Current:Home > NewsMusic Review: Taylor Swift’s ‘The Tortured Poets Department’ is great sad pop, meditative theater -GrowthInsight
Music Review: Taylor Swift’s ‘The Tortured Poets Department’ is great sad pop, meditative theater
NovaQuant View
Date:2025-04-11 09:15:19
Who knew what Taylor Swift’s latest era would bring? Or even what it would sound like? Would it build off the moodiness of “Midnights” or the folk of “evermore”? The country or the ‘80s pop of her latest re-records? Or its two predecessors in black-and-white covers: the revenge-pop of “Reputation” and the literary Americana of “folklore”?
“The Tortured Poets Department,” here Friday, is an amalgamation of all of the above, reflecting the artist who — at the peak of her powers — has spent the last few years re-recording her life’s work and touring its material, filtered through synth-pop anthems, breakup ballads, provocative and matured considerations.
In moments, her 11th album feels like a bloodletting: A cathartic purge after a major heartbreak delivered through an ascendant vocal run, an elegiac verse, or mobile, synthesized productions that underscore the powers of Swift’s storytelling.
And there are surprises. The lead single and opener “Fortnight” is “1989” grown up — and features Post Malone. It might seem like a funny pairing, but it’s a long time coming: Since at least 2018, Swift’s fans have known of her love for Malone’s “Better Now.”
Taylor Swift’s “The Tortured Poets Department” is here.
- In her review, AP Music Writer Maria Sherman calls it “an amalgamation of an artist who has spent the last few years re-recording her life’s work and touring its material, filtered through synth-pop anthems, breakup ballads, provocative and matured subject matter.”
- Swift announced a surprise two hours after the album release: 15 additional tracks.
- The project is Swift’s first original album since her record-breaking Eras Tour kicked off last year.
“But Daddy I Love Him” is the return of country Taylor, in some ways — fairytale songwriting, a full band chorus, a plucky acoustic guitar riff, and a cheeky lyrical reversal: “But Daddy I love him / I’m having his baby / No, I’m not / But you should see your faces.” (Babies appear on “Florida!!!” and the bonus track “The Manuscript” as well.)
The fictitious “Fresh Out The Slammer” begins with a really pretty psych guitar tone that disappears beneath wind-blown production; the new wave-adjacent “My Boy Only Breaks His Favorite Toys” brings back “Barbie”: “I felt more when we played pretend than with all the Kens / ‘Cause he took me out of my box.”
Even before Florence Welch kicks off her verse in “Florida!!!,” the chorus’ explosive repetition of the song title hits hard with nostalgic 2010s indie rock, perhaps an alt-universe Swiftian take on Sufjan Stevens’ “Illinois.”
As another title states, “So Long, London,” indeed.
It would be a disservice to read Swift’s songs as purely diaristic, but that track — the fifth on this album, which her fans typically peg as the most devastating slot on each album — evokes striking parallels to her relationship with a certain English actor she split with in 2023. Place it next to a sleepy love ode like “The Alchemy,” with its references to “touchdown” and cutting someone “from the team” and well ... art imitates life.
This cover image released by Republic Records show “The Tortured Poets Department” by Taylor Swift. (Republic Records via AP)
Revenge is still a pervasive theme. But where the reprisal anthems on “Midnights” were vindictive, on “The Tortured Poets Department,” there are new complexities: “Who’s Afraid of Little Old Me?” combines the musical ambitiousness of “evermore” and “folklore” — and adds a resounding bass on the bridge — with sensibilities ripped from the weapons-drawn, obstinate “Reputation.” But here, Swift mostly trades victimhood for self-assurance, warts and all.
“Who’s afraid of little old me?” she sings. “You should be,” she responds.
And yet, “The Smallest Man Who Ever Lived” may be her most biting song to date: “You didn’t measure up in any measure of a man,” she sings atop propulsive piano. “I’ll forget you, but I won’t ever forgive,” she describes her target, likely the same “tattooed golden retriever,” a jejune description, mentioned in the title track.
Missteps are few, found in other mawkish lyrics and songs like “Down Bad” and “Guilty as Sin?” that falter when placed next to the album’s more meditative pop moments.
Elsewhere, Swift holds up a mirror to her melodrama and melancholy — she’s crying at the gym, don’t tell her about “sad,” is she allowed to cry? She died inside, she thinks you might want her dead; she thinks she might just die. She listens to the voices that tell her “Lights, camera, bitch, smile / Even when you want to die,” as she sings on “I Can Do It with a Broken Heart,” a song about her own performances — onstage and as a public figure.
“I’m miserable and nobody even knows!” she laughs at the end of the song before sighing, “Try and come for my job.”
“Clara Bow” enters the pantheon of great final tracks on a Swift album. The title refers to the 1920s silent film star who burned fast and bright — an early “It girl” and Hollywood sex symbol subject to vitriolic gossip, a victim of easy, everyday misogyny amplified by celebrity. Once Bow’s harsh Brooklyn accent was heard in the talkies, it was rumored, her career was over.
In life, Bow later attempted suicide and was sent to an asylum — the same institution that appears on “Who’s Afraid of Little Old Me?” “Clara Bow” works as an allegory and a cautionary tale for Swift, the same way Stevie Nicks’ “Mabel Normand” — another tragic silent film star — functioned for the Fleetwood Mac star.
Nicks appears in “Clara Bow,” too: “You look like Stevie Nicks in ’75 / The hair and lips / Crowd goes wild.”
Later, Swift turns the camera inward, and the song ends with her singing, “You look like Taylor Swift in this light / We’re loving it / You’ve got edge / She never did.” The album ends there, on what could be read as self-deprecation but stings more like frustrating self-awareness.
Swift sings about a tortured poet, but she is one, too. And isn’t it great that she’s allowed herself the creative license?
veryGood! (91761)
Related
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- Child's body confirmed by family as Mattie Sheils, who had been swept away in a Philadelphia river
- Restock Alert: Get Hailey Bieber’s Rhode Glazing Milk Before It Sells Out, Again
- How America's largest newspaper company is leaving behind news deserts
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Inflation eased in March but prices are still climbing too fast to get comfortable
- When AI works in HR
- Human remains found in luggage in separate Texas, Florida incidents
- Sam Taylor
- Possible Vanderpump Rules Spin-Off Show Is Coming
Ranking
- South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
- Cash App creator Bob Lee, 43, is killed in San Francisco
- Melanie Lynskey Honors Former Costar Julian Sands After He's Confirmed Dead
- Chipotle and Sweetgreen's short-lived beef over a chicken burrito bowl gets resolved
- Friday the 13th luck? 13 past Mega Millions jackpot wins in December. See top 10 lottery prizes
- How Climate and the Nord Stream 2 Pipeline Undergirds the Ukraine-Russia Standoff
- Businesses face more and more pressure from investors to act on climate change
- Phoenix residents ration air conditioning, fearing future electric bills, as record-breaking heat turns homes into air fryers
Recommendation
Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
Special counsel continues focus on Trump in days after sending him target letter
More states enacting laws to allow younger teens to serve alcohol, report finds
The pharmaceutical industry urges courts to preserve access to abortion pill
Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
Ocean Warming Doubles Odds for Extreme Atlantic Hurricane Seasons
Apple Flash Deal: Save $375 on a MacBook Pro Laptop Bundle
In San Francisco’s Most Polluted Neighborhood, the Polluters Operate Without Proper Permits, Reports Say