Speak Now is the third studio album by the American singer-songwriter Taylor Swift, released on October 25, 2010, by Big Machine Records. Swift wrote the album entirely herself while touring in 2009–2010 to reflect on her transition from adolescence to adulthood.
Speak Now | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | October 25, 2010 | |||
Recorded | 2009–2010 | |||
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Length | 67:29 | |||
Label | Big Machine | |||
Producer |
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Taylor Swift chronology | ||||
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Singles from Speak Now | ||||
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Swift framed Speak Now as a loose concept album about the unsaid things she wanted to deliver to the subjects of her songs. Using confessional songwriting, the album is mostly about heartbreak and reflections on broken relationships, and some tracks were inspired by Swift's rising stardom in the public eye to confront her critics and adversaries. She and Nathan Chapman produced Speak Now, which combines country pop, pop rock, and power pop. Its songs incorporate prominent rock stylings, and their melodies are characterized by acoustic instruments intertwined with chiming electric guitars, dynamic drums, and orchestral strings.
After the album's release, Swift embarked on the Speak Now World Tour from February 2011 to March 2012. The album was supported by six singles, including the US Billboard Hot 100 top-ten singles "Mine" and "Back to December", and the US Hot Country Songs number ones "Sparks Fly" and "Ours". Speak Now peaked atop the charts and received multi-platinum certifications in Australia, Canada, and New Zealand. In the United States, it sold one million copies within its first release week, spent six weeks at number one on the Billboard 200, and was certified six-times platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America.
Music critics generally praised Speak Now for its radio-friendly melodies and emotional engagement. Some critics thought the lyrics represented Swift's maturity in early adulthood, but several others criticized the confrontational tracks as shallow. At the 54th Annual Grammy Awards in 2012, Speak Now was nominated for Best Country Album, and its third single "Mean" won Best Country Song and Best Country Solo Performance. The album appeared in 2010s decade-end lists by Billboard and Spin, and Rolling Stone ranked it in their 2012 list "50 Best Female Albums of All Time". After a 2019 dispute regarding the ownership of Swift's back catalog, she re-recorded Speak Now and released it as Speak Now (Taylor's Version) on July 7, 2023.
Background
editTaylor Swift released her second studio album Fearless through Nashville-based Big Machine Records in November 2008. The album spent 11 weeks at number one on the US Billboard 200, the longest chart run for a female country music artist.[2] It was the best-selling album of 2009 in the United States and then-20-year-old Swift the youngest artist to have an annual best-seller since Nielsen SoundScan began tracking album sales in 1991.[3] Two of the album's singles, "Love Story" and "You Belong with Me", performed well on both country and pop radio and brought Swift to mainstream prominence.[4] "Love Story" was the first country song to reach number one on the Mainstream Top 40 chart and "You Belong with Me" was the first country song to top the all-genre Radio Songs chart.[5][6] At the 52nd Annual Grammy Awards in February 2010, Fearless won Album of the Year and Best Country Album, and its single "White Horse" won Best Female Country Vocal Performance and Best Country Song.[7]
The success of Fearless made Swift one of country music's biggest stars to crossover into the mainstream market.[8][9] At the 2009 MTV Video Music Awards, where Swift won Best Female Video for "You Belong with Me", the rapper Kanye West interrupted her acceptance speech; the incident received widespread media coverage and became known as "Kanyegate".[10][11] At the 52nd Annual Grammy Awards, Swift sang "You Belong with Me" and "Rhiannon" with Stevie Nicks; some critics commented Swift performed with weak vocals.[12] MTV News commented the MTV Awards incident transformed Swift into a "bona-fide mainstream celebrity",[13] and The New York Times said it was refreshing to see a talented singer-songwriter like Swift "make the occasional flub".[14] Swift began writing for her third studio album immediately after she released Fearless and continued during her Fearless Tour in 2009 and 2010.[15]
Writing and lyrics
editBecause of her extensive touring schedule, Swift wrote her third album alone: "I'd get my best ideas at 3:00 a.m. in Arkansas, and I didn't have a co-writer around so I would just finish it. That would happen again in New York and then again in Boston and that would happen again in Nashville."[15] Inspired by her growth into adulthood, she conceived Speak Now as a loose concept album about the things she wanted to tell certain people she had met but never had a chance to.[15] As with her songwriting on previous albums, Swift strove to convey emotional honesty with details as specifically as possible, believing it is important for a songwriter to do so.[15] She described her songs as "diary entries" about her emotions that helped her navigate adulthood.[16][17] Swift chose not to follow the trend of making increasingly sexualized music by artists of her age and believed such a path would be incongruent with her artistic vision.[note 1]
