Peace (Taylor Swift song)
"Peace" (stylized in all lowercase) is a song by the American singer-songwriter Taylor Swift from her eighth studio album, Folklore (2020). Swift wrote the song with its producer, Aaron Dessner. According to Swift, "Peace" is her most personal song on Folklore. It has a minimal composition of a soft piano and harmonized guitars over an electric pulse, combining elements of R&B, funk, and jazz. In the lyrics, Swift's character pledges her commitment to a lover while acknowledging the downsides she might bring to their relationship.
"Peace"
July 24, 2020
- Kitty Committee (Los Angeles)
- Long Pond (Hudson Valley)
3:54
- Taylor Swift
- Aaron Dessner
Aaron Dessner
Music critics who praised "Peace" found the song to contain emotional lyrics, Swift's elastic vocal performance, and a stripped-down production. Some critics named it one of the best-written songs by Swift. Commercially, the track peaked at number 58 on the US Billboard Hot 100 and charted in Australia and Canada. The Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) gave it a gold certification. Swift performed the song for the concert documentary Folklore: The Long Pond Studio Sessions (2020) and her Eras Tour (2023–2024).
Background and production[edit]
The American singer-songwriter Taylor Swift began work on her eighth studio album, Folklore, during the COVID-19 lockdowns in early 2020.[1] She recruited Aaron Dessner as a producer on the album. Swift co-wrote nine songs with Dessner, who produced all of them, including "Peace".[2] It was the third track the duo wrote, following the fellow Folklore tracks "Cardigan" and "Seven".[3] Due to the lockdown, Swift and Dessner were separated and had to create the album by exchanging digital files;[4] the songs they worked on were originally Dessner's instrumental tracks that he would send to Swift to pen the melody and lyrics over.[5]
For "Peace", its instrumental consisted of harmonized basslines, a drone, and a pulse—the last one was provided by the American singer-songwriter Justin Vernon.[6][7] When Swift heard the instrumental, she found an "immediate sense of serenity" and a feeling of being at peace, but thought that it would be very literal to sing about finding peace. Instead, Swift wrote about complex "conflicted" feelings that would contrast to the track's calming sound.[1] She recorded it in one take at Kitty Committee Studio in Los Angeles.[2][7] The song and its instruments were recorded at Long Pond Studios in Hudson Valley and April Base Studios in Wisconsin. It was mixed at Long Pond and was mastered at Sterling Sound in New York City.[2]
Music and lyrics[edit]
Characterized by a sparse,[8] lo-fi instrumentation,[9] "Peace" is a minimal R&B-influenced song with a slow funk bassline,[10] consisting of three lushly harmonized electric guitars juxtaposed over a ticking pulse,[11][3] further textured by subtle synthesizers and a drizzle of soft piano notes.[12] Swift employs her soulful jazzy vocals in the "Peace",[3][8] via a complex vocal melody,[10] ranging between F3 to A4.[13] The song is written in the key of F major and has a moderately fast tempo of 150 beats per minute.[14]
The song structure of "Peace" is an ode reminiscent of a prayer.[10] Its lyrics discuss the effects of Swift's hectic superstardom on her private life, and is directly addressed to her lover, warning them of the challenges that come with them being a part of her hyper-publicized life.[15][16] The song's title is deceptive, since "Peace" is about failing to achieve peace, seeing Swift confess that "tranquility is the only thing she can't promise" her lover.[17] After witnessing the dissection of her personal life by the press for over a decade, especially tabloid media, Swift was tight-lipped and private about her boyfriend from 2016 to 2023, English actor Joe Alwyn, who co-wrote and co-produced several tracks on Folklore. "Peace" channels the balance Swift struck between her private and public lives and is rooted in her personal life, unlike much of the fictional material in Folklore.[18]
Notable details in the song's lyrics include Swift's mention of Alwyn's younger brother in the lyric "Family that I chose now that I see your brother as my brother", the second time she mentions him in her discography, after the track "Paper Rings" from her 2019 album Lover.[19] An Insider critic opined that the lyric "But there's robbers to the east / clowns to the West" is a mention of her famous feuds, underscoring "the spectacle of Swift's everyday and her inability to escape the trappings of public life"; "robbers" referring to Scott Borchetta, who sold the masters of Swift's first six albums to Scooter Braun, while the "clowns to the West" refers to Kanye West and his ex-wife Kim Kardashian.[20]
Release and live performances[edit]
Folklore was released on July 24, 2020, via Republic Records. In the standard track-list, "Peace" sits at number 15 as the penultimate track.[21] The song debuted in the United States's Billboard Hot 100 and Rolling Stone Top 100, with peaks of number 58[22] and number 25 respectively.[23] On Billboard's Hot Rock & Alternative Songs, it reached number 12 and stayed on the chart for 10 weeks.[24] The song also appeared on the chart's 2020 year-end chart, where it landed at number 53.[25] Elsewhere, the track reached on the national charts of Australia (33)[26] and Canada (46),[27] and the Audio Streaming Chart of the United Kingdom (53).[28] It received a gold certification from the Australian Recording Industry Association for reaching 35,000 units.[29]
After the album's release, on November 25, 2020, Swift recorded a stripped-down rendition of "Peace" for the Disney+ concert documentary Folklore: The Long Pond Studio Sessions and its live album.[30] On February 23, 2024, Swift performed the song as a mashup with her songs "You're Not Sorry" (2008) and "New Year's Day" (2017) for the Sydney stop of her Eras Tour (2023–2024).[31]
Critical reception[edit]
Sarah Carson of i remarked "Peace" as "the most romantic song" Swift has ever written, containing the "storybook poetry hallmarks" of her early country career, and underlined the lyric "All these people think love's for show / But I would die for you in secret."[11] Variety critic Chris Wilman called "Peace" the "champion romance song", and along with fellow track "Invisible String", found it a suitable addition that contrasts the overaching sadness of Folklore. He thought "Peace" is a "realistic" love ballad that "renders all the compensatory vows of fidelity and courage all the more credible and deeply lovely".[17] The Guardian's Laura Snapes complimented the "deep dedication" Swift expresses in "Peace".[32]
Writing for Vulture, Nate Jones felt that "Peace" is "more clearly autobiographical than much of the album", having Swift apologize to her lover for "the stress that comes with dating one of the world's most famous women". He added that the song's purpose can come off as "an insufferable flex", but "her unassuming authenticity keeps it far away from humblebrag territory".[9] Callie Ahlgrim of Insider said the song has Swift promise to give her partner "passion and warmth and undying loyalty" but yet "wrestles with her inability to promise peace".[20] Also writing for Insider, Courteney Larocca admired the song's "gut-wrenchingly vulnerable" lyrics, "stunning" musical composition, and Swift's "crisp" vocal performance. She also drew lyrical parallels between "Peace" and Swift's older songs "Call It What You Want" (2017) and "The Archer" (2019).[33]
WRVU stated that "Peace" is one of the "most exquisite" songs Swift has ever written, representing a love song in "the absolute purest and most devoted sense", with some of the "lushest" lyrics she has ever written. The review praised the "improvisational" song structure of "Peace", deviating from standard pop structures of "a regular verse-chorus-bridge", and pinpointed that the song's central theme is a derivative of Swift's sixth studio album, Reputation.[34] In a mixed commentary, Kathryn Flynn of Consequence felt the song's slow pace and muted R&B sound does not fit the overall texture of Folklore.[35]