Lavender Haze and Maroon both have sort of a colour in the name. Lavender Haze is about like oh no this is the end of our relationship. It's kind of a looking back and remembering the nice but you're in the bad bit now. And I think it's interesting that she puts them next one another right at the beginning to almost be like this is a story of a man I really loved and had a wonderful relationship with then he did. She doesn't not want to get married for like feminist reasons. No I think she just didn't want to do it. Not with him. We are in the room room more in the room later. More on
Could Joe Alwyn's departure from Taylor's life be the skeleton key to understanding Midnights, Taylor Swift's murkiest album? Jen Cownie returns for a track-by-track study that, she believes, tells the story of a woman who is breaking up with herself.
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