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'Tis the Damn Season

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Wikipedia article




{{Infobox song

| name = Tis the Damn Season

| type = song

| artist = Taylor Swift

| album = Evermore

| released =

| recorded = 2020

| studio =

| length = 3:49

| genre =

* Christmas

* alternative rock

| label = Republic

| writer =

*Taylor Swift

* Aaron Dessner

| producer = Aaron Dessner

| misc = {{External music video|type=song|header=Lyric video|

}}

}}

"'Tis the Damn Season'" (stylized in all lowercase) is a song by American singer-songwriter Taylor Swift. It is the fourth track on her ninth studio album 'Evermore,' which was released on December 11, 2020, by Republic Records. It was written by Swift and its producer Aaron Dessner.

Musically, Tis the Damn Season" is a Christmas song that eschews the traditional festive value for a melancholic atmosphere. It gives the perspective of a female narrator named Dorothea who arrives to her hometown in Tupelo, Mississippi, and encounters her former lover, knowing the rekindled relationship will inevitably end. It is a wintry alternative rock song instrumented by an electric guitar riff entwined with minimally programmed drums, accompanied by violins, trombone, and organs. Tis the Damn Season" is a counterpart to fellow track "Dorothea", which gives the former lover's point of view, addressed to the titular character.

Upon the release of 'Evermore', Tis the Damn Season" was extolled by music critics, who admired its nostalgia-inducing lyrics and twist on festive music. In the United States, it debuted at number 39 on the 'Billboard' Hot 100, number six on the 'Billboard' Hot Rock & Alternative Songs chart, and number 13 on the 'Rolling Stone' Top 100. Internationally, it charted at numbers 13, 23 and 24 on the Canadian Hot 100, the 'Billboard' Global 200, and the Australian Singles Chart, respectively.

Background and release



On July 24, 2020, during the COVID-19 lockdowns, Swift surprise-released her eighth studio album, 'Folklore', to widespread critical acclaim and commercial success. In September 2020, Swift and her co-producers and co-writers for the album, Aaron Dessner and Jack Antonoff, assembled at Long Pond Studio, located in a secluded cabin in upstate New York, to film the documentary 'Folklore: The Long Pond Studio Sessions'. Released to Disney+ and accompanied by a live album released digitally, Swift performed the stripped-down renditions of all 17 tracks on 'Folklore' and recounted the creative process of developing the album. After the filming process, Swift, Antonoff, and Dessner celebrated 'Folklore' by drinking and ultimately decided to stay in Long Pond and unexpectedly continued writing songs. Swift wrote Tis the Damn Season" in the middle of the night while drunk on the first day of rehearsal. The next day, at approximately 9:00 a.m., she presented the lyrics to Dessner, who recounted the moment in an interview with 'Billboard': "That was definitely another moment [where] my brain exploded, because she sang it to me in my kitchen, and it was just surreal." Dessner wrote the music to Tis the Damn Season" several years before 'Evermore' and described it as one of his favorite works ever. He compared the background and writing of the song to that of "Peace" from 'Folklore' and recounted that the song could have remained instrumental but "someone of [Swift's] incredible storytelling ability and musical ability took it and made something much greater."

Before the release of 'Evermore', Swift teased the song Tis the Damn Season" on December 9, 2020, in an Instagram story in which she posted a photo of herself from an 'Entertainment Weekly' feature with the caption "This outfit really screams 'TIS THE DAMN SEASON." On December 10, 2020, Swift announced that her ninth studio album and 'Folklore's sister album, 'Evermore', would come out at midnight and revealed its track listing, where Tis the Damn Season" placed fourth. In the announcement, Swift teased imageries of various tracks, including Tis the Damn Season", which is narrated by a character named Dorothea who left her hometown of Tupelo, Mississippi for Hollywood. When she comes back for the holidays, she rediscovers an old romantic relationship with an unnamed lover to whom the song is addressed to, knowing it will inevitably fade again. "Dorothea", the eighth track on the album, is written from the unnamed narrator's perspective. Lyric videos of each song on the album were released to Swift's YouTube channel; Tis the Damn Season" has since garnered over 8.1 million views as of December 2021.

Composition and lyrics



Tis the Damn Season" is a minimalistic, nostalgic, alternative rock song that spins a twist on traditional Christmas balladry. The song is set in the key of F major with a moderately fast tempo of 146 beats per minute. Swift's vocals span from C3 to A4. Tis the Damn Season" is built on an "icy", swirling finger-picked electric guitar, minimalistic drum programming, syncopated and sparse percussion. Dessner performed the acoustic guitar, bass, drums, electric guitar, and piano for the song; also instrumenting the song were a cello, harmonium, keyboard, trombone, and violin.

-resident actress named Dorothea, who returns to her hometown for Christmas vacation.

