Tools
Change country:

What Taylor Swift Sees in “The Albatross”

How do you get the albatross off your neck? You know, your albatross. Your own dank collar of bird carcass, bespoke feathery deadweight of shame/rage/neurosis/solipsism/the past/whatever, the price of being you as it feels on a bad day … How do you let it drop?

In Taylor Swift’s “The Albatross”—a bonus track on her new double album, The Tortured Poets Department—the albatross is a person. A woman, to be precise. “She’s the albatross / She is here to destroy you.” Which could be a trope from some slab of 1970s misogynist boogie, Bad Company or Nazareth howling about a faithless woman and her evil ways, etc., etc., but—because this is Taylor Swift—it isn’t.

Let me quickly locate myself in the Taylorverse. I’m a “Bad Blood”/“We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together” guy. I like the bangers, the big tunes. Midnights was not my cup of tea: overdetermined as to lyrics (too many words), underpowered as to melodies (not enough tunes). For me, it was as if she’d taken the DNA of a maundering, heavy-breathing, medium-Swift song like Reputation’s “Dress” and unraveled it over a whole album, abetted by the soupy skills of Jack Antonoff. But what do I know? Midnights was one of the biggest albums of all time. And now, less than two years later: The Tortured Poets Department. And: “The Albatross.”

[Read: Taylor Swift is having quality-control issues]

Sonically, musically, we’re in Folklore territory with this song: the strings; the wending, woodwindy vocal line; the tender electronica; the muted mood; the pewter wash of tastefulness. Chamber music, if the chamber in question has been decorated by Bed Bath & Beyond. Is there a tune? I mean, kind of. Not one you’re going to be bellowing in a toneless rapture at the wheel of your car, but it’s there.

Lyrically, however, things are more lively. There’s this woman, the albatross: a bad habit, a bad relationship, a self-ensnaring situation, a bundle of familiar negatives (“Devils that you know / Raise worse hell than a stranger”). People have warned you about this person. She’s bad news! And Swift, ever-alert to the opprobrium of the herd, cannot help identifying with her. The voice shifts to the first person: “Locked me up in towers / But I’d visit in your dreams.” Reputation-style vibes of slander and persecution are felt: “Wise men once read fake news / And they believed it / Jackals raised their hackles …” As always, the Swifties are speculating: Who’s this song for? Who is it about? Joe Alwyn? Travis Kelce—and the warnings he got when he started dating Swift? Is she his own stubborn albatross?

By the end of the song, the singer herself has assumed the form of the albatross, and is flapping in to perform a “rescue.” “The devil that you know / Looks now more like an angel.” Embrace your shadow? Embrace your albatross? Embrace your partner with your own long-feathered and doom-laden albatross wings?

This is not how it usually goes with albatrosses.

[Read: Travis Kelce is another puzzle for Taylor Swift fans to crack]

Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s The Rime of the Ancient Mariner is the source, the fons et origo, of the albatross metaphor. In the Rime, a sailor shoots an albatross, and brings a curse upon his ship. Why does he shoot the albatross? No reason, or none given in the poem. Maybe it’s the old existentialist acte gratuit, more than a century early: Maybe he does it because the sun is in his eyes, like Meursault in Camus’s L’Étranger. He shoots it, anyway, prangs it with his crossbow, and the wind drops, and the ship slides into a hell-sea, and the dead bird, as punishment and emblem of shame, is hung around his neck.

Back, then, to our question: How do you get rid of the albatross?

Coleridge, fortunately for us, was very clear on this: You bless the water snakes. It’s all in Part IV of the Rime. The ship is becalmed, the sea is rancid, the crew are dead, and the Mariner—albatross slung Björk-ishly around his neck—is sitting on the deck in a state of nightmare. Meaning, purpose, a following wind: all gone. Perished with his shipmates. Now he’s in a scummy realm, a realm of mere biological outlasting. “And a thousand thousand slimy things / Lived on; and so did I …”

But. However. And yet. With nothing else to do, with no phone to look at, he watches the slimy things as they writhe and flare in the water, super-white in the moonlight, darker and more luxuriously hued when in the shadow cast by the ship itself. And something happens. His heart opens. Or perhaps it breaks. He is mutely, selflessly stirred and awakened. With his core, from his core, he spontaneously exalts what is before him: He blesses the water snakes.

And with a complicated downy loosening, and maybe a glancing clang from its beak, the albatross—fatal baggage of a bird—falls off into the sea.

Taylor Swift is not the first musician to engage with albatrossness. There’s Fleetwood Mac’s beautiful instrumental “Albatross” from 1968—slow celestial wingbeats, bluesy exhalations over a dazzling sea. There’s Public Image Ltd’s trudging, splintering “Albatross” from 1979, interpersonal, more in the Swift vein: “I know you very well / You are unbearable.” Corrosion of Conformity’s “Albatross” is a kind of sludge-rocking, negatively charged “Free Bird”: “You can call me lazy / You can call me wrong … Albatross, fly on, fly on.”

