Thursday, December 31, 2020

Captain's Log, Day 29: 2020 Can Take a Hike

 Date: December 31, 2020

Time of post: 7:00 PM

Quarantine Day: 281

Last Song I Listened To: "Lonely Hearts" by 5SOS

Last Person I Communicated With: was talking to the family just a few minutes ago

Last Thing I Ate: either a homemade cookie or a sausage ball (I was helping Mom cook, so I definitely stole some bites)

Last Thing I Read: fanfic

Current Mood: So ready for this year to be over!

One Thing I’ve Accomplished Today: lots of social media posts--and my makeup!

One Thing I Want To Accomplish Today: make it to next year--ba doom tss!

One Reason I’m Stressed Today: WHAT IF NEXT YEAR IS JUST AS BAD AS THIS YEAR?????

One Reason I’m Happy Today: WHAT IF NEXT YEAR IS BETTER THAN THIS YEAR?????

 

Dear Apocalypsers,

To quote Jane McKeene, who somehow started this whole Apocalypse adventure, “It has been a humdinger of a year.” To quote Taylor Swift, who has brought some of the only genuine joy to this year, “Long story short it was a bad time.”

But we’re here.

December 31st, 2020.

December 31, 2018--A happier time.


My absolute favorite thing about human nature is that every year, no matter what absolute horrors we faced the previous year, we assume the next year will be better. And there are some definite ways that I think 2021 will be better than 2020. New leadership is at the top of that list. Was Biden the best candidate out of all the Democratic nominee hopefuls? Not in my book. But is he infinitely better than Trump? Yes; it’s not even a comparison. I’m happy to have him in office, because it means we can start working toward making things better for so many people. Change isn’t a sprint, it’s a marathon, but at least we can finally start the damn race.

I was thinking about this year—I don’t seem to have much else to do but think—and if there’s any silver lining to the downhill dumpster fire that has been 2020, it’s that I’ve actually learned a lot about myself. Holing up in my apartment alone with just my cats has really forced me to come to terms with myself. For the first time in a long time, I didn’t have to do anything to please anyone else. I put on makeup when I wanted to because I wanted to. I wore cute dresses on my occasional errand outings because I wanted to. I sewed a bunch of patches onto a denim jacket because I wanted to. I baked when I wanted to and tried new recipes and ate french fries for dinner. I watched trashy reality TV and read fanfics and listened to One Direction and made Taylor Swift PowerPoints for fun.

I made myself happy and put myself first.

And that’s a huge breakthrough for me, because I know that I spend so much of my time doing things for other people. And, don’t get me wrong, I love helping people and doing nice things just because, and I spent a lot of this year writing cards and letters just because, but I can get carried away. I definitely do it, in part, to avoid my own problems, but I couldn’t do that this year. It was, weirdly, all about me. And that was uncomfortable and hard in a lot of ways, but also so freeing. Now there’s still a part of me that’s panicking: “What if they don’t like me when I’m not existing just for them?” And, like, maybe that’s a sign that they shouldn’t be in my life anyway. It’s so easy to say all this now; I guess we’ll see if I stick with it.

But I wanted to share with you (and Future Me) the different media that got me through this year, from songs to shows to books, because I’ve consumed a LOT of media:

MUSIC:

Oh, wow. I listened to so much music this year, to the point that I finally caved and upgraded my Spotify account. But I’ll start with my favorite albums that were released this year and my favorite song(s) on them:

·       Fine Line, Harry Styles—December 13, 2019

o   Fave Song(s): “Falling,” “Lights Up,” “Canyon Moon”




·      
Walls, Louis Tomlinson—January 31, 2020

o   Fave Song(s): “Two of Us,” “We Made It,” “Don’t Let It Break Your Heart”


·       Heartbreak Weather, Niall Horan—March 13, 2020

o   Fave Song(s): “Black and White,” “SanFrancisco,” “Still”




·      
CALM, 5 Seconds of Summer—March 27, 2020

o   Fave Song(s): “No Shame,” “Old Me,” “KillMy Time”




·       folklore, Taylor Swift—July 24, 2020

o   Fave Song(s): “invisible string,” “peace,” “epiphany”



·

 


      Confetti, Little Mix—November 6, 2020

o   Fave Song(s): “Gloves Up,” “My Love Won’tLet You Down,” “Breathe”







·      
Plastic Hearts, Miley Cyrus—November

o   Fave Song(s): “Angels Like You,” “High,”“Never Be Me”




·      

evermore, Taylor Swift—December 11, 2020

o   Fave Song(s): “‘tis the damn season,” “tolerate it,” no body, no crime (ft. HAIM)”




·       And here are a few individual songs that I really enjoyed: “Wish You Were Sober” by Conan Gray; “Boys Will Be Boys” by Dua Lipa; “killing boys” & “Finally // beautiful stranger” by Halsey; “I NeedYou Christmas” by the Jonas Brothers

But I also relived a lot of music from the 2010s, because that was a great era of pop music. I had a full blown One Direction phase for some reason. (Let’s be honest, I should have been into One Direction in high school; like, everything about my personality says that I should have been a huge Directioner [and, by extension, that I should have been creepily obsessed with the short-lived Taylor Swift x Harry Styles relationship of 2012-13].) But my friends didn’t think they were cool, so I just…didn’t. And I kind of regret it, because I’m like super into their music. I love a good boyband. So I familiarized myself with all 5 of their albums and all of the drama around the band. It was kind of like binge-watching 10 seasons of a show…and I’m so glad I didn’t have to live through the drama in real-time. Anyway, I do think my favorite album of theirs is Made in the A.M., but Four is a close second.

TV Shows:

2020 is also the year that I got a Netflix account. I had absolutely no time in undergrad or grad school, and didn’t want to waste the $10 a month to never open the app, but what better time to binge-watch than in the middle of quarantine. So here are some of my favorite shows that I watched this year. I also included the streaming service, since I also have an Amazon Prime account.

·       The Great British Baking Show, Netflix; 8 seasons and counting: Yes, I jumped on this bandwagon, and it’s a delight! Well, the first seasons are definitely far superior, but this show is perfect for having on while I wash dishes, and I almost always baking after I finish watching.

I love Tamal. What a mood.



·       The Big Flower Fight, Netflix; 1 season: It’s like GBBO but with flowers! It’s so, so wholesome! These teams just make giant flower sculptures. I loved it. The cast was just as colorful as the flowers.

·       Glow Up; Netflix; 2 seasons: This originally aired on BBC, and it’s a makeup competition show. I loved it. I finished it in no time, and it was so, so cool and creative and fun. Give me more of this.

·       Next In Fashion, Netflix; 1 season: I started watching fashion shows first, and this one was so fun. I fell madly in love with one of the contestants. I hope they do more seasons, because this is a good one. It’s just easy to watch.

·       Skin Wars, Netflix; 3 seasons: It’s a body-painting competition show from the mid-2000s, so this is prime mind-numbing reality TV. I don’t know, I just like creative shows, and this one is…something.

