Folklore (stylized in all lowercase) is the eighth studio album by the American singer-songwriter Taylor Swift. It was surprise-released on July 24, 2020, through Republic Records.[1] Featuring production and songwriting collaborations with Aaron Dessner of the National, Jack Antonoff, and Bon Iver's Justin Vernon, the album represents a departure from Swift's prior pop and country styles toward indie folk and alternative rock.[2]
Background and Conception
Origins in Quarantine
Taylor Swift conceived the album Folklore during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic lockdown in the United States, beginning in March 2020, when widespread isolation measures prompted her to retreat to her home in Los Angeles.[3] With touring canceled indefinitely—her Lover stadium tour was postponed in April 2020 due to health concerns—this period freed up unexpected time, allowing Swift to experiment with introspective songwriting rather than performance-oriented pop production.[4] She later described the process as starting with vivid, unbidden imagery, such as "stars drawn around scars," which evolved into fictional narratives detached from her personal life, marking a departure from autobiographical lyrics in prior works.[5]In a July 23, 2020, Instagram announcement preceding the album's surprise release the following day, Swift explained that isolation fueled her creativity: "In isolation my imagination has run wild and this album is the result, a collection of songs and stories that flowed like a stream of consciousness."[6] This shift toward indie folk aesthetics stemmed from daydreaming about alternate existences, including characters from different eras and small-town settings, which she credited as an escapist response to the confinement and uncertainty of quarantine.[5] Despite cohabitating with partner Joe Alwyn, Swift reflected in a 2024 interview that the experience felt profoundly lonely, intensifying the album's themes of solitude and introspection.[3]The quarantine origins influenced the album's remote production model, with Swift exchanging digital demos and files with collaborators like Aaron Dessner, bypassing in-person sessions to adhere to health protocols.[4] This necessity accelerated the creative timeline, enabling Folklore to be written, recorded, and released within roughly three months, from initial sketches in spring 2020 to its July 24 debut.[5] The result was an album of 16 tracks, predominantly crafted solo or via virtual means, emphasizing storytelling over commercial pressures.[6]
Initial Creative Inspirations
Taylor Swift conceived Folklore during the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, drawing initial inspiration from the isolation of quarantine, which prompted her to explore fictional narratives rather than autobiographical lyrics typical of her prior work. In an interview, Swift described the album's genesis as stemming from a desire to "create a world" of imagined stories, influenced by her time indoors with limited external stimuli, allowing her to delve into character-driven tales of regret, longing, and rural Americana. This shift was catalyzed by canceled tours and postponed projects, redirecting her creative energy toward introspective, story-based songwriting that evoked 1920s or Depression-era aesthetics.The album's folkloric themes were partly inspired by literary influences and broader folklore traditions, though Swift emphasized personal imagination over direct adaptations. She cited the quarantine's enforced solitude as fostering a "cottagecore" vibe, blending indie folk elements with vivid, escapist storytelling that contrasted her pop-heavy catalog. Early demos, sketched on piano and guitar during late March and April 2020, reflected this pivot, with Swift experimenting with sparse arrangements to mimic the intimacy of oral traditions passed down through generations.Critics and Swift herself noted that the inspirations avoided overt pandemic references, instead channeling universal human experiences into fictional vignettes, such as the love triangle in "Cardigan," "August," and "Betty," which she attributed to daydreaming during lockdown walks. This creative approach was informed by her prior interest in narrative depth, seen in songs like "All Too Well," but amplified by the pandemic's introspective pause, leading to a self-described "accidental" folk album recorded remotely with producers Aaron Dessner and Jack Antonoff.
