Taylor Swift Releases 7 New Songs Just Hours After New Album Midnights: Listen

Music News

Taylor Swift Releases 7 New Songs Just Hours After New Album Midnights: Listen

The “3AM tracks” are “songs we wrote on the journey” to Midnights, including three with Aaron Dessner

Taylor Swift onstage

Taylor Swift, October 2021 (Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame)

Only three hours after releasing her new album, Midnights, Taylor Swift has dropped seven more songs written during the album’s conception. Check out the “3AM Edition” of Midnights below, with the added songs starting at track 14, “The Great War.” Among the additional batch are three songs prominently featuring the National’s Aaron Dessner, who did not contribute to Midnights after being a big part of Folklore and Evermore. Jack Antonoff, who Swift kept on board for Midnights, worked closely on the other four extra songs. 

Swift, who had promised a “special very chaotic surprise” at 3 a.m., wrote on social media:

Surprise! I think of Midnights as a complete concept album, with those 13 songs forming a full picture of the intensities of that mystifying, mad hour. However! There were other songs we wrote on our journey to find that magic 13. I’m calling them 3am tracks. Lately I’ve been loving the feeling of sharing more of our creative process with you, like we do with From The Vault tracks. So it’s 3am and I’m giving them to you now.

She announced Midnights itself while accepting the trophy for Video of the Year at the 2022 MTV Video Music Awards. The album follows Folklore and Evermore, as well as Fearless (Taylor’s Version) and Red (Taylor’s Version), part of her album rerecording campaign. Swift worked closely with Jack Antonoff on Midnights, which has additional contributions from Lana Del Rey, Zoë Kravitz, Joe Alwyn (aka William Bowery), Jahaan Sweet, Red Hearse’s Sam Dew and Sounwave, members of the Bleachers live band, and more.

In between Red (Taylor’s Version) and Midnights, Swift collaborated with Ed Sheeran on a new version of “The Joker and the Queen” and shared “Carolina” and “This Love (Taylor’s Version).”

Read more about Swift in the feature “The History of Pitchfork’s Reviews Section in 38 Important Reviews.”

Content

This content can also be viewed on the site it originates from.

Content

This content can also be viewed on the site it originates from.

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Jack Black, Paul Rudd Reboot Gets Christmas 2025 Release
The Monkey Director Makes His Stephen King Movie Sound Unlike Any Adaptation Before It, And I Really Hope He Pulls This Off
Blake Lively Sues Justin Baldoni for Sexual Harassment, Smear Campaign
Lil Wayne Gives Kendrick Lamar Greenlight to ‘Kill It’ at Super Bowl 59
The Quiet Revolution of The Defenders: TV’s First Legal Drama with a Conscience