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                                                                                     PEOPLE & ARTS Wednesday 28 august 2019
            Taylor Swift taps into her joyful side with 'Lover'




            By MARK KENNEDY              Last  time  out,  Swift  was  a  es  throughout,  including
            Associated Press             cool  villain,  settling  scores.  a  sax  in  "False  God"  and
            Taylor Swift, "Lover" (Repub-  Now  she's  joyfully  doing  a  cameo  by  Idris  Elba  (a
            lic Records)                 a  duet  with  Brendon  Urie  snippet from "The Late Late
            If  you  want  an  easy  way  of  Panic!  At  the  Disco  on  Show with James Corden").
            to see how far Taylor Swift  "ME!,"  a  slice  of  self-love.  She name-drops Leonardo
            has  come  since  her  last  She's  refreshingly  contrite  DiCaprio  and  Drake, while
            album,  just  compare  the  on  "Afterglow"  and  reach-  calling  herself  a  "Tennes-
            two covers. If 2017's "repu-  ing out to a pal in the unaf-  see Stella McCartney." The
            tation" featured a photo of  fected "It's Nice to Have a  song  "Miss  Americana  &
            Swift unsmiling in black and  Friend."                    the  Heartbreak  Prince"  is
            white,  "Lover"  is  an  explo-  Not everything is hugs and  the album's most ambitious
            sion  of  color,  clouds  and  giggles,  of  course.  There's  track,  reaching  for  some-
            sparkles.                    a  fair  amount  of  tears,  thing  deeper  than  just  a
            The  superb  new  18-track  drunken regret and break-     high school moment.
            collection  finds  Swift  look-  ups. (There's even a health  The  album  ends  with  one
            ing backward and forward  scare  in  the  understated  of Swift's most introspective
            through the lens of love —  ballad "Soon You'll Get Bet-  songs,  "Daylight,"  in  which
            both  present  and  absent,  ter," which features the Di-  she sings of waking from a
            lustfully and wistfully, friend-  xie Chicks, fiddle and ban-  20-year dark night.
            ly and concerned. She calls  jo.)  "Cruel  Summer"  (with  Now,  in  the  light,  she  can
            it a "love letter to love itself."  writing  help  from  Vincent)  see  "I  wounded  the  good
            It's  a  remarkable  look  at  and "Death by a Thousand  and  I  trusted  the  wicked."   This cover image released by Republic Records shows "Lover",
            the  various  hues  love  can  Cuts" are about love gone  On  this  and  all  the  previ-  the latest release by Taylor Swift.
            take. A songwriter long as-  really, really bad.          ous  others,  she  absolutely                                        Associated Press
            sociated  with  bright  red  is  There are interesting touch-  shines.q
            painting  now  in  blues  and
            golds. "I want to be defined
            by  the  things  I  love  —  not
            the things I hate," she writes
            in  the  album  notes  and
            repeats  in  the  final  song,
            "Daylight."
            For many of the songs, she's
            reunited   with   producer
            Jack  Antonoff.  This  time,
            they've hacked away at a
            lot of the previous electron-
            ic  clutter  to  show  off  Swift
            and her rich pop songwrit-
            ing.
            The album kicks off with the
            trop-hop  "I  Forgot  You  Ex-
            isted,"  which  seems  to  ref-
            erence  her  old  feud  with
            once-friend  Kim  Kardashi-
            an, whom she slammed in
            "This Is Why We Can't Have
            Nice  Things."  Now,  with
            genuine  laughter,  she  ad-
            mits  she's  just  indifferent.
            Chapter  closed,  moving
            on.
            Most of "Lover" is exuberant
            and a return to the diaristic
            Swift of the past. She seems
            to revel in the hard-fought
            happiness she's found with
            her  boyfriend  of  three
            years,  the  Englishman  Joe
            Alwyn,  the  obvious  source
            of "London Boy."
            Things  are  getting  serious,
            apparently.  In  the  Go-
            Go's-ish  "Paper  Rings"  she
            suggests  "you're  the  one  I
            want," while the album's ti-
            tle track even contains Swift
            singing  a  mock  wedding
            vow.  On  "Cornelia  Street,"
            she's  frightened  that  one
            day he'll walk away.
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