe, just in a way we haven't really seen from her before, and i think the fault is this studied, my-first-echoey-sad-indie production

positivity! 'august' is actually p good. 'this is me trying' is also decent. i think in future i will listen to this album from track 8 onward haha

imago, Friday, 24 July 2020 21:25 (three years ago) link

The 1975 album is pretty much a logical extension of their previous work though? The extra fragmented-ness is just a question of degree.

Tim F, Friday, 24 July 2020 21:32 (three years ago) link

i have actually really rather liked it from 'august' onward, 'invisible string' probably best track so far, absolutely no accounting for why

imago, Friday, 24 July 2020 21:33 (three years ago) link

u horrible lot will say it took me 8 tracks to acclimatise but i genuinely think the melodies & sonics have got better

imago, Friday, 24 July 2020 21:34 (three years ago) link

Leaving aside the inevitable critical framing, this album doesn’t feel like it’s even trying to be bold or dangerous or risky except from a “what does this mean career wise” perspective (and even then it could easily be framed as a pandemic one-off), and if that’s specifically what a listener is hoping for from Taylor then I suspect they will be disappointed.

In this regard, the point of comparison I keep coming back to is Tori Amos’s ‘Scarlet’s Walk’ - another superficially “safe” album where the ‘sharper’ piano attack referred to above softened but also the lyrical approach became less elliptical and more attuned to working up and examining the crevices of recognisable metaphors. But even more than that, the opening up of the viewpoints so that the songs feel part of a dialogue with (sometimes heard, sometimes unheard) other voices and viewpoints. They’re coming to the same space from opposite directions but the end result - songs bursting with specific imagery and detail but relatively straightforward to unpack lyrically, because they’re part of conversations - feels very similar.

Feel a strong simpatico between these songs and stuff like “Amber Waves”, “A Sorta Fairytale”, “Strange”, “Your Cloud” etc.

Tim F, Friday, 24 July 2020 21:37 (three years ago) link

my crackpot theory about this album: frontloaded the more 'immediate' stuff, kept the slower, sadder stuff for later, but actually, the slower sadder stuff was more interesting (to me at least), if we're getting sad taylor i want truly-desolate taylor, not sad-indie taylor

imago, Friday, 24 July 2020 21:43 (three years ago) link

lol sorry to ride roughshod over your much-more-thoughtful and probably accurate theory tho tim

imago, Friday, 24 July 2020 21:44 (three years ago) link

Happy to hear an album from her that isn’t suited for stadiums/choreography — which is why Alfred’s Tunnel of Love comparison fits so well. An artist who plays Wembley not writing for Wembley.

... (Eazy), Friday, 24 July 2020 21:47 (three years ago) link

cardigan sounds awfully Lana Del Rey-ish.

Darin, Friday, 24 July 2020 21:50 (three years ago) link

But, like, good.

Ned Raggett, Friday, 24 July 2020 21:55 (three years ago) link

brb gonna find a support group for ppl who strongly disliked the first 7 tracks and rly quite liked the last 9, this is too weird

imago, Friday, 24 July 2020 21:57 (three years ago) link

So AOTY ?

AlXTC from Paris, Friday, 24 July 2020 22:11 (three years ago) link

yes i am sure we are all agreed this is aoty

imago, Friday, 24 July 2020 22:13 (three years ago) link

"peace" is sick as hell isn't it lj

mellon collie and the infinite bradness (BradNelson), Friday, 24 July 2020 22:14 (three years ago) link

Poll it this fall vs. Fetch The Bolt Cutters.

... (Eazy), Friday, 24 July 2020 22:25 (three years ago) link

yeah i was surprised 'peace' was rated so low on rym, it makes good use of that weird little alarm tone

second half of this album's production moves away from bon iver and towards...foxing? thinking aloud here haha

imago, Friday, 24 July 2020 22:26 (three years ago) link

Foxing do seem destined for pop star collaborator status

the quar on drugs (Simon H.), Friday, 24 July 2020 22:28 (three years ago) link

maybe it just made me want to hear 'nearer my god' again haha, now there's an album we can all agree on. yeah christ they NEED to work with some stars

imago, Friday, 24 July 2020 22:29 (three years ago) link

Uh

Jessie Ware recorded the album of the year

TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 24 July 2020 22:49 (three years ago) link

This isn on par with Lover and just as overstuffed. I love the songs I love, but I just can't with Long Albums anymore .

TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 24 July 2020 22:51 (three years ago) link

so based on that clip up there - and perhaps there are exceptions - but it sounds like he made tracks and she wrote melodies and lyrics to those tracks? am i reading that wrong?

this album is really good and a bit boring and too long. if it were 11 tracks instead of 16, the boring part would fade away.

alpine static, Friday, 24 July 2020 22:54 (three years ago) link

but it sounds like he made tracks and she wrote melodies and lyrics to those tracks

yes she's been writing this way with producers since 1989

mellon collie and the infinite bradness (BradNelson), Friday, 24 July 2020 23:04 (three years ago) link

I wonder how much that process has then influenced the overall output of her last few albums, including her lyrical approach.

I mean, if someone gives you the bones of the arrangement for “I Forgot That You Existed” or “You Need To Calm Down”, you’re hardly going to turn that into a “Cardigan” or “Epiphany” lyrically.

So in that sense, Taylor’s output may well be strongly contingent on her collaborators, but not in the way people traditionally mean: rather, because her own creative process seems to strongly involve following the lines of possibility afforded by the material she gets from them.

Tim F, Friday, 24 July 2020 23:14 (three years ago) link

i do tire of dessner's approach a little by the end of this, but i have that same problem with nearly every national album (except i am easy to find but that's still longer than it needed to be)

there's nothing even close to a bad track though which is the first in a long time for her. so much better than lover for that alone

ufo, Friday, 24 July 2020 23:15 (three years ago) link

she had production credits on all of lover so i'd assume she was more involved in the arrangements on that than with the dessner tracks on this & her past martin/shellback collaborations

ufo, Friday, 24 July 2020 23:19 (three years ago) link

wish he'd aaron lessner am I right

the quar on drugs (Simon H.), Friday, 24 July 2020 23:24 (three years ago) link

so based on that clip up there - and perhaps there are exceptions - but it sounds like he made tracks and she wrote melodies and lyrics to those tracks? am i reading that wrong?

worth noting that this is an overwhelmingly common arrangement

like, I’m eating an elephant head (katherine), Friday, 24 July 2020 23:29 (three years ago) link

"betty" is the track that's closest to being from her nebraska and i would love a whole album of it

ufo, Friday, 24 July 2020 23:31 (three years ago) link

xpost I know. Wasn't saying it isn't.

anyway, it must be totally wild to send off a folder of tracks to Taylor Swift and then weeks later they start coming back with a bunch of words and melodies you never could've expected.

not to mention sending off a folder of things you think of as yours and then when they come back, they're really no longer yours ... they are now Taylor Swift songs. I mean, I know he has collaborated with many people, but in most cases his name makes the headline.

alpine static, Friday, 24 July 2020 23:38 (three years ago) link

This album sent me back to Lover, which I haven't listened to in a long time, and is sounding really good.

Your dream has symbolic content (morrisp), Friday, 24 July 2020 23:41 (three years ago) link

xpost None of this feels much like Nebraska to me at all, but if I had to choose the song that comes closest, it would probably be Seven. This dark story told from the perspective of a child who doesn't understand what she's seeing - seems like new ground for Taylor and I like it. The rest of this seems lyrically like pretty generic TSwift to me. Seven, Illicit Affairs, Invisible String, August and Peace are songs I'll probably listen to again, but to me it feels like a step back from Lover. There's nothing on here that grabs me the way The Archer did.

My problem with Betty and August and Cardigan - the whole high school trio - is that I find Taylor Swift's version of high school really boring. Like a Sarah Dessen YA novel. I really don't care whether Betty and James get back together or not; they'll both be fine, and they'll break up next year when they go to college anyway.

Lily Dale, Saturday, 25 July 2020 00:21 (three years ago) link

I have never thought the subject matter per se of Taylor’s songs was particularly interesting - the topics are primarily useful as a framework for her to stretch herself as a songwriter and performer.

Like, nothing about the relationship story in “All Too Well” is interesting except what the songwriting details (e.g. the Chekhov’s gun device) and the execution/delivery bring to the table.

Which is not to say that “Seven” isn’t a stretch for Taylor - but less, I think, because of the story it tells than because that story then demands a different approach to the storytelling given the narrator’s position necessitates a very specific and oblique approach to the subject matter.