·       Chilling Adventures of Sabrina, Netflix; 3 seasons (the fourth is being released today, actually!): A darker version of the Sabrina the Teenage Witch that I grew up watching reruns of before school, but it’s so fun! I binged the first 3 seasons in about a week and a half this summer, and I ended up doing a presentation on it at a conference in November. I’ll link my presentation here!



·       Riverdale, Netflix; 4 seasons and counting: Yes, I went down this rabbit hole…and I was really, genuinely into the first season, and then it spiraled and sucked me in and I couldn’t escape. There’s no logic to this show. It’s ridiculous. What little plot is has is so full of holes that they twist the gaps into a surprise in the next season, and yeah. It’s so, so bad. But it’s so good for 2020.

·       Peaky Blinders, Netflix; 5 seasons and counting: Okay, a maybe unsurprising fun fact about me—I love a good romanticized, historical mobster drama, and this show is all that and British. It’s a wild ride, but it’s very good. No regrets.

·       The Queen’s Gambit, Netflix; 1 season: I watched this whole miniseries in an evening, and it was really captivating. I’m a sucker for any “woman enters a male-dominated industry” storyline, so this ended up being really good. I shouldn’t have put it off so long. I had it on my list since the day it dropped, but I didn’t watch it until this week.

·       Dash & Lily, Netflix; 1 season: OMG THIS WAS ALL THE GOOD HOLIDAY FEELINGS. SO WHOLESOME. SO FUN. THIS IS WHY I LOVE YA. And it was co-produced by Nick Jonas, so the Jonas Brothers had a cameo, and my life was complete.

·       New Girl, Netflix; 7 seasons: This is a rewatch for me, but I love it. I honestly still laugh out loud so hard every time.

This is equal parts ironic and hopeful


·       Making the Cut, Amazon Prime; 1 season: This was definitely one of my early binges, maybe even in tandem with Next in Fashion. This series was also really cool and fun (because I remember obsessing over Project Runway rerun marathons in middle and high school). I also remember this show have a killer soundtrack.

·       River Monsters, Amazon Prime; 9 seasons: I know it sounds weird, but this is the perfect show to have on as background noise. I’ve watched all 9 seasons, and I can’t tell you a single thing that happens. It’s great for having on while I’m doing chores or crafts. I’ve also picked up some random facts about arapaima.

·       Bones, Amazon Prime; 12 seasons: This is a family favorite, and I do love it, so a lot of times I’ll pick a random season and just start watching. I feel like it actually peaks around seasons 8 or 9 (and that might be a controversial opinion)



Books:

Okay, I’ll be honest: I didn’t read as much as I could have this year. Well, correction; I didn’t read a lot of published books this year. For me, reading is exhausting, and I mean that in the best way. I love “binge-reading.” If I had it my way, I’d just read a book cover-to-cover and do nothing else all day…but I didn’t really have the emotional energy for that this year, so I actually ended up reading a lot of fanfic. And I can read hundreds of thousands of words of fanfic a day…and I often did. Because I already knew the characters and settings, it was so much easier to adjust to. I didn’t have to do the emotional labor of getting to know characters and understand worlds. Fanfic is oddly comforting like that. So if I did read anything—especially as the year wore on—I wanted something that “read like a fanfic.” I want coffee shops and unrequited high school love and secret witches and enemies to lovers and fluffy fluffy fluffy fluff. Easy stuff. So here are some of my favorite books from this year—it’ll be a short list.

·       Dread Nation (2018) & Deathless Divide (2020) by Justina Ireland—these books are so good, like, wow! We read Dread Nation as part of my Apocalypse class, and I fell in love with Jane and Katherine and this wild world where zombies are overrunning the East Coast, and Kansas is this bizarre Old West dystopic utopia. So I bought the sequel in May and ate it up! I super recommend these books to anyone who likes YA dystopia.



·       These Witches Don’t Burn (2019) by Isabel Sterling—This book is exactly what I wanted when I wanted a light reading, high school romance/secret witches YA novel! It was sweet and funny and emotional and just fun to read! It was very “domestic fantasy,” where there’s no fantasy worldbuilding—just some normal teens with exes and secret magical powers and an evil power coming after them. Classic. Love it. Can’t wait to read the sequel.



·       Ship It (2018) by Britta Lundin—This might very well be fanfic, because fanfic and fandom is at the center of the storyline. And—exciting news!—it was written by a writer of Riverdale! So you know it’s wild! It’s such an easy thing to read, and, yeah, it’s more than a little cheesy, but it’s exactly what I was looking for this year!





·       Felix Ever After (2020) by Kacen Callender—After being promised this had a happy ending because I refused to read anything sad this year (thanks Dustin!), I opened this book, and I thought it was fresh and real and honest and fun, and it tugged at all my heartstrings. To be fair, there are some not so happy parts of this book, but it all works out!



·       The Black Flamingo (2019) by Dean Atta—My first novel in verse, and this was a beautiful story about identity and self-acceptance and strength. I think I read it in, like, 2 days! It’s the kind of book that will leave you thinking for days, and the language—wow! Honestly, put this one in a museum; it’s gorgeous!



·       My To-Be-Read Pile:

o   The Ravens (2020) by Danielle Paige and Kass Morgan

o   The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (2020) by Suzanne Collins (got it for Christmas!)

o   Tweet Cute (2020) by Emma Lord (got it for Christmas!)

o   You Should See Me in a Crown (2020) by Leah Johnson (I got it as a Secret Santa gift from Mikayla!)

o   Cinder (2012) by Marissa Meyer (I got it as a Secret Santa gift from Mikayla! I’m finally going to hop on this train!)

So that’s what I did this year, and I genuinely enjoyed it. I also made a lot of crafts and only washed my hair like once a week. I got a little bit better at makeup and learned how to pose in a picture and not hate how I looked. That doesn’t seem like a lot, but those are some big wins for me.

I also, you know, passed my defense, got my Master’s degree, had a very exciting academic thing happen (if you know, you know), and am teaching full time now while I wait out this pandemic.

I made some Twitter friends, thanks in part to that conference, and I’ve actually managed to write some. Not a lot, but some. So I’m so excited what the future holds. I can’t help but think there are good things on the horizon, and I think that’s because I am doing what I enjoy. And I don’t want to be ashamed of those things (like I might have been in, say, high school). These are the things that got me through the hellscape that was 2020. And that makes them good and valid. And just because I like 2010s boyband pop and want to write 17, 000 words about Taylor Swift’s new album and read stories with happy endings doesn’t mean I’m not incredibly smart and fierce and capable of kicking someone’s ass if I need to.

I am a woman.

I contain multitudes.

And you’re going to see exactly what that means in 2021.

(As soon as we’re all vaccinated.)

 

Until then, may the odds be ever in our favor,

Katie 

(PS: I just realized that because I usually spend NYE in the Eastern time zone, this year is technically an hour longer than last year. And, honestly, how freaking fitting.)


