shrine to the prophet of americana

#supergenius shapeshifter taylor swift (110 posts)

Working on a take on the new Tayswift album and listening to her older stuff for connections and I’m just struck by how subtly...

Working on a take on the new Tayswift album and listening to her older stuff for connections and I’m just struck by how subtly charming in Speak Now she throws shade on the “lovely bride-to-be” for uninviting from her wedding the girl who is currently planning to steal her fianceé at her wedding

(it’s okay that she does this, as she’s aware she is not the kind of girl who should do the thing - rudely barging in on a white-veil occasion – that she is right now doing)

(or you can read the whole narrative as a daydream if that’s what it takes to maintain your image of her)

Tagged: taylor swift supergenius shapeshifter taylor swift speak now

Taylor Swift's Semantic Overloading

kontextmaschine:

Okay, as I’ve established, I think Taylor Swift is a supergenius writer, the only one I consider my clear superior. But, I mean, have you heard those lyrics? Come on, right?

Okay, yes the vocabulary and grammatical structure is pitched at an eighth-grade reading level; her work is pitched at an eighth-grade audience. But that’s hardly to say there’s no depth to her lyrics, it’s just that a lot of it relies on semantic overloading, and particularly semantic overloading that specifically plays on her bridging of popular music genres. To simplify, pop-rock lyrics tend to set a mood while country lyrics tell a story, but Taylor Swift lyrics tend to craft an atmosphere in which individual lines suggest a story or multiple stories (which listeners can fill in, according to the specifics of their own lives or daydreams), which can in turn be taken as literal or as metaphors.

(A lot of her themes have traditionally been about the stock female coming-of-age, but they shouldn’t be taken as coming from personal experience - which makes them even more impressive. Remember that she spent her teenage years not going to school and dating but home-studying and establishing her career because, contra Fifteen, she knew exactly what she was going to be. And she does venture afield of this - Never Grow Up and The Best Day are about the experience of watching your child grow, and Innocent is about a 32 year old woman looking to distance herself from the things she’s done - “Taylor Swift lyrics as explications of manosphere/redpill themes” would be a pretty impressive series in its own right.)

Like, Mean, from Speak Now. It’s about bullies, right? That you’ll escape from when you leave this one-horse town and live in a big old city?

Or is it about abusive parents? I mean,

some day I’ll be
big enough so you can’t hit me

Girl bullying isn’t really a “hitting” thing, plus

I bet you got pushed around,
Somebody made you cold,
But the cycle ends right now,
cause you can’t lead me down that road

Or is it about critics, such as critics of pop-country star Taylor Swift?

Or yourself and in your insecurity, as your own biggest critic? (cf. Tied Together With a Smile and A Place In This World from the debut)

The answer, of course, is “yes”.

And that’s not even adding in the reading where it’s about her and Kanye West at the VMAs - because Swift can wield her public celebrity tabloid persona to add more reading and layers of valence to her songs, in part through encoded messages in her liner notes. Like, the liner notes code isn’t hard to figure out - just take the letters incongruously capitalized. Because she’s pitching at an eighth-grade audience. And she’s pitching that audience encrypted intertextuality.

Okay, let’s look at another song, Long Live, from Speak Now.

For one, it works a sequel to “Change”, from previous album Fearless, with its blended imagery of supporting a relationship partner, general teenage pressure, and literal revolution (released two months after the first Hunger Games novel came out and shifted the dominant tone of YA from Twilight-era “supportive relationship” to “youth insurrection”).

It’s about triumph, in a supportive relationship, over general teenage pressure (with an aside about high school relationships not being long-term things, in a much more optimistic tone than the similarly themed White Horse and Fifteen), is it metaphorizing that through the recurrent imagery of a coronation, or is it telling a literal story about being named Prom King & Queen, and the answer of course is “yes”. And then the recurring line “bring on all the pretenders”.

“Pretenders”, like, “phonies”, Holden Caulfield style.

“Pretenders”, like, unsuccessful claimants to a royal title.