Recording and Production
Collaboration with Aaron Dessner
Taylor Swift initiated her collaboration with Aaron Dessner, guitarist and producer of The National, in late April 2020 amid the COVID-19 quarantine, reaching out unexpectedly for instrumental ideas he had been developing at his Long Pond studio in Upstate New York.[7] Dessner shared a folder of unfinished musical sketches, to which Swift responded within hours with a voice memo featuring the fully realized lyrics and melody for "cardigan," the album's lead single.[7][8]The entire production process occurred remotely, with Swift recording vocals in her Los Angeles home studio and Dessner handling instrumentation and mixing from New York, facilitated by file exchanges, daily text messages, and phone calls over three to four months; the pair never worked in the same physical space due to pandemic restrictions.[7][8] Swift typically supplied lyrics and vocal takes via memos, which Dessner then layered onto his atmospheric, indie-folk-oriented tracks, often refining them iteratively based on her input.[7]This partnership produced 11 of folklore's 16 tracks, including "cardigan," "seven," "peace," "hoax," and "the last great american dynasty," where Dessner received primary production credits and co-writing on nine songs, emphasizing piano-driven arrangements, subtle orchestration, and emotional restraint over polished pop elements.[7][8] Swift explicitly directed Dessner to avoid emulating her prior collaborators like Max Martin or Jack Antonoff, instead drawing from his own stylistic roots in projects like Big Red Machine, which infused the album with a raw, introspective timbre reflective of both artists' quarantine isolation.[8]Dessner later reflected on the synergy as "fireworks, musically," crediting Swift's versatility and work ethic for elevating his sketches into cohesive songs, while noting the process's secrecy—kept from even Swift's label until hours before the album's July 24, 2020, release—allowed unfettered creativity unbound by commercial pressures.[8][7] The collaboration marked Dessner's first with Swift, despite prior acquaintance, and laid the foundation for their subsequent work on evermore, demonstrating remote production's viability in yielding critically acclaimed results.[9]
Sessions with Jack Antonoff
Sessions with Jack Antonoff primarily occurred remotely during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, reflecting the album's quarantine-driven production model. Antonoff, a longtime collaborator with Swift from albums like 1989 and Lover, contributed to tracks including "mirrorball", "august", "this is me trying", and "illicit affairs". These sessions leveraged digital tools for file-sharing and virtual collaboration, as in-person meetings were limited by lockdowns. Antonoff worked from his New Jersey studio, sending instrumental sketches and mixes to Swift, who recorded vocals at home in Los Angeles.[10]Swift initiated contact with Antonoff around April 2020, shortly after beginning work with Aaron Dessner, emphasizing a spontaneous, low-pressure approach to capture the album's introspective mood. Antonoff described the process as "emailing files back and forth," focusing on organic, folk-inspired builds rather than polished pop production. For "mirrorball," he crafted a shimmering guitar riff inspired by Swift's lyrical vulnerability, layering it with subtle synths to evoke a reflective, carnival-like atmosphere. The track's production emphasized emotional immediacy, with Swift's vocals recorded in a single take to preserve raw delivery, a technique Antonoff credited for the song's authenticity."August" featured a more dynamic evolution, starting with piano sketches Antonoff developed, evolving into a swelling indie-rock chorus with reverb-heavy strings added post-recording. Swift noted Antonoff's role in refining these to align with the album's narrative of fleeting romance, achieved through targeted feedback loops rather than extended studio time.This remote efficiency allowed for rapid iteration, contributing to folklore's cohesive sound despite distributed workflows. Antonoff later reflected that the constraints fostered creativity, yielding tracks that prioritized lyrical depth over technical sheen.
Production Techniques
The production of Folklore relied heavily on remote collaboration necessitated by the COVID-19 pandemic, with Taylor Swift recording vocals from a makeshift home studio in Los Angeles using a Neumann U47 microphone, while Aaron Dessner, who produced 11 of the album's 16 tracks, worked from his Long Pond Studio in upstate New York. Justin Vernon of Bon Iver contributed remotely to "exile" (featuring vocals and co-writing) and "peace" (backing vocals and co-writing), collaborating with Dessner via file exchanges.[10] Real-time monitoring occurred via Audiomovers software, supplemented by Zoom, enabling Dessner and engineer Jonathan Low to direct sessions remotely; Swift often sent voice memos with lyrics and melodies, to which Dessner responded by providing folders of experimental instrumental sketches originally intended for his Big Red Machine project.[11][7] This iterative process allowed Swift to complete songs rapidly, such as "cardigan," written overnight atop one of Dessner's tracks, emphasizing a folk-inspired aesthetic with minimal structural alterations post-vocal integration.[12]Dessner's techniques prioritized organic textures and emotional depth, utilizing a vintage 1965 WSW Siemens console for recording and mixing at Long Pond, paired with microphones like the Telefunken U47 for Swift's in-person overdubs and AKG 414s or Coles 4038s for pianos.[11] Pianos featured prominently, with a Yamaha U1 upright played using the soft pedal for a dampened, felted tone on tracks like "cardigan" and "seven," contrasted by a Steinway grand for fuller dynamics in "exile" and "the 1."[11] Electric guitars included a 1971 Fender Telecaster recorded direct into the console with spring reverb for subtle drive, as in "the last great american dynasty," while analogue drum machines like the Vermona DRM1, Dave Smith Tempest, Roland TR-8, and Teenage Engineering OP-1 provided minimalist, overdriven beats; the iOS app FunkBox supplied vintage percussion emulations, often amplified for grit.[11] Ambient elements, such as the glacial drone in "epiphany," were crafted by layering Mellotron MD4000D, Prophet synth, and OP-1 pads in Pro Tools, involving track duplication, reversal, octave drops, varispeed, and Elastic Audio manipulation to evoke expansive, Cocteau Twins-like soundscapes despite occasional session instability from heavy processing.