because there's a part of me that wants to protest "hang on, no, her lyrics *are* smart and they *are* clever" because hey, lines like "made a rebel of a careless man's careful daughter" are well turned and salient phrases. And writing off her whole oevre as "shitty Jennifer Aniston movies" just has this undercurrent of misogyny about it, like young womens' thoughts and romantic expectations and dreams are just somehow not worth addressing (even though the history of rock music is littered with really inexperienced and immature young men writing about those very exact things and somehow not being seen as being in need of a beatdown or needing to *fall* or be knocked over because of it.)
I ain't made it through all of Wheal Dream's post yet, but way to say what I was thinking. OTM. Etc.
― Brad Nelson (BradNelson), Thursday, 28 October 2010 15:50 (fourteen years ago) link
And writing off her whole oevre as "shitty Jennifer Aniston movies" just has this undercurrent of misogyny about it, like young womens' thoughts and romantic expectations and dreams are just somehow not worth addressing
ok ok i'm running to late to class but i will address this when i get back because i'm a big believer in romantic comedies and i need to clarify my statement a bit
ttys <3
― Taylor McSwift (Tape Store), Thursday, 28 October 2010 15:52 (fourteen years ago) link
Like almost every other songwriter ever sometimes Swift writes something clever (agreed about 'careless man's careful daughter') and sometimes writes something inane that sounds like highschool poetry. She's definitely not the first person to have that kind of inconsistency and it's even to be expected that when you keep trafficking in dramatic romantic tropes that you're going to cross over some well-worn cliches. I think Tape Store is right to hear "Speak Now" as a rom-com situation (a priest saying, "speak now or forever hold your peace" and Swift making a final last-ditch plea to the guy to leave the bride for her -- this is super melodrama, and even if she's being hard on herself too and self-aware you have to realize that 50% of those Julia Roberts movies end with the protagonist realizing how selfish she is -- see: My Best Friend's Wedding).
― Mordy, Thursday, 28 October 2010 15:54 (fourteen years ago) link
FWIW:
http://www.theatlantic.com/culture/archive/2010/10/taylor-swift-kisses-and-tells-and-goes-too-far/65097/
Something about the hesitance in the first sentence rings true:
Like it or not, Taylor Swift is apparently the confessional female singer/songwriter of her generation.
― Ned Raggett, Thursday, 28 October 2010 15:55 (fourteen years ago) link
And btw, re: undermining a young woman's experiences, a huge criticism of nu-metal and then emo music was that it was guys whining about how hard their lives are, etc, and David Cross once described Linkin Park in Spin Magazine as being a band that stands outside a locker room and writes down all the inane highschool bullshit that people discuss. I don't think this is only a cudgel against young women performers but one used in a number of - uh - non-canon genres.
― Mordy, Thursday, 28 October 2010 15:56 (fourteen years ago) link
The tl;dr of my post is kinda:
I'm a little bit uncomfortable with the gender roles that seem to be implied by Swift's lyrics.
But OH HOLY SHIT I AM REALLY REALLY SUPER UNCOMFORTABLE with the misogyny coming off some of her critics.
But I mean, this is the eternal debate that applies to the debate of any powerful female from Hilary Clinton to Sarah Palin at either end of the spectrum so it's not surprising that Swift gets the same stick.
(This post is no longer about you or what you said, Tape Store, so please don't take this post personally.)
― Wheal Dream, Thursday, 28 October 2010 15:58 (fourteen years ago) link
- i totally appreciate kate actually taking the time to listen to taylor swift and writing criticisms that make me feel like she's actually paid some attention to taylor swift's songs (contra jezebel, sady doyle et al).
- i actually agree w/virginia plains here: speak now feels like a much more black-and-white album than either of swift's previous, much quicker to judge and moralise and place one party on the Bad side of the line and the other party (usually taylor) on the Good side. possibly this is a deliberate decision - that ann powers piece nails what she's doing, how the album functions as commentary on "being mean" - but songs like "fifteen", "tim mcgraw" and "breathe" were notable for the lack of judgment, even on parties responsible for hurting others, and that's not really apparent on this album.
- "better than revenge" is an interesting one. the first time i heard it i have to admit that i thought "oh god jezebel will have a field day with this one". it's kind of...out of character? and oddly ineffective as castigation of the girl she's addressing. what i find interesting is how taylor seems to blur archetypes...on first listen, you assume the girl who's taken her man is the mean girl in the equation, but actually that's the role that taylor deliberately takes on herself (and doesn't quite convince in), from the catty slut-shaming comments to the primacy given to (unspecified) revenge. there aren't many clues as to the kind of girl her rival is, though interestingly the line about vintage dresses seems to indicate your arty-bohemian-hipster type. i like to imagine that that song's about the jezebel writers (and if taylor's going to air all her dirty laundry she may as well write about them).
