Vancouver Sun

TWICE THE FUN

What you need to know about Tay-tay's surprise double album drop

- EMILY YAHR The Washington Post

As Taylor Swift accepted the Grammy Award in February for best pop vocal album for Midnights, she informed the audience that she had been keeping a secret for two years: She had recorded a new album, The Tortured Poets Department, and it would be released April 19.

When Swift said “two years,” she held up two fingers, which under normal circumstan­ces is a regular human hand signal. However, Swift's diehard fans know her all too well ... and when the lead-up to the record included more references to the number 2, they suspected something was up.

And they were correct — Swift dropped the 16-song record on midnight ET Friday and then two hours later announced a surprise: It was actually a double album titled The Tortured Poets Department: The Anthology, with 15 additional songs.

Here are the main things to know about the album.

YES, A MAJOR THEME IS HEARTBREAK

Based on the title, you could guess there would be lots of angst on the record, in addition to some of the track listings alone: I Can Do It With a Broken Heart, I Can Fix Him (No Really I Can), as well as So Long, London — the latter of which is the fifth track, which all Swifties know is a spot that she saves for her most personal songs. Before the release, Swift created a series of playlists for Apple Music that categorize­d songs from her discograph­y by the five stages of grief.

Swift does deliver lyric after lyric about devastatin­g heartbreak: “You swore that you loved me, but where were the clues? / I died on the altar waiting for the proof,” she sings on So Long, London. And on LOML, usually internet-speak for “love of my life,” she changes the words to “loss of my life.”

SHE DROPS (A FEW) HINTS ABOUT THE SUBJECTS OF HER SONGS

Swift rocketed to stardom as a teen country singer when she hid clues in the liner notes about the real-life boyfriends and crushes in her lyrics. That practice stopped when she became a global superstar — but as usual, fans are already hard at work dissecting who, exactly, Swift is singing about on these tracks. (“I'd written so much tortured poetry in the past 2 years and wanted to share it all with you,” Swift posted on social media Friday.)

The obvious assumption before the album's release was that many songs would be about British actor Joe Alwyn, whom Swift dated for six years before they announced their breakup in April 2023. But upon hearing the lyrics, fans instead caught more apparent references to Matty Healy, lead singer of British band The 1975, to whom Swift was romantical­ly linked for a couple of months last year.

Swift, who has given very few details about the timeline of Tortured Poets, said that she started recording it after she finished Midnights (presumably in late 2021 or early 2022) and continued through The Eras Tour that launched last spring. So it's unclear whether the timing would have worked for her to include her relationsh­ip with Super Bowl-winning Kansas City Chiefs star Travis Kelce.

SWIFT IS NOT THRILLED ABOUT THE OPINIONS ON HER RELATIONSH­IPS

While Swift and Healy were spotted together multiple times and he showed up at a few of her concerts, they never confirmed they were an item. Still, many people were upset that Swift was associated with the controvers­ial singer, given that he has been criticized for offensive comments over the years, such as laughing and agreeing on a podcast when a host made racist comments about the rapper Ice Spice. Some fans launched a campaign called #Speakupnow that asked Swift to address and condemn his behaviour. Swift has not talked about Healy publicly, but Friday morning, listeners were already drawing the line between the public outcry and her lyrics on But Daddy I Love Him. Swift had some harsh words for strangers who judge her: “God save the most judgmental creeps who say they want what's best for me / Sanctimoni­ously performing soliloquie­s I'll never see, thinking it can change the beat of my heart when he touches me.”

“I'll tell you something about my good name,” she sings, “It's mine along with all the disgrace.”

SWIFT IS STILL PROCESSING HER FEELINGS ABOUT FAME

While there are plenty of perks of being one of the most famous and richest celebritie­s on the planet, it can also kind of ruin your life. Swift has delved into this theme before and continues here.

“You wouldn't last an hour in the asylum where they raised me,” she taunts on Who's Afraid of Little Old Me?, later adding, “I was tame, I was gentle til the circus life made me mean.”

SHE BURIES HATCHETS BUT KEEPS MAPS OF WHERE SHE PUTS THEM

That's Swift's way (on 2017 song End Game) of saying she holds grudges — something that still holds true today.

The second half of the album is filled with songs titled with proper names: Cassandra, Robin, Peter, Chloe or Sam or Sophia or Marcus.

But one is called Thank You Aimee, stylized as “thank you aimee” ... which fans immediatel­y recognized spells out “Kim,” also known as a longtime Swift nemesis known as Kim Kardashian. The song is peppered with expletives directed at Aimee, leaving no confusion about how she feels about a certain someone.

However, in a brief statement on Instagram, Swift wanted to let listeners know that she doesn't plan on looking backward for much longer, describing Tortured Poets as “an anthology of new works that reflect events, opinions and sentiments from a fleeting and fatalistic moment in time — one that was both sensationa­l and sorrowful in equal measure.

“This period of the author's life is now over, the chapter closed and boarded up. There is nothing to avenge, no scores to settle once wounds have healed,” Swift continued. “And upon further reflection, a good number of them turned out to be self-inflicted. This writer is of the firm belief that our tears become holy in the form of ink on a page. Once we have spoken our saddest story, we can be free of it.”

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 ?? NATACHA PISARENKO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILES ?? Pop superstar Taylor Swift surprised fans and music critics alike when she released 15 new songs in the middle of the night to go along with the originally-promised The Tortured Poets Department, which she had released two hours earlier.
NATACHA PISARENKO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILES Pop superstar Taylor Swift surprised fans and music critics alike when she released 15 new songs in the middle of the night to go along with the originally-promised The Tortured Poets Department, which she had released two hours earlier.

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