Tagged: supergenius shapeshifter taylor swift rerun

A unified theory of Taylor Swift’s reputation - Vox

A unified theory of Taylor Swift’s reputation - Vox

Looks like I don’t even need to do my own #supergenius shapeshifter Taylor Swift content this time around

Tagged: taylor swift supergenius shapeshifter taylor swift

Listening again to Taylor Swift’s Red, picked up something I hadn’t - “memorize” used in two different songs In Stay Stay...

kontextmaschine:

Listening again to Taylor Swift’s Red, picked up something I hadn’t - “memorize” used in two different songs

In Stay Stay Stay,

you took the time to memorize me
my fears my hopes and dreams
I just like hanging out with you
all the time

and then in Red,

memorizing him was as easy as knowing all the words to your old favorite song

and I thought on it and realize this downright sapiosexual knowledge-as-intimacy theme is pretty important in Tayswift, it’s the load-bearing element of YBWM

I’m the one who makes you laugh
when you know you’re ‘bout to cry
I know your favorite songs
and you tell me bout your dreams
think I know where you belong
think I know it’s with me
can’t you see I’m the one who understands you
been here all along so why can’t you see
you belong with me

it’s even important in negative (which is how interrogators tease personality from pretense) in Red,

forgetting him was like trying to know somebody you never met

thinking about that, and also remembering when her transparent brand strategy was accessibility and fans chosen to meet her would gush about her casually referencing something they mentioned on their tumblr long ago, and it’s like

AWW, she really IS just like us, in that her real output is multilayered invocations of accreted culture but she charms incidental humans by studying up on whatever incidental shit they happen to be and mirroring it back at them

I just want to know you better
know you better
know you better now
I just want to know you
know you
know you

Tagged: rerun taylor swift supergenius shapeshifter taylor swift

u should follow bloody's example and post more pics of the supergenius shapeshifter waifu

Anonymous asked: u should follow bloody's example and post more pics of the supergenius shapeshifter waifu

::sigh:: alright, who wants to draw me a picture of Taylor Swift in that skintight vinyl Ladybug outfit?

Tagged: supergenius shapeshifter taylor swift

Listening again to Taylor Swift’s Red, picked up something I hadn’t - “memorize” used in two different songs In Stay Stay...

argumate:

kontextmaschine:

Listening again to Taylor Swift’s Red, picked up something I hadn’t - “memorize” used in two different songs

In Stay Stay Stay,

you took the time to memorize me
my fears my hopes and dreams
I just like hanging out with you
all the time

and then in Red,

memorizing him was as easy as knowing all the words to your old favorite song
and I thought on it and realize this downright sapiosexual knowledge-as-intimacy theme is pretty important in Tayswift, it’s the load-bearing element of YBWM
I’m the one who makes you laugh
when you know you’re ‘bout to cry
I know your favorite songs
and you tell me bout your dreams
think I know where you belong
think I know it’s with me
can’t you see I’m the one who understands you
been here all along so why can’t you see
you belong with me
it’s even important in negative (which is how interrogators tease personality from pretense) in Red,
forgetting him was like trying to know someone you never met
thinking about that, and also remembering when her transparent brand strategy was accessibility and fans chosen to meet her would gush about her casually referencing something they mentioned on their tumblr long ago, and it’s like

AWW, she really IS just like us, in that her real output is multilayered invocations of accreted culture but she charms incidental humans by studying up on whatever incidental shit they happen to be and mirroring it back at them

I just want to know you better
know you better
know you better now
I just want to know you
know you
know you

why do you always make her sound like a bundle of chitinous plates and spines tightly wrapped in human skin

because her superpower is making you think she’s you

Tagged: supergenius shapeshifter taylor swift

Listening again to Taylor Swift’s Red, picked up something I hadn’t - “memorize” used in two different songs In Stay Stay...

