August 2020 - Music
Album of The Month - FOLKLORE by Taylor Swift
This
summer, Taylor Swift was meant to headline Glastonbury. In fact, she
was meant to be playing a whole host of festivals and shows on an international
tour as well as hosting her own two-part ‘Lover Fest’ in America, all in
celebration of her seventh studio album 'Lover', which was released last
August). The global pandemic, of course, meant these plans were scrapped,
leaving Swift with bountiful spare time. No longer locked into rehearsals or
jetting around the globe performing to tens of thousands, she used these hours
to write.
The results of these unforeseen quarantine writing sessions
have come together on Swift’s new, eighth studio album, ‘Folklore’. She’s
uncharacteristically ‘done a Beyonce‘, announcing the album less than 24
hours before it drops, a stark change to the very deliberate, calculated
release schedules we’ve seen from Swift in the past. In a simple statement
posted to social media, she acknowledged that she’d usually wait and release
the album at the “perfect” time, but said the global situation acted as a
reminder to her that “nothing is guaranteed”. These shock release tactics go
hand-in-hand with a change in musical direction for Swift; ‘Folklore’ is
something totally unexpected from one of the world’s biggest pop stars.
Over the course of seven albums, we’ve seen Swift evolve from
a fresh-faced, teenage country crossover hopeful to sleek synth-pop
chart-juggernaut. Each record has brought with it gradual changes – 2010’s
‘Speak Now’ was rockier and 2012’s ‘Red’ saw more pop-leaning production, and by
the time we got to 2014’s ‘1989’ she’d cast the cowboy hat aside entirely for
pure pop bangers. On album eight, Swift dives headfirst into the world of folk,
alternative rock and indie.
It was written in isolation; she remotely teamed up with a
handful of her musical heroes – and indie legends – including The National‘s Aaron Dessner (who worked on 11
of the 16 songs), Bon Iver‘s Justin Vernon (he makes the
record’s only guest appearance on ‘Exile’) and long-time collaborator Jack
Antanoff. In her pre-release statement, she claims to have worked with
another ‘hero’, the mysterious William Bowery – though no known details exist
about him elsewhere and fans have speculated that this is a pseudonym for her
brother or boyfriend, the actor Joe Alwyn.
Despite the bold new direction, there are moments of
nostalgia for Swift albums gone by, too. ‘Betty’, a sweet tune about high
school romance written by Swift and the enigmatic Bowery, fuses this new
folk-rock sound with moments of country we’ve not heard for several albums. ‘My
Tears Ricochet’ feels like a sister to the Imogen Heap co-written ‘Clean’
from ‘1989’, only this time a megawatt pop song is encased in layered vocals
and twinkling music box instrumentals.
True: at 16 songs (17, if you count bonus track ‘The Lakes’)
‘Folklore’ can sometimes drag slightly. ‘Mirrorball’, a saccharine declaration
of romance, lacks the bite of the rest of the album, while ‘Epiphany’ feels
slightly sluggish. Yet for the most part, the elegant melodies, glittering
production and, crucially, Swift’s songwriting and lyricism pull it back from
the brink
In fact, it’s Swift’s vivid storytelling that makes
‘Folklore’ such an impressive album. This facet has always been a keystone in
her music, but her discography twinkles with gems in which it’s heightened (the
gut-punch couplet of “you call me up again just to break me like a promise / So
casually cruel in the name of being honest” on ‘Red”s ‘All Too
Well’; the rich description of a gaudy wedding in the title track to ‘Speak
Now’).
‘Folklore’ is infused with this sort of storytelling. Take
‘The Last Great American Dynasty’, which is a contender for the best Taylor
Swift song ever written. Describing one woman’s life crumbling around her, the
descriptive lyrics evoke those of ’80s singer-songwriter Mary Chapin Carpenter,
or the complex tales Bob Dylan spins in his lengthy, winding verses. ‘Invisible
String’, filled with an unusual turn of phrase – “Bad was the
blood of the song in the cab on your first trip to LA” – is a
candid glimpse inside Swift’s current relationship. And, of course, there are
plenty of pithy kiss-offs perfect for your next Instagram caption, the greatest
arriving when Swift whispers “And if I’m dead to you why are you at the wake?” on
‘My Tears Ricochet’.
‘Folklore’ feels fresh, forward-thinking and, most of all,
honest. The glossy production she’s lent on for the past half-decade is cast
aside for simpler, softer melodies and wistful instrumentation. It’s the sound
of an artist who’s bored of calculated releases and wanted to try something
different. Swift disappeared into the metaphorical woods while writing
‘Folklore’, and she’s emerged stronger than ever.
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