Whats the Best Song on Red Three Passionate Taylor Swift Fans Debate
After months of waiting, it is finally time to grab your favorite scarf, a tissue box and perhaps a maple latte or two because Taylorâs Version of her 2012 album Red is upon us.
Taylor Swiftâs Red, her fourth studio album, catapulted the artist into pop stardom. The 16 tracks, plus six bonus songs on the deluxe version of the album, telegraphed to listeners everywhere that Swift is much more than a country artist. It contains what many consider to be the best song in her entire catalog (more on that later) and sees her transition from writing songs about sweeping romantic gestures and unrequited crushes to capturing the quieter, more painful moments of falling in and out of love. When Red debuted she was 22 years old and, through the album, applied a slightly more grown-up lens on love, using the songs to look at relationships with some distance. âIt was all over the place, a fractured mosaic of feelings that somehow all fit together in the end,â Swift wrote in June 2021 of the album. âHappy, free, confused, lonely, devastated, euphoric, wild, and tortured by memories past.â
As part of her ongoing public effort to own all her masters, Swift is re-releasing the album along with her charity single âRonanâ and 9 bonus tracks featuring Chris Stapleton, Phoebe Bridgers, Mark Foster and Ed Sheeran. It follows her re-release of her 2008 album Fearless in April. Since the announcement of Redâs impending arrival, fans have been furiously dissecting every post Swift has made on social media in an attempt to gather clues about the bonus tracks and whether the musician would release any songs early (her use of a pizza emoji led many to believe a collab with the Jonas Brothers was in the works). Though there were no surprise early releases, a much-anticipated reward awaits: a 10-minute version of the piercing breakup anthem âAll Too Wellâ and an accompanying short film starring Swift, Stranger Thingsâ Sadie Sink and Teen Wolfâs Dylan OâBrien.
In preparation for the albumâs re-release, TIMEâs biggest Swifities sat down to rank the original 16 songs on Red by each compiling their own individual rankings. Those rankings were then averaged to create overall rankingsâ"as well as spark some healthy debate among our most devoted fans.
16. âThe Last TimeâIndividual rankings: Annabel 15, Andrew 15, Sam 13
Andrew R. Chow: âThe Last Timeâ is the blowout loser of this poll, and the only song each of us ranked in double digits. Itâs discount âExile.â Still, I hope Gary Lightbody is doing well, wherever and whoever he is.
Samantha Cooney: Do we think Gary Lightbody banked more royalties from this song than from Snow Patrolâs entire back catalogue? The last 30 seconds rule, though.
15. âEverything Has ChangedâIndividual rankings: Annabel 16, Andrew 8, Sam 15
Annabel Gutterman: Would people really care about this song if Ed Sheeran wasnât on it? Listen, I love an acoustic Taylor Swift song more than anyone, but this is just a snooze. I always skip it!
ARC: If you came to this song confused as to why Ed Sheeran is famous, you wonât receive any clarity from listening. Still, Iâm a sucker for a good snare brush beat, and the hook is pretty massive.
14. âStay Stay StayâIndividual rankings: Annabel 9, Andrew 9, Sam 16
SC: This is one of the rare Taylor Swift songs that I actively dislike. Red is a lyrical masterpiece about the complexities of love. This is a saccharine song that makes me, and I quote, âmad, mad, mad.â Someone please explain why this is on the album instead of âBetter Man.â
AG: I really think this will be one fans rediscover on Taylorâs Version and realize they were wrong about it. Yes, itâs a little juvenile, but I love the simple sweetness of it! The bridge perfectly encapsulates that moment when a relationship just clicks: âI just like hanging out with you/ All the time.â So much of Red is looking back on what was. âStay Stay Stayâ celebrates the excitement of what everything could be.
ARC: Annabel, I completely agree with you on that line, except that you left out its all-crucial setup:
âYou took the time to memorize me/ My fears, my hopes, and dreams/ I just like hanging out with you, all the timeâ
Taylorâs first few albums held dear to fairy-tale visions of love: big gestures, poetic proclamations, precise playbooks of how to win someone over. While this songâs subject seems to adhere to that kind of grandiosity, Taylor offers a much more mundane love language that can nevertheless be just as powerfulâ"of sitting around with someone, doing nothing, and still loving it. Or as Kevin from The Office says: âWhy waste time say lot word when few word do trick?â Sorryâ"dorky reference for an extremely dorky song.
13. âStarlightâIndividual rankings: Annabel 8, Andrew 12, Sam 14
SC: Red has a few ideas that donât quite work, but itâs cool to look back on how Swift revisited and perfected them later in her career. âStarlightâ feels like a rough draft to the far superior âThe Last Great American Dynasty.â Iâll have a âmarvelous time ruining everythingâ over a âmarvelous tuneâ about Bobby and Ethel Kennedyâs marriage any day.
AG: I love that Taylor was inspired by a photograph of Bobby and Ethel Kennedy dancing and wrote this whole story about them! I agree, Samâ"itâs so fun to see the evolution of her storytelling skills from this to LGAD. I donât consider it necessarily inferiorâ"itâs a more upbeat tune (perfect to dance along to!) which Iâm not mad about.