Departing from Fearless's theme of fairy tales and starry-eyed romance, Speak Now explores introspection and reflections on broken relationships.[15][19] By avoiding sexual references in its songs, the album kept Swift's "good-girl" image intact.[note 2] Some tracks were inspired by Swift's public experience, including past relationships with high-profile celebrities, which received media attention during the album's promotional rollout.[19][21] The confessional lyrics of Speak Now are more direct and confrontational than those on Swift's past albums.[22] On "Back to December", she asks an ex-lover to forgive her wrongdoings.[23] Swift wrote the title track after hearing a friend's ex-boyfriend was marrying another woman; in the lyrics, the protagonist crashes the ex-boyfriend's wedding and tries to halt it.[21][24] "Dear John" narrates a devastating relationship of a 19-year-old female narrator who accuses a much-older man of manipulating her with "dark, twisted games".[21] Swift's encounter with an ex-lover at an awards show, where they ignored each other despite Swift feeling a need to speak to him inspired "The Story of Us".[25] On "Better than Revenge", Swift affirms vengeance against a romantic rival who is known for "the things she does on the mattress".[21][26]
Romantic optimism is another theme of the album.[15][21] The opening track "Mine" is about Swift's hope of attaining happiness despite her tendency to "run from love" to avoid heartbreak.[16] It was the first song she included on the track list because it represents her then-new perspective of romance.[27] Swift had written "Sparks Fly"—a song about dangerous hints of love at first sight—before she released her 2006 self-titled debut album.[28] She re-recorded the song for Speak Now after she received fan request to release it at the 2010 CMA Music Festival.[15] "Enchanted" describes the aftermath of an encounter with a special person without knowing whether the infatuation would be reciprocated.[21] "Haunted" is about romantic obsession and "Last Kiss" explores the lingering feelings after a breakup.[21] On "Long Live", Swift expresses gratitude to her fans and bandmates.[29] The lyrics of "Enchanted" and "Long Live" incorporate high-school-prom and fairy-tale imagery that recalls the youthful optimism of Fearless.[30][31]
Besides love and romance, Swift wrote about self-perception. "Never Grow Up" is a contemplation of her childhood, adulthood, and future.[26][24] The self-aware "Mean", in which Swift sings about facing a man who had tried to take her down, was inspired by her detractors.[32][33] Because of her confessional songwriting, the media became invested in Swift's personal life and believed each song is about a real person: an ex-lover, a friend, or an enemy.[18][21] Although Swift was interested to hear the response from the people to whom she dedicated the songs, she did not publicly name them and believed they would realize this themselves.[18][21] She did reveal that Kanye West, who interrupted Swift's acceptance speech at the 2009 MTV Video Music Awards, was the subject of "Innocent".[25] In the track, Swift sings about forgiving a man who wronged her; according to Esquire, the track can be interpreted as "a simple lament of a lost love, or a former friend being forgiven".[34]
Swift wrote as many as 25 songs and by early 2010, she had begun to select songs for the album.[15][27] To ensure the album would be coherent, she played the songs to her family, friends, and the producer Nathan Chapman,[15] who had produced for Swift since the recording of her self-titled debut album in 2006.[35] Swift chose Enchanted as a working title but Big Machine Records' founder Scott Borchetta recommended Swift choose a different title, deeming Enchanted unfit for the album's mature perspective.[note 3] She settled on the title Speak Now because she thought it best captures the album's essence: "I think it's such a metaphor, that moment where it's almost too late, and you've got to either say what it is you are feeling or deal with the consequences forever ... And this album seemed like the opportunity for me to speak now or forever hold my peace."[21] Swift finalized the track list by June 2010.[16]
Composition
editProduction
editSwift recorded much of Speak Now with Chapman at his Pain in the Art Studio in Nashville.[36] Although Fearless's commercial success allowed Swift to engage a larger group of producers, she worked solely with Chapman because she believed they had a productive relationship.[36] The recording process started with a demo; Swift recorded vocals and played guitar, and Chapman sang background vocals and played other instruments. After arranging the demos, Swift and Chapman approached other engineers and musicians to tweak some elements, including overdubs and programmed drums.[36] The first track Chapman produced with Swift on Speak Now is "Mine", which they recorded within five hours.[36]
