Taylor Swift Releases a “Willow” Remix in Honor of Her 31st Birthday
Taylor Swift surprises fans with a “Willow” remix in honor of her 31st birthday.
Taylor celebrated her 31st birthday on December 13.
You didn’t really think Taylor Swift was done surprising us, did you? In honor of her 31st birthday, she dropped a remix of Evermore’s lead single, “Willow.” Birthdays are v important to Taylor—that’s where her obsession with the number 13 comes from. Oh, and remember that time she titled her album after her birth year, 1989? Yeah, birthdays are important, which is why “Willow - Dancing Witch Version (Elvira Remix)” feels so…special.
“Not to be all ‘iT’s mY BiRtHdAY & I jUsT wAnNa DaNcE’ but…it is and I do,” Taylor wrote in the surprise Instagram announcement. “So we’ve released the Willow Dancing Witch Version, remixed by Elvira, a badass female producer I really respect ????.”
Even though it’s her birthday, she gave us a gift. *sobs* It hasn’t even been a week since her newest album’s release and she’s already dropped another song. It kind of makes you wonder if those third album rumors are true.
Either way, fans are loving the “Willow” remix.
the willow remix makes me love the song so much more I'm so happy it's so good ??
— giselle ?? (@inagetawaycar) December 13, 2020
willow dancing witch remix is a really great jam
— “you’re kaitlyn” (@sequinedsmile) December 13, 2020
Dancing to the willow remix in my room??♀????
— Leandra???? (@LeandraFolklor) December 13, 2020
Taylor announced the release of her ninth studio album, Evermore, on December 10 in a series of Instagram posts. Hint: Whenever Tay posts a grid of pics to her IG feed—it’s on. She referred to it as Folklore’s sister album.
“To put it plainly, we just couldn’t stop writing songs. To try and put it more poetically, it feels like we were standing on the edge of the folklorian woods and had a choice: to turn and go back or to travel further into the forest of this music,” she explained. “We chose to wander deeper in. I’ve never done this before. In the past, I’ve always treated albums as one-off eras and moved onto planning the next one after an album was released. There was something different with Folklore. In making it, I felt less like I was departing and more like I was returning.”
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