But for the full Coleridgean thing, the full voyage, nothing beats Iron Maiden’s “Rime of the Ancient Mariner.” The live version, preferably. This is a straight-up workingman’s adaptation of the poem, 14 minutes of galumphing rock opera, Coleridge’s words doggedly paraphrased by Maiden bassist–vision guy Steve Harris, and it succeeds spectacularly. Especially at the water-snakes moment, which the band orchestrates to perfection: a flicked and rushing pattern on the hi-hat, a trebly-warbly melodic figure on the bass, palm-muted chug-a-chug of one, then two (then three?) guitars, the tension blissfully building until Bruce Dickinson, with soaring all-gobbling theatricality, sings it out. “Then the spell starts to BREAK / The albatross falls from his NECK / Sinks down like LEAD / Into the SEA / Then down in falls comes the” [King Diamond–style infernal androgynous scream] “RAAAAAAIIN!!”

So what are the water snakes? Coleridge’s Rime is not, for me, an allegory, so the water snakes are not representing or symbolizing something. They are something. A coiling and uncoiling beautiful-terrible, playful-awful force that breaks the surface in snaky loops and flashes. Wonderfully indifferent to us, horrifyingly indifferent to us. But mysteriously in relationship with us, because it is in our eyes that these water snakes, these incandescent reptiles, these limbless creatures of the deep, are made holy. We are the ones who can bless them.

And you can’t decide to bless the water snakes, that’s the point. It’s not about gratitude. It’s not about improving your mental health. No squint of effort, no knotting or unknotting of the frontal lobes will get you there. The blessing arises by itself, or it doesn’t arise at all. Total brain bypass: a love so simple and helpless it barely even knows what it’s loving.

[Read: James Parker on the Rick Rubin guide to creativity]

So it becomes a question of orienting oneself to the possibility of this love. How to do it? I’m out of my depth here—which is just as it should be, for here we are in the zone of the mystics and the mega-meditators. We are full fathom five, where your feet don’t touch anything, because there’s nothing to touch. If you’re the Ancient Mariner—or perhaps if you’re addicted to opiates, as Coleridge was—you’ll have to go through it, all of it. You’ll have to be carried to the end of yourself. The blessing of the water snakes happens at the Mariner’s clinical bottoming-out: when he’s utterly isolated, on a suppurating sea, besieged by the forces of death.

The rest of us, maybe we don’t have to go—or be taken—that far. Maybe there are other, less drastic, more everyday opportunities and invitations for us to be broken down and opened up. For our grip on the albatross to be unclenched. For the love to pour through us like Iron Maiden. For the albatross itself to wrap its angelic Taylor Swift wings around your inner Travis Kelce.

One way or another, though, sooner or later, gently or with loud sunderings and burstings, it’s going to happen. Life, thank God—it’ll get you and get you again.

This article has been adapted from James Parker’s upcoming book, Get Me Through the Next Five Minutes: Odes to Being Alive.


