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  1. Taylor Swift - I Can See You (Taylor’s Version) (From The Vault) (Official Video) - YouTube. 58.9M subscribers. Subscribed. 1.2M. 40M views 10 months ago #taylorswift #ICanSeeYou...

    • 5 min
    • 40.7M
    • TaylorSwiftVEVO
  2. 27 de oct. de 2023 · Taylor Swift's Taylor's Version rerecordings have each featured multiple From the Vault tracks. We rounded up every vault song and ranked them.

    • 4 min
    • Victoria Edel
  3. 25 de oct. de 2023 · With each re-recorded album, Taylor Swift has also released songs that almost made the cut. Here are our favorite 'From the Vault' tracks.

    • 4 min
    • Samantha Cooney,Annabel Gutterman,Moises Mendez II,Rachel Sonis
  4. 2 de nov. de 2023 · With 26 total “From The Vault” songs across the four released Taylor’s Version albums, Swift has scored multiple top 10 hits on the Hot 100, real traction at pop radio, and even an epic...

    • No. 26 — “Bye Bye Baby”
    • No. 25 — “That’s When”
    • No. 24 — “Electric Touch”
    • No. 23 — “I Bet You Think About Me”
    • No. 22 — “We Were Happy”
    • No. 21 — “Foolish One”
    • No. 20 — “Babe”
    • No. 19 — “When Emma Falls in Love”
    • No. 18 — “You All Over Me”
    • No. 17 — “Now That We Don’T Talk”

    Album: Fearless (Taylor’s Version) “Bye Bye Baby” may have been a fitting closing track on Fearless based on its title, but it’s not hard to see why Swift left it off the album. As pleasant of a breakup song as it is, it pales in comparison to the uplifting spirit of the album’scloser, “Change,” or the ferocity of “Forever & Always.”

    Album: Fearless (Taylor’s Version) If you told Swift when she was 18 that she’d be duetting with country legend Urban on “That’s When,”she’d probably be ecstatic to leave it behind for the next 13 years. It’s an immediate country ditty that proves Swift can come up with pop hooks in seconds.

    Album: Speak Now (Taylor’s Version) It’s easy to see why Swift decided to leave “Electric Touch” off Speak Nowin 2010, given how its 2000s pop-rock vibes don’t quite gel with the country-pop album. But 13 years later, Swift finally gets to live out her pop-punk fantasy with Fall Out Boy by her side.

    Album: Red (Taylor’s Version) Swift experimented with genres more than ever on Red, but “I Bet You Think About Me”is as country as country gets. It’s biting, sarcastic, vengeful, and brutally honest. But given how much Swift expanded her horizons, resulting in masterpieces like “State of Grace” and “Red,” it’s understandable why this was left in th...

    Album: Fearless (Taylor’s Version) Swift displays the start of her wise-beyond-her-years country songwriting in “We Were Happy,” which traces the end of a loving relationship without discarding the good memories. It doesn’t quite fit with the unapologetically youthful energy of the 2008 Fearless album, but with Dessner’s soft touch and Urban’s back...

    Album: Speak Now (Taylor’s Version) Speak Now contains some of Swift’s most whimsical and fantastical love songs, like “Sparks Fly” and “Enchanted.” “Foolish One”plays as those songs’ level-headed big sister, warning those girls not to expect love letters or grand declarations of romance from the people they dream about.

    Album: Red (Taylor’s Version) In 2018, Swift gave “Babe” to country duo Sugarland, who turned it into a theatrical portrait of infidelity with Swift on background vocals. For Red (Taylor’s Version), Antonoff gave“Babe” a lighter touch, with summery guitar, lush trumpets, and processed harmonies soundtracking Swift’s woes of betrayal. It’s still cut...

    Album: Speak Now (Taylor’s Version) In Folklore and 1989, Swift showed how adept she was at writing stories about others. But “When Emma Falls In Love” proves she had it in her all along. Rumored to be about her good friend Emma Stone, the song is an ode to female friendship at its core, a message that would’ve been a nice addition to the wide vari...

    Album: Fearless (Taylor’s Version) “You All Over Me” is essentially the unheard prequel to “Clean,” the standout closer of 1989, where Swift examines the scars and bruises from her last relationship that she just can’t wash off. It almost feels too mature for the 2008 Fearless album, which is remarkable considering Swift wrote it before she turned ...

    Album: 1989 (Taylor’s Version) “Now That We Don’t Talk” is the definition of a bop, with Swift effortlessly dragging an ex— from his long hair to his taste in music — over a slick electro-disco groove. The only reason it’s not ranked higher is that it’s too short, clocking in at under two and a half minutes. She leaves us wanting more.

    • Jake Viswanath
  5. Watch the official lyric video for “"Slut!" (Taylor's Version) (From The Vault)” by Taylor Swift, from ‘1989 (Taylor’s Version)’.Buy/download/stream ‘1989 (T...

    • 3 min
    • 10.4M
    • TaylorSwiftVEVO
  6. 27 de oct. de 2023 · Taylor Swift frees 5 songs ‘from the vault’ for '1989' — but what does that mean? Swift is opening the vault and throwing away the key. Sept. 20, 2023, 6:28 PM UTC / Updated Oct. 27, 2023...