Tim F, Saturday, 25 July 2020 00:34 (three years ago) link

the high school trio is made far more interesting by the queer reading, which i absolutely buy into now

ufo, Saturday, 25 July 2020 00:37 (three years ago) link

Also re album of the year Beyoncé hasn’t done her Afro-futurist thing yet so I will wait for that

Its big ball chunky time (Jimmy The Mod Awaits The Return Of His Beloved), Saturday, 25 July 2020 04:21 (three years ago) link

"Cold was the steel of my ax to grind for the boys who broke my heart / Now I send their babies presents"
― Ned Raggett

this line is so good, and also the followup:

"Gold was the color of the leaves when I showed you around Centennial Park / Hell was the journey but it brought me heaven"

sleeve, Saturday, 25 July 2020 05:58 (three years ago) link

Feeling this on a rainy pandemic day.

Popture, Saturday, 25 July 2020 06:21 (three years ago) link

This album is just insanely good

Tim F, Saturday, 25 July 2020 08:48 (three years ago) link

Also anyone who is feeling this should join Brad and I in enjoying the last three Vanessa Carlton albums

Tim F, Saturday, 25 July 2020 08:49 (three years ago) link

lol assuming they are at all similar to this, the last thing I want tbh is three more albums of this right now.

Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 25 July 2020 12:33 (three years ago) link

My tears ricochet <3

the article don, Saturday, 25 July 2020 12:38 (three years ago) link

Btw, an interesting side-discussion I think worth having is the very idea of releasing an album into the void right now. I'm not as up on pop stuff as some/many of you, but I could have sworn a few months ago people were calling the Dua Lipa album basically the smash hit album of the summer by default. Since then there have been some heavy-hitters (critical and/or popular) that have been releasing to wildly varying degrees of success, afaict. There was the Jessie Ware, which is awesome but I don't think she's a household name, at least not in the States. But then there's the Gaga, who *is*, but whose album as far as I can tell missed the landing pad entirely and splashed down in the water. Then there's the Chicks, whose album arrived with some moderate degree of fanfare but who (again, strictly anecdotally) seemed to have made only a modest impression. But this Swift album, which arrived with *no* fanfare, clearly caught everyone's attention in addition to catching them by surprise.

Anyway, there's a good chance none of these acts will be able to tour behind any of these albums any time soon, maybe not for another year at least, and certainly outside of the bounds of the usual promotional cycle, which makes me wonder how long they'll last in everyone's minds after being launched into said void. Does the usual promotional cycle even matter any more? Is it better to release an album now or delay indefinitely? In the case of Swift's album, as I understand it it was written and recorded during the pandemic, which sets it apart from those other albums. Does/did that make a difference? It's a great record regardless, but was she also just really good at reading the room? I wonder if there are a lot of other artists right now weighing their options. Do we wait it out indefinitely or just take the plunge and do something now? Especially with touring (and therefore their most prominent revenue stream) turned off, it's tantamount to just throwing money in a wishing well and seeing what will happen. Billy Eilish is readying something else, right? But I wonder what else this weird year has in store.

Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 25 July 2020 12:51 (three years ago) link

Woke up with "This Is Me Trying" in my head and now want an entire Taylor Swift darkwave album.

There was the Jessie Ware, which is awesome but I don't think she's a household name, at least not in the States. But then there's the Gaga, who *is*, but whose album as far as I can tell missed the landing pad entirely and splashed down in the water.

"Rain on Me" and "Stupid Love" are radio hits, album debuted at #1. I still hear the hits.

TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 25 July 2020 14:38 (three years ago) link

i've only listened to "cardigan" so far but i'm really glad to see that she's released an album that's not geared in some way for radio. the white stations she's meant to cater to in particular have largely given up on introducing its audience to new music, but she of all people does not need them. artistically, this move also lets her play to her strengths -- i agree with those who've suggested that her high-octane pop material often lacks the flexibility to let her really do her thing lyrically.

dyl, Saturday, 25 July 2020 17:20 (three years ago) link

'this is me trying' is the most beautiful song ever.

― Nourry, Friday, July 24, 2020 3:35 PM (yesterday) bookmarkflaglink

I just got that funny feeling in my stomach listening to it, like when something is beautiful that it moves you physically. this album is incredible.

Joey Corona (Euler), Saturday, 25 July 2020 17:23 (three years ago) link

the broader 'teen test' of course is the streaming charts, and for the moment this album seems to be doing significantly better than lover was doing at this point. it's even doing major damage on apple music, a service that serves a pretty rap-centric audience.

dyl, Saturday, 25 July 2020 17:24 (three years ago) link


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