Because of his artistic autonomy, Chapman said he was responsible for "60 percent of the music on the album, including 90 percent of the guitars".[36] Much of his production for Speak Now is identical to that for Fearless; he programmed the drums with Toontrack's software Superior Drummer, played drums on the Roland Fantom G6 keyboard, added electric guitars to the arrangements, recorded Swift's vocals with an Avantone CV12 microphone and his background vocals with a Shure SM57, produced the bass with an Avalon VT737 preamplifier, and used Endless Audio's CLASP System to synchronize his editing on Pro Tools and Logic.[36] Because of Swift's country-music vision, Chapman asked other musicians, mostly in Nashville, to replace his programmed drums with live drumming and add acoustic instruments such as fiddle.[36] For instance, Chapman asked Steve Marcantonio to cut down programmed drums on "Mine" at Blackbird Studios in Nashville.[36] For some tracks, including "Back to December", Swift and her team went to Capitol Studios in Los Angeles to record string orchestration.[16][37]
After recording finished, Justin Niebank mixed the album on Pro Tools at Blackbird Studios; he had mixed some tracks on Fearless. Within three weeks, Niebank finished mixing 17 tracks including 14 on the standard edition and three bonus tracks on the deluxe edition.[36][38] Because Swift wanted Speak Now to be a direct communication with her audience, Niebank infused monoaural reverberation inspired by 1950s and 1960s music in the mix to evoke a "vintage" and "retro" vibe that, according to Niebank, brought a sense of authenticity.[36] Hank Williams mastered the recordings.[36] Because much of Speak Now was recorded and mixed in Nashville, Niebank believed the album stood out among popular records that were manipulated with contemporaneous technologies Auto-Tune and Melodyne.[36] Although Chapman was responsible for much of the production, he said Swift's co-production credit is "not a vanity credit. We were really a team, very collaborative."[36][39]
Music
editSpeak Now follows the country pop production of Fearless and incorporates prominent elements of mainstream pop music, more so than Fearless.[40][41] Critics debated the album's genre. Paste described the album as a blend of country and radio-friendly pop tunes with climatic build-ups and catchy hooks.[42] Entertainment Weekly classified the album as pop and commented the only country elements are its "smattering of banjo pluck and dainty twang".[43] According to BBC Music, Speak Now veers towards pop rock.[44] Ann Powers, in a review for the Los Angeles Times, found the album borderline alternative rock and bubblegum pop with its songs experimenting with styles from "lush strings of Céline-style kitsch-pop to Americana banjo to countrypolitan electric guitar".[19] Now described Speak Now as "slickly produced power pop".[45]
Critics noted the banjo-led bluegrass track "Mean" as the album's pure country song.[9][26][46] Much of the album consists of uptempo country pop melodies, exemplified by the opening track "Mine".[41][47] Many tracks explore rock stylings that draw from rock music of the late 1970s through the 1980s,[48] and their melodies incorporate chiming guitars, loud drums, and powerful choruses.[49] "Sparks Fly" has an arena rock production with guitars and subtle fiddles.[50] The title track is an acoustic guitar-driven country pop song with a 1950s rock chorus.[41][51] "The Story of Us" and "Better than Revenge" are electric-guitar-driven pop-punk songs;[52] the former contains influences of dance-pop and new wave.[42][53] The arena-rock and goth-rock-inspired "Haunted" incorporates a dramatic recurring string section.[29][52][54] The closing track "Long Live" is a heartland rock song featuring girl-group harmonies and chiming rock guitars.[29][30]
The remaining tracks of Speak Now are ballads. "Back to December" is a gentle, orchestral, string-laden ballad.[24] Speak Now's longest track, "Dear John" at six minutes and 43 seconds, is a slow-burning, bluesy, country-pop song with electric guitar licks.[9][55] The guitar ballad "Never Grow Up" incorporates an understated production that accompanies its wistful lyrics.[29][41] On "Enchanted", the acoustic guitar crescendos after each refrain and leads up to a harmony-layered coda at the end.[29][31] The tracks "Innocent" and "Last Kiss" incorporate sparse instruments; the latter is a slow-tempo waltz with breathy vocals.[31][41][54] "If This Was a Movie", a bonus song on the deluxe edition and the only song not written solely by Swift,[note 4] is a fast-paced ballad with a recurring guitar riff and simple harmonies.[57]
Release and promotion
