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Avril Lavigne Goes Back to Her Pop-Punk Roots on ‘Bite Me’: Listen

In the thick of the pop-punk revival, Avril Lavigne released her newest single “Bite Me” on Wednesday (Nov. 10) — her first since signing to Travis Barker’s DTA Records.

“I’m so f—ing excited to be releasing new music,” the 37-year-old wrote on Instagram. “I had so much fun making this record. This is just a taste of what’s to come.”

The guitar- and drum-heavy track features Lavigne raging at her former lover for failing to treat her properly, promising that they’ll always regret being kicked out of her life. “I gave you one chance/ You don’t get it twice/ And we’ll be together never/ So baby you can bite me,” she sings on the chorus.

Speaking in more detail about the track with Kevan Kenney on Alt 92.3, Lavigne said the track is “super sassy and is about someone who wants a second chance but they f—-d up so royally they’re kinda not really worth your time, and they realize after the fact that you had a really good thing going on, and you’re sort of the one that got away.”

She continued, “It’s a song about self-worth and standing up for yourself and just being like ‘You didn’t treat me right. You didn’t treat me well, and that doesn’t work for me….so baby, you can bite me.’”

Lavigne has yet to divulge a title for a forthcoming album or a release date, but during her appearance on the radio show, she said, “The majority of the record is fast, in your face. It’s the most alternative record front to back that I’ve ever made. I just really didn’t want any ballads, I just wanted rock and roll and pop-punk.”

Listen to “Bite Me” below.

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Will Smith on his “raging jealousy” of 2Pac: “I hated that I wasn’t what he was”

Will Smith has spoken about his “raging jealousy” of 2Pac in his new autobiography, Will, which was released yesterday (November 9).

READ MORE: 2Pac and Biggie murders: what my new film taught me about rap’s biggest unsolved mystery

The actor’s wife, Jada Pinkett Smith, was close with the late rapper after meeting him at the Baltimore School for the Arts in the 1980s.

Smith has now admitted that he felt threatened by his wife’s past relationship with ‘Pac and that his “mind was tortured by their connection”.

“Though they were never intimate, their love for each other is legendary – they defined ‘ride or die,’” Smith writes in his new book. “In the beginning of our relationship, my mind was tortured by their connection. He was PAC! and I was me.”

He continues: “Pac was like Harry [Smith’s younger brother] – he triggered the perception of myself as a coward. I hated that I wasn’t what he was in the world, and I suffered a raging jealousy: I wanted Jada to look at me like that.”

Jada Pinkett Smith. CREDIT: Getty Images

Smith went on to say that he felt a “twisted kind of victory” when Jada spent more time with him than with 2Pac.

“If she chose me over Tupac, there was no way I could be a coward,” he says. “I have rarely felt more validated… I was in a room with Tupac on multiple occasions, but I never spoke to him. The way Jada loved Pac rendered me incapable of being friends with him. I was too immature.”

Smith also touched upon how 2Pac had a “fearless passion that was intoxicating, a militant morality, and a willingness to fight and die for what he believed was right.”

Smith previously touched upon 2Pac and Jada’s relationship during an appearance on The Breakfast Club in January 2020.

“[Me and 2Pac] had a little bit of a thing because [2Pac and Jada] grew up together, and they loved each other, but they never had a sexual relationship,” he said at the time. “But, they had come into that age where now that was a possibility, and then Jada was with me.”

He added, “‘Pac had a little thing on that, but she just loved him. Like, he was the image of perfection, but she was with The Fresh Prince.”

Meanwhile, Smith has admitted his “heart shattered” when his son Jaden asked to be emancipated when he was a 15-year-old.

The King Richard star opened up about the struggles his son faced after their 2013 film After Earth bombed commercially and critically, with Jaden enduring attacks from the media.

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Nova Twins share energetic new video for ‘Antagonist’

Nova Twins have shared a video for their latest single ‘Antagonist’ – you can watch it below.

