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Taylor swift

"Slut!" (Taylor's Version) (From The Vault)
"Slut!" (Taylor's Version) (From The Vault)

Enchanted (Taylor's Version)
Enchanted (Taylor's Version)

Bad Blood (Taylor's Version)
Bad Blood (Taylor's Version)

Better Than Revenge (Taylor's Version)
Better Than Revenge (Taylor's Version)

Last Kiss (Taylor's Version)
Song · Taylor Swift

Back To December (Taylor's Version)
Song · Taylor Swift

Foolish One (Taylor’s Version) (From The Vault)
Song · Taylor Swift

august
Track · Taylor Swift

Sad Beautiful Tragic (Taylor's Version)
Track · Taylor Swift

You Belong With Me (Taylor’s Version)
Track · Taylor Swift

Picture To Burn
Track · Taylor Swift

A Place in this World
Track · Taylor Swift

Cold As You
Track · Taylor Swift

You’re Losing Me (From The Vault)
Track · Taylor Swift

22 (Taylor''s Version)
Track · Taylor Swift

Delicate
Track · Taylor Swift

New Year’s Day
Track · Taylor Swift

Paper Rings
Track · Taylor Swift

Our Song
Track · Taylor Swift
I Bet You Think About Me (feat. Chris Stapleton) (Taylor’s Version) (From The Vault)
Track · Taylor Swift, Chris Stapleton
Better Than Revenge
Track · Taylor Swift
White Horse (Taylor’s Version)
Track · Taylor Swift
I Hate It Here
Track · Taylor Swift

You Are In Love (Taylor's Version)
You Are In Love (Taylor's Version)

The Way I Loved You (Taylor’s Version)
The Way I Loved You (Taylor’s Version)

All Too Well (Taylor's Version)
All Too Well (Taylor's Version)

Style (Taylor's Version)
Style (Taylor's Version)

Long Live (Taylor's Version)
Long Live (Taylor's Version)

So Long, London
So Long, London

So High School
So High School

Peter
Peter

But Daddy I Love Him
But Daddy I Love Him

imgonnagetyouback
imgonnagetyouback

Taylor Swift
Taylor Swift

1989 (Taylor's Version)
1989 (Taylor's Version)

Speak Now
Speak Now

Speak Now (Taylor's Version)
Speak Now (Taylor's Version)
“Real life is a funny thing, you know,” Taylor Swift wrote in the liner notes of 2010’s <i>Speak Now</i>, her third album and the third she’s rerecorded as part of a sweeping effort to regain her master tapes. “There is a time for silence. There is a time for waiting your turn. But if you know how you feel, and you so clearly know what you need to say, you’ll know it.” Swift was in her early twenties when she wrote <i>Speak Now</i>, still finding her voice as an artist and as an adult. But she’s faithful to her originals here—all of them written on her own, on tour, without co-writers—and faithful to a much younger version of herself. She pays tribute to early influences like Fall Out Boy and Paramore’s Hayley Williams, teaming up with them on the reimagined “from the vault” tracks “Electric Touch” and “Castles Crumbling,” respectively. And though she swaps Nashville producer Nathan Chapman for more recent collaborators Jack Antonoff and Aaron Dessner, the arrangements are still warm and clear—minus a coat of varnish or two—with an eye towards the sort of all-encompassing pop she’d inevitably, wholeheartedly embrace. We all know what came next for Swift with 2012’s <i>Red</i>, but, looking back, you can easily see and hear what’s on the horizon in these songs. The grace of <i>Speak Now</i> is in how it makes simple work out of feelings that are anything but. Swift is vulnerable here, but she’s also self-empowered (“Mean”). She’s innocent, but knows when to take responsibility (“Dear John”). She’s wise enough to regret her mistakes (“Back to December”), but not too jaded see the best in people (“Innocent”). Does she want to grow up? Yes, if that means more agency and independence (“Speak Now”). But when you’re all alone in that new apartment, you still might cry—not just for the childhood home you left, but for the knowledge that you can never go back (“Never Grow Up”). The sound is big, but the details are extremely specific—at one point, Swift says her rival thinks she’s crazy because Swift likes to rhyme her name with things (pop-punk blowout “Better Than Revenge”). It’s that balance—the universal and the specific, the accessible and the obscure—that not only sets Swift apart from most contemporary pop songwriters, but makes her a guide for anyone trying to sort out the impossible avalanche of feelings early adulthood brings. Not that you have to be a teenager to resonate with her. If anything, what makes Swift special is her hunch that everyone has had their turn at the heartache she writes about, whether they’re ready to admit it or not. In her liner notes for <i>Fearless</i>, she described the power of believing in Prince Charmings and happily-ever-afters. On <i>Speak Now</i>, most of the Prince Charmings turn out to be duds, and the real happily-ever-after is the wisdom and resilience you find in falling for them anyway.

