That's When
"That's When" is a country duet recorded by American singer-songwriter Taylor Swift, featuring Australian country artist Keith Urban, and released on April 9, 2021, as the twenty-fourth and final track on Swift's re-recorded album Fearless (Taylor's Version).[1] Originally composed during sessions for Swift's 2008 sophomore album Fearless but ultimately excluded from its tracklist, the song was re-recorded for the 2021 project as one of six "From the Vault" tracks intended to regain artistic and commercial control over Swift's early masters.[2] An acoustic country pop ballad, it explores the theme of retrospectively recognizing the authenticity of a past relationship amid its dissolution, with Swift and Urban trading verses about emotional epiphanies triggered by separation.[3] Urban contributed electric guitar and harmony vocals during the re-recording sessions, which took place between November 2020 and February 2021. Though not issued as a single, the track benefited from the album's commercial success, debuting on several international charts including peaking at number 63 on the Canadian Hot 100 and number 81 on the ARIA Singles Chart in Australia.Background and development
Writing and initial recording (2007–2008)
"That's When" was written by Taylor Swift in collaboration with songwriters Brad Warren and Brett Warren (collectively known as the Warren Brothers) and intended as a potential track for her second studio album, Fearless, during sessions spanning 2007 to 2008.[4] The song's creation aligned with Swift's songwriting approach in this era, which emphasized autobiographical reflections on romantic relationships as source material for her compositions.[5] An initial solo demo version, featuring Swift's vocals without additional duet elements, was recorded during these sessions, prioritizing acoustic instrumentation to convey the track's intimate sentiment.[6] This demo circulated unofficially online years later, around 2014 to 2015.[6] Swift's prolific output during the Fearless development phase involved co-writing multiple songs amid her rising profile in country music, though specific counts for this album's candidates remain undocumented in primary accounts.[7]Exclusion from original Fearless album
"That's When" was recorded during the sessions for Taylor Swift's second studio album, Fearless, in 2007–2008, with contributions from co-writers the Warren Brothers and guest vocals by Keith Urban, but was ultimately omitted from the final release.[2] The track, which explores a couple's mutual realization of regret following a breakup, did not make the cut despite its completion, as Swift and producer Nathan Chapman sifted through numerous recordings to finalize the album.[8] The original Fearless, released on November 11, 2008, by Big Machine Records, featured a standard edition of exactly 13 tracks, a track count Swift deliberately preferred for its symbolic resonance and to focus on the strongest material.[8] [9] This selection process prioritized songs that aligned with the album's overarching narrative of youthful romance, heartbreak, and resilience, such as "Love Story" and "You Belong with Me," while excluding outtakes like "That's When" to preserve structural tightness and commercial pacing typical of mid-2000s country-pop releases.[8] By designating "That's When" as an unreleased vault track early in post-production, the team avoided diluting the album's curated flow, with the song remaining largely inaccessible to the public until its re-recording over a decade later; minimal circulation of demos occurred among dedicated fans, but no verified widespread leaks surfaced prior to 2021.[2]Re-recording and release
Production of Taylor's Version (2020–2021)
The re-recording of "That's When" took place during 2020–2021 amid Taylor Swift's broader project to remake her first six albums, initiated after Scooter Braun's Ithaca Holdings acquired the masters of her Big Machine Records catalog on June 3, 2019, for $300 million, stripping Swift of ownership and prompting her to seek control through new recordings. This vault track, originally written in 2007–2008 but excluded from the debut Fearless album, was updated to align with contemporary audio standards while retaining its core structure, with Swift emphasizing fidelity to the source material in vocal delivery and arrangement.[10] Swift enlisted Keith Urban as the featured artist specifically for this Taylor's Version, leveraging their longstanding mutual admiration—stemming from Swift opening for Urban's tours in her early career—to infuse the track with authentic duet chemistry. Urban contributed lead vocals on the second verse and harmonies, alongside acoustic guitar work that evoked a live, organic performance feel, enhancing the song's indie folk-country essence without altering its foundational sound.[11] [12] Production was led by Swift and Jack Antonoff, with Christopher Rowe handling vocal engineering to ensure Swift's re-recorded performance captured matured nuances while echoing the youthful timbre of the originals. The sessions prioritized acoustic instrumentation, including prominent guitar layers and harmonious vocal stacks, to modernize the track's production clarity and dynamics, distinguishing it from the 2008 demo era constraints.[7]Release context within Fearless (Taylor's Version)