[11]Mixing maintained Swift's vocals as raw and central, avoiding polished pop brightness in favor of natural warmth across her full range, with effects limited to in-the-box tools like Valhalla reverbs, UAD Capitol Chambers, and subtle Eventide H3000 slap delays; some tracks, including "cardigan" and "seven," retained early rough mixes for their inherent "weird magic," while others underwent dynamic balancing to preserve intimacy.[11][12] Orchestral contributions, scored remotely by Bryce Dessner using Sibelius software, were recorded by dispersed musicians sending stems back to Long Pond, integrating strings and woodwinds without in-person ensemble sessions.[11]Jack Antonoff, producing several tracks with Swift, incorporated percussive acoustic guitars for rhythmic drive, as in the upbeat sections of "betty," alongside grand string arrangements on "my tears ricochet" and "august" for ethereal swells, aligning with the album's stripped-back ethos of piano or guitar accompaniment to heighten lyrical introspection.[13] Overall, these methods yielded a cohesive indie-folk sound through secretive, file-encrypted exchanges and focused experimentation, with only select recorded material—often 20% of sessions—finalized to capture spontaneous essence.[11][7]
Musical Composition and Lyrics
Shift to Indie Folk Sound
Folklore represented a marked departure from Taylor Swift's preceding pop-oriented albums, such as Lover (2019), toward a subdued, introspective aesthetic incorporating indie folk elements, conceived and recorded during the COVID-19 quarantine starting in March 2020.[14] This pivot enabled Swift to explore narrative-driven songs from third-person perspectives, drawing on fictional characters rather than personal autobiography, as she explained: “I found myself not only writing my own stories, but also writing about or from the perspective of people I’ve never met.”[15] Remote collaborations with indie-leaning producers Aaron Dessner of The National and Justin Vernon of Bon Iver facilitated this evolution, with Dessner contributing to eleven of the album's sixteen tracks.[14]The album's sound features mellow ballads anchored by piano, hazy strings, orchestration, and muted percussion, evoking atmospheric indie rock textures like morose piano runs and subtle programming glitches.[15] Tracks such as "exile," a gospel-infused duet with Vernon's baritone vocals, and "Betty," with its rootsy harmonica and folk-pop choruses, exemplify this blend, while "cardigan" incorporates vocal stylings reminiscent of The National's Matt Berninger.[15] Influences from artists like Bon Iver's i,i, Phoebe Bridgers' Punisher, and Bob Dylan's acoustic storytelling informed the sparse, reverb-heavy arrangements, contrasting Swift's earlier synth-driven pop.[16]Critics have debated the extent of the indie folk classification, with some characterizing folklore as genre-less atmospheric pop retaining Swift's pop songwriting core, rather than authentic folk, due to its polished melodies and structures akin to prior works like Fearless.[14] Nonetheless, the album's quarantine-born restraint and indie producer inputs marked a deliberate sonic reconfiguration, prioritizing elemental introspection over mainstream polish.[15]
Lyrical Themes and Storytelling
The lyrics of folklore center on narrative-driven tales of regret, unrequited love, betrayal, and introspection, often presented through the viewpoints of fictional or historical figures rather than direct autobiography. Taylor Swift explained that the album's songwriting process involved inventing characters and scenarios, likening the tracks to "short stories" born from pandemic-induced isolation, allowing her to explore emotional landscapes without personal specificity.[17] This approach draws on folk tradition's oral storytelling, weaving vignettes of small-town Americana, lost innocence, and relational complexities, as seen in tracks like "the 1," which reflects on a hypothetical alternate romance with wistful hindsight.A prominent narrative arc forms a "teenage love triangle" across three songs: "cardigan," "august," and "betty." In this storyline, "Betty" serves as the protagonist—a young woman confronting her boyfriend James's infidelity with an unnamed rival—while "august" captures the rival's fleeting summer affair, and "cardigan" offers Betty's retrospective forgiveness amid heartbreak. Swift confirmed this interconnected plot in the 2020 Disney+ documentary folklore: the long pond studio sessions, noting the songs' deliberate sequencing to mimic generational folklore transmission, with "betty" resolving the tension through apology and reconciliation.[17] The triangle evokes 1950s-inspired aesthetics, blending nostalgia with youthful folly, though Swift blurred lines between invention and real-life inspiration, stating the narratives "pass the blame" in classic folk fashion.Other tracks employ biographical storytelling, such as "the last great american dynasty," which chronicles the life of socialite Rebekah Harkness—Swift's Rhode Island mansion's former owner—juxtaposing Harkness's scandals and resilience against public scrutiny with Swift's own experiences of media vilification. This song exemplifies the album's causal realism in linking personal agency to societal judgment, using vivid imagery like "gasoline" dresses and "freak" whispers to depict cycles of notoriety. Songs like "invisible string" and "seven" further emphasize fate, childhood wonder, and escapist fantasy, with "seven" idealizing pre-adolescent friendship as a refuge from adult pain, rooted in Swift's reflections on youthful purity amid global uncertainty in 2020.Overall, the storytelling prioritizes emotional causality—where actions like betrayal yield enduring scars—over resolution, fostering a melancholic tone that critics attribute to the album's quarantine genesis, where Swift isolated in remote studios to conjure these self-contained worlds. While some analyses speculate autobiographical ties (e.g., to past relationships), Swift maintained the primacy of fiction, cautioning against over-literal interpretations that ignore the deliberate narrative distancing.[12] This method not only revitalized her catalog but echoed folkloric traditions of anonymous, enduring tales, as evidenced by the songs' viral fan dissections post-release on July 24, 2020.
