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Every Detail Of Taylor Swift’s 10-Minute Version Of All Too Well Explained

This song has had us in a chokehold for nine years.
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Raise your hand if you have been personally victimised by Taylor Swift’s 10-minute version of All Too Well. Yeah, us too.

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It was arguably one of Taylor’s biggest releases in, well, ever and helped her smash so many records we seriously don’t know how to react.

WATCH: Taylor Swift performs All Too Well (10 Minute Version) on SNL

The song shot to number one on Spotify around the world in a heartbeat, while Red (Taylor’s Version) quickly became the most-streamed album in a day by a female artist.

That’s not the only Spotify record blondie broke either; she also became the most-streamed female in a single day in Spotify history, and we’re willing to bet plenty of those streams were people (us) playing the 10-minute version of All Too Well on repeat.

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So, what is it about the new, extended version of the song that has us all so captivated? And – for those who are new to the Swiftie sphere – why is All Too Well such a big deal in the first place?

Keep reading for every single detail you need to know about All Too Well (10 Minute Versions) (Taylor’s Version) [From the Vault] … and yeah, we really need to talk to Tay about how she’s naming these damn songs.

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Blondie knew exactly what she was doing when she wrote this track. (Credit: Getty)

What is All Too Well about?

Bestie, sit down and grab a snack – you’re in for a ride. The original recording of All Too Well was the fifth track on Taylor’s fourth album, Red, which was released in 2012. It quickly became one of her most iconic tracks and is widely regarded as one of the best examples of her lyrical genius.

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Any Swiftie can tell you that the fifth track on a Taylor album is guaranteed to be the most emotionally gut-wrenching (looking at you, White Horse, Dear John and Tolerate It), so All Too Well was always going to be a tearjerker. The song tells the story of a devastating breakup, as the narrator relives some of the best and worst memories of her ex.

That alone is enough to make the song an emotional rollercoaster, but like many of Tay’s songs, All Too Well is also closely tied to her own experiences of love and heartache. So, we have to talk about Jake Gyllenhaal.

It’s widely believed that the song was inspired by Taylor’s brief romance with the actor, and the parallels between the song and their relationship are pretty hard to ignore.

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The song is believed to be about Taylor’s ex, Jake Gyllenhaal, pictured here with his sister Maggie, who is supposedly THE sister from the track. (Credit: Getty)
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Jake and Taylor met and sparked a romance in 2010, which was confirmed when they were photographed together before Jake took her to meet his sister, actress Maggie Gyllenhaal. But the something went wrong and the relationship was dead and buried by January 2011. If you want ALL the details, read this explainer.

A year later, Red dropped and Swifties around the world heard All Too Well, cried a bit, then started connecting the dots. “I left my scarf there at your sister’s house” seemed to be a nod to the visit to Maggie’s place, when Jake and Taylor were “getting lost upstate”.

That clue seemed to be confirmed when photos emerged of Jake wearing what looked like the exact same scarf Taylor wore on a New York date in Autumn. Coincidence? Maybe. But also, maybe not! While Taylor has never confirmed any of the theories, they seem pretty believable to us.

Either way, the song became an instant T-Swift classic in 2012 and has remained a fan favourite ever since. Then, in 2021 Taylor announced she would be releasing the re-recorded version of the album with a special 10-minute version of the track.

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In 2021 Taylor is all grown up and ready to break our hearts again. (Credit: Getty)

Why is the 10-minute version of All Too Well such a big deal?

Swifties lost their minds when the 10-minute version “from the vault” was announced, then went wild again when it actually dropped last week. Not only is the song much longer, it features a number of new lyrics that pretty much prove what we’ve been saying all along: this song is about Jake Gyllenhaal. We’ll talk about that more in a minute.

The re-release is also important because it’s a “Taylor’s Version”, meaning she actually owns this version of the track. The original recording from the 2012 version of Red currently belongs to Shamrock Holdings, an American private equity firm owned by the Disney estate, after Scooter Braun sold the masters to Taylor’s first six albums in 2020.

In a bid to finally own her own work, which many music artists sadly don’t, Taylor announced she’d be re-recording and releasing her first six albums. She started with Fearless (Taylor’s Version) and followed up with Red (Taylor’s Version), both in 2021.

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Red is the second album Taylor has re-recorded and released in 2021. (Credit: Instagram/Taylor Swift)

What’s different about the 10-minute version of All Too Well?

Alright, let’s get into the juicy stuff. Taylor has said that she wrote most of the lyrics to the 10-minute version of All Too Well years ago, when she penned the original track. While some seem like more recent additions, like specific lines about her age, the new version of the song features some especially raw lyrics Taylor chose not to include on the 2012 track.