Wednesday, December 30, 2020

Captain's Log, Day 28: This Track-by-Track Review Will Go On For "evermore"-- Part 3: "cowboy like me," "long story short," "marjorie," "closure," and "evermore (featuring Bon Iver)"

 Date: December 30, 2020

Time of post: 8:30 PM

Quarantine Day: 280

Last Song I Listened To: "evermore" by Taylor Swift, featuring Bon Iver

Last Person I Communicated With: my dad, about serial killers, which my mother declared was "not appropriate dinnertime conversation"

Last Thing I Ate: pork tacos

Last Thing I Read: an article...about serial killers

Current Mood: feeling pretty accomplished and weirdly excited and hopeful about the future

One Thing I’ve Accomplished Today: did some grocery shopping and got some "late" Christmas presents

One Thing I Want To Accomplish Today: start tomorrow's blog post

One Reason I’m Stressed Today: COVID, politics, the state of our country...take your pick

One Reason I’m Happy Today: I treated myself to three new dresses, and they're super cute!


Dear Apocalypsers,

We made it!! ...To the end of the track-by-track review of evermore anyway! And this one's a doozy. I'm sorry. I just couldn't stop writing. It turns out (unsurprisingly) that I had a lot to say about these last 5 songs, more than I thought I would. So, I should probably let you dive right in. (If you need snacks or a bathroom break, I suggest you take it now...because this is about 8000 words....). Here's everything I think about Tracks 11-15: "cowboy like me," "long story short," "marjorie," "closure," and "evermore (featuring Bon Iver)"!

A few first-listen notes on "cowboy like me" and "long story short"


Track 11: “cowboy like me”

Favorite line(s): “Forever is the sweetest con”



Initial thoughts and feelings:

Taylor Swift is at a point in her career where even songs that aren’t my personal “ride-or-die, Top 10, will-give-my-firstborn-to-see-this-song-live” favorites are still very, very, very good songs/works of art. And that’s kind of how I feel about “cowboy like me.” It’s a whole mood—a smoky bar, cool confidence, catch-a-stranger’s-eye-across-the-room kind of mood—it’s just not my mood. My very good friend (and 2019 ChLA Carol Gay Award Winner) Savannah Winkler said that this song is the “yeehaw ‘Getaway Car’” (see below for more), and I can never un-think that. And, like, “coney island,” I appreciate the heck out of this song without necessarily bopping to it; it’s almost sultry, and it creates such a vivid image. It’s also, like, this unconventional love song, a criminal’s meet-cute if you’re familiar with romcom/fanfic terms. (Actually, can someone make this a movie? Two cons meet in a bar/lounge—maybe they have the same mark/target—and they end up striking up a conversation and falling in love. I’d watch that.)

Before I get too far into the lyrics, I want to point out for anyone who doesn’t know that that’s Marcus Mumford of Mumford & Sons singing backup on this track…which would explain the video interview you did at what looks very much to be the Mumford & Sons studio. (Side note: the way I desperately wanted this to be Joe Alwyn singing with her! Can that happen? Is that an option?)


Okay, but the lyrics! There’s a lot of fun duality and surprises in this song! I especially like how it opens with “I’m never gonna love again,” and we immediately think, “Oh no this cowboy broke her heart and she’s swearing off men.” But by the time the song’s over, we know that she’s fallen in love for real, so the “never gonna love again” becomes more of a statement that she’s never going to fall for anyone else, because this love is “the 1” or the “endgame” for her. (Sorry, had to throw some T. Swift references in there.)

There are a few lyrics that have been sticking in my brain, too, and I’m still mulling some of them over. One of those is “And you asked me to dance / But I said, ‘Dancing is a dangerous game.’” Dancing is a *thing* in Taylor Swift songs. Starting with her first single, “Tim McGraw,” where we get, “When you think Tim McGraw / I hope you think my favorite song / The one we danced to all night long / The moon like a spotlight on the lake,” we get at least one lyric about dancing on every album except Lover (which is like really, really mind boggling to me; if you know if/where the word “dance/dancing” appears on Lover, please tell me!). We also see “dancing” in a lot of breakup songs—“I’m not much for dancing, but for you I did” in “Last Kiss,” “dancing ‘round the kitchen in the refrigerator light” in “All Too Well,” “I was nowhere to be found / I hate the crowds, you know that / Plus I saw you dance with him” in “betty”—which fits really smoothly with the claim here that “dancing is a dangerous game” (peep my conspiracy theories for more).

This is Savannah! We did a folklore
photoshoot in November, so
she's a very good and reliable
 Swiftie friend.
I also really like all the iterations of “Telling all the rich folks anything they wanna hear / Like it could be love / I could be the way forward / Only if they pay for it.” For one, you could interpret the first two lines as the narrator is pretending like she’s in love and telling the other person all the things you’d say to a lover or she’s literally saying to them, “It could be love,” and I like that duality. I also like all the double meaning of the phrase “pay for it.” On one hand, they could be paying for it by getting conned/robbed or by getting their hearts broken when she leaves—but on the other hand, it could be literally paying for it (love) with money, like she’s an escort or something. I’d be really into that character if that’s the case (see my conspiracy theory for more).

Okay, finally, I want to talk about the line “And the old men that I’ve swindled really did believe I was the one.” Now, while this goes along with the conwoman vibes of the song, it could also be a tongue-in-cheek reference to Taylor’s dating history and specifically how the press used to berate her about it. She’s notoriously dated several older men—like John Mayer, Jake Gyllenhaal, Calvin Harris, and Tom Hiddleston—and none of those relationships worked out, and an insecure white man writing about pop music might see that as her “swindling” them. It’s not “Blank Space”-level, but I like to think this is a subtle jab at that rhetoric around her dating life. Because like the narrator, Taylor’s happy now; what the headlines say don’t matter to her nearly as much anymore.

Other T. Swift songs it evokes:

“Getaway Car” (reputation, 2017): As Savannah said, this song is the “yeehaw ‘Getaway Car.’” I don’t make the rules, but this is correct. For reference, this song is rumored to be about meeting Tom Hiddleston while she was dating Calvin Harris. There’s a lot of fan talk on the Internet (that I honestly don’t have the energy to dig up articles on, because it’s her personal life, and I honestly don’t care about the rumored dramatics of her past relationships) that her relationship with Calvin was fizzling long before they broke up, and a lot of people called her relationship with Tom a publicity stunt anyway, so that’s something she pokes fun at in “Getaway Car”: “Well, he was runnin’ after us / I was screamin’ ‘Go, go, go’ / But with 3 of us, honey, it’s a sideshow / And the circus ain’t a love story /And now we’re both sorry” and “Shoulda known I’d be the first to leave / Think about the places where you first met me / In a getaway car / No, they never get far.” So, if you remember my “And the old men that I’ve swindled” analysis from earlier, this context about “Getaway Car” should help explain the connection. Both songs feel like they’re addressing the same kind of situation.