Instrumentation and Arrangement
The instrumentation of Folklore emphasizes acoustic and organic elements, diverging from the synth-driven pop of Taylor Swift's prior albums, with prominent use of piano, acoustic and electric guitars, mellotron, synthesizers such as the OP-1, and synth bass across tracks.[18] Percussion, including drum programming and contributions from musicians like Jason Treuting, provides subtle rhythms, often experimental and glitchy, as in the soft, irregular beats underlying "cardigan."[19] Strings and orchestration, handled by Bryce Dessner on select tracks, add atmospheric depth without overpowering the core folk intimacy.[19]Aaron Dessner, who produced 11 of the album's 16 tracks, incorporated live instrumentation from his network of collaborators, favoring a dampened upright piano sound reminiscent of his work with The National to evoke emotional restraint and texture.[11] Unusual elements like the rubber bridge guitar were employed for distinctive timbres, enhancing the album's chamber-folk aesthetic through layered, hand-played arrangements built iteratively in remote sessions.[20] This approach prioritized sparse, evolving builds—starting with piano or guitar foundations and gradually introducing strings or percussion—to mirror the album's narrative introspection, as heard in tracks like "the 1," where acoustic strums drive a melancholic pulse.[21]Jack Antonoff's production on five tracks, such as "mirrorball," introduces slightly more processed elements like verbed-out dream-pop guitar chords and tambourine, while retaining an acoustic base with jangly rhythms and nervous, dance-like sensibilities.[21] Arrangements here blend indie sensibilities with subtle electronic hints, using half-spoken vocals over mid-tempo grooves to heighten vulnerability, though critics noted some tracks' drumming as less distinctive.[21] The duet "exile," co-produced by Dessner and featuring Justin Vernon, layers gruff baritone harmonies against Swift's lighter delivery atop desolate piano and guitar, creating stark isolation through minimalistic interplay.[21] Overall, the album's arrangements favor restraint, with producers mixing at Long Pond Studio to preserve raw, quarantined-recorded intimacy via close-miked acoustics and limited overdubs.[18]
Artwork, Packaging, and Promotion
Visual Aesthetic and Cardigans
The visual aesthetic of Folklore draws from pastoral, woodland imagery evoking folklore tales, with the standard edition cover featuring a black-and-white portrait of Swift gazing upward in a misty forest, photographed by Beth Garrabrant.[22] This monochromatic style, selected to convey introspection and escapism amid the COVID-19 pandemic, contrasts Swift's prior pop visuals and aligns with the album's indie folk ethos, as she described it as imagining "a world that doesn't exist" during quarantine isolation. Limited editions included Polaroid-style images of collaborators like Bon Iver, enhancing a DIY, archival feel reminiscent of old photo albums.Cardigans emerged as a central motif in the album's promotion, symbolizing cozy, introspective creativity; Swift wore an oversized black cardigan from her 2019 documentary Miss Americana during remote writing sessions in early 2020, which she later highlighted in the HBO documentary Folklore: The Long Pond Studio Sessions released November 25, 2020. This garment, a vintage-inspired knit, became iconic for representing the "cabin in the woods" vibe of the album's creation, with Swift noting it as part of her casual attire while composing on a keyboard in her home. Merchandise capitalized on this, launching official Folklore cardigans via the Taylor Swift online store on July 24, 2020—the release day—including cream, black, and grey knit styles priced at $49.99 to $89.99, which sold out rapidly and generated significant resale value, with some fetching over $1,000 on secondary markets by August 2020 due to limited stock. The cardigan's popularity tied into broader "cottagecore" trends amplified by the pandemic, though Swift emphasized its personal significance over fashion hype in interviews.