Listening again to Taylor Swift’s Red, picked up something I hadn’t - “memorize” used in two different songs

In Stay Stay Stay,

you took the time to memorize me
my fears my hopes and dreams
I just like hanging out with you
all the time

and then in Red,

memorizing him was as easy as knowing all the words to your old favorite song

and I thought on it and realize this downright sapiosexual knowledge-as-intimacy theme is pretty important in Tayswift, it’s the load-bearing element of YBWM

I’m the one who makes you laugh
when you know you’re ‘bout to cry
I know your favorite songs
and you tell me bout your dreams
think I know where you belong
think I know it’s with me
can’t you see I’m the one who understands you
been here all along so why can’t you see
you belong with me

it’s even important in negative (which is how interrogators tease personality from pretense) in Red,

forgetting him was like trying to know somebody you never met

thinking about that, and also remembering when her transparent brand strategy was accessibility and fans chosen to meet her would gush about her casually referencing something they mentioned on their tumblr long ago, and it’s like

AWW, she really IS just like us, in that her real output is multilayered invocations of accreted culture but she charms incidental humans by studying up on whatever incidental shit they happen to be and mirroring it back at them

I just want to know you better
know you better
know you better now
I just want to know you
know you
know you

Tagged: taylor swift supergenius shapeshifter taylor swift

Tagged: rerun supergenius shapeshifter taylor swift

Tagged: taylor swift supergenius shapeshifter taylor swift

Is…is Taylor Swift’s new aesthetic “late 90s Courtney Love”?

barthel:

Is…is Taylor Swift’s new aesthetic “late 90s Courtney Love”?

Tagged: taylor swift supergenius shapeshifter taylor swift

Yeh MOM??? taylorswift

kontextmaschine:

taylorswift:

sarahwearsamask:

Yeh MOM??? taylorswift

Isn’t that just the normal way to hold cellular phones?
I’m very confused now. I’m going to work on my cross stitch for a while to get my mind off of it.
By the way, young lady, shouldn’t you be asleep at this hour?

Okay so maybe I see your point.
But only when I have my reading glasses on.

Taylor Swift is her audience as they see themselves, that’s her thing she’s her audience as they see themselves, and when her audience comes around to seeing themselves as fuckable office moms (and they will, and it will blindside you because you’ll expect 2020 to act like 2015 same as you expected 2015 to act like 1998) she will be the MOST fuckable office mom holy shit

OK you know how she has distinct looks for each 2 year album/tour cycle? The 1989 tour ended on December 12, and since then her styling’s subtly changed such that her nasiolabial folds and superficial neck muscles are noticeably more prominent. Just saying.

(She’s 26, which is sliiiightly above American mothers’ mean age at first birth. I’m not even going to bother trying to work out the number for unmarried non-Hispanic white non-college centimillionaires.)

Tagged: taylor swift supergenius shapeshifter taylor swift

What do you think of the Wildest Dreams video?

Anonymous asked: What do you think of the Wildest Dreams video?

Okay so the first thing to appreciate is Wildest Dreams is a Lana Del Rey track. Not just the generally woozy instrumentation and vocals, not just the thematics, but very specific quirks - the way she pours syrup into her leading consonants (she used to sing with a twang, recall), the way she aspirates for emphasis in things like “this is getting good now”, “end” and “begins”, the transition on “say you remember me” at 2:38 where lush instrumentation abruptly drops out to a bedroom purr.

Ask me, Taylor Swift is less a musician than a master mimic who operates in the field of music (most of the time she’s mimicking her audience, which is Correct - the way to master predatory mammals, humans included, is to look them straight in the eyes and mirror them back to themselves with more confidence), and she does this occasionally.

Honestly I think it’s just to show off her professionalism as a performer and to throw a bit of shade, take a sound that’s getting attention and prove that she could trivially do that too if she wanted. (And really, is it that odd if the girl who’s known for writing hit singles just to be catty to her romantic rivals were to write hit singles to be catty to her professional rivals?)

ANYWAY, so Lana Del Rey’s brand identity is woozy Jet Age glamour Americana, and so in that context the video is kind of brilliant, the Old Hollywood international spectacle sitting right at the intersection of that and Taylor’s own 1989-cycle brand identity, the “I’m A Fucking Superstar Now” victory lap.

That’s one thing.