Lyrically, it is written from the perspective of a woman named Dorothea, a Hollywood actress who returns to her hometown of Tupelo, Mississippi to visit her family for Thanksgiving weekend. Dorothea encounters an unnamed former lover and ends up reluctantly engaging in a "fleeting but intimate" relationship with somebody from her youth and ending up in bed together, despite knowing she will inevitably have to abandon their relationship again. Similar to "Cardigan", "August", and "Betty" on 'Folklore', the song is part of a series of songs written from different perspectives of the same romantic relationship; "Dorothea", the eighth track on 'Evermore', is written from the perspective of the unnamed narrator, who is more optimistic towards the possibility of dating Dorothea once again. Dorothea painfully reminisces her luxurious life in Los Angeles, loathing her star-studded career in favor of the comfort of her hometown and the unnamed addressee: "So I'll go back to L.A. and the so-called friends / Who'll write books about me if I ever make it / And wonder about the only soul / Who can tell which smiles I'm fakin'".

Critical reception



Tis the Damn Season" received widespread critical acclaim for its "rather moving" variation on traditional, more upbeat holiday music. In a review published in 'Rolling Stone', Brittany Spanos described the song as a "nostalgic gut-punch" and "tautly [capturing] the eerily specific nostalgia and the familiarly messy unraveling that is bound to accompany it." Spanos praised its "lyrical flourishes" and more awkward, less idealistic narrative that distinguish it from traditional Christmas songs. In a review of 'Evermore', Claire Shaffer, also of 'Rolling Stone' praised the storyline detailed from different sides of the story in Tis the Damn Season" and "Dorothea".

Sam Sodomsky of 'Pitchfork' praised Swift's use of her "wordy" and detailed lyricism: "she treats Dessner's electric guitar framework as an empty diary page, her notes spilling into the margins, using every inch of space he offers to describe the fog on the windshield, the mud on the tires, the parking spot by her old school." Brodie Lancaster of 'The Sydney Morning Herald' described the song as powerful, highlighting the "references to suburban nostalgia" that reveal the comfort Swift takes in her hometown, despite being a world-famous celebrity. Madeline Crone of 'American Songwriter' depicted the storyline in Tis the Damn Season" as "the all-too-familiar night before Thanksgiving narrative".

Maura Johnston of 'Entertainment Weekly' chose Tis the Damn Season" as a "luminous" example of 'Evermore's elevated songwriting and production. Annie Zaleski of 'The A.V. Club' opined that Tis the Damn Season" was an example of 'Evermore's sonic cohesion and wintery songwriting, and Patrick Ryan of 'USA Today' identified the track as a hallmark of 'Evermore's "escapist fantasy" that slips between various narratives and perspectives. Insider critics lauded the song's "thicker" production and Swift's nuanced vocals. Callie Ahlgrim said the song is "littered with wistful what-ifs, holiday-season reminiscence, and hometown yearnings." In a review of 'Evermore', Jason Lipshutz of 'Billboard' chose Tis the Damn Season" as an example of how "smartly paced" 'Evermore' is, "offering hope and longevity in the midst of the wreckage." Lipshutz ranked the song as the 7th best track on the album, applauding the "sparkl[ing]" lyrical detail and describing it as a song that could fit on 'Speak Now' or 'Red' but with "wiser" storytelling and production.

Commercial performance



Following the release of 'Evermore', on the issue dated December 26, 2020, Tis the Damn Season" debuted at 39 on the 'Billboard' Hot 100 alongside the album's 14 other songs; the next week, it dropped to number 91 then fell off the chart. It debuted at 13 on the 'Rolling Stone' Top 100, with 134,000 units sold and 16.2 million streams in its first week. It debuted at number 6 on the Hot Alternative Songs chart, where it spent seven weeks. It achieved success internationally, debuting at 13 on the Canadian Hot 100, 23 on the 'Billboard' Global 200, and 24 on the Australian Top 50 Singles chart.

Credits and personnel



Credits adapted from Tidal.

* Taylor Swift vocals, songwriting

* Aaron Dessner songwriting, production, recording, acoustic guitar, bass, drum machine, electric guitar, piano, synthesizer

* Clarice Jensen cello

* Nick Lloyd Hammond B3

* Josh Kaufman harmonium, lap steel guitar

* Benjamin Lanz horn arranger, trombone

* Thomas Bartlett keyboards, synthesizer

* Greg Calbi mastering

* Steve Fallone mastering

* Jonathan Low mixing, recording, vocal engineering

* Yuki Numata Resnick violin

Charts



Weekly charts



Year-end charts



References



Category:2020 songs

Category:Song recordings produced by Aaron Dessner

Category:Songs written by Taylor Swift

Category:Taylor Swift songs

Category:Songs written by Aaron Dessner

Category:American Christmas songs

Category:American alternative rock songs

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