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#evermore parallels gold rush with water metaphors
jamestaylorswift · 3 years
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y’all I think I’ve cracked the eagle noise conspiracy! tldr fearless/1989 taylor’s version streaming on the 9th
#taylor’s 15th cat insta story highlight thingy is benji being a bird#as we know benji is obviously william bowery#there are bird noises on exile and evermore#evermore is track 15 so we pick that one#evermore parallels gold rush with water metaphors#whatmustitbeliketogrowupthatbeautifulwithurhairfallinintoplacelikedominoesIseemepaddincrossurwoodenfloorswithmyeaglestshirthanginfromthedoor#just screams really fluffy and adorable kitten don’t you think#anyways evermore track 15 gold rush track 3 parallel means // which is / which means division#15/3 = 5#coincidentally wildest dreams is on album 5#the 1989 cover has seagulls which also connects to the bird noises hmmm#so you’ve got the eagles (like the philly nfl team) and the seagulls (which implies the seattle nfl team)#hold on to your animated horses folks#both nfl teams are in the nfc (philly in the nfc east and seattle in the nfc west)#so n is the 14th letter of the alphabet and then you have a cardinal direction thing going on#benjamin button also has 14 letters hmmm and a cardinal is a bird hmmmm#isn’t this wild so if you subtract 5 from 14 you get 9 which is the wildest dreams track number#if you add 9 to 14 you get 23 which if you add those digits you get 5 which is 1989#and 19+89 = 108 and if you add those digits you also get 9#as we know fearless taylor’s version comes out on the 9th#fearless tv#t is the 20th letter of the alphabet and v is the 22nd subtract them and you get 2#fearless tv duh#this means she’s doing a second nfl commercial#announcing the release date for 1989 (taylor’s version)#also russell wilson and carson wentz both want trades and their jersey numbers add up to 14#so you know who’s gonna be drafted#that’s right it’s benjamin william bowery button#(a talented king wbk he has helped write some great songs)#anyways clearly the eagle noises are incontrovertible evidence that benji is william bowery
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penclicksound · 3 years
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“Willow” by Taylor Swift line by line Analysis
Welcome to a very elaborate analysis of the song “Willow” by Taylor Swift. My goal is to analyse all songs on Evermore, therefore creating an extensive but organised analysis of the whole album. A link will be provided when more song analysis are available.
Note: this is just my interpretation and in no way discards any other interpretation. I don’t claim my interpretation to be the “right” interpretation.
Please do not steal my words or ideas as your own or repost, but refer to me, when you talk about my ideas or post it somewhere else, thank you so much!
“I’m like the water when your ship rolled in that night
Rough on the surface, but you cut through like a knife”
The song kicks off with rough waters, which may equal to stormy waters. Taylor thus refers to herself as stormy waters, potentially thinking of herself or her life as chaotic or turbulent. A love interest then enters her life like a “boat”. This is an interesting metaphor, as Taylor has often referred to music as a “floating device” on a stormy sea (e.g. the piano in the Cardigan music video). Potentially, this means that she sees herself and her life as a stormy sea and the love interest enters her life as floating device (= the ship). Although the water seems rough, the love interest “cuts through” it “like a knife”, suggesting that underneath the surface, the water isn’t rough at all. This could mean that the love interests sees right through the stormy life/character of the singer and by doing that, enters the quiet part of her life/character. The ship/water metaphor is an ongoing metaphor throughout evermore (later: Gold Rush “eyes like sinking ships”).
 “And if it was an open-shut case
I never would’ve known from that look on your face”
An open shut case is a case “which is easily decided or solved because the facts are very clear” (collinsdictionary.com). This could mean that Taylor herself did not see the getting together with the love interest as an obvious thing that happened easily. She did not think of the issues that arise during the first period of dating and getting together as easily solved. And the look on the face of the love interest did not suggest he thought it was easy. Even if it was that easy to get together, she would have never guessed it.
 “Lost in your current like a priceless wine”
This is an interesting line, as it reverses positions. In the beginning, Taylor was the water and now the love interest is. Opposed to the love interest, she is not a ship that cuts through it, but instead she is lost in the waters. The priceless wine may be a reference to herself as being of high value, but the high value is lost in the relationship. It could also refer to the ships that sank while shipping wine, that then started aging in the sea, increasing in value only more. This would make more sense, as it could mean that while Taylor loses herself in her love interest, it only increases her personal value more. Aside from that, one may notice that Taylor uses “current” instead of “water”, perhaps referring to the actions and the course of life of the love interest, more than their personality. It also appears he is in control of the current, of the waters he’s in of he is. Taylor on the other hands, seems out of control, storming.
