Upon wrapping her final show of the European leg of the Eras tour, Taylor Swift dropped the official music video for “I Can Do It With a Broken Heart."
The clip features behind-the-scenes clips from the setup of the tour to how she moves around beneath and behind the stage.
The video starts with a time-lapse of a crowd filling one of the stadiums before a show.
The viewers can see Swift get in position for her first entrance of the night through the floor set to “Miss Americana and the Heartbreak Prince,” and she gets pulled on a moving seat underneath the length of the stage in the Lover era body suit before changing outfits to transition to the Fearless era.
They can even see a clip of her getting into the “cleaning cart” that they use to transport her to that first elevator platform for the start of the show.
Parts of the video involve her rehearsing the very anthem, which became the second single off of her latest album, The Tortured Poets Department after “Fortnight (feat. Post Malone).”
Lyrics sync up with Swift rehearsing in athletic clothes, costumes closer to what she wears on stage, and even Kam Saunders, one of her dancers, doing the 1-2-3-4 countdown.
Swift’s dancers, background vocalists, and longtime guitarist Paul Sidoti feature in the music video.
The singer played the music video for the audience after her final London show, during which she brought out Florence Welch of Florence + the Machine to perform their song “Florida!!!” off The Tortured Poets Department.
The surprise songs segment saw Swift brought out longtime collaborator Jack Antonoff to perform a guitar mashup of “Death by a Thousand Cuts” from Lover and “Getaway Car” from Reputation.
They re-enacted the famous moment in Swift’s Miss Americana documentary when they came up with the bridge for the song.
She then performed "So Long London” on the piano.
Swift has 18 remaining shows left on her final leg of the tour, which will return to North America in October at the Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida. From there she will move to New Orleans, Indianapolis and Toronto, Canada before closing out the record-breaking stadium jaunt in Vancouver with three nights.
During her final Wembley show, she shouted out the crowd for making her the first artist to play eight nights at the London stadium.