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Posted: 2024-02-17 23:00:00

It's finally here! Taylor Swift's much anticipated Eras tour arrived in Australia this week, and so, after months of waiting, young fans are frantically tying friendship bracelets together and brushing up on their fan chants.

But take a closer look at those taking their (expensive) stadium seats in Melbourne and Sydney. There will be plenty of 40-, 50-, 60-somethings singing along too — and they aren't all there with their kids.

Two glamorous women smile at the camera

Julia Roberts has long been a fan of Taylor Swift. She was one of the surprise guests on the 1989 tour. (Getty images)

While 45 per cent of Swift's US fans are millennials — like the 34-year-old herself — 21 per cent are Gen X and 25 per cent are Boomers, according to a 2023 survey. That means nearly half of her millions of fans are likely over 45.

Middle-aged Swifties aren't shy about their adoration. In the US, Attorney-General Merrick Garland, 72, works Swift's song lyrics into conversations and legal arguments, and reportedly has almost all of her albums on display in his office.

Oscar-winning actor Julia Roberts, 56, loves her so much that the first concert she took her kids to was Swift's 1989 tour in 2015. And recently the self-dubbed Silver Swifties were photographed shaking it off in their retirement homes.

In Australia, AMP chief economist Shane Oliver, actor Toni Collette, former foreign affairs minister Julie Bishop and academic Larissa Behrendt have all declared themselves to be Swift fans.

Even 60-year-old Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is reportedly angling for tickets to the upcoming shows.

So what is it about Swift's lovelorn ballads, kitchen bops and revenge anthems, spread across 14 albums, that appeal so intensely to middle-aged people?

Ageless and timeless

Amy DeSalvo Umanoff, one of the almost 20,000 members of the GenX Swifties Facebook group, says her love of Swift's music comes down to the relatability of her lyrics.

"It's so easy to remember the feelings her lyrics conjure up," she says. "It's easy to put yourself right back into her shoes. She writes for herself but also all of us, no matter your age or where you are in your own life."

Fellow member Courtney Thomas Joyce agrees.

"I feel like her lyrics are ageless and timeless. I can transport myself to that moment where I felt the same thing that she felt. She takes small moments and makes them normal, human, and helps us feel not so alone."

Crowd scenes of middle aged people at a concert

Almost half of Taylor Swift's fans are middle-aged, often paying up big for tickets to her Eras tour. (Getty Images)

Writing universally relatable lyrics is something Swift has always been good at.

In a 2008 New Yorker article entitled Prodigy, published when Swift was only 19 and just before her second album Fearless was released, music critic Sasha Frere-Jones compared her "precocious wisdom" to that of Prince, Elvis Costello and Hank Williams.

"You could also give a Swift composition like 'Our Song' to someone 20 years older and it could work just fine," he wrote. "The concerns of kids aren't necessarily juvenile — just their reactions.

Bridging this gap is the trick of pop music; when people sing 'Love Me Do' to themselves on their way to a date 10 years on the other side of their second divorce, it's a sign that a young songwriter has got to a universal truth. …

People who aren't old enough to have lived the songs they've written nevertheless know how the song embodying that life should go."

The album that grabbed many middle-aged fans' attention was the melancholic Folklore, released in July 2020 when much of the world was in lockdown.

That's when Australia Institute economist Greg Jericho, 52, got hooked.

"It hit me exactly where I needed to be," he says.

He said prior to that album, he'd mistakenly believed everything Swift wrote was "autobiographical and … always about her break-ups". But Folklore "wasn't that kind of an album".

Indeed, the critically acclaimed album, and its sister album Evermore, saw Swift explore a more indie sound, expand on the subjects of her lyrics and collaborate with alternative music stars like Bon Iver and The National.

Two mature aged men smile at the camera

The opening night of the Eras tour in Melbourne drew all generations. (ABC: Danielle Bonica)

Academic Jennifer Beckett, one of the convenors of Melbourne's recent Swiftposium, describes Swift as a "life writer", comparing her to Dolly Parton, another country music star who became more mainstream and is adept at telling stories in song.

"Storytelling is the way that we understand the world. So [it's good] to have an artist like Taylor Swift, who's so good at storytelling, help fans to understand the world that they're in, and to make sense of the changes that they've gone through and how they've grown up or to re-understand something about themselves," Dr Beckett says.

Swift's melodies themselves are sometimes reminiscent of an earlier time.

"She does have quite an 80s aesthetic in her work, even though it's got the pop aesthetic of now in her lyrics," says composer Caerwen Martin, pointing to songs like Wildest Dreams and Style from Swift's album 1989.

Tall blonde woman playing a guitar on stage

Taylor Swift is a prolific singer-songwriter, reportedly writing more than 100 songs solo since her first album. (Getty Images)

Similarly, more mature fans appreciate her as an old-school singer-songwriter, Jericho says.

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