12. âWe Are Never Ever Getting Back TogetherâIndividual rankings: Annabel 7, Andrew 16, Sam 10
SC: This song started the unfortunate trend of Swift releasing the most generic pop song as the lead single (see: âShake It Off,â âLook What You Made Me Doâ). But the âhide away and find your peace of mind with some indie record thatâs so much cooler than mineâ is a genuinely hilarious, self-aware moment. And, really, who hasnât dated someone who thought they were morally superior just because they loved the Decemberists?
AG: We could debate the merits of this song for a long while, but Iâd just like to point out its importance in the arc of Taylorâs career. Before Red, she was a country star; âWe Are Never Ever Getting Back Togetherâ was one of her first entries into the pop universe. There would be no 1989 if we didnât get songs like this one first. Everyone has to start from somewhere!
ARC: Youâre exactly right about the transitional quality of this song; it aspires to pop but only comes away with the genreâs cloying qualities as opposed to its sugar rush. It feels like Taylor cosplaying as Carly Rae Jepsen.
11. âââBegin AgainâIndividual rankings: Annabel 12, Andrew 13, Sam 8
SC: I gotta say, I think we underrated this one. Just like a great first date after a bad breakup, âBegin Againâ is the glimmer of hope we need after an album of pure heartbreak. This song isnât just about finding someone new. Itâs about finding someone who really sees you after a relationship that made you feel so misunderstood. Plus, no one wants this album to end with the Kennedy song!
ARC: This song sounds like it was written in reaction to the final scene of (500) Days of Summer.
10. âThe Lucky OneâIndividual rankings: Annabel 14, Andrew 7, Sam 11
See below.
9. âI Almost DoâIndividual rankings: Annabel 11, Andrew 11, Sam 9
See below (again).
8. âSad Beautiful TragicâIndividual rankings: Annabel 10, Andrew 14, Sam 6
ARC: Red will never be my favorite Taylor album because it sags a lot in the middle with these indie ditties. This trio of songs isnât bad, but it isnât good, either.
SC: Admittedly, my music taste skews heavily toward sad indie ditties, but hereâs my counter. Swiftâs albums always seemed to align with exactly what Iâm going through when theyâre released, which is why Iâm such a big fan. When Red came out in 2012, I was an 18-year-old dealing with my first, real heartbreak. Thatâs why Iâm more drawn to its slow burns of sadness, like âI Almost Do,â âSad Beautiful Tragicâ and âThe Lucky One,â than some of the more iconic pop tracks on this album. Iâm just trying to feel my feelings, OK?
7. âI Knew You Were TroubleâIndividual rankings: Annabel 13, Andrew 6, Sam 7
AG: This is my least favorite of the generic (read: Max Martin) pop songs on the album. I actually like the build-up to the chorus, but then do not enjoy that static-y sound that happens with âtrouble, trouble, trouble.â
ARC: âTroubleâ might not have aged particularly well, but do you guys remember how genuinely exciting it was when it came out? At the time, Kristin Wiigâs impression of Swift on SNL was still one of wide-eyed naivete; Swift was a country megastar whose crossover into the pop stratosphere was far from assured. And here she comes in âTrouble,â sporting bangs and streaked black eyeliner, shrieking over a dubstep drop, a genre that was was only in the process of being absorbed into the mainstream: neither Spring Breakers nor Aviciiiâs âWake Me Upâ would start warding off mosquitoes in America until the following year.
But of course, the songâs greatest legacy is that it produced one of the funniest memes of all time before we even knew what a meme was.
6. â22âIndividual rankings: Annabel 4, Andrew 10, Sam 12
AG: Come on, you guys. I canât not be sentimental about this song. I donât care if itâs far from the peak of Taylorâs lyrical abilities. Sheâs describing a night out where what happens actually doesnât matter as long as youâre just being yourself with the people you love.
I experienced this song in three eras: In high school, I screamed it with my friends at dances and parties, romanticizing a period in my life that hadnât happened yet. Then when I was 22, I 100% lived it: âhappy, free, confused and lonely in the best way.â Now, thereâs this comforting pang of nostalgia that comes over me whenever I hear it.
SC: Annabel, I know how much this song means to you, so Iâll be brief. I had fun dancing to this song on my 22nd birthday and have had zero desire to listen to it since.
AG: Ouch.
5. âRedâIndividual rankings: Annabel 6, Andrew 4, Sam 5
AG: The titular song! Itâs breezy and boppy. The lyrics arenât anything to write home about, but itâs just so fun. I love that we get a callback to this song on Lover through âDaylightââ"âI once believed love would be (burning red)/ But itâs golden.â
ARC: Itâs a far more interesting take on synesthesia than most musicians can muster. Although actually, has anyone asked Billie Eilish or Pharrell if this song is actually red?
4. âState of GraceâIndividual rankings: Annabel 5, Andrew 5, Sam 3
SC: âState of Graceâ sets the tone for the rest of the album: donât expect any Prince Charmings or happy endings this time around. Her lover isnât a âsaint,â and Swift admits sheâs âloved in shades of wrong.â Itâs the perfect opener for an album thatâs all about the ecstasy, agony and complexities of love between two imperfect adults. Itâs also a soaring rock song that makes me want to see Swift go full Springsteen.
