Current:Home > NewsUK fans wonder if Taylor Swift will say ‘So long, London’ after Eras Tour -GrowthSphere Strategies
UK fans wonder if Taylor Swift will say ‘So long, London’ after Eras Tour
View
Date:2025-04-22 07:30:24
LONDON (AP) — Taylor Swift fans enjoy parsing the singer-songwriter’s lyrics for references to her romantic life and insights into her state of her mind.
But the pop superstar’s fans in the U.K. didn’t have to listen closely to her latest album, “The Tortured Poets Department,” to get the sense that Swift had soured on the country’s capital city after long making it a regular hangout and then her second home. The record’s fifth track is titled “So Long, London.”
As Swift brings her blockbuster Eras Tour to London’s Wembley Stadium, some Swifties therefore are wondering if they are witnessing the beginning of an extended goodbye. She is performing three nights starting Friday, and is scheduled to return to Wembley for six nights in August to close the tour’s European leg.
London is the only city on the tour where Swift is stopping twice. Some worry the arrangement may represent a swan song of sorts, while others think it just reflects a new era in Swift’s bond with the Big Smoke. Whether “So Long, London” turns out to be a final chapter or a bookend to her valentine to the city, the song “London Boy,” Eras is arriving as an emotional milestone.
“Her relationship now kind of assumes London won’t be somewhere she will be. It’s not like there is an American football player living here,” said Maggie Fekete, 22, a Canadian graduate student who credits the London references in Swift’s music with orienting her when she moved to the city three years ago. “I think there will be a lot less London in her music, which is sad.”
For those who haven’t been paying attention, Swift had a series of romances with famous British citizens, starting with Harry Styles in 2012 and ending last year, when she started dating Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce. The speculation surrounding “So Long, London” and a mournful companion song that mentions a London pub, “The Black Dog,” stems from the 2023 breakup of Swift and English actor Joe Alwyn, who were together for over six years.
Alwyn is assumed to have inspired “London Boy,” a song from her 2019 album “Lover.” A special-edition “Lover” CD included what appeared to be a January 2017 diary entry in which Swift talked about being “essentially based in London” but trying to lay low. British tabloids later reported that Swift spent much of the COVID-19 pandemic sheltering with Alwyn in north London.
The Sun newspaper reported in December that the multiple Grammy-winner had bought a large property in the area and was remodeling it to be her base in Europe. After Swift released “The Tortured Poets Department” last month, however, a writer for the British edition of ELLE magazine observed that Londoners had an opening “for an all-American A-lister who can slot into her place in our collective consciousness.”
“We had Swift before we lost her to her record-breaking, box office-breaking Eras Tour and now, it would appear that her vacant position has been filled by Zendaya,” writer Naomi May playfully posited before listing the various locations the American actor had been spotted with her longtime boyfriend, British actor Tom Holland.
Either way, the capital is putting on quite a show of its own to make sure Swift and her fans feel appreciated. Guides are offering walking, bus and taxi tours that retrace her footsteps, including a kebab shop whose owner says his establishment is supplying sandwiches for the singer and her crew on Friday.
Before the end of August, Swifties can partake in a full diet of Swift-themed brunches and dance parties, or ride the London Eye Ferris wheel accompanied by a string quarter playing her music. Souvenir stalls in Camden Market, one of the places mentioned in “London Boy,” stocked up on Swift-specific caps, T-shirts, bags and stickers in preparation.
“We’re very proud that London is hosting more shows than any other city on Taylor Swift’s The Eras Tour, a real testament to her love for London,” Laura Citron, CEO of tourism agency London & Partners, said.
Fans started lining up outside Wembley on Thursday in hopes of being among the first ticket-holders to claim spots in standing sections close to the stage. A pop-up tour merchandise store opened in a parking lot by the stadium that morning.
Zachary Hourihane, who co-hosts a Swift podcast called “Evolution of a Snake” and posts YouTube and TikTok videos under the name Swiftologist, said it’s too soon to know whether the singer will retain her honorary citizenship or part ways with London. As her fans know all too well, only time will tell with Taylor.
Hourihane notes that Swift started spending more time in London after a difficult year in which she went from winning album of the year at the 2016 Grammy Awards for “1989” to seeing her popularity plummet amid a public feud with Kim Kardashian and Kanye West. From his study of her life in England, he thinks the happy memories she created there come mixed with “a sense of isolation.”
“There is a lot of nostalgia that might have turned into regret,” Hourihane said. “She felt like she was trapped there for a while.”
Fast forward several boyfriends, 10 albums (including the Taylor’s Version re-records ) and the Eras Tour juggernaut, and it’s not surprising her life is up for reappraisal. Hourihane suspects Swift is “not quite ready to give up on London” for both practical and artistic reasons.
“Taylor is someone who retraces her steps a lot. Things are never really over with her. She likes to revisit things that have finished,” he said. “Let’s be realistic about it. Her relationship, even if it is, ‘so long, goodbye,’ she has good reason to be in London and good money to make there.”
veryGood! (6892)
Related
- Jamie Foxx reps say actor was hit in face by a glass at birthday dinner, needed stitches
- Rihanna, Adele, Ryan Reynolds and More Celebs Who Were Born in the Year of the Dragon
- For San Francisco 49ers coach Johnny Holland, Super Bowl LVIII isn't his biggest challenge
- Hottest January on record pushes 12-month global average temps over 1.5 degree threshold for first time ever
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- Super Bowl events best moments: Wu-Tang, Maluma and Vegas parties
- 2 killed in Illinois after a car being chased by police struck another vehicle
- Antonio Gates, coping after not being voted into Hall of Fame, lauds 49ers' George Kittle
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- LA Dodgers embrace insane expectations, 'target on our back' as spring training begins
Ranking
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- Second man accused of vandalizing journalists’ homes pleads guilty in New Hampshire
- Gabrielle Union, Olivia Culpo, Maluma and More Stars Who Had a Ball at Super Bowl 2024 Parties
- US Sen. Coons and German Chancellor Scholz see double at Washington meeting
- Federal Spending Freeze Could Have Widespread Impact on Environment, Emergency Management
- Retired Arizona prisons boss sentenced to probation over armed 2022 standoff with police
- Two-time Cy Young Award winner Corey Kluber retires after 13 MLB seasons
- Prince William speaks out after King Charles' cancer diagnosis and wife Kate's surgery
Recommendation
Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
Breaking Down the British Line of Succession: King Charles III, Prince William and Beyond
How Asian American and Pacific Islander athletes in the NFL express their cultural pride
Climate change turns an idyllic California community into a 'perilous paradise'
Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
The Lunar New Year of the Dragon flames colorful festivities across Asian nations and communities
Stowaway scorpion makes its way from Kenya to Ireland in woman's bag
Minnesota might be on the verge of a normal legislative session after a momentous 2023