Taylor Swift 1989 Playlist Better [RELIABLE]

At just 2 minutes and 26 seconds, this is the perfect palate cleanser. It is tight, funky, and petty. Use this as a bridge between the sad songs and the angry songs.

  • End of playlist: Summary screen with total keys collected + option to share “My 1989 Polaroid Board” (collage of unlocked stickers).

  • The sun is coming up. The glitter is being wiped away, and we are left with reality and pure emotion.

  • "Clean"
  • "All You Had To Do Was Stay"
  • "Welcome To New York"

  • We will structure the playlist like a night in the city: starting with the excitement of arrival and neon lights, moving into the adrenaline of the night, settling into dreamy introspection, and closing with the morning after.

    Prerequisites: This guide assumes you have access to Taylor’s Version, as the vault tracks add necessary depth to the mid-tempo section. taylor swift 1989 playlist better


    When Taylor Swift released 1989 in 2014, she didn’t just switch genres; she detonated a cultural bomb. It was the album that turned her from a country-pop star into a global, synth-pop monarch. With stadium-filling anthems like "Shake It Off," "Blank Space," and "Bad Blood," the album became ubiquitous.

    But here is the problem facing fans in 2024 and beyond: Overplay fatigue.

    If you simply shuffle the standard edition of 1989 (Taylor’s Version), you are going to hear the same megahits that have been played on grocery store PA systems and workout playlists for a decade. If you want a better listening experience—one that flows with emotional nuance, hidden gems, and vault tracks—you need to stop listening to the radio edit and start curating. At just 2 minutes and 26 seconds, this

    A Taylor Swift 1989 playlist better crafted than the standard album exists. It requires removing a few overexposed tracks, adding the explosive "From The Vault" material, and sequencing the songs to tell a different story.

    Here is how to build the definitive, superior 1989 playlist.


    This is the "walk down the street with sunglasses on" section. High BPM, big choruses, and confidence. End of playlist: Summary screen with total keys

  • "New Romantics"
  • "Shake It Off"
  • "Bad Blood"
  • "Now That We Don’t Talk" (From The Vault)
  • The Hard Choice: "Shake It Off" For a better playlist, cut it. I know. It’s the lead single. But "Shake It Off" is a tone-breaker. It is a children’s party song sandwiched between sophisticated synth-pop. If you are listening for emotional depth or cohesive production, remove it. Save it for the gym.


    This is the bonus track. It fits best as a penultimate track before "Clean." It’s nostalgic and specific.