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"Champagne Problems" is a ballad [10] with lo-fi instrumentals, consisting of piano chords, guitar arpeggios, and choir vocals; the piano also possesses a stylistic oom-pah sound. [11] Pitchfork critic Sam Sodomsky felt the song's composition is "spacious" in nature. [ 12 ]
Chris Willman of Variety wrote that while "it's lovely to hear [Swift and Urban] together", the song does not feel as immersive in comparison to the other songs that made it into the original album, and he dubbed the track and the chords as "a slightly more balladic version" of the fellow album track "You Belong with Me" (2009), which he deemed ...
The song appeared on the self-titled second album by Blood, Sweat & Tears. It was the third single from the album, peaking at #2 on the Hot 100; the album's previous two singles had also stalled at #2 on the same chart. The three singles each charted thirteen weeks on the Hot 100.
"Marjorie" is a song by the American singer-songwriter Taylor Swift from her ninth studio album, Evermore (2020). She wrote the track with its producer, Aaron Dessner.A tribute to Swift's late maternal grandmother, the opera singer Marjorie Finlay, the song features bits of advice that Finlay offered to Swift and touches on her guilt over not knowing Finlay to the fullest.
"The Last Great American Dynasty" is a song by the American singer-songwriter Taylor Swift from her eighth studio album, Folklore (2020). The life of the American socialite Rebekah Harkness, who once lived in Swift's Rhode Island mansion, inspired her to write the song.
In successive stanzas, the lyrics paraphrase religious texts from Matthew 10:35 ("mother's children; brothers, sisters torn apart"), Revelation 21:4 ("wipe your tears away"), and bring a twist to 1 Corinthians 15:32 ("we eat and drink while tomorrow they die", instead of "let us eat and drink; for tomorrow we die"). The song finishes with a ...
On July 24, 2020, the American singer-songwriter Taylor Swift released her eighth studio album, Folklore, to critical and commercial success. [1] On November 25, Swift and the album's co-writers and co-producers, including the first-time collaborator Aaron Dessner, assembled at Long Pond Studio in Hudson Valley to film a concert documentary titled Folklore: The Long Pond Studio Sessions, which ...
"Carolina" has been described as an Americana [12] and Appalachian folk song, [13] with country folk [14] and bluegrass elements, [15] on minor chords. [16] It was recorded in one take and only features instruments available before 1953—around the time when Where the Crawdads Sing takes place—acoustic instruments [ 17 ] such as mandolin ...