Current:Home > FinanceWill Taylor Swift add 'Tortured Poets' to international Eras Tour? Our picks. -Thrive Capital Insights
Will Taylor Swift add 'Tortured Poets' to international Eras Tour? Our picks.
Chainkeen View
Date:2025-04-10 20:36:17
A double album. Thirty one songs. Two hours and two minutes. In the spaces between the international, record- breaking Eras Tour, Taylor Swift released her 11th era: "The Tortured Poets Department." But will the behemoth tour make room for the newest addition to Swift's vast catalog and how?
"The Tortured Poets Department" showcases the singer's mastery to connect words like puzzle pieces seamlessly depicting the human experience and complex themes of false wedding promises, relationship imprisonment, break-ups and drug escapism, religion versus rebellion, childhood retrospection and the duality of internally suffering while externally performing. It would be a surprise for her not to push this body of art into the spotlight.
But how it fits into the 44-song three hour and 15-minute Eras tour is anyone's guess. And we won't find out until she resumes the tour on May 9 in Paris. I'll be there.
Read Melissa Ruggieri's reviewTaylor Swift's 'Tortured Poets' is hauntingly brilliant, even the 15 surprise songs
Whether or not she's incorporating the era has already been decided. Swift is 13 steps ahead. She plans her moves years in advance. There is a two-month break from the tour and she has been spending time in Los Angeles. Her team of dancers have not been as active on social media possibly because they're rehearsing a new set. Or maybe it's a coincidence?
The simplest path would be to absorb some of the the 31 songs into the acoustic set that comes after "Bad Blood" during the "1989" era. Swift has used the 2024 surprise songs to play mash-ups on the guitar and the piano. It's when she makes announcements and it's a custom gift to concertgoers and fans watch in envy on livestreams from around the world.
'Tortured Poets' release live updatesWhat to know as Taylor Swift's new album debuts
More likely, she will add a "Tortured Poets" set. The show is segmented, allowing a new era to squeeze in. She could open the show with the new era, although "Miss Americana and the Heartbreak Prince's" opening line is a perfect opening for an artist who has released seven albums and hasn't seen fans: "It's been a long time coming." She could end the show with the set, but "Karma" is a good show closer.
Cue the confetti. If she ends the tour with "Tortured Poets," I'm guessing "I Can Do It With a Broken Heart" is the closer.
The writing shines bright like Swift's glittering sequin stars which is reminiscent of and relative to "Folklore" and "Evermore." For the flow of the concert, it makes more sense to not place "Tortured Poets" next to these albums. The show flows with a narrative that spans almost two decades with highs and lows of energy. Two areas that could be good: after "Reputation" and before "Speak Now" or after the secret songs and before "Midnights." Maybe she dives into the stage to swim to the an asylum of typewriters and tormented thoughts.
The four eras with the most amount of songs are the latest records she owned that aren't re-records: "Lover" (six songs), "Folklore" (seven songs), "Evermore" (five songs) and "Midnights" (seven songs). Will she follow that flow? Will she cut songs from these eras?
I could see her performing the lead single "Fortnight," title track "The Tortured Poets Department," Eras Tour song "I Can Do It With a Broken Heart," "Down Bad," "Who's Afraid of Little Old Me," "thanK you aIMee" and "So High School."
Swift holds the answer key. Sixty-nine shows are left on the recording shattering magnum opus for 2024.
Don't miss any Taylor Swift news; sign up for the free, weekly newsletter "This Swift Beat."
Follow Taylor Swift reporter Bryan West on Instagram, TikTok and X as @BryanWestTV.
veryGood! (6)
Related
- Shilo Sanders' bankruptcy case reaches 'impasse' over NIL information for CU star
- Poland picks Donald Tusk as its new leader, bucking Europe's trend to the far right
- Federal judge rejects request from Oregon senators who boycotted Legislature seeking to run in 2024
- Hawaii governor wants 3,000 vacation rentals converted to housing for Maui wildfire survivors
- A steeplechase record at the 2024 Paris Olympics. Then a proposal. (He said yes.)
- Tiger Woods and son get another crack at PNC Championship. Woods jokingly calls it the 5th major
- Cold case now a murder investigation after body found in Texas lake 37 years ago identified
- RFK Jr. faces steep hurdles and high costs to get on ballot in all 50 states
- Man charged with murder in death of beloved Detroit-area neurosurgeon
- A 4-month-old survived after a Tennessee tornado tossed him. His parents found him in a downed tree
Ranking
- Eva Mendes Shares Message of Gratitude to Olympics for Keeping Her and Ryan Gosling's Kids Private
- 2024 Ford Mustang GT California Special: A first look at an updated classic with retro appeal
- What is wrong with Draymond Green? Warriors big man needs to harness control on court
- Mayim Bialik says she’s out as a host of TV quiz show ‘Jeopardy!’
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- 1000-Lb. Sisters Shows Glimpse Into Demise of Amy Slaton and Michael Halterman's Marriage
- Man in central Illinois killed three people and wounded another before killing self, authorities say
- AP Week in Pictures: Global | Dec. 8 - Dec. 14, 2023
Recommendation
'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
Michigan State trustees approve release of Larry Nassar documents to state official
Mississippi police sergeant who shot unarmed boy, 11, in chest isn't charged by grand jury
Apple adds Stolen Device Protection feature to new iOS beta
A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
Court upholds $75,000 in fines against Alex Jones for missing Sandy Hook case deposition
2023 Arctic Report Card proves time for action is now on human-caused climate change, NOAA says
8th Circuit ruling backs tribes’ effort to force lawmakers to redraw N.D. legislative boundaries