Opening for Taylor Swift is like winning the lottery in audio suitable about now.
We all saw what transpired to Sabrina Carpenter’s vocation soon after she opened for Swift on her epic Eras Tour last calendar year. I signify, she blew all the way up — and now she’s bought the track of the summer with “Espresso.”
Now it is Gracie Abrams’ transform to have a very hot female summer season after also opening for Swift last yr.
Phone it her Article-Tay Period.
Abrams even bought the top co-indication on her new album “The Key of Us” — which dropped on Friday — from Swift herself.
That is appropriate. The Empress of Eras blesses this set on their duet “Us,” which they co-wrote when, you know, just chilling at Swift’s apartment in New York.
And it is not only the most predicted music on Abrams’ sophomore album, but one particular of the most predicted songs of the summer time period.
Does it dwell up to the hoopla?
Indeed … and no.
Initially off, inspite of all of the Swiftie hoopla, this is not a one. This is an album observe that — in idea — is not meant to consider absent from Abrams’ true present one, the electro-pop bop “Close to You.”
But of system, it does.
Like a lot of Swift tracks, it is — surprise, shock — a break up music all about lacking “us.” As in exes, not BFFs.
It is kinda moody, kinda folky. Sorta like “Folklore” meets “Midnights.”
And there’s additional references to poetry and literature a la “The Tortured Poets Section.”
As well as, when they sing alongside one another — “I felt it/ You held it/ Do you skip us?” they croon in the chorus — it’s almost really hard to explain to their voices apart.
But hey, at minimum Abrams will get that initially verse all to her damn self.
You know what however? It is not honest that Abrams’ album has come to be all about Swift.
Right before this collab came alongside, she had previously attained a Very best New Artist Grammy nomination on the toughness of her 2023 debut “Good Riddance.”
And she experienced an additional cred-boosting collab with “Stick Season” singer Noah Kahan on their duet “Everywhere, All the things.”
But at 24, Abrams is a person of a technology of younger female singer-songwriters who no question analyzed the “Tao of Taylor.”
You can hear that all about her new album, which just about feels like “Taylor Unplugged” often with the acoustic vibe. They even have a very similar vocal delivery.
And if that album title “The Key of Us” sounds familiar, effectively, it echoes Swift’s “Speak Now” single “The Tale of Us.”
I’m certain the “Fortnight” singer can see her young self in an artist who is 10 a long time her junior. And, thanks to this Swift kick in her job, all ears will be on Abrams now.