- but they are also deeply tied into a view of the world and a view of gender roles and relations that I find conservative and deeply harmful to women - i guess this isn't untrue; i'd rather ascribe it to taylor's roots in country, but it seems that she writes within the orbit of a conservative world view with traditional gender roles - cf most r&b and hip-hop artists - and while she can play with them and subvert them in interesting ways, she's not interested in busting out of them. i disagree that this makes her unfeminist or makes her songs harmful to women: i realise this is kate's personal reaction, but the things you criticise her for - references to "that kind of girl", treating men like property - are all hallmarks of r&b, too. yet they're mostly overlooked when done by beyoncé or missy elliott or kelis (not to mention madonna, xtina etc).
- it's interesting that the last act to have pretty much been labelled "the death of feminism forever" were the pussycat dolls, who are the exact opposite of taylor swift.
- anyway, i was gonna write some stuff about how taylor's forte is playing with that sort of archetype, and how that's a key part of both pop and formalist genres like country and r&b, but where i think taylor weirds people out is in tying it to confessional singer-songwriterism, which usually tries to explicitly avoid archetypes, but my thoughts are a bit confused now. i really haven't got any sort of angle on this album yet, and - "dear john" apart - i've found myself most drawn to the least "interesting" songs, like "enchanted" and "last kiss"...
― lex lex lex lex lex on the track BOW (lex pretend), Thursday, 28 October 2010 16:20 (fourteen years ago) link
(xps - i haven't read any of the articles linked since ann powers, and i'm not going to, because i really really want to get my own thoughts on the album straight first and maybe write something of my own if anyone commissions me, and only then can i indulge in reading other thinkpieces on her)
(do any other writers find this? that if they're going to write a long piece on something, they have to avoid the entire conversation on them first)
― lex lex lex lex lex on the track BOW (lex pretend), Thursday, 28 October 2010 16:22 (fourteen years ago) link
the things you criticise her for - references to "that kind of girl", treating men like property - are all hallmarks of r&b, too. yet they're mostly overlooked when done by beyoncé or missy elliott or kelis (not to mention madonna, xtina etc).
I don't think this is true.
― lol tea partiers and their fat fingers (HI DERE), Thursday, 28 October 2010 16:25 (fourteen years ago) link
I don't know, I think "Irreplaceable" is a pretty good example of exactly what lex is saying: "I could have another you in a minute" is dead-on treating men like property.
― Tub Girl Time Machine (Phil D.), Thursday, 28 October 2010 16:30 (fourteen years ago) link
Right, and that is one of many reasons why I think that song is eternally stupid, as I argued long and vociferously on this very board.
― lol tea partiers and their fat fingers (HI DERE), Thursday, 28 October 2010 16:34 (fourteen years ago) link
Haha, that's why I think it's awesome!
― Tub Girl Time Machine (Phil D.), Thursday, 28 October 2010 16:37 (fourteen years ago) link
the hating on other types of women for being nasty girls who think they're so fine that runs through survivor is waaaay more slut-shamey than taylor swift could dream of being (i'm not saying that's a bad thing, the self-righteous mean-girl psychodrama of survivor really makes the album for me)
― lex lex lex lex lex on the track BOW (lex pretend), Thursday, 28 October 2010 16:38 (fourteen years ago) link
My point, really, is that while a lot of people love those artists and love the songs that exhibit these traits, when they get criticized it is often along these exact lines, so I don't think it's exactly right to treat Taylor as a special case for this type of analysis/criticism.
― lol tea partiers and their fat fingers (HI DERE), Thursday, 28 October 2010 16:39 (fourteen years ago) link
really weird "defense" of taylor swift
http://newsblogs.chicagotribune.com/steve_chapman/2010/10/in-defense-of-taylor-swift.html
― fakey (buzza), Thursday, 28 October 2010 16:44 (fourteen years ago) link
There is a certain brand of "girl power" that is posited as that ultra competitive treat-men-as-property, be just as bad as the boys (who are, of course, all dogs, natch), use sex as a weapon - which gains a lot of its power from being an inversion of traditional gender roles. And yes, people like Madonna and some R&B singers use it in that way.
I find it personally questionable (so many assumptions I'd want to challenge) but on a "I'd never do that myself, but I understand why other people would want to, and respect them for it" level. But I understand what it is, and why it works that way.
