A look at But Daddy I Love Himpublished at 21:37 British Summer Time 7 June
Mark Savage
BBC Music correspondent reporting from Murrayfield
Now we venture into new territory – with a half-hour set dedicated to Taylor’s latest album, The Tortured Poets Department.
The colour scheme for this section is a muted black-and-white, reflecting the brooding, downcast tones of the song – many of which address the end of her six-year relationship with Joe Alwyn, and the brief(but apparently intense) fling she had afterwards with The 1975’s Matty Healy.
The album was not an immediate critical success -“Sylvia Plath did not stick her head in an oven for this!” said a particularly scathing review in Paste Magazine – but it is aging well, with fans finding new layers and firm favourites among the sprawling, 31-song track list.
Taylor has chosen seven of her favourites for the tour, starting with the small-town melodrama of But Daddy I Love Him, and continuing with the garage rock vibes of So High School.
Keep an eye out later for Down Bad, during which she appears to be abducted by a UFO; and the number one single Fortnight.
That one is performed on a hospital bed to depict the song’s central metaphor of an affair as a mental breakdown.