It seems everything Taylor Swift touches turns to gold, or I guess I should say platinum. In fact, her 1989 album, which was sort of her first experiment with pop music, it turned multi-platinum, selling over 10 million copies worldwide. And Taylor explains this next song, it's all about wishing that person would just say what you want them to say and tell you how they feel. I Wish You Would is a song that I wrote with Jack Antonoff, and it was the first song we ever worked on together. I think for this song, we wanted to create sort of a John Hughes movie visual, with pining and, you know, one person's over here and misses the other person, but is too prideful and won't say it, but meanwhile this other person is here and missing the same person, they're missing each other, but they're not saying it. And I had this happen in my life, and so I wanted to kind of narrate it in a very cinematic way, where it's like you're seeing two scenes play out, and then in the bridge you're seeing the final scene, where it resolves itself. So it talks about a relationship, it says it's a crooked love in a straight line down, makes you want to run and hide, but it makes you turn right back around. So it just kind of is like that dramatic love that's never really quite where it needs to be, and that tension that that creates. It's called I Wish You Would, off Taylor Swift's 1989 album, which is celebrating its fourth year of release this year, and it's on Big Machine Radio.