editSwift announced Speak Now on July 20, 2010, in a live stream on Ustream.[35] Big Machine Records released the lead single "Mine" to US country radio and digital download sites on August 4, 2010.[58] The single peaked at number three on the US Billboard Hot 100[59] and was certified triple platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA).[60] It reached number six in Japan,[61] number seven in Canada,[62] and number nine in Australia.[63] On August 18, Swift released the album's cover art, which depicts Swift with curly hair and red lipstick twirling in a deep-purple gown.[64] On September 15, she announced a Target-exclusive deluxe edition whose cover art is identical to that of the standard edition but the gown is red instead of purple.[65] Starting from October 4, 2010, Big Machine released one Speak Now track each week on the iTunes Store as part of a three-week countdown campaign; the title track was released on October 5, followed by "Back to December" on October 12 and "Mean" on October 19.[66] On October 22, Xfinity premiered a preview of "The Story of Us".[66]
Big Machine released the standard and deluxe editions of Speak Now on October 25, 2010.[65][67] The Target-exclusive CD+DVD edition contains 14 songs of the standard; the bonus tracks "Ours", "If This Was a Movie", and "Superman"; acoustic versions of "Back to December" and "Haunted"; a "pop mix" of "Mine"; a 30-minute behind-the-scenes video for "Mine"; and the music video for "Mine".[38][68] The deluxe edition was released to other retailers on January 17, 2012.[69][70] To bolster sales of the album, Swift had partnerships with Starbucks, Sony Electronics, Walmart, and Jakks Pacific.[71][72] In October 2011, Swift partnered with Elizabeth Arden, Inc. to release her fragrance brand "Wonderstruck", whose name references the lyrics of "Enchanted".[72]
To further promote Speak Now, Swift appeared on magazine covers and conducted press interviews.[16] She performed "Innocent" at the 2010 MTV Video Music Awards.[73] Her other performances at awards shows include the Country Music Association Awards[74] and the American Music Awards in 2010;[75] the Academy of Country Music Awards[76] and the Country Music Association Awards in 2011.[77] She also performed at Nashville's Country Music Hall of Fame.[78] In Europe, Swift performed on BBC Radio 2 and X Factor Italy, and she had interviews with BBC Radio 1 in the United Kingdom and NRJ in France.[79] She embarked on a promotional tour in Japan, where she appeared on the television shows SMAPxSMAP and Music Station.[80] Her round of American television shows included Today, Late Show with David Letterman, The Ellen DeGeneres Show, Live with Regis and Kelly, and Dancing with the Stars.[71] She also gave private concerts to contest winners and played a semi-private concert for JetBlue at the John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York.[81]
After "Mine", Swift released five more singles from Speak Now. "Back to December" and "Mean", which were earlier available for digital download, were released to US country radio on November 15, 2010,[82] and March 13, 2011.[83] The two singles peaked at numbers seven and ten in Canada,[62] and "Back to December" reached number six on the Billboard Hot 100.[84] "The Story of Us" was released to US pop radio on April 19, 2011.[85] "Sparks Fly" and "Ours" were released to US country radio on July 18[86] and December 5, 2011.[87] Prior to its single release, "Ours", together with the other deluxe edition tracks, was released for digital download via the iTunes Store on November 8, 2011.[88] "Sparks Fly" and "Ours" reached the top 20 on the Billboard Hot 100 and peaked atop the Hot Country Songs chart.[89][90] The RIAA certified all six of the album's singles at least platinum; "Back to December" and "Mean" sold over two million copies each, and they were certified double-platinum and triple-platinum.[91][92]
On November 23, 2010, Swift announced the Speak Now World Tour, which started in Singapore on February 9, 2011. The tour visited Asia and Europe before the North American leg started in Omaha, Nebraska, on May 27, 2011.[93] Within two days of announcement, the tour sold 625,000 tickets.[94] By April 2011, Swift had added another 16 shows to the North American leg.[95] After the final US concert in New York City on November 22, 2011, the Speak Now World Tour had covered 80 sold-out North American shows.[96] On August 10, 2011, Swift released a music video for "Sparks Fly" that includes footage from the tour.[97] She released the album Speak Now World Tour – Live on November 21, 2011.[98] In December 2011, Swift announced an extension of the tour to Australia and New Zealand starting in March 2012.[99] Concluding on March 18, 2012, the Speak Now World Tour had covered 110 shows, visited 18 countries,[note 5] and grossed $123.7 million.[100]
Commercial performance
editBefore Speak Now's release, Big Machine shipped two million copies of the album to stores in the United States.[27] In the week ending November 13, 2010, the album debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 chart, with first-week sales of 1,047,000 copies.[101] It marked the highest single-week tally for a female country artist and became the first album since Lil Wayne's Tha Carter III (2008) to sell over one million copies in its first week of release.[102] Media publications including Billboard,[101] MTV,[71] and The New York Times[81] published articles highlighting Speak Now's strong sales in the context of declining record sales brought about by the emergence of music download platforms. According to The New York Times, although the music industry in 2010 saw album sales "[plunging] by more than 50 percent in the last decade", the album proved Swift "has transcended the limitations of genre and become a pop megastar".[81] The Guinness World Records in 2010 recognized Speak Now as the fastest-selling album in the United States by a female country artist.[103]