But the real cowboy connection for me is in the bridge: “We were jet set Bonnie and Clyde.” Now, if you don’t do the occasional true crime deep dive (are you real??), go learn about Bonnie and Clyde. They were infamous outlaws, and I’m sure that included some conning, much like the couple in “cowboy like me.” And the relationship that the narrator describes falls in line with the romanticized love story of Bonnie and Clyde. Honestly, I kinda wish “cowboy like me” existed when Don Black and Ivan Menchall were writing the Bonnie and Clyde musical.

All in all, I think you can read this song as a metaphor for finding love in the entertainment industry. Taylor’s found a real-life cowboy like her in Joe Alwyn, someone who’s in the industry and understands what she’s gone through/is going through. They’re partners in this relationship, and they understand that sometimes we all have to fake it (or “con” people) in life and that all we’re really looking for is someone we don’t feel the need to fake it around. It’s kind of beautiful and clever in that sense.

My most ridiculous theory involving this song: So, my first conspiracy theory is about dancing in Taylor Swift’s music. Like I said, she talks about dancing a lot, but the one place it’s conspicuously absent is on Lover, which, you know, is probably her most romantic album to date. So, why? Was it a conscious choice? Did it just happen that way? I don’t know. But I started thinking about how she says, “Dancing is a dangerous game” in “cowboy like me,” and I keep having this image of Julia Roberts as Vivian Ward from Pretty Woman (1990) refusing to kiss the men because it was “too intimate.” It feels like the narrator might feel the same way about dancing. All that to say, it’s a stretch, but it’s possible that there’s no dancing on Lover because that’s the one love that doesn’t feel dangerous for her. Think about it, and let me know if you want examples, because this could go on.


And maybe it’s my connection to Vivian Ward that’s prompted my second conspiracy theory/headcanon: what if the narrator in “cowboy like me” is a call girl or escort or prostitute? Like a lot of songs on
evermore, “cowboy like me” feels like it could be a period piece drama (if you ignore the anachronistic line about the “airport bar”), and I’m already building this character: she’s a single woman (maybe widowed) who lives in an “Old West” town, and she’s got a little bit of a bad reputation for seducing traveling men and conning them out of money or material goods and then leaves them. And then she ultimately falls in love with a traveling conman who comes to town; he knows the lifestyle, and he doesn’t judge her for her choices, and it all works out. So, why not? Taylor’s already written songs that are more explicitly about ostracized women; why not a song about a prostitute?


Track #12: “long story short”

Favorite line(s): “Long story short it was a bad time / Long story short I survived”



Initial thoughts and feelings: I liked this song the first time I heard it. It felt like it could have been on 1989, and that’s a compliment. I’ll admit that I thought it was a little simple the first time I listened to it, and I still think the chorus could be punchier, but it’s grown on me the more I think about how it tells her story of the last several years. (See below for many more details on that.) But my absolute favorite part of the song are the very last lines: “Long story short it was a bad time / Long story short I survived.” It just…left me breathless…because sometimes that’s all you can say about a situation. I know I’ve had moments in my life where, I can look back on it and say, “Okay, you survived that. It wasn’t pretty. It wasn’t easy. You didn’t come out of it a new and better and more put together person…but you survived.” And that’s such a poignant message for 2020. Like, if we get through this year, that’s enough for now. We don’t have to make 2 albums or write a book or invent something; if we survive, that’s enough, and it’ll get better from there. Like “happiness,” I think this song shows a lot of self-awareness in how the narrator talks about her past and in recognizing some of her behaviors that weren’t the best for her. I’m especially thinking about the “clung to the nearest lips” line, which I think we’re meant to interpret as, “I was just looking for comfort and companionship, and that’s not the best way to choose a significant other.” The first half of the bridge where she addresses her younger self is also really indicative of her growth, and I love to see it. I said it with “peace” on folklore, and I’ll say it about “long story short”—this song is deeply about her own life in so many ways that we, as fans, can make educated guesses about but will never fully understand.

Connection to other songs on folklore & evermore:



“happiness” & “closure”: When I talked about “happiness” in Part 2, I mentioned that I felt “closure” was a response to it, and now I’d like to add that “long story short” and “closure” could go hand-in-hand. A more general connection is that “happiness” describes a truly terrible time in someone’s life, as does “long story short,” but the latter reassures us that it all works out. The narrator survives and finds something good again, which I really, really think the narrator of “happiness” needs to hear. More specifically, “closure” references “the sea that you put between you and me” (which I equate to “the great divide” referenced in “happiness”), and in “long story short,” the narrator says of her new love, “My waves meet your shore / ever and evermore.” So the narrator’s finally found someone who they don’t feel like there’s space/distance between. There’s no great divide in this relationship. (Side note: I’m really interested by all the water imagery on this album. Someone write this paper with me.)



Other T. Swift songs it evokes: Like “coney island” in Part 2, I think you can connect “long story short” to a lot of her older songs, and I don’t know if it’s because she’s been revisiting her catalogue while re-recording or if, like a lot of us, 2020 has just prompted her to think about her life and career. Anyway, here’s a chronological breakdown of lyrics and the songs/moments I think the reference:

“I tried to pick my battles 'til the battle picked me,” the 2009 VMAS—Where the Kanye drama began; Taylor’s “Love Story” won the Video of the Year VMA over Beyonce’s “Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It),” and Kanye West hopped up on stage to interrupt Taylor’s acceptance speech and tell her that Beyonce’s video was better. It was embarrassing for everyone involved, including poor Beyonce—and the Kanye/Taylor saga began. But the point is, she didn’t choose this battle; Kanye’s unbelievable ego did.



“The knife cuts both ways,” “Cruel Summer” (Lover, 2019)In what could have (should have) been a single, Taylor states, “So cut the headlights, summer’s a knife / I’m always waiting for you just to cut to the bone.” While it’s never been confirmed that this is what the song’s about, “Cruel Summer” could definitely refer, in part, to the summer of 2016 that followed Kanye’s “Famous” music video and the leaked (and spliced) video of the Taylor/Kanye conversation. It was definitely not a good summer for Taylor.



“And I fell from the pedestal / Right down the rabbit hole,” (1989 era, “Wonderland” [1989, 2014], and the 2016 fallout)—A bonus track on 2014’s 1989, “Wonderland” has several very clear references to Alice in Wonderland, such as 1) the title and 2) lines like “Fell down a rabbit hole,” “Haven’t you heard what becomes of curious minds?,” “Didn’t you calm my fears with a Cheshire Cat smile?,” and “And in the end in Wonderland / We both went mad.” So, it’s pretty easy to see that “long story short” might be recalling this song, but why? Well, 1989 was a major peak for Taylor’s career. The 1989 era brought her second Album of the Year (making her the first woman ever to do so); it marked her move to pop from country, and she shattered records from sales to touring. You might even say she was on a pedestal. And when the aforementioned Kanye/Kim drama hit in 2016 (just a few months after 1989 swept the Grammys), her reputation definitely fell*

*Among people who don’t have any critical thinking skills



“Pushed from the precipice,” (1989-era fallout): This lyric, again, just reinforces the earlier “’til the battle picked me” line, because the drama that caused the fallout wasn’t instigated by Taylor. It was Kanye and Kim who “pushed” her.

