Taylor Swift and her faithful followers were extremely exuberant enough to cause the earth to move during her Seattle concert.
Swifties cause 2.3-magnitude earthquake in Seattle at Lumen Field https://abc7.com/taylor-swift-concert-earthquake-lumen-field-seattle-sw…
Taylor Swift sang ‘Shake It Off in Seattle — and a seismometer felt it https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/science/taylor-swift-sang-sha… https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nfWlot6h_JM
Beast Quake (Taylor's Version): Swift's "Eras" tour concerts cause seismic activity in Seattle https://www.cbsnews.com/minnesota/news/beast-quake-taylor-swift-seattle…
Taylor Swift causes a 2.3 magnitude earthquake during her Eras Tour concert in Seattle compared to the legendary 2011 “Beast Quake” https://indianexpress.com/article/trending/trending-globally/taylor-swi…
CRUEL SUMMER https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ic8j13piAhQ
Much like the lengthy No. 1 hits of decades past, "Let it Be" American Pie" and Papa's Gt A Brand New Bag" - “All Too Well” tackles big emotions with catchy, heartfelt refrains. Though New York Times critic Lindsay Zoladz argues that the shorter version of “All Too Well” is “the better song,” in part because of “the elegant simplicity of its structure,” she adds that “the power of the new version comes from its unapologetic messiness, the way it allows a woman’s subjective emotional experience to take up a defiantly excessive amount of time and space.”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sRxrwjOtIag
“All Too Well” also embodies—and for some, defines—the heartbreak anthem. In this, too, the song follows a long tradition of American musicians who have wrung melodies from misery. As Gracie Anderson wrote for Smithsonian magazine earlier this year, by the 1970s, a generation of singer-songwriters had perfected the so-called “breakup album,” producing such records as Joni Mitchell’s Blue (1971) and Willie Nelson’s Phases and Stages (1973).