READ MORE: Nova Twins: “The massive surge of POC pop-punk and rock is an act of rebellion”

The new clip finds the duo – recently hailed by Tom Morello as “an incredible band who deserve to be huge” in an interview with NME – bouncing around a variety of colourfully-lit rooms with hooded and tied up figures nodding in the background.

“‘Antagonist’ is a defiant tune about self-belief; how you can summon the inner strength to be ready for whatever comes at you,” the band explained in a press release. “It’s the army that surrounds you wherever you go. The entire song was pulled together during a jam session.

“Having spent all of lockdown writing tracks remotely over computers, it was really exciting to capture this spontaneous energy together in the studio, as well as the nuances coming from our boards. We made sure not to lose any of this magic on the record.”

The pair made a surprise appearance in London last weekend (November 6), performing from an open-top bus at the Camden Stables as part of an impromptu setup organised by Climate Live.

The concert was held to raise awareness for Climate Live’s COP26 petition, encouraging Londoners to call on world leaders to improve their action on climate change. Nova Twins headlined the show, performing alongside the likes of Hitchin indie-rockers Second Thoughts and DJ sets from Girli and July Jones.

Nova Twins are due to officially hit the road for a UK tour in 2022 – tickets are available to buy here. Before that they will join Sleaford Mods and Enter Shikari as support on their forthcoming tours.

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Tierra Whack Channels Childhood Creativity For Her First-Ever Vans Collection

Known for her experimental artistry, Tierra Whack has recently unveiled her first-ever, full-blown collaboration with Vans, which features both footwear and apparel.

A follow-up to a one-off Vans Old Skool the 26-year-old designed for attendees of a 2019 House of Vans performance in her hometown of Philadelphia, the multi-piece collection captures a glimpse of the spoken word artist’s mind. The aforementioned Old Skool is reissued as part of the joint-project, with its multi-color and enlarged “WHACK” text, checkerboard pattern and “WEIRD HYPE AND CREATIVE KIDS” phrase on the midsole. Accompanying Vans Style 36, Vans Half Cab and Vans Standard Snow MTE propositions also boast personal, bold touches from the “Whack World” visionary.

To accompany the vibrant colors and playful branding found on her footwear selection, Whack tapped her longtime stylist, Shirley Kurata, for assistance on t-shirt, hat, bottoms and socks offerings. Statement-making mis-matched patterns and colors cover everything from “IT’S OKAY TO CRY” long-sleeve tees to crewneck sweaters, while Whack ensures her name is stamped on each piece.

“It was an amazing experience to be able to take what I do with music and apply it to fashion,” said Whack in a statement shared by the “OFF THE WALL” brand. “[I]t was great to work with Shirley and with Vans to give people a collection they can feel free in.”

Enjoy official imagery of the entire capsule here below, and find all styles available at Vans.com and retailers listed below on December 3rd.

Where to Buy

Make sure to follow @kicksfinder for live tweets during the release date.

Tierra Whack x Vans Old Skool
Release Date: Nov 10th, 2021 (Wednesday)
Color: N/A

Unisex: N/A
Style Code: N/A

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Maison Kitsuné Finds Elegance In The PUMA Suede Crepe And Mirage Sport

Maison Kitsuné only has a few footwear collaborations under their belt. But with each, the brand effortlessly toes the line between luxury and sport, shining many a brands’ staples through their own French-Japanese lens. Here, PUMA‘s offerings take the helm for the second time, touched up with a sense of elegance.

Aside from the athleisure, which is etched with the label’s signature fox logo, the collection includes a reverse bomber, poncho, trench coat, and cargo pants, all a stark departure from the footwear brand’s usual selection. The footwear, in contrast, is far more focused, making use of only the Suede Crepe and the Mirage Sport. The latter, as its namesake implies, is a visual busy trainer made up of mesh, suede, and the like, colored with hits of tan and both dark and light shades of blue. Opposite, the iconic Suede silhouette goes heavier on the aforementioned earth tone, applying it throughout the construction in complement to the crepe sole. An aqua-painted formstripe, then, accents the side, matching the embroidered fox just adjacent.

