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Post by Admin on Aug 8, 2015 22:43:47 GMT
Taylor Swift will have us all wanting to live our “wildest dreams” soon. The singer announced on Twitter on Wednesday that her next single will be "Wildest Dreams," and we can only imagine what this music video will look like! The song is her fifth single from her album, 1989, and will no doubt be played on the radio over and over (and over again) like her other recent hits "Shake It Off," "Style," "Bad Blood" and "Blank Space." 1989 debuted at No.1 with 1.287 million copies sold in just its first week, making it the largest debut of any American record in over 12 years, according to Billboard. Expectations are no doubt high for "Wildest Dreams" to top the charts! "[It's] a really good example of the way I go into relationships now," she told NPR of the tune late last year. "If I meet someone who I feel I have a connection with, the first thought I have is: 'When this ends, I hope it ends well. I hope you remember me well.' Which is not anything close to the way I used to think about relationships. It's that realization that it's the anomaly if something works out; it's not a given."
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Post by Admin on Aug 13, 2015 22:35:52 GMT
Ryan Adams is making good on his promise to cover all of Taylor Swift’s 1989. Wednesday night he posted clips from his latest attempt at giving the album a “Smiths style” makeover, and teased a 30-second video of “Wildest Dreams.” Moody and retro, it’s a chilled out version of Swift’s crashing love song. “Can’t wait to add strings,” he wrote.
Adams has been chronicling his studio sessions spent recording versions of 1989 songs for the past few weeks, and has posted snippets of “Bad Blood,” “Blank Space,” “Style,” “All You Had To Do Was Stay,” “Out Of The Woods,” “Welcome To New York,” and “Shake It Off.” In case you had any doubts, he assured fans that he plans to include bonus tracks “Wonderland” and “New Romantics.” Until then…
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Post by Admin on Aug 14, 2015 22:43:50 GMT
The pop stars' new singles earn high debuts on the chart. Plus, new music from Rita Ora, Robin Thicke and the return of Macklemore & Ryan Lewis. Taylor Swift claims her ninth top 10 on Billboard + Twitter Top Tracks as “Wildest Dreams” starts its chart run at No. 3 on the survey dated Aug. 22. The track’s huge bow owes to a Swift tweet announcing “Dreams” as the fifth single from her current album, 1989. Good news for the new release - all of Swift’s previous 1989 singles have ascended to No. 1 on Top Tracks: “Shake It Off” (one week), “Blank Space” (three weeks), “Style” (one week) and the Kendrick Lamar-assisted “Bad Blood” remix (two weeks). Billboard + Twitter Top Tracks is a weekly ranking of the most shared and/or mentioned songs on Twitter in the U.S., ranked by the volume of shares over a seven-day period (Monday to Sunday).
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Post by Admin on Aug 24, 2015 22:38:51 GMT
Taylor Swift is set to debut her newest music video right before the MTV Video Music Awards. The pop star made the announcement Sunday night on Twitter, which came accompanied by a brief but, uh, very intense preview of what’s in store. This new video for “Wildest Dreams” will be the fifth video from Swift’s album 1989. She’s already released videos for “Shake It Off,” “Blank Space,” “Style” and “Bad Blood.” As you can see, this 15-second clip features a piercing blue eye (probably Swift’s?), a galloping horse, packs of wild zebras running freely through the plain, a bird, a sunset and some sensual canoodling in a rain storm.
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Post by Admin on Aug 29, 2015 22:31:42 GMT
Scott Eastwood stars in Taylor Swift’s video for “Wildest Dreams,” and the singer previewed the clip’s forthcoming debut with a photo of Eastwood on Twitter, looking so tall (and handsome as hell). Swift included lyrics from “Wildest Dreams” in the tweet: “Say you’ll remember me/ Standing in a nice dress/ Staring at the sunset, babe.” Swift previously teased the video last weekend, when she announced that it would debut during the MTV Video Music Awards pre-show on Sunday night. “Wildest Dreams” is the fifth video Swift has released off her smash-hit album 1989.
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