"That's When", featuring Keith Urban, was released on April 9, 2021, as the nineteenth track on Fearless (Taylor's Version), Taylor Swift's re-recording of her second studio album, and designated as one of the six "From The Vault" outtakes.[13][14] The full album debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 chart, marking Swift's ninth chart-topping release and the largest opening week for a re-recorded album to date.[15] This release formed part of Swift's overarching strategy to undermine the commercial value of her original master recordings—acquired by Scooter Braun's Ithaca Holdings in June 2019 through the purchase of Big Machine Records—by offering enhanced new versions under her control via Republic Records. Swift contended that the transaction proceeded without her notification or input, despite her expressed interest in acquiring the masters, prompting her to announce re-recording plans in 2019.[16] Braun and associates countered that the deal followed standard industry protocols, with Swift having signed contracts waiving future negotiation rights and prior opportunities to renegotiate or buy the catalog, including a reported $305 million offer in 2020 that Swift rejected.[16][17] Unlike select "From The Vault" tracks promoted as pre-release singles, "That's When" integrated into the album's collective rollout without individual single status, benefiting from overarching marketing efforts including social media announcements, merchandise bundles, and streaming platform features.[18] A lyric video, emphasizing the duet with Urban, premiered on YouTube the day before the album launch, generating modest coverage focused on their longstanding professional rapport—Urban had previously mentored the teenage Swift and hosted her as an opener.[19] This approach aligned with Swift's emphasis on album cohesion amid the re-recording project's contractual and artistic imperatives.Composition and lyrics
Musical style and structure
"That's When (Taylor's Version)" is a duet track structured in verse–chorus form with an intervening bridge, totaling 3:09 in duration.[20] The arrangement begins with acoustic guitar accompaniment supporting Swift's lead vocals in the verses, transitioning to harmonized singing by Swift and Keith Urban in the choruses.[21] It maintains a 4/4 time signature at a moderate tempo of 90 beats per minute.[20][22] Produced by Taylor Swift and Jack Antonoff, the re-recording aims to replicate the acoustic essence of the 2007–2008 demo while incorporating polished vocal layering and instrumental clarity to enhance the organic duet dynamic without excessive effects. Subtle string elements and guitar harmonies underpin the bridge, building emotional intensity before resolving into the final chorus.[23] The overall sound emphasizes country pop conventions, prioritizing vocal interplay and rhythmic steadiness over dense orchestration.Lyrical themes and analysis
The lyrics of "That's When" center on the emotional dynamics of temporary separation in a romantic relationship, where one partner requests "time" and "space" to process uncertainties, leading to a mutual realization of enduring commitment. This unfolds through a first-person recounting of watching "taillights fading" after the departure, evoking the immediate isolation following a rift, followed by reflective clarity on the partner's steadfastness. The narrative avoids portraying the separation as irreparable dissolution, instead tracing a causal sequence from doubt-induced distance to reaffirmed attachment, as evidenced in lines like "And when I say, 'When can I come back?'" which highlight vulnerability and the desire for return without preconditions.[7][11] Central to the themes is the chorus's depiction of epiphanic moments amid life's variances—"When I wake up in the morning / That's when, when it's sunny or storming / Laughing when I'm crying"—illustrating how routine experiences and emotional contrasts reveal the depth of reciprocal loyalty. This structure emphasizes emotional realism over dramatized rupture, grounding the aftermath in observable relational patterns such as conditional forgiveness yielding to unconditional presence, rather than perpetual grievance. The bridge introduces tension with "That's when you know it's trouble / When no one knows," suggesting underlying relational strains or unspoken deceptions that precipitate the need for space, yet resolves toward integration without victimhood, aligning with country music's tradition of narrative resolution through personal accountability.[24][7] The duet format amplifies this by alternating perspectives, with each singer occupying the role of both the departing and waiting partner across verses, fostering a gender-neutral universality in regret and patience that transcends individual blame. Keith Urban's contributions, mirroring Taylor Swift's phrasing (e.g., his parallel recounting of "her taillights fading"), introduce a male viewpoint on yielding to the other's needs, portraying regret not as capitulation but as active endurance—"I'll be waiting at the front gate / Driving the same old truck." Interpretations vary: some view this symmetry as empirically reflective of mutual dependencies in long-term bonds, eschewing one-sided narratives common in Swift's catalog; others critique it as potentially idealized, downplaying causal asymmetries like infidelity suspicions implied in the space-request motif, though the text prioritizes reconciliation's pragmatism over forensic accusation.[11][25]Critical and public reception