I guess the big thing about it in hot take land is that it’s a manifestation of colonial white priveleged racism, because that’s always the big thing about anything in hot take land. Aaron Bady, who is trying to make a name for himself as the American Richard Seymour, wrote the best of them but boil away the writing and the point is that the “Africa” setting is implicitly Kenya - colonial Kenya - which I suppose is true, and that this means the video is substantially in a colonial setting while not being about colonialism, which I suppose is true, and that it doesn’t even seem to feel any obligation to be about colonialism, which I suppose is true. Which seems about right for a Taylor Swift video tbh. So I wouldn’t say he’s wrong, just… tangent to anything interesting.

One point I think he could have stood to make though is that when you look at some of those shots - a boy with his arms around a girl as they gaze upon a golden field, etc. - this is actually some of the most countryfied imagery she’s used for a few album cycles.

So if you want to talk about Africa and whiteness and ownership, maybe mention how the video models whites-in-Africa using an established vocabulary of relationship between land and the reproductive unit drawn from an artistic tradition founded on settler-colonial volkishness and white indigeneity.

Or not. For those of us more interested in Taylor Swift in herself, the interesting thing is how the visuals in the video for what’s possibly the last single off 1989 almost come off as an attempt to retroactively place the song, and by extension the album, as much more in line with previous Tayswift canon. Shots like that attach a countryfied image to her first not-at-all country release.

But beyond that is the plot - there is a desirable boy, there is a girl (Swift), there is romantic tension between them that ends with the girl’s heart being broken but an assurance that this is error and a correct analysis would place her as most desirable.

And while that isn’t completely incompatible with the lyrics, it’s not something you could have extrapolated from the lyrics alone. (Really, things like “I can see the end as it begins” better suggest, as with other tracks on the album, an acceptance of relationships as distracting amusements with expiration dates.)

What it IS, though, is the signature Taylor Swift plot from her earlier albums. Which means that at the end of an album-cycle that was explicitly themed around “I’m not the heartbroken country girl anymore”, we get this almost after-the-fact “…or am I still, just a superstar now?”

And that’s interesting.

Tagged: taylor swift supergenius shapeshifter taylor swift wildest dreams

The progress of the catwalk… taylorswift

taylorswift:

christabelletay13:

tswiftandnewyork:

The progress of the catwalk… taylorswift

YES

This!!!!

Tagged: taylor swift supergenius shapeshifter taylor swift

Taylor Swift Is Confusing - The New Yorker

Taylor Swift Is Confusing - The New Yorker

When she floated above the audience in her high, high heels on that lighted dock, facing a stadium of sixty-eight thousand people, how could she feel anything except either a messiah complex or profound loneliness?

Later that night, I said to my husband, “I thought of her as a singer-songwriter.” And my husband, who has never voluntarily listened to a single word escaping Taylor Swift’s mouth, laughed. “Singer-songwriters don’t perform in stadiums,” he said.

Tagged: taylor swift supergenius shapeshifter taylor swift ave tayswift regina americanorum

Sitting on a bedroom floor crying is something that makes you feel really alone. If someone's singing about that feeling, you...

tayllorswifts:

Sitting on a bedroom floor crying is something that makes you feel really alone. If someone's singing about that feeling, you feel bonded to that person. That's the only way I can find an explanation for why 55,000 people would want to come see me sing.

Tagged: taylor swift supergenius shapeshifter taylor swift ave tayswift regina americanorum

today is never too late to be brand new.

iswiftt:

today is never too late to be brand new.

Tagged: taylor swift supergenius shapeshifter taylor swift

Vanity Fair (HQ)

boewing:

Vanity Fair (HQ)

Tagged: taylor swift supergenius shapeshifter taylor swift

Tagged: taylor swift supergenius shapeshifter taylor swift

Got my Tayswift playlist on random, man I Know Places into Jump Then Fall is a striking transition.

Got my Tayswift playlist on random, man I Know Places into Jump Then Fall is a striking transition.

Tagged: supergenius shapeshifter taylor swift taylor swift

Tagged: taylor swift supergenius shapeshifter taylor swift bare shoulders