“Actually / I always felt I must look better in the rearview,” (driving allusions & reference to her reputation)—Taylor loves a driving reference. I could literally write a paper on it…and am. But, fun fact, this is one of the only times that she (or the narrator) isn’t in the car; usually she’s in the passenger seat; more recently, she’s been driving, and I have a whole theory (technically it’s a hypothesis—sorry, Dad) on why. More on that someday. But by saying that she’s in the rearview (mirror), it’s implied that she’s being left while someone else drives away. Now, you can easily read this as a breakup, in which case the implication is sarcastic that she must “look better” when she’s being left because people do it so much. I think you can also read this as a commentary on how she’s been historically known for her breakup songs. She’s “better” at writing songs about being left than writing songs about being in love…which is false, but it’s definitely an opinion that circulates.

“Missing me / At the golden gates they once held the keys to,” “Look What You Made Me Do” (reputation, 2017)—In the most epic comeback of the century, there’s the line, “I don’t like your kingdom keys / They once belonged to me.” The whole reputation album is a response to the Kimye drama of 2016 (and also a tribute to Joe, who helped her through it), so this is, yet again, another song about Kanye West—but also everyone who has ever been cruel to her. Look what you made her do: write a record-breaking album. Take that, ya hobos.



“When I dropped my sword / I threw it in the bushes, and I knocked on your door,” “Daylight” (Lover, 2019)—In “Daylight” (one of my personal faves, by the way), there’s the line, “Threw out our cloaks and our daggers, because it’s morning now / It’s brighter now,” which ends a verse about the couple fighting (the metaphorical “darkness” before the dawn). Once they stop fighting, they can see daylight. It’s an interesting callback, because the line in “long story short” starts a turning point in the song. After this line, the narrator is more focused on her current love and moving forward with them, which is also a theme of “Daylight.”



“No more keepin’ score now / I just keep you warm,” “peace” (folklore, 2020)—I squealed a little when I heard this for the first time, because just a scant few months ago, I cried over the line “I’m a fire, and I’ll keep your brittle heart warm / when your cascade ocean wave blues come” in “peace” (another personal favorite). She’s clearly referencing that song here, and you can’t convince me otherwise. It’s great because it shows how “long story short” really is a story in its own way—Taylor’s story, if you ask me—and that she really is letting go all of the crap in her past. And, good for her. I’d probably hold onto it forever.



“Past me / I wanna tell you not to get lost in these petty things / Your nemeses / Will defeat themselves before you get the chance to swing”—I won’t say that these lines reference any one thing, but rather everything that I’ve talked about above and more. I don’t know who Taylor personally considers her nemeses, but I think Kanye West would have been up there at one point, and I’d definitely say that Scooter Braun is up there now. (If you’re not caught up on the Scooter Braun/Big Machine/masters recordings disaster, this is a good article to read.) And, honestly, Present Taylor is right. Both Kanye and Scooter dug themselves holes early on, and Taylor came out/is coming out on top. Yes, Kimye caused her some absolutely horrifying emotional trauma in 2016, but I think she took that and made something good with it. She made an album that the fans adore; she toured said album and broke records; and, maybe most importantly, she was forced to step back and reevaluate herself and, yes, her reputation, and she’s made some changes (mostly to her social media presence) that seem to have taken a lot of stress off of her—she’s become more private, and I think that’s been so good for her mental health. And Scooter? Well, the second he refused to give her the chance to buy back her life’s work, he basically signed a career away, because it’s caused her to be very vocal about how artists are treated in the music industry and allowed her to re-record her first 5 (eventually 6) albums, which will 1) render her original masters basically worthless to Scooter and Big Machine Records and 2) make her an obscene amount of money from the sales and rights. So, yeah, long story short, Past Taylor, it’ll be hard, but it’ll work out.

 

Track #13: “marjorie"

Favorite line(s): “Never be so kind you forget to be clever / Never be so clever you forget to be kind” or “I should've asked you how to be / Asked you to write it down for me / Should've kept every grocery store receipt / 'Cause every scrap of you would be taken from me / Watched as you signed your name Marjorie / All your closets of backlogged dreams / And how you left them all to me”



Initial thoughts and feelings:

**You absolutely have to watch the lyric video for this song. You should probably do it before you even keep reading. I watched it the night the album dropped, and when I realized that most people just listened on Spotify, I made it my life’s mission to tell everyone about the lyric video. But, fair warning, it might (read: will) break you.**

My final thoughts on the final 3 tracks after
the first listen-through of evermore
Normally, I play the song on repeat while I write about it, just so I can pick out certain lyrics and things, but I physically cannot do that with “marjorie,” or I’ll cry, and this post will never be finished. I love this song so much, but I’m also terrified by it. I never really knew any of my grandparents—they all died by the time I was 5—so I don’t have the kind of memories with them that Taylor and a lot of other people have with their grandparents, but I know that one day my mom won’t be here anymore, and when that day comes, I’ve given 2 of my friends explicit instructions to only let me listen to “marjorie” in small doses (probably supervised) for a very long time. It’s a song that I know will hit so differently someday, and I know it must hit hard for so many people who have lost loved ones, especially in 2020. It’s just…a masterpiece of a song.

So, in a weird way, this song that I don’t relate to right now is the most personal to me, and it’s because of my favorite lyrics—they literally have kept me up at night before. “Never be so kind you forget to be clever” is really special to me, because I do have a tendency to let people take advantage of me. I have a hard time saying “no.” I overextend myself for the sake of others. I put others’ needs ahead of my own. And here’s the thing: I’m really, really clever. I know I am, but I’ve always kind of shelved that in favor of being kind and nice and well-liked by other people. I don’t know if it’s a Southern thing or something we’re taught as women or a combination of both, but I’m working on finding that balance, like the lyrics imply. Those lyrics and the opening lyrics of the next verse—“Never be so polite that you forget your power / Never wield such power you forget to be polite”—just feel like these “grandma-isms” that got passed down in Taylor’s family, and I can’t help but wonder what my grandmothers might have passed down to me if they had lived longer. And I think you can see Taylor putting those ideas into practice more and more the older she gets. In her documentary, Miss Americana, she talks about coming of age in the music industry, specifically the country music industry, and how they tried to bottle her as this meek, polite, silly, all-American young girl, and how she felt “frozen” in that image for a long time. You could even say that she was so polite that she forgot her power. There was also a lot of criticism about her a-politicism pre-2016, how she didn’t speak up against Trump then, and how 1989 was a “white feminist” era for her—and there’s a lot of validity in those statements that we can unpack some time, but I think we’ve seen her grow a great deal in the last few years and find ways to utilize her power (to the tune 87.8 million Twitter followers and 142 million Instagram followers) that’s both polite and assertive.



