Swift's 'All Too Well' ousts 'American Pie' as longest top hit
AFP
November 24, 2021 18:48 MYT
November 24, 2021 18:48 MYT
AFTER nearly 50 years as the longest number one hit of all time, it's finally time to say bye, bye Miss American Pie.
Taylor Swift unseated Don McLean's 8-minute, 42-second epic about the day the music died with her 10-minute, 13-second version of her smash hit "All Too Well (Taylor's Version)", which soared to take the number one spot on the top songs chart this week, according to industry tracker Billboard.
The extended version of Swift's hit was recently released on her re-recorded album "Red (Taylor's Version)." Swift dropped two new versions of the song, the 10-minute version and another clocking in at around five minutes.
Per Billboard's chart rules, both of those songs were rolled into one listing, making Swift's rise to the Hot 100's top spot all the more likely.
"American Pie" had held the rank of longest ever number-one hit since it first hit the charts in January 1972.
"You guys sent a 10-minute song to Number One for the first time in history," Swift, 31, said on Instagram.
Swift has found resounding success as she makes good on her vow to re-record her first six albums so she can control their rights.
It's a power move that comes in the wake of her public sparring with industry mogul Scooter Braun over his company's purchase of her previous label, which gave him a majority stake in the master recordings of her first six albums.
Braun later sold the master rights of Swift's works to the private equity company Shamrock Holdings.
The heated feud and her bold promise to re-record those works ignited discussion over who keeps the keys to an artist's work, and the conditions under which young musicians sign contracts.
The owner of lucrative masters one-of-a-kind source material used to create vinyls, CDs and digital copies is able to dictate how songs are reproduced and sold.
Swift has sweetened her re-releases with bonus materials and previously unreleased tracks like the 10-minute version of "All Too Well" to the delight of her ardent fans.
She has released two re-records of her six albums this far: "Fearless" and "Red."
Swift still has four left, after she was contractually allowed to begin the process in November 2020.
Billboard tracks the original versions of her songs, still owned by Shamrock, separately from her re-records.