Surprise Release Strategy
Taylor Swift announced the release of Folklore just 16 hours before its midnight drop on July 24, 2020, via a surprise Instagram post at 1:24 p.m. EDT, stating, "Tonight at midnight I’ll be releasing my entire brand new album... Most of the things I had planned this summer have ended up being canceled and I ended up playing up my creativity/photos of my clothing and counting down the months until I can see you again." This abrupt strategy deviated from her typical album rollout cycles, which often included singles, music videos, and extensive promotion.The decision to forgo traditional marketing was influenced by the COVID-19 pandemic, which halted Swift's Lover tour and stadium performances, prompting a pivot to spontaneous creation during quarantine. Swift collaborated remotely with producers Aaron Dessner and Jack Antonoff, finalizing the album in under three months, with the surprise element intended to create immediate buzz without spoilers. Industry analysts noted that this approach leveraged Swift's massive social media following—over 140 million Instagram followers at the time—to generate organic virality, as fans mobilized to stream and purchase upon announcement.The strategy proved highly effective, with Folklore debuting at No. 1 on the Billboard 200, selling 846,000 equivalent album units in its first week—over 1.3 million worldwide—and marking the largest opening week for a female artist since Nielsen Music began tracking in 1991. It also achieved the biggest Spotify global debut of 2020 at the time, with 75.8 million streams on day one. Critics and observers attributed the success to the surprise factor reducing piracy risks and capitalizing on pent-up demand during lockdowns, though some marketing experts questioned its replicability for less-established artists due to Swift's unparalleled fan loyalty. Subsequent analysis from Republic Records highlighted how the unannounced drop minimized leaks, as production wrapped just weeks prior, ensuring freshness.
Commercial Performance
Chart Achievements
Folklore debuted at number one on the US Billboard 200 chart dated August 8, 2020, with 846,000 album-equivalent units, including 615,000 pure album sales, 218,000 streaming-equivalent album units (from 289.85 million on-demand streams), and track-equivalent units, marking the largest opening week for any album by a female artist since Nielsen Music began tracking in 1991 and the biggest debut week overall since Swift's 2019 album Lover.[23] The album accumulated eight non-consecutive weeks at number one, the longest reign of any album in 2020, and marked Swift as the first artist to simultaneously debut an album at number one on the Billboard 200 and a single at number one on the Hot 100 with "Cardigan."[24]In the United Kingdom, Folklore entered the Official Albums Chart at number one on August 7, 2020, with 37,060 units, becoming Swift's fifth UK number-one album and the first by a female artist to achieve five number-one studio albums; it held the top position for three consecutive weeks.[25][26] Internationally, the album reached number one in Australia, Canada, Ireland, New Zealand, and Scotland, among others, while peaking in the top five in countries including Germany, the Netherlands, and Sweden, contributing to global record-breaking debuts across streaming and sales metrics.[27]
Country/Region
Peak Position
Source
United States (Billboard 200)
1
[23]
United Kingdom (Official Albums)
1
[25]
Australia (ARIA)
1
[27]
Canada (Billboard Canadian)
1
[27]
Lead single "Cardigan" debuted at number one on the Billboard Hot 100, making Swift the first artist to top both the Hot 100 and Billboard 200 simultaneously with debut entries from the same album, while "The 1" and "Exile" (featuring Bon Iver) both reached the Hot 100 top 10.[24]
Sales and Streaming Data
Folklore achieved significant commercial success, with global sales exceeding 2 million album-equivalent units in its first week of release on July 24, 2020. In the United States, the album debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 chart, selling 846,000 units in its debut week, marking Swift's ninth consecutive number-one album and her largest sales week since Nielsen tracking began. This figure included 615,000 pure album sales (physical and digital downloads), 218,000 streaming equivalent album (SEA) units derived from 289.85 million on-demand streams, and track equivalents.By the end of 2020, Folklore had sold over 3.3 million units worldwide, with U.S. sales reaching 1.2 million pure copies and total album-equivalent units surpassing 2 million domestically. The album was certified 2× Platinum by the RIAA on November 20, 2020, for 2 million units shipped in the U.S., reflecting a combination of 1.2 million traditional sales and streaming equivalents. Internationally, it topped charts in countries including the UK, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand, with the UK reporting 67,000 units in its debut week.Streaming performance was robust, particularly on Spotify, where Folklore amassed over 10 billion global streams as of 2024, contributing to its enduring metrics. In the U.S., Spotify streams alone exceeded 2.5 billion by 2022, with tracks like "Cardigan" surpassing 1 billion streams individually. Apple Music reported the album as one of the most streamed of 2020, with over 500 million U.S. streams in its first week. Total U.S. streaming equivalents reached 1.5 million units by year-end 2020, underscoring the album's shift toward streaming dominance amid declining physical sales industry-wide.
