PvNew | Internet Celebrity Wiki

Taylor Swift Treats ‘Carolina’ Like ‘Folklore’ in ‘Where the Crawdads Sing’ End Credits Theme

  2024-03-20 varietyChris Willman25930
Introduction

Taylor Swift has gone to Carolina in her mind in her new single, which was released at midnight Thursday night — the fir

Taylor Swift Treats ‘Carolina’ Like ‘Folklore’ in ‘Wher<i></i>e the Crawdads Sing’ End Credits Theme

Taylor Swift has gone to Carolina in her mind in her new single, which was released at midnight Thursday night — the first newly written original song she’s put out since the “Evermore” album in late 2020. But things are more brooding for her in that state of mind than they were for James Taylor.

“Carolina” is the end-credits theme for the film “Where the Crawdads Sing,” which doesn’t reach theaters for another three weeks — July 15, to be exact — and the song provides a foretaste of the possibly jolting mood of the climax, where she and the movie’s protagonist are definitely not feeling 22.

As much as it’s a direct outgrowth of Swift loving the source novel, fans may feel the song is a throwback … all the way back to the “Folklore”/”Evermore” era of two years ago, with those albums’ primary producer, Aaron Dessner, back on board for a tune lightly augmented with the Americana-friendly elements of mandolin and fiddle.

Swift provided more insight into the song in an Instagram post. “about a year and half ago,” she said, “I wrote a song about an incredible story, the story of a girl who always lived on the outside, looking in. Figuratively and literally. The juxtaposition of her loneliness and independence. Her longing and her stillness. Her curiosity and fear, all tangled up. Her persisting gentleness… and the world’s betrayal of it. I wrote this one alone in the middle of the night and then Aaron Dessner and I meticulously worked on a sound that we felt would be authentic to the moment in time when this story takes place. I made a wish that one day you would hear it. ‘Carolina’ is out now.”

Reese Witherspoon, a producer of the film, released her own statement about the song upon its midnight ET release: “Taylor Swift writing a song for the film based on these characters was the greatest gift that we could have received,. We got a call from Taylor and her team to tell us she had written a song, ‘Carolina,’ that incorporates so many of the haunting elements of the movie. I’ve gotten to talk with her a couple of times about what inspired the song and how she wrote it. Obviously, she’s a beautiful songwriter who understands so much about folk and country music, and it’s her appreciation of those genres that made the song so perfect for this film. And who doesn’t love a gorgeous, haunting Taylor Swift song?”

ned="" data-instgrm-permalink="https://www.instagram/reel/CfLHtmElDhC/?utm_source=ig_embed&utm_campaign=loading" data-instgrm-version="14">

A post shared by Taylor Swift (@taylorswift)

The lyrics suggest that there are secrets the main character, Kya, will keep all the way to the end of the movie and beyond. “Oh, Carolina knows why for years they’ve said / That I was guilty as sin and sleep in a liar’s bed,” Swift sings in the final iteration of the chorus. “But the sleep comes fast and I’ll meet no ghosts / It’s between me, the sand, and the sea.”

It’s not only reminiscent of “Folklore” and “Evermore” at their most folky and subdued, but also, as Swift movie songs go, of her collaboration a decade ago with the Civil Wars on “Safe and Sound” for “The Hunger Games.”

Anticipation was high since Swift revealed in an Instagram Story post Thursday morning that the new song was nigh. But really it had loomed large in fans’ minds since the song’s existence was first teased all the way back on March 22, at which point a trailer was released that included excerpts from her song.

Additional information about the number was relayed by the filmmaking team in a roundtable about the movie that was livestreamed June 13.

The song was recorded in one take, using only instruments that existed in the early 1950s, when the first part of “Where the Crawdads Sing” is set — points of interest that were revealed by Reese Witherspoon, who produced the movie, and director Olivia Newman in a recent roundtable.

Swift “wrote this gorgeous letter to us,” said Newman, explaining how they chose instruments that were only available before 1953 and she recorded it in one take the way they recorded songs at the time. … The first time I listened to it, I just started bawling and I said, ‘I don’t know what’s happening to me right now.’ I mean, I love singing along to Taylor Swift songs but I never cry like this.”

Taylor Swift Treats ‘Carolina’ Like ‘Folklore’ in ‘Wher<i></i>e the Crawdads Sing’ End Credits Theme
Taylor Swift ‘Carolina’ single art

The song was written on spec and then submitted out of the blue by Swift, the filmmakers revealed.

Said Witherspoon, “She read this book and loved it so much, and then she heard we were making a movie [during the period] she was making her ‘Folklore’ album and then she wrote a song with that whole ‘Folklore’ team, which was so haunting and magical and beautiful.”

“She had gone and written this song out of just pure inspiration and sort of said, ‘I don’t know if you’ll like it, but here it is,'” confirmed Newman.

The existence of the tune was first revealed in a March 22 trailer for the movie that included excerpts from the track. Swift posted on Instagram at the time that “Carolina” was produced by Aaron Dessner, a primary collaborator on “Folklore” and “Evermore,” her last pair of more acoustically based albums, both released in 2020. “I wanted to create something haunting and ethereal to match this mesmerizing story,” she wrote at the time.

The director said in the recent livestream discussion that Swift’s song reflects the tone of the story’s ending, as it plays over the credits. “We wanted to leave audiences with that same sort of emotional feeling” that was impactful on readers of the source novel, Newman said, “and her song just leans right into that.”

Previous original songs Swift has written or co-written for feature films include “I Don’t Wanna Live Forever (featuring Zayn Malik)” for “Fifty Shades Darker” in 2016, “Sweeter Than Fiction” for “One Chance” in 2013, “Safe and Sound” and “Eyes Open” for “The Hunger Games” in 2012, “Today Was a Fairytale” for “Valentine’s Day” in 2010 and “Crazier” and “You’ll Always Find Your Way Back Home” for “The Hannah Montana Movie” in 2009.

(By/Chris Willman)
 
 
Dislike 0 Report 0 Favorite 0 Awards 0 Comments 0
0 itemsRelated comments
 

(c)2019-2024 PvNew All Rights Reserved |