Enjoy a close-up look at the range below and sit tight as we await its November 13th release via PUMA.com, MaisonKitsune.com, and select retailers.

In other news, have you seen the YZY KNIT RNR Stone Carbon?

Where to Buy

Make sure to follow @kicksfinder for live tweets during the release date.

Maison Kitsune x Puma Suede Crepe
Release Date: Nov 13th, 2021 (Saturday)
Color: N/A

Mens: $140
Style Code: 381270-01

North AmericaNov 13th, 2021 (Saturday)



PUMA

Coming Soon

Where to Buy

Make sure to follow @kicksfinder for live tweets during the release date.

Maison Kitsune x Puma Mirage Sport
Release Date: Nov 13th, 2021 (Saturday)
Color: N/A

Mens: $130
Style Code: 381268-01

North AmericaNov 13th, 2021 (Saturday)



PUMA

Coming Soon

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Another Lil Wayne Mixtape Is Coming to Streaming Platforms in January

Lil Wayne fans, rejoice: It seems another one of Mr. Carter’s projects will be making its way to streaming platforms in the coming months.

“Spoiler alert,” Wayne manager Mack Maine tells Billboard. “We have [a mixtape] coming, probably in January.”

Although the manager and Young Money Entertainment president kept the project’s name a secret, he did reveal that Wayne’s team was able to clear every song on the mystery mixtape’s track list, something that has proven difficult in the past, considering the hitmaking rapper’s love of samples.

“Shout-out to the fans. If we could, we’d put all of [the tapes] up in one month,” he adds. “It’s a tedious process. It’s not like a one-day thing. But we’re going to hopefully get all those mixtapes [up].”

The first Wayne mixtape to make it onto streaming was No Ceilings in August 2020, released by Cash Money Records and Young Money Entertainment, both distributed by Republic Records. The project, which originally dropped as a downloadable zip folder on sites like DatPiff in October 2009, was almost entirely made up of other artists’ instrumentals, and as a result, was not re-released in its entirety due to sample-clearance issues. Of the 21 tracks, including three skits, only 11 made it onto streaming platforms. All of the skits, and tracks that sampled music from Jay-Z, Kid Cudi, Dorrough and 3 Deep, among others, were not included.

Despite being an abridged version, the 2020 No Ceilings release debuted at No. 18 with 23,000 album equivalents sold in its first week, more than 10 years after its initial release. Wayne still has a number of EPs and mixtape series still unavailable on streaming, including The Sqad 1-7, Da Drought tapes, The Dedication 1-6 and Sorry 4 the Wait.

“The mixtape game has definitely been nice for Wayne and a big part of his career,” Maine says. “You can do whatever you want, say whatever you want, just go bananas. It’s kind of like practice for a lyricist.”

Some of the most beloved Wayne mixtapes, like the Dedication series, have been confirmed to be in the process of coming to streaming. Until they make it into our favorite Spotify playlists, fans will have to continue relying on YouTube and mixtape sites to get their underground Weezy fix.

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Adele Tells Oprah Winfrey the Meaning Behind ‘Hello’ in First Look at ‘One Night Only’ TV Special

Adele will be giving a warm “Hello” to her fans to start off her upcoming concert special Adele One Night Only, and in a new interview, she explained to Oprah Winfrey what else the song started for her.

In a minute-long snippet from the primetime special that was released on Wednesday (Nov. 10), the English pop superstar sits down with Winfrey in a similar setup to the host’s viral Prince Harry and Meghan Markle tell-all interview from this past spring. The two discuss the deeper meaning behind the opening track of her forthcoming televised set, her 2015 smash “Hello,” while Adele jokes that “I’m always going to have to start with ‘Hello.’ It’d be a bit weird if it was like halfway through the set.”