Swift, on the songs I've flagged, doesn't seem to be doing it in that way. She seems to be reinforcing a straight-up "when a man cheats, blame the other woman, not the man" thing which is subtly different both in intent and meaning, even if it hinges on the same set of gender biases.
One is a purposeful inversion of a power dynamic, the other is just boring old slut-shaming and placing the responsibility for policing of sexual behaviour in the hands of women, not men. I don't think they're *exactly* the same thing; I could be wrong.
― Wheal Dream, Thursday, 28 October 2010 16:55 (fourteen years ago) link
i'd agree that on "better than revenge" swift is straight up blaming the other woman, but i don't see how that amounts to espousing "blame the other woman" as a philosophy - even without being aware that the traditional swift tactic to date has been to place all the blame on the man ("should've said no", "picture to burn", "forever and always").
actually, one of the best thing's about swift's songwriting as a body of work is how almost every song she's written has an equal and opposite, and this is something she takes care to highlight with judicious use of her signature recurring motifs. on the last album, "love story" and "white horse" obviously functioned as oppositional takes on fairytale romance; here, you have little things like the phrase "sparks fly" - used on that track as a harbinger of a great romance, but recurring on "the story of us" as a false dawn. and "dear john" and "innocent" are oppositional reactions to being done wrong by an older person, one condemnatory and the other forgiving. "understanding the other person's perspective" is a taylor forte, which she only departs from when trying to be funny: "you belong with me", "speak now" and..."better than revenge", which i still think of as a failed attempt to get in character as someone she usually isn't.
― lex lex lex lex lex on the track BOW (lex pretend), Thursday, 28 October 2010 17:04 (fourteen years ago) link
OK, that's one of those cases where I'm at a disadvantage because I don't know what the "traditional swift tactic to date" really is. I'm going by reading this afresh as a new document. And that does put a slightly different slant on things.
But what it comes down to is, really, that we both recognise that Swift is coming from within the orbit of a worldview with really traditional gender roles that she's not particularly interested in busting out of - and you're OK with accepting her despite - or maybe even *because* of that - while I'm really less interested in returning to the orbit of that world. Or I don't find enough stuff-of-interest-to-me within the small sample of her work that I've heard to justify having to willingly put myself back in that world.
― Wheal Dream, Thursday, 28 October 2010 17:18 (fourteen years ago) link
it's like encountering missionaries hammering away about the Gospel of Taylor
― lol tea partiers and their fat fingers (HI DERE), Thursday, October 28, 2010 2:36 PM (18 minutes ago)
i haven't read past this post yet, but when someone comes in & posts a thought out & rather long criticism of the album (or any album!) that also includes the sentence "this isn't for me" are the ppl that like the album just supposed to go "okay cool bro, talk to you later"?
― sour posse (J0rdan S.), Thursday, 28 October 2010 17:19 (fourteen years ago) link
i advocate the "okay cool bro, talk to you later" reaction from both parties when it turns into a 2 day, 600 post black hole like deej vs. the world in the gza thread, but we certainly aren't there yet
― sour posse (J0rdan S.), Thursday, 28 October 2010 17:20 (fourteen years ago) link
But what it comes down to is, really, that we both recognise that Swift is coming from within the orbit of a worldview with really traditional gender roles that she's not particularly interested in busting out of
i expect and welcome this w/ the territory
― valerie (surm), Thursday, 28 October 2010 17:20 (fourteen years ago) link
kind of like how i expect and welcome chocolate to b brown
― valerie (surm), Thursday, 28 October 2010 17:23 (fourteen years ago) link
OK, cool, bro. TTYL! ;-)
― Wheal Dream, Thursday, 28 October 2010 17:23 (fourteen years ago) link
we both recognise that Swift is coming from within the orbit of a worldview with really traditional gender roles that she's not particularly interested in busting out of
but "within the orbit of" doesn't preclude "being critical of"; it's kind of like being raised with religion for some people, whereby you might want to buy into some aspects of it and want to reject it at the same time, but it'll be present in your work regardless. swift's obsession w/fairytale romance signifiers is a bit like that - i mean, she was almost certainly raised in an environment where that WAS sold to her - and it's probably the most documented criticism of her to date - and on her last album, she demonstrated both how much she desperately wanted to buy into it and how she saw it as untrue.
what it comes down to for me is: swift will sing about conservative small town values and traditional gender roles, sometimes from the perspective of wanting to get away from their small-mindedness, sometimes from the perspective of those things acting as her safe place, but i don't think she rigidly espouses or propagates a set role for men and women to behave bar a nebulous "don't be mean".
