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Nashville's latest blonde beauty Taylor Swift began performing at the ripe old age of 10. Swift picked up the guitar at 12 and quickly wrote her first song. That was all it took, a future singing/songwriting star was born. The young singer caught the attention of Big Machine Records label head Scott Borchetta, and the rest will be written in the pages of music history.
Like the recent release by American Idol castaway Kellie Pickler, Swift's self-titled debut isn't really country music in the truest sense of the word. This is pop-country with steel guitars, mandolin and fiddle. Good music, granted, but more pop than country. Swift is a mini Sheryl Crow, a songstress and vocalist of impressive skill. How many songwriters get to put the very first song they ever wrote on their debut album? "The Outside" was written when Swift was just 12. The breezy track, while not the best song on here, is well-crafted and lyrically mature.
A straight-A high school student, Swift is an old soul. Songs like the yearning "Teardrops On My Guitar" and the emotionally raw "Cold As You" sound like they were written by someone twice Swift's age. The latter is a heartbreaking song with chilling steel guitar. She may be a teenager, but Swift sounds all grownup here. The lyrical first single "Tim McGraw," about a girl who associates a summer love with one of McGraw's songs, is as good as anything on radio right now. Swift possesses a honeydew voice that, like her, seems much older than it really is.
"Picture To Burn" finds Swift adopting a bit of an attitude. The young singer sounds like a cross between Kelly Clarkson and angst-riddled popster Avril Lavigne on this one. The girl has a great sense of what works in a song, not to mention a great sense of humor. "Go and tell your friends that I'm obsessive and crazy, that's fine/ I'll tell mine you're gay," Swift sings. For the banjo stoked "Should've Said No," Swift ditches Clarkson but sticks with Lavigne. A cheating boyfriend gets an earful as a sawing fiddle and a descending chord progression add weight to Swift's words.
"Stay Beautiful" is the closest Swift comes to traditional country on the album. Vocally, the singer still sounds like a younger version of Sheryl Crow, but musically she dips into the past for a shuffling number with pretty mandolin fills and cat-skinning Dobro licks. The album closes with the upbeat "Our Song." A buoyant beat gets hitched to rolling banjo and fiddle and more slithery Dobro.
If there's a better debut from a new female artist under the age of twenty this year, it hasn't made it onto this scribe's desk.
By Todd Sterling
| Artist: | Taylor Swift |
| Edited: | No |
| Format: | CD |
| Enhanced: | No |
| Number of Discs: | 1 |
| Shipping Weight (in pounds): | 0.2 |
| Product in Inches (L x W x H): | 4.95 x 0.49 x 5.61 |
| Assembled in Country of Origin: | United States |
| Origin of Components: | United States |
Wal-Mart No.: |
000000000 |
| UPC: | 0085778700120 |
Taylor Swift became one of country-pop's brightest (and youngest) faces in 2006, when the 16-year-old vocalist released her first album. Although new to the American public, Swift had been performing since early childhood, taking inspiration and encouragement from her opera-singing grandmother. She sang "The Star-Spangled Banner" before a Philadelphia 76ers game at the age of 11; the following year, she began practicing her guitar skills for several hours each day, only stopping when her fingers began to bleed. Swift's parents realized their child's dedication and began making regular visits to Nashville, TN, where Swift would perform casually and meet with songwriters in the area. The family then decided to move from their native Pennsylvania to an outlying Nashville suburb, which accelerated Swift's career.
While performing at the intimate Bluebird Cafe in Nashville, Swift caught the eye of music industry veteran Scott Borchetta, who signed her to his newly formed label. Swift joined the roster at Big Machine Records and released her debut single, "Tim McGraw," in August 2006. The song drew upon her experience as a lovelorn high-school student, a theme that Swift revisited throughout her self-titled debut album. Released in late 2008, Taylor Swift catapulted the young songwriter to stardom, spawning a handful of hits (five consecutive Top Ten singles, a new record for a female solo artist) while earning multi-platinum sales. Swift also received a Grammy nomination for Best New Artist, an award she ultimately lost to Amy Winehouse. Two subsequent EPs -- Sounds of the Season: The Taylor Swift Holiday Collection and Beautiful Eyes -- helped maintain Swift's popularity while whetting public demand for her sophomore release, Fearless, which arrived in November 2008. ~ Andrew Leahey & Megan Frye, All Music Guide