Professional reviews
Professional reviewers praised "That's When" for its emotional authenticity and the effective collaboration between Taylor Swift and Keith Urban, highlighting their vocal chemistry in evoking a nostalgic return to Swift's country origins. Saloni Gajjar of The A.V. Club noted that the duet "hits all the right soothing notes" as the pair reflect on reuniting after past relational amends.[26] Billboard critics described it as offering "a dose of levity" through unfussy production, with the "pair of country pros" addressing differences in a post-breakup context.[27] Rob Sheffield of Rolling Stone characterized the track as a refurbished Fearless outtake enhanced by the duet with Swift's longtime associate Urban, underscoring its introspective ballad quality.[28] Some critiques pointed to the song's formulaic elements and questioned its exclusion from the original album, suggesting it adheres to familiar breakup tropes without standout innovation. A New York Times review observed that the choruses of "That's When" "don't quite pop the way the best Fearless songs do," explaining its original omission from the tracklist.[29] The Guardian described vault tracks like this one as a "mixed bag," implying some feel like "leftovers for a reason" amid the re-recording's commercial incentives to reclaim masters and add unreleased material.[30] As an album track within Fearless (Taylor's Version), it received limited individual scrutiny, with commentary often embedded in broader acclaim for the vault songs' preservation of early songwriting strengths despite dated production echoes from 2008.[31]Fan and commercial feedback
Fans on platforms like Reddit reported immediate and intense engagement with "That's When" following its release on April 9, 2021, as part of the From the Vault tracks on Fearless (Taylor's Version), with one user documenting 36 consecutive plays and describing an inability to stop listening.[32] Social media discussions highlighted appreciation for the song's reveal, including spikes in shares and comments praising its country-pop introspection on relationship reconciliation, often contrasting it favorably against other vault tracks like "Mr. Perfectly Fine."[32] The collaboration with Keith Urban drew particular fan enthusiasm, tied to Swift's history as his opening act in 2009, with users on Facebook and TikTok celebrating the harmonies and duet dynamic as a "remarkable" nostalgic element that enhanced the track's emotional depth.[33] Some debates emerged in fan communities over its quality relative to original Fearless era songs, with proponents arguing the vault reveal unearthed a standout that rivaled hits like "You Belong with Me," while others viewed it as solid but not surpassing the album's core singles.[34] Views on the re-recording process were mixed among audiences, with supporters lauding Swift's ownership reclamation as empowering artist control post her masters dispute, evidenced by enthusiastic streaming tied to album promotion; detractors, including some music forum commenters, critiqued it as prioritizing commercial duplication over fresh creativity, potentially diluting artistic focus.[35] Initial market reactions showed streaming uplifts driven by Swift's dedicated fanbase during the Fearless (Taylor's Version) rollout, though the track exhibited limited independent virality beyond the album's collective hype, reflecting reliance on bundled consumption rather than solo breakout appeal.[35]Commercial performance
Chart performance
"That's When" debuted on various charts alongside the release of Fearless (Taylor's Version) on April 9, 2021, primarily driven by album streaming and download bundles rather than standalone radio promotion or physical sales. In the United States, the track did not enter the Billboard Hot 100 but reached number 3 on the Bubbling Under Hot 100, reflecting modest streaming performance as one of 18 vault tracks from the re-recording. It achieved a stronger debut at number 30 on the Hot Country Songs chart, benefiting from the album's country roots and Keith Urban's feature, though it received limited solo country radio airplay.[36] Internationally, charting mirrored the album's overall success in select markets, with entries fueled by global streaming platforms. In Canada, it peaked at number 63 on the Canadian Hot 100 for the week ending April 24, 2021.[37] Australia's ARIA Singles Chart saw a peak of number 81 in the same tracking week. On the Billboard Global 200, the song entered at number 130, indicating peripheral visibility outside core markets.[38] The track's chart longevity was brief, typically one to two weeks, sustained by inclusions in editorial playlists on services like Spotify and Apple Music rather than sustained airplay or viral trends.| Chart (2021) | Peak Position |
|---|---|
| Australia (ARIA) | 81 |
| Canada (Canadian Hot 100) | 63 |
| US Bubbling Under Hot 100 | 3 |
| US Hot Country Songs | 30 |
| Billboard Global 200 | 130 |