Taylor Swift’s 1989 re-recorded with five new tracks from the vault is now out. Fans believe the ‘pop bible’ has arrived

It’s Taylor Swift and she’s in no way going out of Style. Not even an album that she recorded 9 years ago.

On Friday, Taylor launched the re-recorded model of one of her largest albums. 1989 Taylor’s Version as it is called, comes with re-recordings of all-time bangers like Welcome to New York, Style, Blank Space, Out of the Woods, Shake It Off, Bad Blood, and Wildest Dreams. Five unreleased songs From The Vault additionally make it to the sparkling album. These consist of “Slut!”, Say Don’t Go, Now That We Don’t Talk, Suburban Legends and Is It Over Now. The unreleased songs, as many would possibly notice, have a especially Midnights-y feeling to them.

Sharing the album, Taylor shared a bunch of pics on Instagram and wrote in a handwritten note, “I was once born in 1989 and reinvented for the first time in 2014 and a phase of me was once reclaimed in 2023 with the re-release of this album that I love so dearly. Never in my wildest desires did I think about the magic you would sprinkle on my lifestyles for so long.”

“This second is a reflection of the woods we have wandered via and all this love between us is nevertheless glowing in the darkest dark. I existing to you, with deepest gratitude and wild wonder, my version of 1989. It’s been ready for you,” she wrote.

Fans of the singer had been excited after the re-release. “POP BIBLE IS FINALLY HERE,” exclaimed one. “The truth that so many human beings throughout the world proper now are listening to the genuine identical element at the genuine identical time has me in a puddle of tears,” tweeted another. A fan additionally seen new nuances in the songs. “The ‘oh no’ in Blank Space just despatched me to a new level. and the transport of ‘darling, I’m a nightmare dressed like a daydream?’ Taylor felt that in her bones,” wrote another.

The Taylor’s Version albums, instigated via track supervisor Scooter Braun’s sale of her early catalog, signify Swift’s effort to manipulate her personal songs and how they’re used.