Metric
U.S. Figure
Global Figure
Source
First-Week Units
846,000 (2020)
2 million+
Billboard
Pure Sales (End of 2020)
1.2 million
3.3 million total units
RIAA/IFPI
Total Streams (Spotify, as of 2024)
2.5 billion+
10 billion+
Spotify/Chartmasters
Long-term data shows sustained streaming growth, with Folklore generating over 10 billion global streams by 2024, equivalent to approximately 6.7 million additional album units under standard multipliers (1,500 streams = 1 album unit). Physical sales, including vinyl editions tied to the surprise release, accounted for 40% of debut week U.S. units, a high ratio reflecting fan demand for collectibles despite broader industry trends toward digital consumption.
Long-Term Metrics
Folklore has maintained strong long-term commercial viability, with global album-equivalent units exceeding 2 million by mid-2021, driven by sustained streaming and physical sales resurgence. As of 2024, the album had accumulated over 10 billion streams on Spotify alone, contributing to its certification as Spotify's most-streamed female album by a solo artist at the time. This endurance is evidenced by its re-entry into the Billboard 200 chart multiple times post-initial release, including peaking at No. 7 in 2023 amid broader catalog boosts from Swift's re-recording projects.Certifications reflect its ongoing sales momentum: in the United States, Folklore achieved six-times Platinum status from the RIAA for 6 million units. Internationally, it earned 2× Platinum in the UK (600,000 units) by 2021 and Platinum in Australia (70,000 units) shortly after release, with cumulative figures underscoring catalog depth over viral peaks. Long-term streaming data from 2023 reports indicate over 1.5 billion annual on-demand streams in the US, sustaining its position in Swift's top-performing releases despite no new singles promotion after 2020.
Metric
Value
Date Achieved
Source
US RIAA Certification
6× Platinum (6M units)
As of 2024
RIAA
Global Spotify Streams
>10B
As of 2024
Spotify/ChartMasters
UK BPI Certification
2× Platinum (600K units)
2021
BPI
Annual US Streams (2023)
>1.5B
2023
Luminate/Billboard
These metrics highlight Folklore's shift toward evergreen appeal, contrasting initial pandemic-driven sales spikes, with vinyl reissues in 2023 generating additional revenue exceeding 100,000 units in the US. Analysts attribute this longevity to its integration into Swift's touring repertoire during the 2023-2024 Eras Tour, where medley performances boosted catalog streams by 20-30% quarterly.)
Reception and Analysis
Critical Praise
Upon its release on July 24, 2020, Taylor Swift's folklore received widespread critical acclaim for its departure from her previous pop-oriented work, earning a Metacritic score of 88 out of 100 based on 26 reviews, marking her highest-rated album to date.[28][29] Critics highlighted the album's introspective folk sound, co-produced by Swift with Aaron Dessner of The National and Jack Antonoff, as a mature evolution emphasizing narrative depth over commercial hooks.[30]Rob Sheffield of Rolling Stone awarded it 4.5 out of 5 stars, praising its "goth-folk" aesthetic driven by acoustic guitar and piano, which he described as a "head-spinning, heart-breaking" collection that showcased Swift's songwriting prowess through vivid, character-driven stories like those in "The Last Great American Dynasty" and "Invisible String."[30] Similarly, Variety's review lauded folklore as a "serious act of sonic palette cleansing," noting its restraint and emotional authenticity amid the COVID-19 pandemic, with tracks like "Cardigan" exemplifying Swift's ability to blend personal reflection with universal themes of isolation and longing.[31]Pitchfork's review emphasized Swift's storytelling as her core strength, commending the album's "enchanted and magic" quality through intricate narratives and subtle production that evoked a sense of timeless folklore, though it noted the 8.0 rating sparked debate among fans for slightly tempering the aggregate score.[32] Outlets like Billboard retrospectively affirmed its status as a "critical and commercial blockbuster," crediting the surprise drop and indie-folk pivot for revitalizing Swift's artistic reputation during a period of global uncertainty.[33] This consensus positioned folklore as a pivotal work, with its emphasis on lyrical introspection and minimalist arrangements earning comparisons to literary traditions rather than mainstream pop.[34]
Criticisms and Skepticism
Some music critics expressed skepticism about the authenticity of folklore's folk aesthetic, viewing it as a superficial stylistic pivot rather than a substantive genre exploration. Reviewers noted that the album's acoustic arrangements and narrative-driven lyrics evoked indie-folk influences but retained core pop structures, such as chorus-centric songwriting, which undermined claims of a full departure from Swift's commercial pop roots.[35] For instance, one analysis described it as "a pop record dressed in folkish garbs," arguing it represented a "toe dipped in shallow folk-pop waters" rather than innovative immersion.[35] This perspective highlighted how Swift's established persona as a strategic career architect fueled doubts, with some perceiving the quarantine-era release as a calculated reinvention amid industry disruptions rather than organic evolution.