 “The more that you say, the less I know
Wherever you stray, I follow”
The more the love interests say, the less Taylor knows. This could mean that the love interest is very wise to Taylor, and therefore makes her feel unintelligent and discard old beliefs. It could however, also mean that the love interest is not making any sense when they’re speaking. Maybe they’re sending conflicting signals. This interpretation ties in with the upcoming lines “Now this is an open-shut case, I guess I should’ve known from the look on your face”. However, even though Taylor is not understanding what the person means (or possibly, what their intentions are), she will follow him wherever he goes. This ties in with the previous line: “lost in your current”. She is unable to separate from him, lost in his current, bound to follow him wherever he decides to go.
 “I’m begging for you to take my hand
Wreck my plans, that’s my man”
She then asks the love interests to take her hand. This could again refer to him as a floating device. She is lost, following him around in his stormy sea, and she’s begging him to take her hand, so she won’t get lost in his current. She’s also asking him to wreck her plans, possibly meaning that she’s confused and abandoning her own plans to follow him wherever he wants. She then goes on to say “that’s my man”, which has some sense of pride. Possibly she admires him for being her “current”, taking her everywhere and guiding her.
 “Life was a willow and it bent right to your wind”
This again ties in with the resemblance of the love interest to the “current”. He is in control of his life, deciding where to go, changing course and she will follow. Life bents to his wind. This is the first time the song title is named, so why did she chose a “willow” to equal life? A willow is often considered a beautiful tree, but also a sad tree (willow often means the “weeping willow”). This may mean that life is beautiful, but sad and weeping. All the same, the love interest is able to steer the beautiful and sad life.
 “Head on the pillow, I could feel your sneakin’ in”
Taylor is in her bed, possibly pretending to sleep, while the love interests sneaks up on her. This could mean that she felt like she was in “pause” in her life, sleeping, doing nothing or maybe just not being on guard, but vulnerable. The love interest sneaks into her life, but although Taylor is not on guard, she does know he is entering her life.
 “As if you were a mythical thing
Like you were a trophy or champion ring
But there was one prize I’d cheat to win”
He’s entering her life like he is a mythical thing, like he is not real. This may in a way refer to folklore. It is as though he isn’t real, but stories are told about him. Taylor then compares him to a trophy or a champion ring. Perhaps this line means that she sees him as something that people admire and desire to have, but nobody really ever wins. For example a Grammy is rarely won by anybody, it may feel rather mythical to many musicians. The love interest thus doesn’t seem real to her, but he is highly desired. She would even cheat to win him. Cheating could referring to cheating in a game (this ties in with the champion ring metaphor, such as taking dopamine to win a cycling race), but also cheating in a relationship (which ties in better with the fact that she’s talking about a love interest).
 “You know that my train could take you home
Anywhere else is hollow
I’m begging for you to take my hand
Wreck my plans, that’s my man”
After repeating the chorus, where she is again subject to his course of life, she then goes on to state that her train could take him home. This seems a lot more in control in this second chorus. She’s following him anywhere, but if he steps on her train, he’d go home. Perhaps this means that she will follow him, traveling anywhere, doing anything, but if he wants, he can come to her and she will take him home. She then states that anywhere besides home is hollow. This could mean that, yes, she will follow him anywhere, but she thinks it’s rather a waste, because she’d rather be home. Home could be referring to a familiar place, somewhere where there’s peace. She would follow him into the storm, but she’d rather be at home with him in peace. In this version of the chorus, her asking the love interest to take her hand, may mean the opposite of what it meant in the first version. In this version she’s begging him to let her control his route to take him home. Perhaps going home and staying in peace, however, wasn’t her original plan, as she does refer to it as wrecking her plans. She loves it though, as she again proudly states: “that’s my man”.
 “Life was a willow and it bent right to your wind
They count me out time and time again”
Life was a willow and it bent right to your wind
But I come back stronger than a ‘90s trend”
While he is completely in control of his beautiful and sad life, the people in Taylor’s life (“they”), keep counting her out, as though she’s no longer a part of the world/life. After stating again that he is in control of his life, she then takes control over hers and states that she “comes back stronger than a ‘90s trend”. This could mean that, in the beginning of the song, she felt out of control, following her love interest anywhere, unsure and confused, but now she’s back, and she’s stronger than ever.
 “Wait for the signal and I’ll meet you after dark
Show me the places where the others gave you scars”
Waiting for signals and meetings in the dark suggests there’s secrecy in the relationship. This could be because she is cheating (“there was one prize I’d cheat to win”) and therefore they have to meet secretly. In my view, however, it could also refer to some sense of darkness in the world and they have to built their relationship in secrecy to avoid other people from interfering (this could tie in with “they could me out time and time again”. It also interesting to note that the love interests enters her life in the nighttime (“your ship rolled in that night”), so perhaps they have always met during the nighttime in secrecy. It is also interesting to note the parallel this line has with Cruel Summer (album Lover track 2): “I snuck through the garden gate every night that summer just to seal my fate”, perhaps referring to the same type of secrecy and nighttime meetings. During the meeting in the dark, they tell each other everything, showing each other their scars and where they got them from. They get to know each other deeply, in secrecy.
