The Tortured Poets Department

Album: The Tortured Poets Department (2024)
Charted: 3 4
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • "The Tortured Poets Department" is the title track of Taylor Swift's 11th studio album. An ode to chaotic love between two modern poets, fans believe the song chronicles the brief summer 2023 love affair between Swift and The 1975 frontman, Matty Healy.
  • There's a clue tucked away in the very first lines that Swift is addressing Healy:

    You left your typewriter at my apartment
    Straight from the tortured poets department


    This seemingly innocuous detail becomes a Rosetta Stone when you consider Healy's well-documented attachment to his typewriter. He's even gone on record as naming it on a list of things he couldn't do without.

    Suddenly, the abandoned typewriter transforms into a tangible symbol of the relationship's demise. Swift's lyrics wrestle with the unanswered questions left behind: "Who else decodes you? And who's gonna hold you like me?" Her answer, delivered with a sigh that could shatter glass, is a single, desolate word: "Nobody."
  • Here's where things get a bit more literary. Some Swifties have drawn a connection between the song's title and the 1989 film Dead Poets Society co-starring Ethan Hawke and Josh Charles. Their cameo in the "Fortnight" music video supports this.

    There's also the curious case of the missing apostrophe. The official title is indeed "The Tortured Poets Department," not "The Tortured Poets' Department."

    This, the theorists argue, is a deliberate echo of the film's title. In Dead Poets Society, the inspirational teacher, Mr. Keating (played by Robin Williams), leads a group of students in a secret literary society. Theirs is a world of passionate expression, a refuge for "tortured poets," much like the department alluded to in Swift's song. By omitting the apostrophe, the theory goes, Swift is using "Tortured Poets" as an attributive noun (similar to the film's title) and not as a possessive construction.
  • The song namechecks multiple musicians and writers, enough to make even the most diehard Swiftie reach for a decoder ring.

    1. First, there's the chorus, which references two poets who each lived in the Chelsea Hotel in Manhattan: Dylan Thomas and Patti Smith.

    I laughed in your face and said, 'You're not Dylan Thomas, I'm not Patti Smith
    This ain't the Chelsea Hotel
    We're modern idiots


    For the uninitiated, the Chelsea Hotel was a Manhattan haven for creative souls, a place where Dylan Thomas once raged and Patti Smith found her voice. Swift's point? Don't get too full of yourselves, kids, we're not exactly reliving a bohemian revolution here. We're just, you know, "modern idiots."

    2. In the second verse, there's a line about singer-songwriter Charlie Puth.

    You smoked then ate seven bars of chocolate
    We declared Charlie Puth should be a bigger artist


    Puth, a self-proclaimed Swift admirer, has covered her songs and sang her praises on several occasions. It's a little inside joke, a "thanks for being a fan" from Swift.

    3. The plot thickens further with the cryptic mentions of "Lucy" and "Jack" in the bridge.

    Sometimes, I wonder if you're gonna screw this up with me
    But you told Lucy you'd kill yourself if I ever leave
    And I had said that to Jack about you, so I felt seen


    Music critics, ever the bloodhounds, have sniffed out these names as likely referring to singer-songwriter Lucy Dacus and producer Jack Antonoff. Here, things get a touch more personal. Swift reveals that Healy once made a grand (and hopefully melodramatic) declaration about killing himself if she ever left him. Now, Lucy Dacus is part of the Boygenius band with Phoebe Bridgers, another Swift collaborator, who has opened for her on tour. Dacus was also friends with Healy, and Jack Antonoff produced this song. See how it all intertwines?

    Dacus later confirmed it is her being namechecked and said Swift asked her for permission. "I think it's fair game to say yes," she told People. "She actually texted me and asked for my approval."
  • The Tortured Poets Department is a double album with the second part, "The Anthology," released as a surprise just two hours after the first.

    For Swift, it seems, "The Tortured Poets Department" was a deeply personal project. She describes it as a "lifeline" album, something she "really needed" to create. The creative fire ignited quickly, with the initial ideas sparking right after finishing Midnights in 2022. The songwriting process continued throughout her 2023 Eras Tour. Two significant events changed her life during this period: the end of Swift's relationship with her longtime boyfriend Joe Alwyn and the short-lived romance with Matty Healy.
  • Naturally, the internet being the internet, fan theories have sprung up like mushrooms after a summer rain. The album's title itself has become a source of much speculation. Some see it as a haven for passionate artists, a place where tortured souls can find solace and unleash their creativity. Others delve deeper, suggesting it's a metaphor for the artistic process itself, a swirling vortex of emotions and experiences that ultimately birth a work of art.

    But perhaps the most intriguing theory involves a rather unexpected source: a group chat. Apparently, Swift once shared a digital space with actors Andrew Scott, Paul Mescal, and her longtime beau, Joe Alwyn. This virtual haven was christened "The Tortured Man Club." Could this be the inspiration for the album's title? Did the late-night musings and emotional baring within this digital haven bleed into Swift's songwriting?
  • Just five days after its release, The Tortured Poets Department became the first album in Spotify history to surpass one billion streams in a single week.
  • Taylor Swift achieved a monumental feat on the Billboard Hot 100 chart the week after The Tortured Poets Department was released. She not only conquered the top 14 positions, but also charted a total of 32 songs overall, breaking the record for the most songs ever charted by a female artist in a single week. The total was made up of all 31 tracks from the deluxe edition of the album, plus Swift's enduring hit, "Cruel Summer."
  • Taylor Swift played the song live for the first time during her May 25, 2024, concert in Lisbon, Portugal. "This part of the show, I try to be very creative," Swift on Saturday told the Estádio da Luz crowd. She then performed the song as a mashup with "Now That We Don't Talk."

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

John Waite

John WaiteSongwriter Interviews

"Missing You" was a spontaneous outpouring of emotion triggered by a phone call. John tells that story and explains what MTV meant to his career.

Charlie Daniels

Charlie DanielsSongwriter Interviews

Charlie discusses the songs that made him a Southern Rock icon, and settles the Devil vs. Johnny argument once and for all.

Barry Dean ("Pontoon," "Diamond Rings And Old Barstools")

Barry Dean ("Pontoon," "Diamond Rings And Old Barstools")Songwriter Interviews

A top country songwriter, Barry talks about writing hits for Little Big Town, Tim McGraw and Jason Aldean.

Director Nick Morris ("The Final Countdown")

Director Nick Morris ("The Final Countdown")Song Writing

Nick made some of the biggest videos on MTV, including "The Final Countdown," "Heaven" and "Don't Know What You Got (Till It's Gone)."

John Kay of Steppenwolf

John Kay of SteppenwolfSongwriter Interviews

Steppenwolf frontman John Kay talks about "Magic Carpet Ride," "Born To Be Wild," and what he values more than awards and accolades.

Supertramp founder Roger Hodgson

Supertramp founder Roger HodgsonSongwriter Interviews

Roger tells the stories behind some of his biggest hits, including "Give a Little Bit," "Take the Long Way Home" and "The Logical Song."