Read full article on: theatlantic.com
Singer-songwriter Huey Lewis on seeing his songs come to life on stage
Singer-songwriter Huey Lewis joins "CBS Mornings" to talk about his new Broadway musical, "The Heart of Rock and Roll," and working through hearing loss.
cbsnews.com
Best Buy has a huge sale on TVs this Memorial Day
Save hundreds on TVs from top brands like Samsung, LG, TCL and more with Best Buy's Memorial Day deals.
cbsnews.com
Women live through deadly Texas tornado as it cuts across road they were traveling in frightening video
The twister went on to kill several people, but the pair survived their harrowing ordeal.
nypost.com
Trump Flag Seen Flying at Post Office Sparks Investigation
The Donald Trump 2024 flag was reportedly spotted by attendees of the Memorial Day Parade in nearby Bethlehem, New York.
newsweek.com
Pro-Palestinian protesters shut down 101 Freeway in downtown L.A.
Dozens of pro-Palestinian protesters shutdown the 101 Freeway in downtown Los Angeles on Monday afternoon.
latimes.com
Trump responds to special counsel's effort to limit his remarks about FBI
Trump falsely claimed last week that FBI agents who searched Mar-a-Lago in August 2022 were "authorized to shoot me."
cbsnews.com
Martha's Vineyard resident arrested in Massachusetts stabbing spree possibly linked to Connecticut homicide
Suspect Jared Ravizza, who is accused of stabbing six people on Saturday, is reportedly being considered as a suspect in a separate homicide in Connecticut.
foxnews.com
Donald Trump Calls Latest Jack Smith Motion 'Extremely Problematic'
Trump's attorneys are seeking sanctions against federal prosecutors in the former president's classified documents case.
newsweek.com
Kodai Senga appears to hint at Mets rehab disagreement as frustrating injury setbacks mount
The litany of issues and setbacks Kodai Senga has encountered since being shut down with a shoulder strain in spring training basically encapsulates the entire season in Queens.
nypost.com
Polarizing MLB umpire Angel Hernandez retiring: report
After 34 seasons umpiring Major League Baseball, Angel Hernandez is reportedly retiring on Tuesday after growing quite the reputation.
foxnews.com
Popular California beach closed for the holiday after shark bumped surfer off his board
Authorities have closed a 2-mile stretch of a popular Southern California beach for the Memorial Day holiday after a shark bumped a surfer off his board the night before
abcnews.go.com
Polarizing umpire Angel Hernandez set to immediately retire from MLB
One of MLB’s most infamous umpires Ángel Hernández is planning on retiring
nypost.com
Jury awards drag performer $1.1M in case against blogger who made false posts
The day after Eric Posey performed at a Pride event in June 2022, an Idaho blogger falsely claimed that he had exposed himself, according to a lawsuit.
washingtonpost.com
United Airlines flight aborted before takeoff when plane engine catches fire, gushes smoke at Chicago airport: video
The FAA temporarily halted arrivals into the Chicago airport on one of the busiest travel weekends of the year until regular operations started at 2:45 p.m., the agency said.
nypost.com
Kourtney Kardashian went through ‘5 failed IVF cycles and 3 retrievals’ before getting pregnant with Rocky
The Lemme creator and Travis Barker welcomed their first child together in November 2023.
nypost.com
Map Shows Florida Cities Break Heat Records Amid Surging Temperatures
A heat wave rocked the Gulf Coast as residents celebrated the holiday weekend.
newsweek.com
Nobody hurt after plane's engine catches fire at Chicago O'Hare airport
The Federal Aviation Administration says a commercial airliner’s engine caught fire at Chicago O’Hare International Airport
abcnews.go.com
Alex Rodriguez left stunned by daughter surprising him at Timberwolves playoff game
Former Yankees star Alex Rodriguez got a surprise on Sunday that left him shocked and smiling from ear to ear. 
nypost.com
Broadway star Andy Karl already ‘swanning’ about NYC with ‘new woman’ after ending marriage with Orfeh just ‘weeks’ ago
Andy Karl — the Tony-nominated husband of beloved theater star Orfeh — broke off their 23-year marriage after falling for his co-star in an Australian production of the musical “Groundhog Day.”
nypost.com
Tommy DeVito among Giants players with most to gain, lose during OTAs
The school year is winding down in most places, but Brian Daboll is just beginning to impart his lesson plans to the Giants. 
nypost.com
Bob Menendez Is Blowing Campaign Gold on Lawyers—and Pricey Steaks
Photo Illustration by Elizabeth Brockway/The Daily Beast/Reuters/GettyFighting to keep himself out of prison has cost Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ) a lot—but not his appetite, campaign finance records show.The embattled Democrat, now on trial for allegations he accepted gold bars and envelopes of cash from New Jersey businessmen in exchange for favors f
thedailybeast.com
U.S. sailors take a Memorial Day turn on L.A.'s 6th Street Bridge
Los Angeles' 6th Street Bridge draws hundreds of sailors on Memorial Day.
latimes.com
List of New Weapons Spain's Sending to Ukraine
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez said, "It is more important than ever to redouble our support" for Ukraine.
newsweek.com
Monaco F1 News: More Footage From Horrific Sergio Perez Crash Shows Photographers Run From Debris
A horrifying incident at the Monaco GP led to a red flag and significant concern over trackside safety.
newsweek.com
Jason Kelce Defends His Wife Against ‘Homemaker’ Hecklers
Lisa Lake/Getty ImagesJason Kelce didn’t mince words while shutting down a social media troll’s harsh criticism of his wife and her role in their family.Days after denouncing Harrison Butker’s viral commencement speech—in which the Chiefs kicker told female graduates that their “most important title” in life would be “homemaker”—Kelce responded to
