The album draws a clear line between the singer’s pop breakthrough and her current world-conquering form.
The allure of a Swift performance has little to do with the traditional qualities that draw people to live shows.
The singer-songwriter’s growth as an artist helps elevate her formative work.
The action-packed video finds the singer pulling off a heist of her master recordings.
The singer calls the self-directed video a “sultry sleepless fever dream.”
Swift and Antonoff’s work together has, more often than not, resulted in pop magic.
From Taylor Swift to Midnights, we’ve ranked all of the singer’s studio albums from best to worst.
The singer proves she’s unwilling to operate on anyone’s terms other than her own.
The video is a horror-comedy that, at turns, evokes Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind and Alice in Wonderland.
What lingers most readily from Amsterdam are the little privileged moments.
With Red (Taylor’s Version), Swift displays a surprising willingness to kill, or at least revise, her darlings.
The 18-year-old possesses both a knack for stealthy pop hooks and a vocal control beyond her years.
The maturity and control of the singer’s voice re-contexualizes the songs from the original album.
The album finds the singer digging further into her explorations of narrative voice and shifting points of view.
We’ve ranked all 17 songs from the singer-songwriter’s watershed eighth album.
The album anticipates questions surrounding the singer’s genre bona fides and leans into each contradiction.
The special effects-heavy clip finds the singer climbing inside a dusty upright piano and into a moss-covered fantasy world.
This adaptation gets straight to the heart of the material, which is basically two hours of stray cats introducing themselves.
The album attempts to be something to everyone, the surest tell that it’s as much reaction as it is creation.
The video takes the notion of visibility as a means of acceptance to the extreme.