In Speak Now's first charting week, 11 of the standard edition's 14 tracks charted on the Billboard Hot 100, making Swift the first female artist to have 11 songs on the Hot 100 at the same time.[104] After the digital release of the deluxe edition tracks in November 2011, "If This Was a Movie" charted at number 10 on the Hot 100, making Swift the first artist to have eight songs debut in the top 10.[105][note 6] With this achievement, Speak Now had four songs peaking in the top 10 of the Billboard Hot 100—"Mine", "Back to December", "Speak Now", and "If This Was a Movie".[107] The album spent six non-consecutive weeks atop the Billboard 200.[108] Speak Now was the third-best-selling album of 2010 in the United States with sales of 2.96 million copies.[109] By January 2024, it had sold 4.817 million copies in the United States.[110] The RIAA certified the album six-times platinum, which denotes six million album-equivalent units based on sales, song downloads, and streaming.[111]
Speak Now was a chart success in the wider English-speaking world: it peaked atop the albums charts of Australia,[112] Canada,[113] and New Zealand,[114] and peaked at number six in Ireland[115] and the United Kingdom.[116] The album was certified triple-platinum in Australia,[117] Canada, and New Zealand.[118] Upon conclusion of the Asian leg of the Speak Now World Tour by February 2011, the album sold 400,000 copies in the region and received platinum sales certifications in Taiwan, South Korea, Indonesia, and the Philippines.[119] In Europe, it charted at number four in Norway,[120] number six in Japan,[121] number eight in Mexico,[122] and number ten in Spain.[123] After Swift embarked on the Eras Tour (2023–2024), Speak Now resurged in popularity in the United Kingdom: it re-entered the top 40 (at number 23) of the UK Albums Chart for the week ending May 18, 2023, which was its first top-40 appearance since November 2010.[124]
Critical reception
editAggregate scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AnyDecentMusic? | 6.9/10[125] |
Metacritic | 77/100[126] |
Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [40] |
The A.V. Club | B−[127] |
Entertainment Weekly | B+[43] |
The Guardian | [128] |
Los Angeles Times | [19] |
MSN Music (Expert Witness) | A−[129] |
Paste | 7.1/10[42] |
Rolling Stone | [30] |
Slant Magazine | [31] |
Spin | 7/10[55] |
Speak Now received generally positive reviews from contemporaneous critics.[94] Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, gave the album an average score of 77 that was based on 20 reviews.[126] AnyDecentMusic? compiled 10 reviews and gave it an average score of 6.9 out of 10.[125]
Most critics approved of Swift's grown-up perspective on love and relationships.[94] Reviews published in AllMusic,[40] Entertainment Weekly,[43] The Guardian,[128] the Los Angeles Times,[19] and Rolling Stone[30] complimented the songs for portraying emotions with engaging narratives and vivid details. In AllMusic's review, Stephen Thomas Erlewine wrote: "[Swift] writes from the perspective of the moment yet has the skill of a songwriter beyond her years".[40] American Songwriter approved of Swift's self-penned material and artistic control.[26] In his consumer guide, Robert Christgau commented that although the album was too long and the romantic themes did not interest him, the songs were fascinating because of an "effort that bears a remarkable resemblance to care—that is, to caring in the best, broadest, and most emotional sense".[129]
The album's dramatic themes of heartbreak and vengeance received mixed reviews. Spin[55] and Now[45] said although it included some memorable tracks, Speak Now was blemished by celebrity, rage, and grievances. Slant Magazine lauded Swift's melodic songwriting for offering radio-friendly pop hooks but criticized the lyrics of "Dear John", "Mean", "Innocent", and "Better than Revenge" as shallow and shortsighted.[31] According to Steven Hyden from The A.V. Club, those tracks were Speak Now's strength: "Swift's niftiest trick is being at her most likeable when she's indulging in such overt nastiness."[127] Entertainment Weekly agreed, deeming those tracks inevitable for Swift's artistic evolution.[43] The Village Voice said Swift's songwriting was "not confessional, but dramatic" and found it more nuanced and mature compared to that of Fearless.[53]
Other reviews focused on Speak Now's production. Reviews published in Paste[42] and Slant Magazine[31] called it a catchy album with radio-friendly pop tunes; the former was impressed by the crossover appeal but deemed the overall production dull. The Village Voice took issue with Swift's vocals as weak and strained.[53] BBC Music found the album's track list too long but called it overall a "sparky and affecting record".[44] Now approved of Swift's experimentation with styles other than country but considered it "too safe" and said the album was tarnished by "slickly produced power pop and a sugary sameness [that is] indiscernible from any number of today's radio-oriented artists".[45] Ann Powers appreciated Speak Now's soft, introspective tracks for personalizing pop music.[19] Jon Caramanica of The New York Times lauded the experimentation with genres such as blues and pop punk, and he called Speak Now a bold step for Swift.[52]