 “Now this is an open-shut case
I guess I should’ve known from the look on your face
Every bait-and-switch was a work of art”
Then follows a slightly different version of the ending of the first verse, where she states that if it was an open-shut case, she never would’ve known. Now, however, she states that it in fact was an open-shut case and she should have known. Where at first, she thought that starting and building their relationship was a complex and uncertain thing and perhaps she wasn’t even sure her love interest wanted it, now she knows. It was clear as day and it was quickly and easily done. And apparently he was already aware of that, before she was. An interesting parallel can be drawn with Cruel Summer again, where she sings: “I love you, ain’t that the worst thing you ever heard?/He looks up grinning like a devil”. This means – as is widely accepted among Taylor Swift listeners - he was already long aware she loved him and he was just playing along. She then goes on to state that every bait-and-switch was a work of art. A bait and switch is a “sales tactic that lures customers in with specific claims about the quality or low prices on items that turn out to be unavailable in order to upsell them or a similar, pricier item”. In this context it could mean that the love interest was pretending to be something he was not, therefore luring her into getting to know him. Then, as she dedicated herself to him, she stays with him, even though the costs are higher. In this case, I believe this is a “cheeky” comment, about him selling himself a player, but when she falls for it, she finds out he actually never intended to enter her life as a player, but as a life partner. So now, instead of just dedicating to a period of fun loving, she is in the relationship for life. There is, yet again, a parallel with Cruel Summer: “Bad, bad boy, shiny toy with a price, you know that I bought it”.
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francesderwent · 3 years
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evermore, on the other hand, I still barely understand at all.
if I had to pair songs, my instinct is:
“tis the damn season” and “dorothea”, obviously.  “tis the damn season” is about snatching at moments, and “dorothea” is about patience and the love that endures even when the moment you looked for doesn’t come.
“willow” and “ivy” go together, with “willow” being a happy-ending version of ivy.  “life was a willow and it bent right to your wind” and “my house of stone, your ivy grows, and now I’m covered in you”.  there are still hints of darkness in “willow”, though: “there was one prize I’d cheat to win”, “wreck my plans”, etc.  (“cowboy like me” also has a similar storyline, of everything else getting swept away in the face of an unstoppable love - but I’m not putting it straightforwardly in this category, because the main metaphors in the other songs show two opposed or at least very different elements: willow and wind, ivy and house, water and ship, etc.  whereas the whole point of “cowboy like me” is that they’re both cowboys; the reason all of life gets derailed isn’t because they encounter something new, but because they recognize each other!)
“gold rush” is the flip side of “evermore”.  “my mind turns your life into folklore, I can’t dare to dream about you anymore, ‘cause it will never be” versus “in the cracks of light I dreamed of you and it was real enough to get me through. I swear, you were there.”  “gold rush” is about a daydream about something perfect that could never be realized, that when you snap out of it leaves you sitting there with tea that’s gotten cold.  “evermore” is about encountering somebody through the haze of your pain, and they’re not perfect, they’re struggling too, but seeing them and connecting with them is enough, it leaves you changed.  
“tolerate it” and “coney island” are different perspectives on the same kind of relationship, “tolerate it” being the person who loves too much, “begging for footnotes in the story of your life, drawing hearts in the byline, always taking up too much space or time” and “coney island” being the person who has to face up to the fact that they didn’t love enough when their partner breaks free: “did I leave you hanging every single day? sorry for not making you my centerfold”.
“happiness” and “closure” are flip sides, different ways of approaching similar endings: “after giving you the best I had, tell me what to give after that? all you want from me now is the green light of forgiveness.  you haven’t met the new me yet, but I think she’ll give you that” versus “it wasn’t right the way it all went down, looks like you know that now”
and there are a few songs that don’t have clear pairs on evermore, but do have sisters on folklore:
“epiphany” and “marjorie”, obviously.  both songs are about death; “epiphany” is about facing so much suffering on a grand scale and hoping to find just a glimpse of what it all means; it’s reaching up and outward, from this world to the next.  “marjorie”, on the other hand, is about somebody who’s died reaching back from the next world to this one, about the presence that lingers and speaks to us, and makes itself felt even though we’d like to deny it.
“champagne problems” goes with “this is me trying”.  “this is me trying” is showing up on somebody’s doorstep even when you know your best probably isn’t good enough for them, and “champagne problems” is realizing your best probably isn’t good enough, so you make the choice to let someone go.  
we could put “no body no crime” with “last great american dynasty”.  in both songs we start with a named character and then perspective switches dramatically to the narrator.  so from “she had a marvelous time ruining everything” to “I had a marvelous time ruining everything”, parallels “(she said) I ain’t letting up until the day I die” becoming “I wasn’t letting up until the day he died”
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