The Borneo Post

Even in the midst of a global pandemic, Taylor Swift delivers

- Sonia Rao

BACK in July, Washington Post pop music critic Chris Richards wondered: If a Taylor Swift album drops in a pandemic, does it make a sound?

Such a question is rhetorical, to some extent. Even in these unpreceden­ted times, of course one of her releases would make a sound.

The smallest of Swiftian plops would. The actual question is, how loud?

For all its musical softness, “Folklore” seems to have landed with a thud that reverberat­es to this day.

Billboard reported Sunday that the album has become the first to sell a million copies in the United States this year.

It has also returned to the top of the Billboard 200 chart for an eighth non-consecutiv­e week.

These feats aren’t out of character for Swift.

“Folklore,” her eighth studio album, follows in the footsteps of last year’s “Lover,” the only 2019 record to sell a million copies stateside.

Including “The Taylor Swift Holiday Collection,” released in 2007, nine of the singer’s albums have sold at least a million copies each.

According to Billboard, 2008 s “Fearless” continues to reign supreme at a whopping 7.21 million.

But wait, there’s more! Swift has been nominated for favorite female pop/rock artist at the American Music Awards next month and, if she wins for the third year in a row, would become the first five-time winner in the award show’s 47-year history.

She is currently tied at four with Olivia Newton-John and Whitney Houston.

Pandemic who?

Beyond the sales and minor accolades naturally drawn to a star of Swift’s magnitude, the success of “Folklore” could be in part due to the unique circumstan­ces of its creation.

The album was written and recorded “in isolation,” Swift wrote upon its release, announcing that she made a pandemic album for her pandemic listeners.

She recruited collaborat­ors - chief among them, the National’s Aaron Dessner, who co-wrote or produced nearly a dozen songs, and frequent collaborat­or

Jack Antonoff, who let off the pop music gas pedal - who enabled her vision of pouring

“all of my whims, dreams, fears, and musings” into a cozy sweater of a record.

“The triumph of ‘Folklore’ isn’t that Swift has suddenly become tasteful and tuned-in,” The Post’s Richards stated in his review.

“Having so thoroughly crashed the pop charts like a fluorescen­t tidal wave, she’s finally making enough space in her music for her modest voice to sound like itself.” — The Washington

Post

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Taylor Swift

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