My other favorite/most emotionally vulnerable line is “Should've kept every grocery store receipt / 'Cause every scrap of you would be taken from me…All your closets of backlogged dreams / And how you left them all to me.” This part hurts me in way I don’t know I can really articulate. In the same way that “I just realized everything I have is gonna someday be gone” in “Never Grow Up” (Speak Now, 2010) gives me an existential crisis, these lines do the same. I’ve always been a sensitive person. Once, as a kid, probably around 8 or so, I put some change from my piggy bank into my advent calendar and told the elves to give it to Santa to help with my presents. (Yes, we had elves that visited us years before Elf on the Shelf was a thing.) I got a very nice note (and my change) the next day telling me that that was very sweet, but Santa already had our gifts ready. I imagine my parents were equally touched and worried about me in that moment. But the point is that I’ve thought more than once about what dreams my parents may have put on hold for me—I know they had started saving for a cruise when my mom found out she was pregnant with me and that they’ve still never been on a cruise, and, yes, that does bother me in ways that it shouldn’t—so the line about “backlogged dreams” makes me feel a lot of things. I’m also sobbing because Marjorie was Taylor’s grandmother (on her mother’s side) who died in 2003, just 3 years before her self-titled album was released. Marjorie was a singer, too—an opera singer—and it breaks my heart that she didn’t live to see everything her granddaughter would do.


Left: Taylor Swift in her 2015 music video for "Wildest Dreams"
Right: Taylor's grandmother Marjorie

Some other fun facts before I make myself cry (more than I already am):

1)     Marjorie actually sings on this track. Right after Taylor sings, “And if I didn’t know better, I’d think you were singing to me know,” there’s an opera cadenza (? Scale? I don’t know anything about opera terms, please forgive me), and that’s her grandmother. What’s really fun about that to me is that, later in the song—right after “If I didn’t know better, I’d think you were still around” and repeated a couple more times in the outro—there are violins that mimic her singing*, which to me reads as Aaron Dessner (and his twin brother Bryce who did the string arrangements) interpreting ways that we see our deceased loved ones in everyday life. Marjorie’s vocals aren’t used each time in the music, but her memory is evoked in the orchestral arrangement.

2)     “marjorie” is track 13 on evermore, and “epiphany” is track 13 on folklore. Both tracks are about Taylor’s grandparents; “marjorie” is about her maternal grandmother, Marjorie Findlay, and “epiphany” is, in part, about her paternal grandfather, Dean Swift, who fought at the Battle of Guadalcanal in WWII.

*Note: I listened to “marjorie” once to find this part, and I cried, so, I’m doing great, thanks.

I promise I didn't choose these lyrics as my favorite just because Taylor also loves them.



Connection to other songs on folklore & evermore:

“epiphany”: As stated above, track 13 on folklore references Taylor’s paternal grandfather, Dean, and his service in WWII. In the Long Pond Studio Sessions concert documentary on Disney+, Taylor talks about how her grandfather was always private about what he experienced. Her family didn’t even know he was at the Battle of Guadalcanal until her father started doing genealogy research. My paternal grandfather was a navigator during WWII, and my dad says the same thing—that he didn’t talk about it…ever. I’m the kind of person who wants to talk out all my feelings, so I can’t imagine the kind of horrors you’d have to face to literally never talk about it. That’s…a special kind of terrible. It’s also worth noting that 13 has always been Taylor’s favorite lucky number, so the fact that she gave that spot to songs about her family is really sweet to me.



Other T. Swift songs it evokes: While “marjorie” is the only song about her grandmother, I thought I’d treat this as a “Taylor-songs-that-give-me-the-same-vibes” category, aka “Songs That I Will Uncontrollably Sob To As Soon As I Finish Writing This.”

“The Best Day” (Fearless, 2008): Taylor wrote, recorded, and made the music video for this song as a Christmas gift for her mother, Andrea (Marjorie’s daughter!). She was going to perform it as part of her Fearless tour but dropped it from the set list because her mom—who went on tour with her—cried every time she heard it (much like I do!). I think my favorite lyrics from this song are “I know you were on my side even when I was wrong / And I love you for giving me your eyes / For staying back and watching me shine,” because they remind me of my mom, much like parts of “marjorie” do. “The Best Day” also includes the line “look now, the sky is cold,” and “marjorie” has the line, “You loved the amber skies so much,” and I like to think that Taylor had many amber sky days with her mom and grandma.



“Never Grow Up” (Speak Now, 2010): I referenced this song earlier, but, uh, yeah, it really does make me cry. I thought about the lines, “So here I am in my new apartment / In a big city, they just dropped me off” an unhealthy amount when I moved to Manhattan. But I think the lyrics that best capture the tone of “marjorie” is the bridge: “Take pictures in your mind of your childhood room / Memorize what it sounded like when your dad gets home / Remember the footsteps, remember the words said / And all your little brother's favorite songs / I just realized everything I have is someday gonna be gone.” This bridge gives me an existential crisis every time, because I always frantically try to remember all those things. What did my childhood room look like? (It was literally crushed in the tornado, so I’ll never be that person who comes home to their childhood room as an adult visiting for holidays.) What did it sound like when my dad got home? (Did our dogs bark? I can’t remember. I remember the screen door—now long gone—used to make a smacking sound before the front door opened because the screen was loose.) And, honestly, what are my little brother’s favorite songs? I should probably ask, because I’m sure they’ve changed. Is he still into ska music? (Update: ). Like I said, this song is a full-on existential crisis in the same way that “Should've kept every grocery store receipt / 'Cause every scrap of you would be taken from me” is a full-on existential crisis. They both make me want to go hug my family and force them to take a picture with me and just desperately cling to the moment…which, I guess isn’t a terrible thing, but the whole “looming knowledge of death and change” thing isn’t comforting to me at all.



“Soon You’ll Get Better” (Lover, 2019): I’m going to be real with you, Internet Blog. I skip this song every time except for my cross-country Alabama-to-Kansas drives, because it is too damn sad to listen to on my way to Wal-Mart. I cannot be crying in a Wal-Mart parking lot to a Taylor Swift song on a random Tuesday afternoon. “Soon You’ll Get Better” is about Andrea’s battle with cancer. She was first diagnosed with breast cancer in 2015, and it returned in 2019. In January 2020, Taylor gave an interview with Variety (it’s a very, very good read—check it out here) and confirmed that the doctors had also discovered a  brain tumor. I feel very lucky and grateful to not be able to relate to that specifically, but my dad has been diagnosed with Stage 4 kidney failure and has been on at-home dialysis for almost 2 years now, so I know what it’s like to have a parent with fragile health. Even when their numbers are good, you’re worried about when they won’t be—and if they’re “too good” for “too long,” you actually start to get suspicious, which I know is weird, but I don’t know; I still feel it. *You wonder what they’ll be around to see and what they’ll miss out on—weddings, grandchildren, PhDs—and you almost wish you could fast-track your life so they could be there for it all, and you’re so mad that some things aren’t in your control to even think about fast-tracking. So, needless to say, I almost never listen to “Soon You’ll Get Better,” because it’s a little too much.

