Wed. Nov 27th, 2024
alert-–-taylor-swift’s-edinburgh-show-is-a-‘spectacle-with-substance’:-critics-are-united-in-praise-for-star’s-eras-tour-and-say-she-inspired-a-‘secular-religious-mass-ritual’-among-fansAlert – Taylor Swift’s Edinburgh show is a ‘spectacle with substance’: Critics are united in praise for star’s Eras Tour and say she inspired a ‘secular religious mass ritual’ among fans

The verdict is in: Taylor Swift’s first Edinburgh show on Friday night was a resounding success with fans and critics alike. 

The pop superstar, 34, wowed the Murrayfield crowd and told them ‘we need to do this again’ on the opening night of her Eras Tour in the UK.

The hitmaker touched down around lunchtime on Friday before she was whisked away in a blacked-out vehicle accompanied by a police escort.

Taylor has received universally glowing revies from British music critics who attended her first show in the Scottish capital.  

Writing for The Guardian, Alexis Petridis awarded her show five out of five stars, noting the American singer seems ‘all-powerful’.

The verdict is in: Taylor Swift 's first Edinburgh show on Friday night was a resounding success with fans and critics alike

The verdict is in: Taylor Swift ‘s first Edinburgh show on Friday night was a resounding success with fans and critics alike

The pop superstar, 34, wowed the Murrayfield crowd and told them 'we need to do this again' on the opening night of her Eras Tour in the UK

The pop superstar, 34, wowed the Murrayfield crowd and told them ‘we need to do this again’ on the opening night of her Eras Tour in the UK

Taylor has received universally glowing revies from British music critics who attended her first show in the Scottish capital

Taylor has received universally glowing revies from British music critics who attended her first show in the Scottish capital

He wrote: ‘It’s an incredibly impressive show. It succeeds in leaping between an eclectic range of material – dubstep-inspired, dark-hued pop; tweedy folk; monster-chorus-sporting anthems and acoustic guitar-driven songs that show her Nashville grounding – all of it linked by Swift’s keen melodic awareness and ability to turn songs about famous ex-partners and celebrity nemeses into universally relatable figures.’

Writing for the Daily Mail, Adrian Thrills also awarded the show five stars and descibed it as ‘a spectacle with substance’.

Praising the career-spanning nature of her three-hour long show, he wrote: ‘It’s easy to get lost in the Swiftiverse: the speculation surrounding the lyrics about her exes; the different colour codes for each album; the £1.5 billion this tour is expected to generate. But all the background noise fades the minute this brilliant performer hits the stage.’

In one of the most rave reviews, Neil McCormack also gave Taylor’s performance five stars in The Telegraph and said the devotion she inspired among her fans in the crowd was akin to a ‘secular religious mass ritual’. 

He wrote: ‘There were no special guests, and little straying from a by-now familiar script. But no one could feel short-changed by a set that really had it all, succeeding in what might seem on paper to be an impossible synthesis of serious singer songwriter and full on commercial pop machine.

‘Swift left it all onstage, standing sweaty and exhausted at the end, with a smile that somehow extended beyond her permanent air of artificial delight to shine with unalloyed joy.’

Writing for The Independent, Annabel Nugent noted The Beatlemania-like devotion Taylor’s fans have for the singer, with many brought to tears during the concert.

She wrote: ‘Across the evening, I see girls yowling, wailing, swooning, hugging. But more than anything, I see girls crying. There are some Beatlemania-style sobs. 

Writing for The Guardian, Alexis Petridis awarded her show five out of five stars, noting the American singer seems 'all-powerful'

Writing for The Guardian, Alexis Petridis awarded her show five out of five stars, noting the American singer seems ‘all-powerful’

Writing for the Daily Mail, Adrian Thrills also awarded the show five stars and descibed it as 'a spectacle with substance'

Writing for the Daily Mail, Adrian Thrills also awarded the show five stars and descibed it as ‘a spectacle with substance’

Writing for The Independent, Annabel Nugent noted The Beatlemania-like devotion Taylor's fans have for the singer, with many brought to tears during the concert

Writing for The Independent, Annabel Nugent noted The Beatlemania-like devotion Taylor’s fans have for the singer, with many brought to tears during the concert

Playing the first of 15 UK shows that will stretch out across the summer, the American megastar wowed the 72,990 Swifties at Murrayfield Stadium in Edinburgh

Playing the first of 15 UK shows that will stretch out across the summer, the American megastar wowed the 72,990 Swifties at Murrayfield Stadium in Edinburgh  

‘Not only during the lovelorn ballads, but at seemingly random points, too. Even the coquettish sugar rush of ‘Love Story’ and ‘Fearless’ yield wet, mascara-strewn cheeks.’

The BBC’s music correspondent Mark Savage praised the singer for keeping her Eras tour fresh, even as she approaches its 100th show.

Noting a moment where she told the crowd that Scotland inspired her albums Folkmore and Evermore, he wrote: ‘Even as she approaches the 100th show of this mammoth tour, she is still creating new moments to keep the conversation circulating.

Read More

Taylor Swift Edinburgh Show RECAP: Global superstar tells Murrayfield 'we need to do this again'

article image

‘Even fans who tune into livestreams of every concert are given something to fresh to discuss, as the singer constantly updates her outfits and switches up her setlist.’

Writing for The Times, Will Hodgkinson said the show is enjoyable even for those who may not be die hard Swifties.  