She later describes the song as “the beginning of me trying to find myself, and I hadn’t figured out yet what it was that I had to do for that. But when I wrote it, it was a real ode to like, little me, older me, all of these things,” the singer tells Winfrey while sitting across from her in a beautiful rose garden. “It’s just a song about like, ‘I’m still here.’ Like, ‘Hi, I’m still here, I still exist in every aspect of my life.’”

“Hello” was released as the lead single from her third studio album 25 in 2015. The song hit No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100, where it remained for 10 consecutive weeks, and won three Grammy Awards including record and song of the year, while the music video has amassed nearly 3 million views.

The “Easy on Me” hitmaker, who has been reigning over the Hot 100, Billboard Global 200 and Billboard Global Excl. U.S. charts for three straight weeks with her latest single, will celebrate the release of her upcoming album 30, due Nov. 19, during the Adele One Night Only TV special this weekend. In addition to her exclusive interview with Winfrey, the Los Angeles-filmed one-off event will include Adele performing “Hello” and her other beloved hits as well as never-before-heard songs from the new album.

Watch the snippet of Adele and Oprah’s conversation below before Adele One Night Only airs Sunday night, Nov. 14, from 8:30 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. ET on CBS and streams on Paramount+.

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Nadine Shah, John Grant and Django Django to headline Deer Shed 2022

Deer Shed have confirmed that Nadine Shah, John Grant and Django Django will headline their 2022 event next summer.

READ MORE: John Grant – ‘Boy From Michigan’ review: visions of an American nightmare

Taking place from July 29 – 31, the North Yorkshire festival will also include performances from Dry Cleaning, Yard Act, Snapped Ankles, Pip Blom, Du Blonde, Katy J Pearson, Porij, and CMAT.

“While our two Base Camp events were both wonderful, there really is nothing like what we’ve come to know as ‘full-fat Deer Shed’,” co-founder Kate Webster said in a statement. “We’re so excited to be announcing the first of our artists for Deer Shed 12 and everyone feels so ready to get back to Baldersby Park in 2022!

“We’ve been around a while now and one of my favourite things is seeing artists come back, working their way up the bill as they go – Nadine Shah first joined us in 2018 and has gone from strength to strength since, so it’s a real honour she has decided to come back to Deer Shed as a headliner!”

You can buy tickets for the event from the Deer Shed website.

Deer Shedders, we are over the moon to bring you the first wave of music announcements for Deer Shed 12: Pocket Planet (July 2022)!

We can’t wait to welcome these incredible acts to Baldersby Park, including main stage headliners @nadineshah, @johngrantmusic & @thedjangos pic.twitter.com/ZkKDbOq2YO

— Deer Shed Festival (@DeerShed) November 10, 2021

Back in April, organisers confirmed that Deer Shed 2021 – originally scheduled for July 30 to August 1 – would not take place due to the lack of government insurance in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic, a “hurdle” that posed a significant financial risk.

However, a scaled-back event called Base Camp Plus was held at Baldersby Park in Thirsk, North Yorkshire across the same weekend.

Dubbed “a safe camping weekend”, the alternative festival was headlined by Dream WifeJane Weaver and Porridge Radio, with a host of comedy, activities, workshops and wellbeing sessions also on offer.

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Listen to Avril Lavigne take down an ex on punky new single ‘Bite Me’

Avril Lavigne has released her brand new single ‘Bite Me’ – you can listen to it below.

READ MORE: Avril Lavigne – ‘Head Above Water’ review

The track – which was co-produced by Travis Barker, John Feldmann and Mod Sun – comes after the Canadian singer-songwriter revealed last week (November 3) that she has signed to Barker’s label DTA Records.

With the announcement – which followed her performance on the Blink-182 drummer’s House Of Horrors live-stream – she teased the arrival of a new song, writing on Instagram: “Should I drop my first single next week?”

Lavigne then shared a further teaser on Friday (November 5), revealing the name of the track – her first since 2019 – along with its artwork.

