Even while enjoying a quiet period of time following the conclusion of her hotly-successful Eras Tour,Taylor Swiftis stillthe subject of plenty of headlines and conversation. There arethe biggest unsolved mysteries from the Eras Tour experience, as well asthe artist collaborations with Swift we all still aspire to witnesssomeday.
Speculation has also mounted about the (eventually arriving) finale of Swift’s “Taylor’s Version” series and howit might massively improve upon her “worst” album. The biggest rumor mill of all, however, is arguably surrounding the arrival of Swift’s next new studio LP, when it might be set to release, and most interestingly,just what the record’s dominant sound might be.

Taylor Swift’s Next Album Might Have A Strong Pop Sound Again
A 1989 Relative Just Decades Later
In a video interview that took place earlier this year, Swedish producer Jacob Criborn (part of Swedish DJ collective Nause) mentioned he was working with fellow Swede (violinist/multi-instrumentalist Erik Arvinder) on a song remix project. Arvinder has previously created with the likes of pop stars Ed Sheeran and Ariana Grande,though he has never collaborated with Swift before.
Criborn mentioned that Arvinder had a variety of different brass players available for the remix, and that they’d jump on Criborn’s endeavorafter they finished Taylor Swift’s album. The clip was quickly taken down from Instagram once it took off, though not before Swift’s ardent fanbase saved and shared it around the internet.
Now, might this be an unintended clue about Swift’s new album continuing to progress, and, given Arvinder’s background with pop stars, the direction the sound of it might be going? It’s altogether quite possible, though, given that the “Taylor’s Version” of Swift’s self-titled debut is still in the wind,this slip might be a reference to that project instead.
That possible alternative doesn’t eliminate the chance that Swiftis working on moving her new album forward, however. In a recent interview with the outletEntertainment Weekly, Swift’s trusty, right-hand producer Jack Antonoff said “she’s effortlessly working with a new idea every other second in her brain.”
A More Mature Take On Swift’s 1989 Would Be Perfect
An Update On A Successful Formula
IfTaylor Swiftis currently concocting her next full-length album release and is approaching it in a pop-layered style similar to her highly successful LP1989, that can only be a good thing.1989was Swift’s biggest album, and a more matured take in that creative playgroundwould be highly intriguing to hear.
Much like the possibility of what a “Taylor’s Version” of her self-titled debut record might offer, an updated and evolved landscape similar to1989would benefit from Swift’s continued evolution. The singer-songwriter has a strong knack for finding new regions of her music skills, and more will undoubtedly present themselves on her next release.