Fearless (Taylor's Version)
Fearless (Taylor's Version)

Fearless (Taylor’s Version)
Fearless (Taylor’s Version)

Speak Now (Taylor's Version)
Speak Now (Taylor's Version)
“Real life is a funny thing, you know,” Taylor Swift wrote in the liner notes of 2010’s <i>Speak Now</i>, her third album and the third she’s rerecorded as part of a sweeping effort to regain her master tapes. “There is a time for silence. There is a time for waiting your turn. But if you know how you feel, and you so clearly know what you need to say, you’ll know it.” Swift was in her early twenties when she wrote <i>Speak Now</i>, still finding her voice as an artist and as an adult. But she’s faithful to her originals here—all of them written on her own, on tour, without co-writers—and faithful to a much younger version of herself. She pays tribute to early influences like Fall Out Boy and Paramore’s Hayley Williams, teaming up with them on the reimagined “from the vault” tracks “Electric Touch” and “Castles Crumbling,” respectively. And though she swaps Nashville producer Nathan Chapman for more recent collaborators Jack Antonoff and Aaron Dessner, the arrangements are still warm and clear—minus a coat of varnish or two—with an eye towards the sort of all-encompassing pop she’d inevitably, wholeheartedly embrace. We all know what came next for Swift with 2012’s <i>Red</i>, but, looking back, you can easily see and hear what’s on the horizon in these songs. The grace of <i>Speak Now</i> is in how it makes simple work out of feelings that are anything but. Swift is vulnerable here, but she’s also self-empowered (“Mean”). She’s innocent, but knows when to take responsibility (“Dear John”). She’s wise enough to regret her mistakes (“Back to December”), but not too jaded see the best in people (“Innocent”). Does she want to grow up? Yes, if that means more agency and independence (“Speak Now”). But when you’re all alone in that new apartment, you still might cry—not just for the childhood home you left, but for the knowledge that you can never go back (“Never Grow Up”). The sound is big, but the details are extremely specific—at one point, Swift says her rival thinks she’s crazy because Swift likes to rhyme her name with things (pop-punk blowout “Better Than Revenge”). It’s that balance—the universal and the specific, the accessible and the obscure—that not only sets Swift apart from most contemporary pop songwriters, but makes her a guide for anyone trying to sort out the impossible avalanche of feelings early adulthood brings. Not that you have to be a teenager to resonate with her. If anything, what makes Swift special is her hunch that everyone has had their turn at the heartache she writes about, whether they’re ready to admit it or not. In her liner notes for <i>Fearless</i>, she described the power of believing in Prince Charmings and happily-ever-afters. On <i>Speak Now</i>, most of the Prince Charmings turn out to be duds, and the real happily-ever-after is the wisdom and resilience you find in falling for them anyway.
Olivia Rodrigo

drivers license
drivers license

so american
so american

obsessed
obsessed

jealousy, jealousy
jealousy, jealousy

traitor
traitor

love is embarrassing
love is embarrassing
deja vu
8/10
enough for you
9/10 And maybe I''m just not as interesting As the girls you had before But God, you couldn''t have cared less About someone who loved you more
lacy
9/10 Lacy, oh, Lacy, I just loathe you lately And I despise my jealous eyes and how hard they fell for you Yeah, I despise my rotten mind and how much it worships you
pretty isn’t pretty
9,5/10 When pretty isn''t pretty enough, what do you do? And everybody''s keeping it up, so you think it''s you I could change up my body and change up my face I could try every lipstick in every shade But I''d always feel the same ''Cause pretty isn''t pretty enough
teenage dream
9,5/10 They all say that it gets better, it gets better the more you grow Yeah, they all say that it gets better, it gets better, but what if I don''t?
all I want
9/10
Ariana grande
better off
Track · Ariana Grande
intro (end of the world)
Track · Ariana Grande
we can't be friends (wait for your love)
Track · Ariana Grande
ghostin
Track · Ariana Grande
don't wanna break up again
Track · Ariana Grande
Hampstead
Track · Ariana Grande