The pop-punk takedown of an ex hears Lavigne sing: “Hey you, you should’ve known better, better to mess with someonе like me/ Hey you, forеver and ever you’re gonna wish I was your wifey/ Should’ve held on, should’ve treated me right/ I gave you one chance, you don’t get it twice/ Hey you, and we’ll be together never, so baby, you can bite me.

You can listen to ‘Bite Me’ below:

Travis Barker teamed up with Elektra to launch DTA Records in 2019. “I wanted a label partner that I trusted with true artist development,” he said at the time. “As an artist, it’s important to me that an artist’s vision is protected at all costs.”

He said of Lavigne joining DTA: “Avril and I have been friends for a long time, but I think I’ve been a fan of hers even longer! She’s a true badass and an icon as a performer, songwriter, and presence.

“We had gotten in the studio earlier this year, and we were having so much fun that I knew I wanted to ask her to join the DTA team. I’m so stoked she’s now part of the label. I can’t wait for everybody to experience the incredible music she’s about to drop.”

Lavigne recently joined forces with Barker on Williow’s pop-punk single ‘Grow’. Back in December 2020, she was pictured in the studio with the sticksman’s friend and collaborator Machine Gun Kelly.

“So are we ready for new music in the new year or what?” she asked fans at the time. “Lemme know.”

In February, Lavigne confirmed that her seventh album was “done”. It will follow on from 2019’s ‘Head Above Water’.

Last month she announced a UK and European tour for 2022, which includes a three-night billing at the O2 Academy Brixton in London as well as a show at Manchester’s O2 Apollo.

Avril Lavigne’s 2022 tour dates are as follows:

MARCH 2022
25 – Manchester, O2 Apollo
27 – London, O2 Academy Brixton
28 – London, O2 Academy Brixton
29 – London, O2 Academy Brixton

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Brooklyn’s Female-Owned KCDC Skateshop Celebrates 20 Years With A Pink Nike SB Dunk High

Since 2001, Brooklyn’s KCDC Skateshop has been promoting the idea of “Unity Makes Strength.” As a female-owned institution, the shop has championed handfuls of issues historically omitted from skateboarding’s story. As KCDC approaches its 20th anniversary, the Amy Ellington-led team has brought its creativity to a Nike SB Dunk High collaboration.

While the inspiration behind the newly-surfaced pair has yet to be disclosed by any party involved in the project, the skate-ready sneaker features two shades of pink suede across its upper. Likely arranged to match the now-pink brick of its storefront on 80 North 3rd Street, the soft, durable material is contrasted by stark black detailing both throughout the top and bottom halves. Profile swooshes, laces and midsoles opt for the pitch-dark tone, while tongue labels follow suit, but also boast the shop’s inaugural year underneath standard “NIKE SB” text. Lastly, brownish rubber tread underfoot and “KCDC” logos on the heel pull tabs round out the commemorative Nike Dunk.

Enjoy early on-foot shots of the pair here below, and expect an exclusive release at KCDC Skateshop soon.

Elsewhere under the NIKE, Inc. umbrella, the Air Jordan 11 “Animal Instinct” arrives on November 26th.

Images: @YankeeKicks

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Tencent Music Partners With Apple Music On Global Streaming

SHANGHAI — Apple Music and Tencent Music Entertainment (TME) have reached an agreement that will allow hundreds of thousands of Chinese musicians to stream their music globally on Apple’s platform, while giving Apple a way to scrape its way into China’s booming domestic music market.

Music from record labels and artists that are part of Tencent’s TME Cloud Music will become available on Apple Music, Tencent said in a statement on Tuesday (Nov. 9).

The companies framed the move as a way for artists to “enable music lovers to explore China’s unique music culture and genres” while “assisting in the international development of Chinese musicians.” (The companies did not release financial details about the partnership or when it will begin.)

The partnership is a breakthrough for Apple Music, which first entered the Chinese market back in 2015, but has made little impact in the country so far. Tencent controls 77% of the Chinese streaming market through its QQ Music, Kuguo and Kuwo platforms.

