What Taylor Swift’s Vault Tracks Can Teach You About Not Killing Your Darlings | Jane Friedman (2024)

What Taylor Swift’s Vault Tracks Can Teach You About Not Killing Your Darlings | Jane Friedman (1)

Today’s post is by writer and editor Sarah Welch.

I write a lot about killing your darlings. Or, rather,notkilling your darlings but saving them for later. These scraps that say something beautiful or important to you, but don’t ultimately fit in your current work-in-progress, can still have serious value for another project down the road. That might be snippets of dialogue, a catchy turn of phrase, or a full-fledged character or plot line.

Not buying it? Let me offer you a little concrete evidence: Taylor Swift’s vault tracks.

Swifties (and I’m one of them) will jump on any chance to listen to new/new-to-them music from Swift, and the vault tracks that come with each album re-record have been gold in so many ways. But what I love about them, as an author, is the peek they give us intoa prolific and talented writer’s process. Specifically, they show us what it can look like to save “scraps” for later projects.

Now, before I move on, let me give two disclaimers:

  1. I’m operating under the assumption that,as Swift has said, the vault tracks were written as she worked on each albumfor the first time. Maybe they were, maybe they weren’t, but with no way to know, I’m choosing to believe her.
  2. I’m making conjectures about process based on textual evidence—in this case, lyrics. I have not talked to Swift herself about how she uses her uncut songs to fuel future work. Maybe someday.

With that said, here goes.

Vault tracks as scraps

If the vault tracks are tracks that didn’t make the original albums, then they’re a variation of the “scraps” I tell authors to save from their drafts. They’re scenes, storylines, characters, images, and just pretty combinations of words that don’t fit in the current work in progress for one reason or another.

Let’s look at theRedvault tracks: “Better Man” is a great one to study here, because it’s pretty clear why it was cut from the 2012 album. It’s an amazing country song, but she was transitioning to a poppier sound, and in terms of her evolving image, it held her back rather than moving her forward.

But did she trash the song? No, she turned it over to Little Big Town, who recorded it in 2016, and then she re-recorded it herself forRed (TV).She saw that it was a valuable song, but rather than force it onto an album it didn’t fit, she saved it for the right project, where it thrived.

We can make conjectures about all the vault tracks—maybe some were cut from the original albums to create an emotional balance and avoid too many track-five contenders, while others were cut simply for word count—or, in the case of music pre-Spotify, CD space limitations. Whatever the reasoning, the key is that (thank God) she saved the songs for later instead of tossing them.

Giving scraps new life

Obviously, the mere fact that the songs existed to re-record in the first place is evidence of why saving those scraps is a good move. But if we look more closely at the vault tracks, we can see pieces and fragments of them appear in music she wrote later—images and turns of phrase she set aside for future songs. Let’s look at a few examples.

Castles Crumbling,Speak Now (TV)

Swift originally wrote “Castles Crumbling” for her 2010 album,Speak Now, but when it didn’t make the cut, she found opportunities to use the same imagery in future songs, like “Call It What You Want” (Reputation, 2017). The entire context of the song is completely different, of course (withReputation, she’s turned that crumbling castle into a thing of splendor), but the same image kicks the whole thing off: “My castle crumbled overnight…”

Suburban Legends,1989 (TV)

In “Suburban Legends,a scrap from1989, the narrator laments that, “I broke my own heart ’cause you were too polite to do it.” When that song didn’t make the cut in 2014, she held onto the idea, and she used it at least twice in future songs:

  • “I pushed you to the edge / but you were too polite to leave me” (“coney island,” evermore, 2020)
  • “I broke his heart ’cause he was nice” (“Midnight Rain,”Midnights, 2022)

Timeless, Speak Now (TV)

I’ve heard thisSpeak Nowvault track called “hilarious,” and I’ll fight anyone else who wants to denigrate it in my presence because I think it’s gorgeous.

I also think it’s Swift’s first time playing with nostalgia in a way that we see happen over and over again in later albums. The vintage photos she finds in the antique shop in 2010 set the stage for plenty of future material:

  • The sepia-toned account of Bobby and Ethel Kennedy’s relationship in “Starlight” (Red)
  • Her Rebekah Harkness exposé in “the last great american dynasty” (folklore)
  • The blending of her grandfather’s experience in WWII with the realities of COVID-19 in “epiphany” (folklore)
  • Her ode to her grandmother in “marjorie” (evermore)
  • We even see a little bit of it in the vintage feel—and, of course, the 1950s sh*t—of “Lavender Haze” (Midnights)

Mr. Perfectly Fine,Fearless (TV)

I could write a thesis on how “Mr. Perfectly Fine” sends me right back to 17 years old (my age whenFearless first came out), cruising around in my red Jeep Liberty with my high school besties, but that’s for another blog and another day. (A scrap, you might say, that I should save for later instead of leaving here.)

This breakup bop contains a tiny scrap that you could almost overlook as you scream sing from behind the wheel. In the chorus, Swift refers to her mystery ex as “Mr. Perfectly Fine,” “Mr. Always at the right place at the right time,” and…wait for it…“Mr. Casually Cruel.”

And there it is, a direct path from the boppiest of breakup songs to the most devastating of track fives, “All Too Well” (Red), in which Swift accuses another mystery ex of being “casually cruelin the name of being honest.”