The first change is in the second verse, where Tay sings:

“And you were tossing me the car keys, ‘f–k the patriarchy’
Key chain on the ground, we were always skipping town
And I was thinking on the drive down, any time now
He’s gonna say it’s love, you never called it what it was

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‘Til we were dead and gone and buried
Check the pulse and come back swearing it’s the same
After three months in the grave
And then you wondered where it went to as I reached for you
But all I felt was shame and you held my lifeless frame”

First of all, ouch. Second of all, these lines seem to tie into a pretty popular fan theory that Jake tried to rekindle his and Taylor’s romance a few months after initially calling things off in 2011. Though the theory doesn’t have much evidence to back it up, it wouldn’t be the first time Tay has sung about an ex trying to come crawling back – We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together, Anyone?

The second change comes in the second chorus, where Taylor adds the lines:

“And there we are again when nobody had to know
You kept me like a secret, but I kept you like an oath
Sacred prayer and we’d swear
To remember it all too well, yeah”

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And yep, that one hurts too! It’s believed these lines refer to Taylor’s ex (looking at you Jake) wanting to keep their relationship a secret, while she was totally committed to the romance.

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Sadie Sink in the All Too Well short film is all of us listening to this track. (Credit: YouTube)

One of the biggest changes in the 10-minute version is after the bridge, where Taylor just goes in on her ex with these emotionally charged lines:

“They say all’s well that ends well, but I’m in a new Hell
Every time you double-cross my mind
You said if we had been closer in age maybe it would have been fine
And that made me want to die

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The idea you had of me, who was she?
A never-needy, ever-lovely jewel whose shine reflects on you
Not weeping in a party bathroom
Some actress asking me what happened, you
That’s what happened, you

You who charmed my dad with self-effacing jokes
Sipping coffee like you’re on a late-night show
But then he watched me watch the front door all night, willing you to come
And he said, ‘It’s supposed to be fun turning twenty-one’”

If you weren’t crying already, this would be the section of the song that really turns the waterworks on. It’s also the section that fans believe proves the song is about Jake Gyllenhaal, specifically because of the references to an age gap and a birthday party. There’s a nine-year age gap between Jake and Taylor, who were 29 and 20 respectively when they dated – hence the line about being “closer in age”.

It’s also a widely held belief among fans that Taylor knew the romance with Jake was over when he skipped her 21st birthday party, which would have been in December of 2010, right before the pair split. Not only did that experience (allegedly) inspire the track The Moment I Knew, it also seems to have inspired the lines in the new version of All Too Well about watching the door all night as the narrator turns 21.

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Taylor released a short film alongside the 10 minute version of the song. (Credit: Instagram/Taylor Swift)

The final gut-punch comes with the fifth verse, in which Taylor just solidifies our belief that this song is about Jake. Allegedly. She sings:

“And I was never good at telling jokes, but the punchline goes
‘I’ll get older, but your lovers stay my age’
From when your Brooklyn broke my skin and bones
I’m a soldier who’s returning half her weight

And did the twin flame bruise paint you blue?
Just between us, did the love affair maim you, too?
‘Cause in this city’s barren cold
I still remember the first fall of snow
And how it glistened as it fell
I remember it all too well”

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Did we mention that Jake, who is 40, is currently dating a 25-year-old? And that he was photographed with her in Brooklyn in 2010? And that she and Jake are both fire signs, hence the whole “twin flame” thing?

Okay, maybe that last one is a bit questionable, but the rest of the evidence stands. If there were any doubts about All Too Well being written about Jake Gyllenhaal, the 10-minute version has well and truly put them to bed.

WATCH: Taylor Swift stars in All Too Well: The Short Film

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What’s the All Too Well short film about?

Just when you thought we were done with the evidence, Taylor dropped the short film to accompany the 10-minute version of All Too Well and gave us even MORE proof this track is about Jake. Watch it above.

The short film – starring Dylan O’Brien as “Him”, Sadie Sink as “Her” and Taylor herself as “Her, later” – follows the story of the doomed romance the song is based on. So, basically, Taylor and Jake’s IRL relationship.

The video shows some of the sweetest moments at the start of Jake and Taylor- *ahem*, we mean the character’s relationship, then follows its breakdown and the eventual heartbreak. It then shows Sadie’s character writing a song- wait, no, a novel about the relationship titled All Too Well. We see what you did there, Taylor.

In the last section of the film, we jump 13 years into the future to see Sadie’s character – now played by Taylor herself – promoting the book to a crowd of adoring female fans. Art really does imitate life, doesn’t it? Meanwhile, the guy – now played by a man credited as “Jake Lyon” and Tay, come on, that’s a little on the nose – stands outside, peering through a window… wearing the scarf.

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Taylor with Dylan O’Brien and Sadie Sink at the short film’s premiere. (Credit: Getty)

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