While Apple has a large roster of international artists, it has struggled to reach new audiences because of its relatively small library of Chinese repertoire – especially compared to TME and Netease Cloud Music, Chinese music analysts have said.

TME has repeatedly stressed the importance of its growing bank of original music from independent Chinese musicians and labels. Aside from its streaming platforms, Tencent created TME Original Productions, which develops hit TV shows like Produce 101, a spin-off of the Korean variety show, which attracts billions of views every year. And TME runs Tencent Music Program, a service for aspiring musicians to upload their own music to its platforms, while also opening up access to copyright development and professional training.

Also yesterday, TME released its earnings for the third quarter, showing mixed results for the music company. While paying users on Tencent Music rose by 37.7% to 71.1 million, exhibiting the growing willingness of Chinese music fans to pay for music, the company’s quarterly revenues rose by just 3% year-on-year.

The partnership could also give a boost to Chinese musicians hoping to increase their exposure abroad. In the past year, the Chinese government put online music company Bandcamp behind the Chinese internet firewall and the platform now requires Chinese users to have a VPN, essentially creating another roadblock for Chinese musicians attempting to reach global audiences. Other music sites like Spotify, YouTube and SoundCloud also require the use of a VPN.

Despite its initial struggles in China, Apple’s smartphone penetration is growing, and Apple Music has sought to undercut its Chinese rivals to gain a foothold. Apple controlled 14% of the Chinese smartphone market in the second quarter of this year, up from 8% in the second quarter of 2020, according to research firm Counterpoint. A monthly subscription for Apple Music costs 10 RMB ($1.56), with Netease charging 18 RMB ($2.82) and Tencent Music’s asking 20 RMB ($3.13).

It has been a difficult year for TME. China’s State Administration of Market Regulation (SAMR) fined the company a total of 2.5 million yuan ($385,000) for five breaches of regulatory requirements after investigations into its exclusivity deals with record labels like Universal, Sony and Warner. TME has since given up those exclusivity deals.

Despite the government crackdown, the company is setting its sights on improving social entertainment content, which includes karaoke app WeSing, while continuing to develop TME Live functions and long-form audio content.

In the third-quarter earnings call, Ross Liang, CEO of TME, said that monthly average users of long-form audio had grown 89% year-over-year to more than 140 million, “as our users discover the complementary experience of music and audio streaming.”

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Taylor Swift’s ‘All Too Well’: How the ‘Red’ Fan Favorite Became One of Her Biggest & Most Important Songs

When Taylor Swift brought out her emerald green acoustic guitar on the first night of the Reputation Stadium Tour in 2018, she addressed the sold-out Arizona crowd from one of her three elaborate stages. 

“There is one song that you requested that I play more than all other songs, and it wasn’t even a single,” Swift began, as she started strumming. “I figure since you guys have made this such an unbelievable experience, I would play this song that you seem to request more than others — and it would be so cool if you sang as loud as you possibly could.” She slowly launched into the first verse of “All Too Well,” off her 2012 album Red, as the crowd erupted and the stadium rained confetti. 

Despite being one of her most requested (and covered) tracks, “All Too Well” was never a single. After announcing Red nearly a decade agoSwift dropped “We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together,” an upbeat breakup song with audacious lyrics and a shout-along chorus, as the set’s official lead single — which were ultimately followed to radio by the explosive dubstep drops of “I Knew You Were Trouble” and the effervescent synth-pop of “22.” “All Too Well,” by contrast, is an introspective, patient ballad that builds to an explosive, emotionally charged bridge. Its story weaves together seemingly mundane, everyday pieces of a relationship — like photo albums, red lights, even old scarves — that had little to no meaning at the time, but mean everything “after all these days.” 