The turn of phrase hits different in each song, but thank goodness she saved it when “Mr. Perfectly Fine” didn’t makeFearless,because there’s no denying it cuts deep in “All Too Well.” (And in the ten-minute version? Forget about it. We’re sobbing.)

Long story short

(See what I did there?)

Next time you find yourself making the difficult choice to excise a scene or a character or even a single sentence that you love for the greater good of your novel, think of those cuts as your very own vault tracks. Sure, you could ball them up and trash them (like “crumpled up piece[s] of paper lying here…”), but I encourage you to save them. Stick them in a folder on your hard drive, in a journal, or in a shoebox in the closet—wherever you need to stash them so that, down the road, they can become inspiration for your next masterpiece.

I want to hear from you! How do you save your scraps? Which vault track “scraps” have you been delighted to hear show up in later songs?Email meto talk about your writing, Swift’s writing, or both!

What Taylor Swift’s Vault Tracks Can Teach You About Not Killing Your Darlings | Jane Friedman (2)

Sarah Welch

Sarah Welch is a book editor, writing coach, and unabashed Swiftie living in Austin, TX. You can find her—and her craft resources, community offerings, and one-on-one services—at inkdroplit.com.

What Taylor Swift’s Vault Tracks Can Teach You About Not Killing Your Darlings | Jane Friedman (2024)

FAQs

What does Taylor Swift from The Vault mean? ›

The vault tracks are songs written from the time in her life that she produced each album. As they weren't released as a single or album, they were metaphorically locked away in her musical vault, now released as a “surprise” to fans for each “Taylor's Version” re-recording.

What is the significance of Taylor Swift's track 5? ›

“As I was making albums I guess I was just kind of putting a very vulnerable, personal, honest, emotional song as track five,” she said. Because her fans noticed this, she upheld the Swiftian tradition, and it's the track her fans look out for.

Who are the Vault songs about? ›

Namely, the vault songs feel especially reminiscent of the wavy-haired, Gucci suit-wearing elephant in the room: Harry Styles, who dated Swift in 2012 and is the rumored muse behind many of the songs on the original 1989 (cough cough, “Style”).

How many Vault tracks does Taylor Swift have? ›

With 26 total “From The Vault” songs across the four released Taylor's Version albums, Swift has scored multiple top 10 hits on the Hot 100, real traction at pop radio, and even an epic No. 1 single — these castoff tracks have earned more success for Swift than most artists achieve in their entire career.

What does the vault mean? ›

a room, especially in a bank, with thick walls and a strong door, used to store money or valuable things in safe conditions: a bank vault.

What four songs did Taylor drop? ›

The four songs were labeled as "Eras" bonus songs, not tied to any particular album. But three of the tracks, "Eyes Open," "Safe & Sound" and "If This Was A Movie" have all been on versions of albums before. Specifically, they were all on the pre-"Taylor's version" of various albums.

What is Taylor Swift's most popular? ›

1. You Belong with Me. Taking the top spot on our list is 'You Belong With Me' Tay Tay's country music classic that has withstood the test of time. Released in 2008 as the third single from her second studio album 'Fearless', the song is quintessential Taylor Swift and tells the timeless story of unrequited love.

What is Taylor Swift's 6th? ›

'Reputation' represents her sixth album released in 2017. It shows Taylor Swift embracing her label of a snake and delving back into the dark days of her career.

Who inspired the vault? ›

The history of vaults can be traced back thousands of years. The necessity to protect money and belongings led to locks being developed by the ancient Egyptians, with more sophisticated mechanisms being created by the Romans. Over time, increasingly impressive safes were made available.

What is Taylor Swift worth? ›

Is Mr. Perfectly Fine from the Vault? ›

Critics have included "Mr. Perfectly Fine" in their lists of Swift's "From the Vault" tracks. It was ranked among her ten best vault tracks by Lipshutz, Jack Viswanath of Bustle, Nylon, Time, and Josh Kurp of Uproxx. Viswanath lauded the song as one of the "most clever, witty, and catchy songs Swift has ever written".

Why does Taylor Swift have the vault? ›

The vault tracks are songs written from the time in her life that she produced each album. As they weren't released as a single or album, they were metaphorically locked away in her musical vault, now released as a “surprise” to fans for each “Taylor's Version” re-recording.

How to get Taylor Swift vault? ›

How do I get Taylor Swift vault on Google? Search for “Taylor Swift” in the Blank Space (ahem, a Search bar). Click on the blue vault and solve one of the word puzzles. It may take a second, since there are 89 puzzles to get through (a la “1989 (Taylor's Version)") — don't say we didn't warn ya!

What is Taylor Swift's favorite color? ›

Taylor Swift's favorite color is purple [3].

What does it mean when a song is vaulted? ›

With each release, Swift includes several songs that she describes as "from the vault," meaning they were written during the album's creative process but cut from the original tracklist. Swift wrote "Speak Now" between the ages of 18 and 20.

What is the vault foundation? ›

Description. The Vault hovers above the ground and generates a null field that discourages anything from approaching it, including humans and animals. It was an elongated diamond shape that was shorter and the base and taller at the apex, divided into two equal halves.

Why does Taylor Swift use Easter eggs? ›

Taylor herself told The Washington Post, "When I was 15 and putting together my first album, [...] I decided to encode the lyrics with hidden messages using capital letters. That's how it started, and my fans and I have since descended into color coding, numerology, word searches, elaborate hints, and Easter eggs."

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