― lex lex lex lex lex on the track BOW (lex pretend), Thursday, 28 October 2010 17:27 (fourteen years ago) link
oh yeah also if kate came back before her ban is up under a new username than i think she should be banned
― sour posse (J0rdan S.), Thursday, 28 October 2010 17:28 (fourteen years ago) link
Still haven't figured out how you guys know who and why people are banned.
― sandra lee, gimme your alcohol (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 28 October 2010 17:32 (fourteen years ago) link
lol username
― valerie (surm), Thursday, 28 October 2010 17:32 (fourteen years ago) link
wtf does that have to do with Taylor Swift
― lol tea partiers and their fat fingers (HI DERE), Thursday, 28 October 2010 17:37 (fourteen years ago) link
uh j0rdan if you look at the admin log Kate was unbanned last week because it's been a month?
― ksh me thru the phone (c sharp major), Thursday, 28 October 2010 17:42 (fourteen years ago) link
Maybe we should use this thread to talk about Taylor Swift and instead of this boring meta crap, perhaps?
I hear she has a new album out, after all.
― Wheal Dream, Thursday, 28 October 2010 17:44 (fourteen years ago) link
HAI GUYS I HAVE A BIG HIT.
― sandra lee, gimme your alcohol (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 28 October 2010 17:45 (fourteen years ago) link
― ksh me thru the phone (c sharp major), Thursday, October 28, 2010 12:42 PM (8 minutes ago) Bookmark
cool, no biggie -- this is why i said "if"
― sour posse (J0rdan S.), Thursday, 28 October 2010 17:51 (fourteen years ago) link
shut up about meta bullshit
― lol tea partiers and their fat fingers (HI DERE), Thursday, 28 October 2010 17:58 (fourteen years ago) link
who's talking
― sour posse (J0rdan S.), Thursday, 28 October 2010 18:00 (fourteen years ago) link
I bet she makes big deals out of nothing all for the sake of middling confessional songs
i'd take the "middling" part out of that, and maybe the "confessional" too, because i'm not sure confessional is the right adjective for taylor swift. but making big deals out of nothing, i mean, the clash wrote one of their best songs about fighting with the label over which single to release, and they made it sound like a life or death struggle. and i bet the backstories to a lot of songs on blonde on blonde are pretty petty bullshit, we just don't know them.
re: the overall discussion, she's never struck me as a deep thinker, exactly, but i think she is very self-aware and is able to pinpoint specific experiences and moments and understand why they feel like they do and how they work. i think she's a pretty good pop lyricist and occasionally a very good one. and mostly i think she's a natural with a tune and a hook, and i'm a big fan of tunes and hooks. (also, in terms of her deepness or whatever, she's on paper way smarter than another tune-hook natural, billie joe armstrong, who afaict gets taken much more "seriously.")
― a tenth level which features a single castle (tipsy mothra), Thursday, 28 October 2010 19:13 (fourteen years ago) link
IIRC, people only really started taking Billie Joe Armstrong seriously when he wrote an entire album about how much he hated the President.
― lol tea partiers and their fat fingers (HI DERE), Thursday, 28 October 2010 19:16 (fourteen years ago) link
certainly not when he started looking like Lance Bass' lesbian girlfriend.
― sandra lee, gimme your alcohol (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 28 October 2010 19:19 (fourteen years ago) link
aside from the weird insinuation that taylor will only write songs about things that happen explicitly to her therefore she goes around constructing conflicts out of nowhere so she has subject matter to write about, she said that she writes songs about/to people because she can say things in song that she can't say in real life, because there is no "verse, second verse, bridge" in real life -- in fact she painted herself as sort of socially non-functional, which i don't actually buy, but regardless the above characterization isn't right i don't think
― sour posse (J0rdan S.), Thursday, 28 October 2010 19:20 (fourteen years ago) link
digressing, but it struck me the other day that for all the talk about the "purity" of her image or whatever (which i think is mostly to do with all those white dresses), there's very little moral posturing in her songs. she's supposedly from this super-christian family, but is there a single god song -- or even a single god lyric -- on any of the records? all the trespasses or redemptions are pretty secular.
― a tenth level which features a single castle (tipsy mothra), Thursday, 28 October 2010 20:50 (fourteen years ago) link
I'm not a big enough fan to wade through all these posts, but has this been mentioned? Taylor Swift Reveals Song Subjects In Hidden Messages
http://new.music.yahoo.com/blogs/ourcountry/67334/taylor-swift-reveals-song-subjects-in-hidden-messages/
― Floyd Smoot Hawley Tariff (Dan Peterson), Thursday, 28 October 2010 21:26 (fourteen years ago) link
kate's first couple posts in this thread are really on point - i mean i love most of the music but i do roll my damn eyes at some of the shit taylor says
― avoyoungdro's number (k3vin k.), Thursday, 28 October 2010 21:29 (fourteen years ago) link
xp great read; but knowing that "enchanted" is about owl city guy makes it quite a bit less enchanting.