Accolades
editSpeak Now was ranked 13th on Rolling Stone's list of the best albums of 2010.[130] The New York Times' Jon Caramanica ranked the album number two (behind Rick Ross's Teflon Don) in his 2010 year-end list.[131] The album appeared on lists of the best country albums of 2010; PopMatters ranked it fifth[132] and The Boot ranked it second.[133] In 2012, Speak Now appeared at number 45 on Rolling Stone's list of the "50 Best Female Albums of All Time"; the magazine commented: "She might get played on the country station, but she's one of the few genuine rock stars we've got these days, with a flawless ear for what makes a song click."[134] In 2019, Billboard listed Speak Now in 51st place on its list of the best albums of the 2010s[135] and second on its list of best country albums of the same decade.[136] The album also ranked 37th on Spin's 2010s decade-end list[137] and 71st on that of Cleveland.com;[138] and Taste of Country named it the fourth-best country album of the 2010s.[139]
Speak Now received industry awards and nominations. In the United States, it was nominated for Album of the Year at the Academy of Country Music Awards,[140] the American Country Awards,[141] and in 2011 the Country Music Association Awards.[142] At the 2011 Billboard Music Awards, Speak Now was nominated for Top Billboard 200 Album and won Top Country Album.[143] It won Favorite Album (Country) at the 2011 American Music Awards[144] and Top Selling Album of 2011 by the Canadian Country Music Association;[145] and was nominated for International Album of the Year at the 2011 Juno Awards[146] and for International Album of the Year at the 2012 Canadian Independent Music Awards.[147] At the 54th Annual Grammy Awards in 2012, Speak Now was nominated for Best Country Album, and its single "Mean" won Best Country Solo Performance and Best Country Song.[148]
Impact
editIn a 2019 Rolling Stone cover story, Swift said she wrote the album by herself as a reaction to her critics' doubts about her songwriting ability.[149] For some critics and academics, the self-written Speak Now is an album that solidified Swift's songwriting and artistry with its nuanced observations and confessional songs about young adulthood and confrontation against her critics.[150] Many considered it a strong groundwork to Swift's consistently-evolved songcraft on subsequent albums.[note 7] For communications professor Myles McNutt, the album established Swift's credentials to claim authorship to her music and career, contrary to other artists being commodified by their labels.[154] Its commercial success contributed to her fame as a pop star transcending her self-identity as a country-music artist.[155][156] Pitchfork's Sam Sodomsky, reviewing the album in 2019, contended that her country-music identity served as an indicator of her autobiographical songwriting rather than musical style.[29]
Some commentators reflected on Speak Now in the context of Swift's celebrity: they viewed the songs inspired by Swift's public experience—including high-profile, short-lived romantic relationships and the 2009 MTV Awards incident—as a precedent to her confessional narratives of subsequent albums, which received extensive media attention.[note 8] According to the gender studies professor Adriane Brown, the songs about idealized romance and her innocent, "good-girl" image made her stand out in a contemporary pool of sexualized female pop artists. Brown commented that Swift's unwillingness to openly discuss sex and tendency to criticize females who "whore themselves out", as in the lyrics of "Better than Revenge", was problematic.[160] In Vulture, Maura Johnston remarked that although the songs about Swift's public experience were missteps, they hinted at her 2017 album Reputation, which explores Swift's public image and confrontation against her critics.[157]
In November 2020, after a dispute over the ownership of the masters to her back catalog, Swift began re-recording her first six studio albums.[161] On May 5, 2023, at the first Eras Tour show in Nashville, Swift announced the re-recorded version of Speak Now—Speak Now (Taylor's Version), and its release date on July 7.[162] Speak Now (Taylor's Version) consists of re-recordings of all fourteen songs from the standard edition, the deluxe tracks "Ours" and "Superman",[note 9] and six previously unreleased "From the Vault" songs.[164] After Speak Now (Taylor's Version) was released, the original album reached new peaks in Switzerland (number one),[165] Austria (number one),[166] Germany (number two),[167] and it was certified gold in the latter two countries.[168][169]
Track listing
editAll tracks are written by Taylor Swift, with additional writers noted where applicable. All tracks are produced by Swift and Nathan Chapman.