The lyrics mimic the song’s own journey — a deep cut that was never promoted by her label, but went on to become one of Swift’s most massive cult favorites, and is often considered her best work by critics and fans alike. (On Rolling Stone’s recent industry-voted list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All-Time, it was her top finisher, placing at No. 69.) This Friday (Nov. 12), Swift gets to give the song a proper spotlight as the most-anticipated new track from her Red (Taylor’s Version) re-recording of the 2012 set, via its long-awaited ten-minute version. 

Since its release nearly a decade ago, Swift herself has dropped hints that the song had a much longer, drawn-out life, even before it was picked to be the fifth track on her fourth studio album. Much of the song’s cathartic bridge about the breakup’s final straw (“You call me up again just to break me like a promise/ So casually cruel in the name of being honest”) was written while Swift was soundchecking on the Speak Now World tour in 2011, when she began improvising the lyrics and her band jumped in. Though the subject of the song was never officially confirmed, fans theorized that the autumnal backdrop of the song alluded to her much-publicized relationship with Jake Gyllenhall in the fall of 2010. 

The song was rumored to have originally been over 10 minutes long, a theory that was picked up and popularized among her dedicated fandom, then later confirmed by co-writer Liz Rose. After Swift was asked by a fan on Instagram where the 10-minute version was, Swift joked that it was “somewhere in a drawer.” The song had its own “folklore” of rumors and theories about if the full version would ever be released after nearly a decade since its inception, with new fans diving into the theories as they began discovering her catalog. 

“The reason why I think that song caught on with fans and critics is that it’s the best song on the album,” says Bruce Warren, assistant general manager for programming for Philadelphia public radio station WXPN, whose listeners ranked “All Too Well” as one of the greatest songs of all time in 2020. “The craft of the song [is] mature beyond its young age. Great power ballads are great power ballads. Immediately, they sort of grab you…It’s the song structure, it’s the way the song builds. I think about the great soft rock power ballads, and I would consider this one of them.”

But despite its power-ballad appeal, the radio push for the Red album cycle was primarily given to “We Are Never Getting Back Together” and “I Knew You Were Trouble” — two singles which helped cement in the public perception the scheming, maneater pop star persona that Swift was often criticized for around this time. Instead of a vulnerable, brutally honest singer-songwriter ballad such as “All Too Well,” Red was promoted with songs that might have helped the narrative that Swift would later actively try to distance herself from.

“Somebody at a label makes a decision — they decide that these are the songs that are gonna be the singles, for any number of reasons,” says Warren. “And somebody decided ‘All Too Well’ was not gonna be a single. But if the internet has proven anything, if the streaming economy has proven anything, the fans are in control [of what gets popular], and not the record label.” 

As the fans gain that control, they are able to bring back years-old tracks and to give them a second life on platforms like Twitter and TikTok. Swift herself has taken advantage of this — after “Wildest Dreams” went newly viral earlier this year, she released “Wildest Dreams (Taylor’s Version)” to capitalize on the song’s momentum and help keep her re-recordings on everyone’s radar. But “All Too Well” didn’t need a specifically viral moment — instead, its popularity rose gradually over time through Swift’s fans.

The song initially peaked at No. 80 on the Billboard Hot 100, following the album’s release in fall 2012 — far from a resounding bow by Swift’s standards, considering she has seven No. 1 hits on the chart. The artist herself seemed surprised by the continued support of the song. “‘All Too Well’ was never a single, and it always blows my mind that it is consistently one of the loudest songs the crowd sings when I play it,” Swift tweeted before the release of the Reputation Stadium Tour movie on Netflix.

But perhaps more than any other song in her catalog, “All Too Well” was the one that proved to skeptics who might’ve thoughtlessly dismissed Swift as a frivolous pop star — in an era when such artists still weren’t given nearly as much credit or attention by critics and older music fans as they are now — that she was in fact a truly formidable singer-songwriter. (The song’s cred was also furthered by a rare spotlight moment at the 2014 Grammys, when Swift performed a dramatic piano version of it, complete with headbanging, causing many to take notice of it for the first time.) 

