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Home Reviews A fan says Taylor Swift ‘Speak Now’ vinyl contain ‘devilish’ electronic music. Check now
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A fan says Taylor Swift ‘Speak Now’ vinyl contain ‘devilish’ electronic music. Check now

by Tarang Kashyap

Musk stated that he had teased plans for his new AI venture in an April interview with Tucker Carlson, who was hosting Fox News at the time. He said, “We’re going to start something I call TruthGPT.” He called it an “maximum truth-seeking AI” that “cares about understanding the universe.”

Musk’s announcement of the new business comes a few months after he said in an interview that he thinks AI could cause “civilization destruction” and joined other tech leaders in calling for a break from an “out of control” AI race.

A Taylor Swift fan from the United Kingdom placed an order for a vinyl special edition of Taylor Swift’s “Speak Now (Taylor’s Version)” for $39 from the singer’s official website. At first, she was scared, and then she was happy when she found out that her copy had been pressed incorrectly.

In her viral TikTok video, Rachel, 30, who declined to unveil her keep going name, pressed play on the record, as an unfavorable voice can heard say, “I quit seeing individuals, I quit checking out at the chips of tissue and moving living beings.”

It has already received 3.8 million views since it was posted on Monday.

Rachel then flips the record over to its B-side, where a man’s vacant voice can heard more than once say, “There are 70 billion individuals of earth. Where are they concealed?” The dreadful inquiry in the end regresses into an electronic tune. ( According to Rachel, only one of the three records in the set contained an error. The other two play as planned.)

Taylor Swift 'Speak Now' vinyl

The self-described Swiftie said, “At first I thought that maybe she’d put a secret message in the vinyl because it started talking and I was like, ‘OK, this is weird, but it’s not like Taylor Swift,'” referring to the singer’s penchant for easter eggs.

Be that as it may, as she listened further, she turned into somewhat scared. ” She recalls thinking to herself, “Oh my god, this is demonic.” What’s going on?”

Rachel discovered that the three tracks on her record were from an album called “Happy Land,” a compilation of electronic music from the British Isles from 1992 to 1996, with some assistance from the app Shazam and by searching for the lyrics on Google.

Rachel said she came to know from comments that misprints can happen in light of the fact that record organizations lease their print machines to run collections. However, the way that her circles are a purple — or an “orchid marbled variety,” as per Taylor Swift’s site — and not the commonplace dark shading makes the misunderstanding even more peculiar, she said.

She stated, “I haven’t seen a single other person who this has happened to,” which is “really strange.”

The reactions via social media have been all around.. Swifties are scared — yet some are encouraging all her the uncommon collectible as it might demonstrate to have a high resale in future.

A top comment with 28,000 likes read, “This would scare me out.”
one more top comment, with 56,000 preferences, said. ” Try not to dispose of it!!!!!!!!”
One client recognized themselves as a gatherer of broken vinyls, adding, “Anything you do, purchase what you didn’t get and keep this. Vaue will just increment.”

Rachel said the record mark behind “Blissful Land,” called Above Board, informed her secretly, proposing to send her the full collection.

According to Rachel, some viewers even made fun of the “70 billion people” track and called it a “bop,” while others were reminded of “The Evil Dead,” a 1980s horror film about a forgotten book that brings back the dead when read.

“Individuals were saying it’s spooky,” she said, adding that individuals requested that she quit playing it or it would “curse” her.

Rachel told Insider she at first reached client support on Taylor Swift’s site for a exchange, whereupon a representative from Universal Music told her that they would require the record once again to research. Yet, she has selected against sending it away, given the uncommonness of the bizarre collectible.

“Obviously it resembles a major, something major,” Rachel said about erroneously printed records. ” Because it’s so uncommon, they’ll pay a lot for it.”

“I can’t part with my creepy vinyl,” she added.

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