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "Mine" | 3:50 |
2. | "Sparks Fly" | 4:20 |
3. | "Back to December" | 4:53 |
4. | "Speak Now" | 4:00 |
5. | "Dear John" | 6:43 |
6. | "Mean" | 3:57 |
7. | "The Story of Us" | 4:25 |
8. | "Never Grow Up" | 4:50 |
9. | "Enchanted" | 5:53 |
10. | "Better than Revenge" | 3:37 |
11. | "Innocent" | 5:02 |
12. | "Haunted" | 4:02 |
13. | "Last Kiss" | 6:07 |
14. | "Long Live" | 5:17 |
Total length: | 67:29 |
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
15. | "Ours" | 3:58 |
16. | "If This Was a Movie" (Martin Johnson) | 3:54 |
17. | "Superman" | 4:36 |
18. | "Back to December" (acoustic) | 4:52 |
19. | "Haunted" (acoustic) | 3:37 |
20. | "Mine" (pop mix) | 3:50 |
21. | "On the Set: Behind the Scenes "Mine" Music Video" (video) | 30:21 |
22. | "Mine" (music video) | 3:55 |
Notes
- The international iTunes Store edition features the original version of "Mine", noted as the "US version", as track 15.[170]
- International editions feature different versions of "Mine" (noted as the "Pop mix" on digital releases), "Back to December" and "The Story of Us" in place of their original versions in the track listing.[171]
- The international deluxe editions include the original versions of "Mine", "Back to December" and "The Story of Us" as tracks 20, 21, and 22, they are entitled under "US version". Since the international "pop" mix of "Mine" is included already it doesn’t appear as a bonus track.[171]
- CD releases of the album in Japan included the original versions of "Back to December" and "The Story of Us", each noted as "US version", as tracks 15 and 16 on the standard[172] and deluxe editions with the deluxe bonus tracks on the second disc being numbered 17–22 with the original version of "Mine", also noted as the "US Version", as the final track.[173]
Personnel
editCredits are adapted from the album's liner notes.[1]
Musicians
- Taylor Swift – vocals, acoustic guitar, handclapping, vocal harmony, banjo
- Nathan Chapman – banjo, bass guitar, Fender Rhodes, electric twelve-string guitar, electric guitar, acoustic guitar, handclapping, mandolin, organ, piano, synthesizer, vocal harmony
- Tom Bukovac – electric guitar
- Nick Buda – drums
- Chris Carmichael – strings
- Smith Curry – lap steel guitar
- Eric Darken – percussion
- Caitlin Evanson – vocal harmony
- Shannon Forrest – drums
- John Gardner – drums
- Rob Hajacos – fiddle
- Amos Heller – bass guitar
- Liz Huett – vocal harmony
- Tim Lauer – Hammond B3, piano
- Tim Marks – bass guitar
- Mike Meadows – electric guitar, handclapping
- Grant Mickelson – electric guitar
- Michael Rhodes – bass guitar
- Paul Sidoti – electric guitar
- Tommy Sims – bass guitar
- Bryan Sutton – acoustic guitar, twelve-string guitar, ukulele
- Al Wilson – handclapping, percussion
Production
- Taylor Swift – background vocals direction, liner notes, songwriter, producer
- Nathan Chapman – engineer, producer, programming
- Chuck Ainlay – engineer
- Joseph Anthony Baker – photography
- Steve Blackmon – assistant
- Drew Bollman – assistant, assistant engineer, engineer
- Tristan Brock-Jones – assistant engineer
- David Bryant – assistant engineer
- Paul Buckmaster – conductor, orchestral arrangements
- Jason Campbell – production coordination
- Chad Carlson – engineer
- Chris Carmichael – composer, string arrangements
- Joseph Cassell – stylist
- Steve Churchyard – engineer
- Mark Crew – mixing engineer
- Dean Gillard – production, mixing, additional instrumentation
- Jed Hackett – engineer
- Jeremy Hunter – engineer
- Aubrey Hyde – wardrobe
- Suzie Katayama – orchestra contractor
- Steve Marcantonio – engineer
- Seth Morton – assistant engineer
- Emily Mueller – production assistant
- Jemma Muradian – hair stylist
- John Netti – assistant engineer
- Bethany Newman – design, illustrations
- Josh Newman – design, illustrations
- Justin Niebank – engineer, mixing
- Mark Petaccia – assistant engineer
- Joel Quillen – engineer
- Matt Rausch – assistant
- Lowell Reynolds – engineer
- Mike Rooney – assistant engineer
- Austin Swift – photography
- Todd Tidwell – assistant engineer, engineer
- Lorrie Turk – make-up
- Matt Ward – production, mixing, additional instrumentation
