Reviews

Taylor Swift: Speak Now

Taylor Swift
Speak Now
Big Machine
[Rating: 3.5 stars]

The release of a new recording as a cultural event is pretty much a thing of the past. A new Eagles album used to be that type of thing; so was a long-awaited and hyped album from U2 in their prime. But it rarely happens these days, and certainly hasnโ€™t happened for any Nashville acts lately. Except for one: Taylor Swift.

Unless youโ€™ve been roughing it with Osama bin Laden, you know that Ms. Swiftโ€™s new album, Speak Now, is a sales sensation. Heck, bin Laden probably even knows. Taylor Swift is far more than just a singer-songwriter. In our digital world, sheโ€™s the iconic face of young female America, someone who parents love for her wholesomeness, and the reason so many young girls are taking guitar lessons. And, to the chagrin of those who say she really isnโ€™t โ€œcountry,โ€ sheโ€™s selling millions of records and downloads and bringing more money into Nashville than any artist since Shania.

Because of the buzz behind it, Speak Now was destined to be a commercial success no matter what. Thankfully, the album succeeds on an artistic level as well. Swift has created an album of 14 completely self-penned tunes that work well on the level of her young female fans whose lives revolve primarily around romantic relationships. And while countless media outlets have speculated about the male subjects of those songs, letโ€™s assume Ms. Swift is more concerned with her art than she is with making sure everyone examines her private life, which hopefully is the case.

The albumโ€™s first single, โ€œMine,โ€ opens the album with the words โ€œUh ah oh / uh ah oh,โ€ not exactly the strongest way to start an album. But when she sings the line โ€œYou made a rebel of a careless manโ€™s careful daughter / You are the best thing thatโ€™s ever been mine,โ€ one hopes that there will be more such interesting wordplay to come. There is.

The song that is probably the most โ€œcountryโ€ on the record, โ€œMean,โ€ starts off with outstanding producer Nathan Chapmanโ€™s pseudo-clawhammer banjo, mandolin and handclaps setting the stage for a presumed rebuttal against the critics who have been less than kind to Swift over the years. With lines like โ€œSomeday Iโ€™ll be living in a big ole city / And all youโ€™re ever gonna be is mean / Someday Iโ€™ll be big enough so you canโ€™t hit me / And all youโ€™re ever gonna be is mean,โ€ itโ€™s an enjoyable tune no matter what age you are.

The one song on Speak Now that shows Swift isnโ€™t the naรฏve young role model that so many parents perceive her to be is โ€œBetter Than Revenge,โ€ where the G rating leaves the building and the claws come out. โ€œSheโ€™s not a saint, and sheโ€™s not what you think / Sheโ€™s an actress, whoa / But sheโ€™s better known for the things that she does on the mattress,โ€ Swift sings, exacting payback on a rival by prompting her millions of fans to dislike whomever messes with Taylorโ€™s man.

โ€œNever Grow Upโ€ is one of the few songs on Speak Now that doesnโ€™t focus on relationships. This song about childhood innocence opens with the vivid โ€œYour little handโ€™s wrapped around my finger / And itโ€™s so quiet in the world tonight / Your little eyelids flutter cause youโ€™re dreaming / So I tuck you in, turn on your favorite night light.โ€ Such great opening lines and use of imagery give one hope that Swift could someday be a truly accomplished writer, and might begin to spend more time writing about something that doesnโ€™t involve romance.

The musicians here include some of Nashvilleโ€™s finest session players, but the members of Swiftโ€™s touring band, the Agency, play a key role, a bit of an anomaly on Nashville recordings. This not only shows the power Swift has in terms of how her records are made, but a wisdom in making sure that her live show sounds like the album, since her band helped create the finished product.

Speak Now is Taylor Swiftโ€™s best record yet, all in her voice with no co-writers. Itโ€™s a powerful statement from someone who has proven that she knows who she is, and, whether Nashville likes it or not, is here to stay.