*Note: This is where I started crying, can you tell?



Track #14: “closure”

Favorite line(s): “Don’t treat me like some kind of situation that needs to be handled”



Initial thoughts and feelings: This is not my favorite song on the album, but I will fight for it, because I think it does some things absolutely brilliantly. And, I might be wrong, but I feel like this is a song that won’t jive with a lot of people, mostly because of the very experimental track, so, if you feel that way, please let me try to talk you out of it. I’ll admit the “robo-synth meets Tarzan’s ‘Trashing the Camp’” track is a bit shocking, especially coming out of the sob-fest that is “marjorie,” but I love how fitting it actually is for the song. (If you remember from the Long Pond Studio Sessions, when Taylor and Aaron Dessner are talking about “epiphany,” he mentions that Taylor had asked him to send her everything he was working on, even the “weird stuff,” and I’d bet money that the track for “closure” was one of those weird ones.) In fact, just about every complaint you could have about this song, I think, can be justified in terms of the theme of the song. Taylor is doing this thing that’s become popular in music, which is throwing the audience for a loop. Like Kacey Musgraves’ “SpaceCowboy” isn’t about a ranch hand in outer space, “happiness” isn’t happy, and “closure” isn’t about getting closure. From the woman who inspired my most hopeless romantic dreams with “Love Story,” “You Belong with Me,” and “Enchanted,” we now get a major dose of realism: we don’t always get closure from people who have hurt us, and we have to figure out how to be okay with that. Because, I think, if we can’t figure that out, then they still have power over us and they’re still hurting us. And they don’t get to do that.

I really kind of love this hot take from Taylor, and the disjointed, electro track mixed with the soft piano I think perfectly represents the feeling of a) finding calm within the turmoil of being approached by an ex and b) the stormy feelings that clash when you’re looking for/hoping for closure from someone but knowing you won’t get it. The music also brings out the tension in the song. This isn’t a song about finding peace without getting the closure you want from someone; it’s a little gritty and a little angry and little sassy—all very real feelings in this kind of situation. I mean, you can’t tell me that “Yes, I got your letter / Yes, I’m doing better” isn’t twinged with a little exasperation. Like, “I’m over you. Please stay out of my life, and screw your formalities.”  And my favorite lyric—“Don’t treat me like some situation that needs to be handled”—strikes a personal chord. When I’m angry about something, don’t tell me to calm down (spoiler alert: I won’t), and when talking to me, treat me like a person, not an item on a to-do list. And I feel like that’s what this line is saying: “I am a person with valid feelings, and I have a right to be mad at you, so don’t try to mend this just because it’s ‘the right thing to do.’ Do it because you mean it, and if you don’t, then no thanks.”



Now, I can also see some people being upset about how the song ends. In reality, it doesn’t feel like it says much, and then it just kind of fades out before anything really “hits,” per say. It might be a coincidence, but “closure” is also the shortest song on the album, coming in at 3:00 exactly (5 seconds shorter than “gold rush”). And I kind of think there’s a reason for that; the story is over, but not in the way they probably planned, and it’s not a neat ending tied up with a bow, because there’s no closure. So the song just kind of ends, just like that relationship did, and it kind of leaves you wanting more…just like that relationship did.

Long story short (see what I did there?), I think “closure” is a really smart song. Fight me on it.

Connection to other songs on folklore & evermore:

“happiness”: Like I said in Part 2, I am convinced that “closure” is a response to “happiness.” Initially that came from the parallels between he lines, “across our great divide” and “reaching out across the sea that you put between you and me,” but I have more evidence! Like I say above, the line “Yes, I’m doing better” seems to be a response to the stereotypical greeting, “I hope you’re doing well” (which, coming from an ex, would be really infuriating, I think). That feeling corresponds really well with the line from “happiness” “And I pulled your body into mine every goddamn night / Now I get fake niceties.” The word “fake” is also repeated in “closure” in the line “But it’s fake / And oh so unnecessary.” I am very into the idea of these two songs being part of the “‘unhappily ever after’ anthology of marriages” that she references in her album booklet letter.



“the 1”: Remember when we all clicked “play” on folklore for the first time and were greeted with the liens “I’m doing good / I’m on some new shit”? I cheered in my bedroom. Well, while “the 1” is a lot lighter than “closure,” I like to think that the sentiments of “the 1” (especially those opening lyrics) are embedded in the lyric “Yes, I’m doing better.” Both songs are about moving on, and what we see is that that process takes on a lot of different forms.



Track #15: “evermore ft. Bon Iver”

Favorite line(s): “I swear (Is there a line that we can just go cross?) / You were there / And I was catching my breath / Floors of a cabin creaking under my step / And I couldn’t be sure / I had a feeling so peculiar / That this pain wouldn’t be for / Evermore”



Initial thoughts and feelings: I was almost very mad at this song. The whole time I was listening to it and she kept repeating “I had a feeling so peculiar that this pain would be for evermore,” I was thinking, “No. No. Don’t end your album on this note. It’s too sad.” But then in the last verse and chorus, she flipped it, and I freaked out. I was so glad that we got a miniscule bit of hope. Because, as sad as this album is, it’s also hopeful: “tolerate it” says, “I deserve better”; “happiness” says, “Things will be good again”; “long story short” says, “I’ve survived hard things”; “marjorie” says, “Memories keep you alive”; “closure” says, “I can be okay without them”—so when I say I would have absolutely lost my mind (and not in an excited way) if her closing track didn’t have some of that same bittersweetness to it, I mean it. But, thankfully, Taylor pulled the old bait-and-switch on me, and I’ve never been happier to be bamboozled. I’m very ready to hear the bonus tracks now!

With “evermore,” it should also be noted that Bon Iver is now only the second signer that Taylor has collaborated with twice, the other being Ed Sheeran (for “Everything HasChanged” on Red [2012] and “End Game” on reputation [2017]). And while I didn’t/don’t obsessively love “exile” the way a lot of Twitter does, I do very much love “evermore.” I love that Joe wrote and plays the piano part on the recording; I love the imagery (like, I feel chilly listening to it); I love the message. I think it’s beautiful.

Now, I have to give some credit to Savannah Winkler again. And by “credit,” I mean “blame,” because what I’m about to tell you may ruin your life like it did mine, and I don’t want to be responsible for that. But when Savannah and I were talking about this song, she mentioned that it could be interpreted as being about the pandemic. This isn’t out of the realm of possibility, because “epiphany” on folklore is clearly, in part, about the COVID-19 pandemic. So, you’re probably wondering what prompted these thoughts.