― prolego, Thursday, 28 October 2010 21:38 (fourteen years ago) link
That's exactly what prompted my post. Yeah, TMI, kinda...
― Floyd Smoot Hawley Tariff (Dan Peterson), Thursday, 28 October 2010 21:39 (fourteen years ago) link
For the record (in response to mordy) I would never construct some defense of Taylor based on her being generally 'subversive'.
Kate if yr interested "should've said no" is a good example of Taylor blaming the man for cheating. Also it's great.
By comparison, "better than revenge" definitely implies some kind of personal beef with the other girl above and beyond the man-stealing. I think it's really about taylor's discomfort in Hollywood-world. The fact she can't hold onto her boyfriend in that environment is just "the last straw" - what really drives the song is a sense of feeling disempowered by the new codes of social hierarchy with which she's now dealing, the sense of being thrown back into schoolyard politics at the very moment she thought she'd escaped them - writing a song is not just revenge against the other woman but against that whole world that judges her for being insufficiently stylish etc.
This doesn't make the song honorable or subversive or whatever, but there's more going on than just "blame the woman".
― Tim F, Thursday, 28 October 2010 21:46 (fourteen years ago) link
Like, I can imagine that Taylor used to sit in her room writing songs that play-acted how confident and socially capable she would be when she "grew up" ("Mean" is of course a throwback to this), but then you don't magically acquire these skills when you grow up, or at least if you do it's always one step behind the changing situation, you're always realising in retrospect how heirarchies etc work.
"Better Than Revenge" is really Taylor telling herself "well, actually, I should remember that i'm familiar with this territory and I've found a way to turn it to my advantage."
― Tim F, Thursday, 28 October 2010 21:49 (fourteen years ago) link
i've found myself most drawn to the least "interesting" songs, like "enchanted" and "last kiss"...
― lex lex lex lex lex on the track BOW (lex pretend), Thursday, October 28, 2010 12:20 PM (5 hours ago)
yeah i don't have much to say about "enchanted" other than it's amazing, the best song on the album by a mile
xp wish i did not read that about owl city, ugh
― avoyoungdro's number (k3vin k.), Thursday, 28 October 2010 22:02 (fourteen years ago) link
ok that takes the zooey d comparison up one notch further, as that owl city guy is basically cut rate gibbarddoesn't anyone else see this carefully crafted ott cuteness thing as a little much?
i like taylor swift, and she's young so i'll forgive her naive gender politics, but i wish she would loosen up, like a whole lot.
― The Great Jumanji, (La Lechera), Thursday, 28 October 2010 22:05 (fourteen years ago) link
For the record: this is the one and only time I'll go against my new "no meta" rule, but I'm really uncomfortable with the use of government names in this thread. There's a bunch of nastiness I would really like to leave behind, and the new screen name existed for that reason.
OK, with that out of the way, the linked "secret messages" article really puts quite a different spin on "Better Than Revenge" which does change my reading of it slightly, but leaves me with a different set of questions. Like, the actual story speculated on in the link - "pop star boy dates pop star girl, dumps her for actress and writes song about how much less threatening and less complicated he finds a girlfriend who isn't in the same line of work" - it does make her referring to that boy in question as a toy, an object, make a lot more emotional sense, that she's dismissing him for a reason, not just stripping him of agency because she's slut-blaming the breakup on the other girl. But writing a song that implicates the boy in that, like "huh, you couldn't handle an equal, so you dumped me for a bimbo" would have had me, personally, doing a little air punch and slapping Swift a high five. But that's probably about my baggage. And I'm really not sure that the song *works* without the back story, which kind of points to its failure as a piece of art.
I suppose I'll go back and try to listen to the album again with all that in mind, see if it settles differently. But my cautions about that conservative worldview she seems deeply invested in still stand, really.
― Wheal Dream, Thursday, 28 October 2010 22:20 (fourteen years ago) link
if the blues undertones of "dear john" are a shot across the bow at mayer than the warm & comforting synths of "enchanted" are prob saying the opposite about big homie from owl city
― sour posse (J0rdan S.), Thursday, 28 October 2010 22:22 (fourteen years ago) link
*looks at his iTunes library and feels sad*
― markers, Thursday, 28 October 2010 22:24 (fourteen years ago) link