[32]Critics also pointed to uneven track quality, suggesting the 16-song length diluted cohesion and included filler material. Specific tracks like "Seven" and "Hoax" were cited as examples needing "selective pruning" to elevate the album's overall impact, implying that not all compositions matched the lyrical precision or atmospheric depth of standouts.[32] While the production—handled remotely by collaborators Aaron Dessner and Jack Antonoff—earned praise for its intimacy, detractors argued it prioritized homage to familiar indie references over bold originality, resulting in a work that felt derivative of its producers' prior outputs rather than distinctly Swiftian.[32] These observations, drawn from contemporaneous reviews, underscore a broader wariness that folklore's critical acclaim might overstate its transformative qualities, positioning it as evolutionary rather than revolutionary within Swift's discography.[35]
Controversies
Merchandise Logo Dispute
In July 2020, shortly after the release of Taylor Swift's album Folklore, merchandise items featuring a stylized embroidered patch with the word "folklore" in lowercase script drew accusations of design plagiarism from Amira Rasool, owner of the Black-owned fashion brand The Folklore. Rasool highlighted the visual similarities on Instagram on July 24, 2020, noting that Swift's patch closely resembled her brand's logo, which uses a comparable cursive font and layout for apparel tags and branding.[36][37]Swift's team responded by altering the merchandise design, replacing the disputed patch on items like cardigans with a simplified version reading only "folklore" without the contested styling, effective immediately for new production. No admission of intentional copying was made, but Swift publicly supported Rasool's brand by donating an undisclosed amount to The Folklore and to the Black in Fashion Council, an organization promoting diversity in fashion.[38][39]The incident sparked online debate about intellectual property in celebrity merchandising, with critics questioning whether the similarity constituted theft or mere coincidence in a common typographic style, while supporters praised Swift's quick redesign and financial gesture as responsive allyship. Existing disputed merchandise remained available briefly before the update, but no legal action ensued from Rasool or her brand.[36][38]
Authenticity Debates
Critics have questioned the authenticity of Folklore as folk music, arguing that despite its acoustic arrangements, narrative-driven lyrics, and rustic imagery, the album represents a stylized pop interpretation rather than adherence to traditional folk practices, which emphasize communal origins, oral transmission, and unpolished expression from everyday lives. Traditional folk authenticity derives from collective cultural heritage rather than individual commercial artistry, a standard Folklore fails to meet given Taylor Swift's status as a global pop icon producing a highly engineered studio album.[40][41]Swift's genre pivot from country and pop to this folk-infused sound has fueled debates on performative authenticity, with some viewing collaborations—such as with indie-folk artist Bon Iver on "Exile"—as strategic appropriations for credibility rather than genuine immersion in folk traditions. Reviews describe the effort as a "lackluster attempt at being indie," citing superficial elements like the black-and-white album artwork and "folksy hipster" aesthetics as disconnected from the organic, grassroots ethos of folk music scenes. Swift's history of calculated image shifts, including accent modulations in earlier work, further erodes perceptions of rooted authenticity in folk's emphasis on lived, regional experience.[42][43]Defenders counter that Folklore's creation amid the 2020 COVID-19 lockdowns lent it personal authenticity, as Swift composed much of it in isolation, drawing on fictional characters for introspective storytelling that echoes folk's narrative traditions without claiming literal autobiography. However, academic analyses frame the album as engineering "modern folklore" through pop mechanisms, processing personal and societal events in a folkloric manner but commodified for mass consumption, diverging from folk's non-commercial roots. These debates underscore broader tensions in contemporary music, where genre labels like "folk" often serve marketing over strict fidelity to origins.[44][45]
Legacy and Impact
Awards and Recognitions
Folklore secured the Album of the Year award at the 63rd Annual Grammy Awards on March 14, 2021, marking Taylor Swift's third victory in the category—following wins for Fearless (2010) and 1989 (2016)—and establishing her as the first woman to achieve this milestone.[46] The album received five nominations overall, including Best Pop Vocal Album (which it lost to Dua Lipa's Future Nostalgia), Best Pop Duo/Group Performance for "Exile" (featuring Bon Iver), and Song of the Year and Best Pop Solo Performance for "Cardigan."[46]At the 2020 Apple Music Awards, announced on November 18, Folklore contributed to Swift's Songwriter of the Year honor, with Apple citing the album's exceptional songwriting amid its surprise release during the COVID-19 pandemic.[47] This recognition underscored the project's introspective narratives and collaborative production with Aaron Dessner and Jack Antonoff.The album earned nominations at the 2020 American Music Awards, including Favorite Pop/Rock Album, which it won; Swift prevailed in broader fields like Artist of the Year, reflecting Folklore's role in her pandemic-era output.) Internationally, it garnered acclaim such as the International Album of the Year at Sweden's Grammis in 2021, affirming its global resonance despite limited physical promotion.[48]
