Swift is a noted Sally Rooney fan, and the tale’s tone is reminiscent of Normal People, a book about an ongoing on-and-off relationship between a pair of high school lovers who find themselves reconnecting repeatedly over the years. Listen to Cuffing Season - Single by Beachwood Coyotes on Apple Music. The chill exists in the exchanges, too: She’s avoiding holiday traditions that brought her home and really doesn’t care to get too attached (“If I wanted to know who you were hanging with/While I was gone, I would have asked you,” she sings at the onset of the song). The song wears like old flannel on a cold day, much like the lover who re-enters her life.
“Season” is full of those Swiftian lyrical flourishes: an invitation to call her “babe” for just the weekend, muddy truck tires, untrustworthy friends back in L.A., and even a Robert Frost reference. Alex kept thinking she saw something flitting above them, and kept her eyes trained on the overhanging branches. It’s an emotional gut-punch, full of charming gusto that helps Evermore match so much of the fraught nostalgia from its sister record Folklore. QB Sam Bradford is one stiff wind away from a rotator cuff tear. Taylor Swift’s “‘Tis the Damn Season’ tells the tale of someone returning to their hometown and embarking on a fleeting but intimate relationship with someone from their past. Jason Heyward: The post-season Jason Heyward of the Cardinals, because the rest of his.