- Hank Williams – mastering
- Brian David Willis – engineer
- Nathan Yarborough – assistant mixing engineer
Charts
edit
Weekly chartsedit
|
Year-end chartsedit
|
Decade-end charts
editChart (2010–2019) | Position |
---|---|
Australian Albums (ARIA)[218] | 39 |
US Billboard 200[219] | 50 |
US Top Country Albums (Billboard)[220] | 17 |
All-time charts
editChart | Position |
---|---|
US Billboard 200 (Women)[note 11] | 66 |
US Top Country Albums (Billboard)[note 12] | 73 |
Certifications and sales
editRegion | Certification | Certified units/sales |
---|---|---|
Australia (ARIA)[117] | 3× Platinum | 210,000‡ |
Austria (IFPI Austria)[168] | Gold | 10,000* |
Brazil (Pro-Música Brasil)[224] | Gold | 20,000* |
Canada (Music Canada)[118] | 3× Platinum | 240,000^ |
Germany (BVMI)[169] | Gold | 100,000‡ |
Hong Kong (IFPI)[79] | Gold | |
Ireland (IRMA)[225] | Gold | 7,500^ |
Japan (RIAJ)[226] | Gold | 100,000^ |
New Zealand (RMNZ)[227] | 3× Platinum | 45,000‡ |
Norway (IFPI Norway)[228] | Gold | 15,000* |
Philippines (PARI)[229] | Platinum | 15,000* |
Singapore (RIAS)[230] | Platinum | 10,000* |
Switzerland (IFPI Switzerland)[231] | Gold | 15,000‡ |
United Kingdom (BPI)[232] | Platinum | 300,000‡ |
United States (RIAA)[111] | 6× Platinum | 4,817,000[note 13] |
* Sales figures based on certification alone. |
See also
edit- List of Billboard 200 number-one albums of 2010
- List of Billboard 200 number-one albums of 2011
- List of Top Country Albums number ones of 2010
- List of Top Country Albums number ones of 2011
- List of number-one albums of 2010 (Canada)
- List of number-one albums from the 2010s (New Zealand)
- List of number-one albums of 2010 (Australia)
Notes
edit- ^ In a 2010 interview with Glamour, when the interviewer asked, "And you hear artists say things like, 'When I turned 21, the record label made me over into a sexualized creature'. Could you see yourself going in that direction?", Swift responded, "I don't ever look down on people for the way they choose to have fun; it's just not necessarily the way I like to have fun".[18]
- ^ In scholar Adriane Brown's view, Swift's past albums are also about romantic, nonsexual relationships, which was congruent with her public image and identity as a white, feminine, innocent, middle-class American girl.[20]
- ^ Borchetta reportedly said to Swift; "Taylor, this record isn't about fairy tales and high school anymore. That's not where you're at."[27]
- ^ Although "If This Was a Movie" (written by Swift and Martin Johnson) is on the deluxe edition of Speak Now, the 14-track standard edition was solely written by Swift, and thus the album is agreed upon by the press as self-penned by Swift.[9][17][56]
- ^ United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, Japan, Philippines, Hong Kong, Belgium, Norway, Germany, Netherlands, Italy, France, Spain, Ireland, Northern Ireland, and England.[100]
- ^ The other seven songs that debuted in the top 10 of the Billboard Hot 100 are "Change" (2008), "Fearless" (2008), "Jump Then Fall" (2009), "Today Was a Fairytale" (2010), "Mine" (2010), "Speak Now" (2010), and "Back To December" (2010).[106]
- ^ Attributed to retrospective rankings of Swift's albums by GQ's Lucy Ford,[151] Entertainment Weekly's Allaire Nuss,[152] and the Alternative Press's Kelsey Barnes[153]
- ^ Attributed to retrospective reviews by Billboard,[9] Vulture's Maura Johnston,[157] Spin's Al Shipley,[158] and Consequence's Mary Siroky[159]
- ^ The re-recorded version of "If This Was a Movie" was released independently.[163]
- ^ The chart positions listed below coincided with the release of the 2023 re-recording Speak Now (Taylor's Version). In Austria, Germany, Greece, Portugal and Switzerland, the chart performance of the original Speak Now was combined with that of Speak Now (Taylor's Version).
- ^ Compiled by Billboard for albums 1963–2017[221][222]
- ^ Compiled by Billboard for albums 1963–2016[223]
- ^ Pure sales as of January 2024[110]
References
edit- ^ a b Speak Now (CD liner notes). Taylor Swift. Big Machine Records. 2010. BTMSR0300A.
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{{cite journal}}
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