Influence on Swift's Career
The release of Folklore on July 24, 2020, marked a pivotal artistic pivot for Taylor Swift, transitioning her from the polished pop production of albums like Reputation (2017) and Lover (2019) to an indie-folk aesthetic characterized by lo-fi instrumentation, neo-classical elements, and introspective, character-driven narratives rather than strictly autobiographical content.[49] This shift, developed in isolation during the early COVID-19 pandemic, involved collaborations with producer Aaron Dessner of The National—who co-wrote and produced 11 of the album's 16 tracks—expanding Swift's creative partnerships beyond her established circle and demonstrating her genre versatility from country origins to pop dominance and now folk experimentation.[49]Commercially, Folklore achieved blockbuster success without traditional promotional singles, tours, or media blitzes, debuting at number one on the Billboard 200 and becoming the best-selling album of 2020 with 1.2 million units sold, underscoring Swift's entrenched fan loyalty and ability to drive streams and sales through surprise drops.[49] This performance not only revitalized her chart dominance amid industry disruptions but also validated a model of artist-led, low-key releases that prioritized songcraft over formulaic hits, influencing subsequent works like the companion album Evermore (2020) and reinforcing her as a adaptive force in evolving music consumption patterns.The album's critical and awards acclaim further solidified Swift's stature as a serious songwriter, earning five nominations at the 2021 Grammy Awards—including Album of the Year, which it won—marking her third victory in that category (following Fearless in 2010 and 1989 in 2016) and making her the fourth artist ever to achieve this feat.[49] Tracks like "cardigan" (nominated for Song of the Year and Best Pop Solo Performance) and "exile" (featuring Bon Iver, nominated for Best Pop Duo/Group Performance) highlighted her prowess in blending vulnerability with cinematic scope, elevating her reputation beyond pop confectionery to that of a narrative innovator and broadening her appeal to indie and literary audiences.[49]Overall, Folklore recalibrated Swift's career trajectory by decoupling her success from high-visibility controversies or maximalist production, allowing a focus on mature, fiction-infused storytelling that critics hailed as her finest work to date and which paved the way for sustained artistic exploration in later projects, including the introspective segments of her Eras Tour (2023–2024).[49] This era demonstrated causal links between creative risk-taking and commercial resilience, as the album's quarantine-era resonance—without reliance on radio-friendly "bops"—challenged pop industry norms and affirmed Swift's capacity to reinvent without alienating her base.[49]
Cultural and Performative Reach
Folklore, released on July 24, 2020, exerted significant cultural influence by aligning pop music with folk traditions, fostering introspection amid the COVID-19 pandemic's isolation. The album's storytelling, such as the "teenage love triangle" trilogy comprising "cardigan," "august," and "betty," reimagined folktale archetypes with nuanced character perspectives, diverging from simplistic moral binaries to explore complex emotions like lingering regret and ambiguous reconciliation.[44] This approach, including telescoping historical traumas in tracks like "epiphany," connected personal narratives to broader intergenerational experiences, positioning the work as a modern vehicle for shared cultural processing. Critics noted its role in elevating Swift's reputation for literary depth, with the album's pandemic-timing release providing communal solace through abstracted tales of betrayal and childhood reminiscence, as in "my tears ricochet" and "seven."[44] Over time, it redefined Swift's image toward poetic acclaim, evoking Romantic literary traditions via references to William Wordsworth in "the lakes" and a Thoreau-inspired aesthetic in visuals.[50]Performative elements extended through intimate documentation and later live adaptations, amplifying its reach. The Disney+ special Folklore: The Long Pond Studio Sessions (2020) captured stripped-down renditions in a rustic studio with collaborators Aaron Dessner and Jack Antonoff, emphasizing vulnerability and creative isolation that mirrored lockdown realities.[44] In the Eras Tour (2023–2024), the Folklore segment featured a moss-draped cabin stage prop and folk-infused instrumentation, transforming album tracks into theatrical vignettes that evoked woodland mysticism and narrative immersion for audiences.[51] This staging, including live debuts of songs like "the 1" with ethereal lighting and acoustic arrangements, cultivated a sense of communal storytelling, contributing to the tour's status as a cultural phenomenon that reinforced themes of empathy and connection beyond mere performance.[51] Such adaptations underscored the album's evolution from introspective recording to a performative anchor in Swift's career-spanning retrospectives, influencing fan rituals and broader discussions on pop's narrative potential.[50]