He wrote: ‘With her emphasis on hard work, emotional expunging, ability to capture the concerns of young women worldwide and a general suggestion that if you can dream it, you can be it, she is a triumph of wholesomeness. 

‘No wonder, during a particularly volatile period in world history, she has become such a phenomenon.

Over the course of 46 songs, Taylor shook off a cramp in her hand, witnessed a live proposal, gifted a fan her hat and even suspended a tune so fans could receive medical aid – and in between those events found time for an almost insurmountable 12 costume changes.

Among the outfits were including a double-breasted black and gold pinstripe blazer dress, a white Vivienne Westwood dress and a stunning lilac gown complete with train.

Fans queued for hours – some as early as 3am – in order to be the first inside for the gig, which kicked off following pop-punk band Paramore’s set at exactly 7.18pm.

Between songs, Taylor paused to tell them: ‘What a way to welcome a lass to Scotland… you’ve gone and made me feel so amazing… You’ve got me feeling really, really powerful.’ Towards the end, she vowed: ‘We have to do this again.’ 

Taylor drove the native fans wild after telling them lockdown-era album Folklore was inspired by their home country.

In remarks reported by BBC News, she said: ‘There was so much TV, so much white wine, covered in cat hair. That was my reality. So I thought, ‘I’m going to create an imaginary world and escape into it’.

‘That was Folklore, and it was probably based online of videos I’ve seen of Scotland.’

She also told the adoring crowd earlier in the show: ‘My biggest regret is that I should have played in Scotland more. I should have brought every tour to Scotland. I can’t stop looking at the crowd…it’s captivating.’

The three-and-a-half hour show charted the singer’s 20-year professional music career, from aspiring country singer to pop star and now global cultural juggernaut with a fandom unrivalled by almost any other musical act on the planet – and a reported net worth of $1.3billion (£1.02billion).

Taylor Swift Eras Tour in Edinburgh review: Singer is at the peak of her powers as she kicks off her first UK show in spectacular style, writes ADRIAN THRILLS

Taylor Swift Eras Tour, Murrayfield Stadium Edinburgh 

Verdict: A spectacle with substance

Rating:

Welcomed by a multi-coloured sea of sequins, stetsons, glittery face-paint and cowgirl boots, Taylor Swift brought her record-breaking Eras tour to Britain in spectacular fashion on Friday.

Playing the first of 15 UK shows that will stretch out across the summer, the American megastar wowed the 72,990 Swifties, most of them female, who had gathered in a windy but sunny Edinburgh.

‘You’ve got me feeling so powerful,’ she told fans, shortly after emerging from below the stage, dressed in a spangly leotard.

The career-spanning, three-hours-plus epic that followed was divided into ten acts, or ‘eras’, with each act devoted to one of the Pennsylvania-born singer’s studio LPs.

I saw Taylor, 34, on 2014’s Red tour, the following year’s 1989 show, and 2018’s Reputation trek. This was bigger, better and bolder. Performed with a six-piece band, four backing singers, 16 dancers, three stages and an array of digital effects, it felt like a cross between a futuristic rock concert and a Broadway blockbuster. With bells on.

But Swift’s great trick is her knack of combining theatrical spectacle with substance. Her schooling in country music’s story-telling tradition has given her the skill to convey her emotions in vivid, relatable songs that connect with her fans.

She sang 47 of them here, and most were accompanied by word-perfect singalongs. Even a lyrical, ten-minute version of the ballad All Too Well, from a re-recording of 2012’s Red, got the singalong treatment.

The show opened under bright blue skies with 2019’s Lover album – its early slot a nod, perhaps, to the Lover Fest tour she had to cancel during the pandemic. The album’s waltz-time title track, strummed on a sky-blue guitar, was an early highlight.

We then zipped back to the country-pop of 2008’s Fearless (the eras weren’t showcased chronologically) before the decibel level went up a notch with the brash Red and its whip-smart pop hits. I Knew You Were Trouble would have raised the roof if Murrayfield had one.

The mood shifted with each act. For Reputation, one of Swift’s weaker albums, it was dark and peevish. Her two pandemic releases, Folklore and Evermore, were bundled together, as dusk fell, in a single ‘Folk-more’ act with a pastoral feel and, in Cardigan and Betty, two of her most finely-crafted character sketches. Champagne Problems, sung singer-songwriter style at the piano, was prefaced with lengthy lockdown reminiscences. ‘We never knew whether we’d ever get to do this concert thing again,’ she said.

By the time we reached the 1989 era, with its fun, feel-good hits Style, Blank Space and Shake It Off, the singalongs had become gleeful shout-alongs.

Swift’s two most recent LPs, Midnights and The Tortured Poets Department, featured late on, but even a setlist as tightly-planned as this one allowed some room for spontaneity, and an ‘unplugged’ section towards the end of the show saw Taylor solo on guitar and then piano sing spur of the moment songs, including ‘Tis The Damn Season and Would’ve, Could’ve, Should’ve.

It’s easy to get lost in the Swiftiverse: the speculation surrounding the lyrics about her exes; the different colour codes for each album; the £1.5 billion this tour is expected to generate. But all the background noise fades the minute this brilliant performer hits the stage.

With two more Edinburgh gigs tonight and tomorrow, and further concerts in Liverpool, Cardiff and London, those lucky enough to have tickets will see a show both Era-spanning and era-defining. With Taylor at the peak of her powers, it’s the music event of the year.

error: Content is protected !!