thedailybeast.com
NBA legend Bill Walton dies at age 71
Bill Walton, the college basketball superstar who went on to win two NBA titles and followed that up with a successful broadcasting career, has died at age 71 following a battle with cancer. Elise Preston takes a look back at the sports icon, activist and noted deadhead's legacy.
cbsnews.com
Storms kill more than 20 across 4 states
More than 20 people, including two young children, were killed as dangerous storms moved across four states over Memorial Day weekend. Meg Oliver has the latest.
cbsnews.com
Ryan Phillippe shares Reese Witherspoon throwback photo nearly 16 years after divorce: 'We were hot'
On Monday, the “Prey" star took to his Instagram Story to share a photo of him and his ex-wife, Reese Witherspoon, posing together. The former couple is parents to daughter Ava, 24, and son Deacon, 20.
foxnews.com
Eagles Flight, half brother to Flightline, makes impressive winning debut at Santa Anita
Jockey Flavien Prat rides Eagles Flight, the 3-year-old son of Curlin, to a 2 3/4-length win at Santa Anita in his debut.
latimes.com
Dog rescued after being chased off 'steep cliffside' by raccoons: video
A dog named Cushy-Pup was rescued by San Francisco Fire Department officials on Sunday after being chased off a cliff by raccoons. Officials say that the animal was unharmed.
foxnews.com
Tom Brady cautiously optimistic on Chiefs' chances of 3-peating: 'It's a big challenge'
Not even Tom Brady, a seven-time Lombardi Trophy winner, ever won three Super Bowls in a row — nobody has. But if anyone can, Brady says it could be the Kansas City Chiefs.
foxnews.com
Nikki Haley consoles victims of Oct. 7 Hamas attack on trip to Israel-Gaza border
Former presidential hopeful Nikki Haley consoled an Israeli community that had been ravaged by the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas attack, during a Memorial Day trip she made to the Israel-Gaza border.
nypost.com
Homicide reported in D.C. on each day of three-day holiday weekend
At least three men were killed in separate incidents in the District over Memorial Day weekend.
washingtonpost.com
Ideological growth of a poison Ivy: Columbia’s journey from scholarship to activism
The images of the recent protests at Columbia University have grabbed the attention of the American public: students chanting for a Palestinian state.
nypost.com
Bill Walton’s longtime ESPN partner Dave Pasch pays tribute to legendary player, broadcaster
The two had been calling college basketball games alongside one another since 2013 and became well-known for their on-air antics with one another.
nypost.com
Deadly Bomb Strikes, Murdered Keepers and Lion Attack at Ukraine Zoo Targeted by Putin
HandoutDodging Russian bullets and bombs, zookeepers and volunteers, who were risking their lives to save big cats, bears, apes and thousands of other creatures at a besieged Ukrainian zoo, captured hearts worldwide. The Feldman Ecopark in Kharkiv had been shelled relentlessly since the conflict began on Feb. 24, 2022. Throughout it all, a handful
thedailybeast.com
MLB grounds crew member gets trapped under tarp in rain delay
A Cincinnati Reds grounds crew member was trapped under the tarp while she was helping assist but it on the field during a rain delay.
foxnews.com
Colorado police plan to use drones as first responders, calling the technology 'future of law enforcement'
Several local law enforcement agencies in Colorado, including Denver, are making plans to start dispatching drones instead of officers to respond to 911 calls.
foxnews.com
Donald Trump Could Face Two More Criminal Indictments: Attorney
The former president is "more than likely" to be indicted over an alleged Arizona fake electors plot, according to a leading attorney.
newsweek.com
Legal analyst predicts defense's closing arguments in Trump hush money trial
CNN legal analyst Ryan Goodman provides insight into the potential defense strategy that may be presented during the closing arguments of former president Donald Trump's Hush money trial.
edition.cnn.com
Biden honors late son Beau in somber Memorial Day message: ‘The hurt is still real’
President Biden on Monday invoked the memory of his late son, Iraq War veteran Beau Biden, while addressing an audience at Arlington National Cemetery for a Memorial Day ceremony.
foxnews.com
Panthers coach Paul Maurice mocks Jacob Trouba’s $5K fine: ‘Poor lad’
It’s an inconsequential punishment for an Eastern Conference Final series that has been chock-full of nasty play from both sides.
nypost.com
Yankees’ DJ LeMahieu finally set to make season debut after foot injury
Two months late, DJ LeMahieu finally appears ready to make his season debut. 
nypost.com
Vets say they were sickened at secret base near nuclear test site
For decades, the U.S. government conducted nuclear bomb tests near what is sometimes called Area 52.
cbsnews.com
Bill Walton's kindness and wonderful wackiness made us the grateful ones
From calling John Wooden twice a week to pretending to be NBA players on voice messages left for his son, Bill Walton was an eternally kind and quirky soul.
latimes.com
Denver Offers How-To Guide on Turning Cities into Taxpayer-Funded Immigrant Sanctuaries
Denver, Colorado, is offering a how-to guide to help other cities turn into immigrant sanctuaries at the expense of taxpayers. The post Denver Offers How-To Guide on Turning Cities into Taxpayer-Funded Immigrant Sanctuaries appeared first on Breitbart.
breitbart.com
David Justice disputes his portrayal in ‘Moneyball’ movie
The movie, based on the Michael Lewis book about former A's general manager Billy Beane, portrayed Justice as a me-first egotist.
nypost.com
Shohei Ohtani’s $700 million greatness won’t be slowed by betting-scandal distraction
The Scandal Heard ’Round the World, from here to Japan and back, no longer costs you sleep.
nypost.com