“‘All Too Well’ has been the Taylor song that I have shown to anyone who has had any doubts about her songwriting talent and craft,” says Stevie Knipe, of indie pop band Adult Mom — who cites Swift as one of their biggest musical inspirations, and has covered tracks off Red in the past. Knipe believes the simple-but-relatable narrative of the track is what helped build its dedicated fanbase and achieve that cult status, not only among fans, but fellow artists and critics. 

“It’s a song with a perfect narrative presentation that hooks the listener and slowly builds into anthemic catharsis,” they say. “Its story is specific and detailed while remaining relatable — and its melodies are scream-able, cry-alongable, and extremely quotable, all elements that make for a cult classic of a song.” 

Having an earlier, under-the-radar track that highlights her songwriting prowess become one of her most popular songs might also have served as something of a catalyst for where Swift is now. Seeing just how well-received “All Too Well” was by fans and critics alike just in the past few years may have been what helped pushed Swift to lean into that quieter but more intimate sound that the track does so well with her last two albums — the acclaimed Folklore and Evermore, produced in collaboration with indie paragons like Justin Vernon and Aaron Dessner. 

“In 2014 or 2015, you wouldn’t have been able to say, ‘[Taylor Swift] is working with Justin Vernon,’ right?” says Warren. “It foreshadowed the place she’s in now… “All Too Well’ showed the potential of how great a songwriter she would be, and how she would evolve as a songwriter. And [Folklore and Evermore] took her to another level.” 

Ruston Kelly, a fellow country singer and massive Swift fan, thinks the simplicity and vulnerability of the track is what helped fellow musicians gain respect for Taylor as a songwriter, beyond her pop stardom. “Obviously you can’t really go anywhere in this world without encountering something having to do with Taylor Swift,” says Kelly, who recorded his own emotionally-charged rendition of “All Too Well” in 2019, which Swift approved via social media. “I really appreciated her music, but it wasn’t until that song came out and I was going through a breakup myself, that it really hit home. All the pieces kinda fell into place. It was like, ‘OK, I get it.’

“I’ve become friends with [co-writer] Liz Rose over the years,” Kelly continues. “I got to ask her once about ‘All Too Well’… she was like, ‘I’m just gonna be honest with you, It’s all Taylor. She brought it in, I just helped her piece it together.’ It will be interesting to hear if she brought in all those verses on the 10 minute version.” 

Some fans believe the song goes beyond a breakup song, and symbolizes more — a bond with her fans, and the connection with the audience when she performed it live. That bond is very present on Twitter, where Swift has a massive (and highly protective) fanbase. Zainub Amir, who runs one of the largest Taylor Swift update accounts on Twitter, says the song’s meaning has changed over time, due to fan response, becoming less about the heartbreak and more about the evolution of her fanbase’s support.

“The amount of times I have seen Taylor perform this song, it used to be a really sad time,” Amir recalls. She believes the switch happened post-Reputation, when Swift performed the track in 2017 for the first time in years: “You could see it on her face… she actually smiled and had a visually fun time hearing the fans sing back the words with so much energy. It shows she is in a completely different place and that growth is so powerful — so now it’s really fun to hear that song, because we remember a time when it wasn’t fun.”

As fans count down to Red (Taylor’s Version), the extended version of “All Too Well” is the most highly-anticipated track — and with a much-hyped arrival, and now a 10-minute video to come with a star-studded cast, it’s likely to outpace its prior No. 80 peak on the Hot 100 in the weeks to come. No matter the commercial success of the track, though, Swift is well aware that it has all to do with the fans who took the breakup song and made it into something more. 

“You turned this song into a collage of memories of watching you scream the words to this song, or seeing pictures that you post to me of you haven written words to this song in your diary, or you showing me your wrist, and you have a tattoo of the lyrics to this song underneath your skin,” Swift explained to the crowd that opening night on the Reputation Stadium Tour. “And that is how you have changed the song ‘All Too Well’ for me.”

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