3. âHoly GroundâIndividual rankings: Annabel 3, Andrew 3, Sam 4
SC: Finally, a bop I can get behind! This is the Red song that makes the most frequent appearances on my Spotify playlists. It makes me want to dance, and it perfectly evokes that warm feeling of remembering someone who used to mean something to you.
AG: If you donât immediately start dancing in the first 20 seconds of this song, something is wrong with you! I donât make the rules!
ARC: This had to have broken Taylorâs previous record for syllables per minute. I also think this is the introduction of âNew Yorker Taylor Swift?â Great song, although I never liked that âhoo-lay-eeâ refrain.
2. âTreacherousâIndividual rankings: Annabel 2, Andrew 2, Sam 2
SC: Iâm so glad we all love this song, which I feel is criminally underrated. âTreacherousâ has some of Swiftâs best-ever lyrics (âAll we are is skin and bone/ trained to get alongâ) and her second-best bridge. It also shows just how much Swift has evolved since the enchanted encounters and flying sparks on Speak Now: she knows the object of her affection is bad for her, but sheâs in for the ride anyway.
ARC: What is her best bridge, Sam, and why is it âDear Johnâ?
SC: Ugh, it is âDear John.â âYou are an expert at sorry/And keeping the lines blurry/Never impressed by me acing your testsâ walked so the entirety of Red could run!
ARC: If weâre giving out superlatives, I think this is also her best prechorus (which contains the lyric you just mentioned) and also probably her sexiest song.
AG: People are sleeping on âTreacherousâ and I am hoping Taylorâs Version will change that. This is a gorgeous song and it is so deceiving. It starts off moody and soft and thereâs this gentle, twinkly quality to the acoustic beat that makes it sound like a Fearless song. Then, the pace picks up at the exact line Sam mentioned (one of my all time favorite Taylor Swift lyrics) and it just keeps building to its brutal end. It seamlessly blends pop and country and gives way to a beautiful ballad about risking your heart when you know things might end badly.
SC: Being friends with Annabel also means getting ânothing safe is worth the driveâ sent to you, unprompted, at least once a day.
AG: I donât even like driving and here we are!
1. âAll Too WellâIndividual rankings: Annabel 1, Andrew 1, Sam 1
SC: âAll Too Wellâ is the best song on Red. Itâs also the best song in Taylor Swiftâs entire discography, and one of the best breakup songs ever written (itâs in my personal canon with âThe Last Time I Saw Richardâ and âIf You See Her, Say Hello.â) A collage of muted memories builds to a bursting bridge youâre never quite ready forâ"until youâre screaming âyou call me up again just to break me like a promise/ so casually cruel in the name of being honestâ alone in your apartment. (Sorry to my next-door neighbor.) The song is quietly powerful: itâs just a woman telling the truth about the good and bad of her relationshipâ"and not allowing her ex to rewrite their history.
ARC: +1000 for your âThe Last Time I Saw Richardâ shoutout, Sam.
Itâs become almost too fashionable to anoint âAll Too Wellâ as Taylorâs best song these days, which is why I tried my very hardest to rank it somewhere else. But I couldnâtâ"itâs too damn good. The little visual cues that serve as sepia Polaroid snapshots of vivid moments; the perfectly strange turns of phrase (âAutumn leaves falling down like pieces into placeâ). This song has a smell, just like her old sweater.
The songâs composition also perfectly aligns with the sonic era Taylor created it in. With its booming snare, overdrive guitars and wall of sound, itâs hard to imagine it having the same impact when dressed up in the clothes of the metallic âReputationâ or the cloistered âFolkloreâ eras, for example. Iâm very excited to watch the songâs 10-minute film, because itâs always had a cinematic quality. I love her turn at the end from wistful to vicious; itâs practically a superhero (or supervillain) origin story.
AG: I know, I know. Itâs boring to have this at number one. Itâs very expected. But how could âAll Too Wellâ be anywhere else? Iâm pretty positive we could have done a roundtable ranking every single line of this song. (For what itâs worth, my number one is âCause there we are again in the middle of the night/ Weâre dancing âround the kitchen in the refrigerator lightâ). This song is the centerpiece of Taylor Swiftâs discographyâ"it announced to the world that she transcends genre and is here to stay.
Songs about heartbreak are so often about what one person did or how the other responded. There is blame to be placed and someone is mad or sad at the person they once loved. There is no blame in âAll Too Well.â As she looks back on these seemingly meaningless moments that built this relationship thatâs now over, Taylor Swift is asking for an explanation as to why it had to end and canât pinpoint where the unraveling began. Sheâs mining these memories and realizes it doesnât matter at allâ"âMaybe we got lost in translation/ Maybe I asked for too muchââ"because she knows it happened, âit was rare, I was there, I remember it all too well.â
More Must-Read Stories From TIME
0 Response to "Whats the Best Song on Red Three Passionate Taylor Swift Fans Debate"
Post a Comment