It's her fault! ^^^

Well, the first clue could be the months” “Gray November / I’ve been down since July” and “Hey December / Guess I’m feeling unmoored.” July is the month that Taylor dropped folklore, and she wrote of that album, “n isolation my imagination has run wild and this album is the result, a collection of songs and stories that flowed like a stream of consciousness. Picking up a pen was my way of escaping into fantasy, history, and memory.” folklore, and, by extension, evermore, have been products of a pretty “down” time in life. And, yeah, November was gray. There’s no other way to describe it. The nerves of the election, the knowledge that even though Biden won the fight was far from over, missing holidays with loved ones, the ever-increasing death toll because of out incompetent government—pretty gray. Which led to a rather unmoored December. “Unmoored” is another sailing term (I really wanna think about the water imagery on this album more) which effectively means “lost.” When a ship comes unmoored, it basically gets untied and is just floating; so applying that feeling to a person basically describes 2020…at least for most of us.

You could also think about the lines “And I was catching my breath / Staring out an open window / Catching my death” as being about the airborne, respiratory, COVID-19 virus. That’s all I’ll say about that.

I also think that the line “I rewind the tape but all it does is pause / On the very moment all was lost” could mean something different to everyone. For me, “the moment all was lost” was March 12, 2020. It was my Spring Break. I was in Lincoln, NE visiting my friend Meg, and it all hit. I was getting texts and emails about “extending” K-State’s Spring Break. I was rearranging my Master’s defense that was scheduled for Monday the 15th. When I got to Manhattan on the 14th, I officially started my quarantining/isolating/social distancing, and that’s the date I count my “Quarantine Day” from for these entries. Years from now, I’ll still think about March 12th as the day it all “started” (or “ended,” maybe).

And finally, the line “I had a feeling so peculiar / That this pain would be for evermore” is just a very honest description of a place I think we’ve all been in at some point this year, not knowing if or when this will all end or how we’ll get through it or what it will cost.

So, yeah. Feel free to interpret this song as being about a relationship and healing from past heartbreak…or to think about it as a song about collective healing from an international tragedy.

Also, side note: The day this album was announced, I had a Zoom rehearsal for a reading I was participating in for our department (Zoom) Christmas party. (We were reading excerpts from The Importance of Being Earnest, and I was reading for Miss Prism, if you were curious.) And do you know what word I had to say??? My least favorite word in the English language: PECULIAR!! So I’m already thinking about how this word gets tangled up in my mouth every time, and then Taylor goes and features it in a song! So I guess I’ll figure it out, even if I pronounce it “peh-cue-lee-er” for evermore 😉

Actual footage of me trying to say "peculiar"


Connection to other songs on folklore & evermore:

“willow”: The first lyric in “willow” is “I’m like the water when your ship rolled in that night / Rough on the surface, but you cut through like a knife,” and then Taylor comes in with more  water/ship imagery in “evermore”: “Guess I’m feeling unmoored” and “I’m on waves, out being tossed.” So I love that the album is bookended like that—and, if you dig back through these posts, you’ll find a lot more water references, too!



“gold rush”: Like I mentioned way back in Part 1 of this series, I think the lines “I see myself padding across your wooden floors” and “Floors of a cabin creaking under my step” are evocative of each other; “gold rush” is all about talking yourself out of a crush and dousing those flames before they can burn (hurt) you, and “evermore” is knowing that you’ve been burned before but allowing yourself to heal and move forward. “gold rush” feels warmer, with its references to warm colors like gold, rose, and red and phrases like “my face in a red flush” and “rose blush,” and “evermore” is cooler with its references to “wildest winter” and the winter months of November and December. Plus, the musical tracks are different; “gold rush” is predominantly more upbeat, whereas “evermore” has a pretty somber piano track—thanks, Jack Antanoff and Joe Alwyn, respectively! But, I still think these songs complement each other.



Other T. Swift songs it evokes:

“I Wish You Would” (1989, 2014): Full disclosure, this is one of my favorite Taylor Swift songs, and I think it’s wildly underrated, but my favorite part of the song is when she says, “I wish we could go back / And remember what we were fighting for / I wish you knew that / I miss you too much to be bad anymore,” and that parallels so nicely to “Can’t remember / What I used to fight for” in “evermore.” And both those lyrics break my heart, because there’s something so demoralizing about losing that “fight”, and, if you’re thinking about a relationship, losing that desire to fight for and with someone else. So, honestly, “I Wish You Would” might actually be sadder than “evermore” if you break down the lyrics, because at least “evermore” is vaguely hopeful; “I Wish You Would” is just about regret and wishing things were different.



Can we talk about that little Justin Vernon line “Is there a line that we can just go cross?” Yes, we can, because Taylor talks about lines and crossing lines in several other songs! (Just FYI, I made a Word doc of all her lyrics just so I could use the search function to find said songs.) I only pulled the songs that use “line” in reference to boundaries or communication, not literal lines (but there are a few of those, too!).

“The Outside” (Taylor Swift, 2006): “I didn’t know what I would find / When I went lookin’ for a reason/ I know / I didn’t read between the lines”

“Forever & Always” (Fearless, 2008): “Was I out of line? / Did I say something way too honest / Made you run and hide / Like a scared little boy?”

“Dear John” (Speak Now, 2010): “You are an expert at sorry / And keeping lines blurry”

“Haunted” (Speak Now, 2010): “You and I walk a fragile line / I have known it all this time / But I never thought I’d live to see it break”

“Girl At Home” (Red, 2012): “I don’t even know her / But I feel a responsibility to do what’s upstanding and right / It’s kinda like a code, yeah / And you’ve been getting closer and closer and crossing so many lines”

“Don’t Blame Me” (reputation, 2017): “For you, I would cross the line / I would waste my time”

“Daylight” (Lover, 2019): “There are so many lines that I’ve crossed unforgiven / I’ll tell you the truth, but never goodbye”

“exile” (folklore, 2020): “All this time / We always walked a very thin line”

What does all this mean? I don’t really know. You could write a whole paper just on this idea probably. (Filing that idea away for later.) Does he want to cross a line from friends to something more? Is he asking if there’s a way to skip all the tough parts and just get to the place where things are good again? Is he asking her to cross one of her moral lines for him? I really like the use of “we,” because that implies that they would do it together. Is crossing said line really such a good idea if we look at her catalogue? I don’t know! How will this relationship end? I don’t know! We don’t know! They don’t know!! Will crossing that line be worth it in the end? No one knows…and maybe that’s the point. The beauty of the open-endedness is that you really don’t know where everything goes from this point. It could be anything. It could be so good.

 


So, if you’re reading this and have made it through the previous 2 posts—wow! Thank you! I’m so impressed, because I straight up rambled in these entries. But I’m not sorry. It was so much fun to sit and think about all these songs and Taylor’s whole career, especially at the end of this very weird year that has kind of been made for reminiscing. I hope you've been inspired to go listen to her albums--new or old--or maybe to just go listen to some of your favorite artists a little more closely. And if you ever want to talk more about Taylor Swift, you know where to find me! You know I’ll be talking about her for…well, you know.

Ever and evermore,

Katie