Taylor Swift Fans Gather For Singalongs Following Cancelled Vienna Shows
Heartbroken Taylor Swift fans gathered together across Vienna, trading friendship bracelets and joining in spontaneous singalongs after the singer’s three-night run of shows was cancelled due to a terror plot.
Videos have been flooding TikTok and Twitter showing scores of Swifties gathering in the Austrian capital and singing the lyrics to Swift’s songs.
One X user posted a video, captioned: “The Vienna Taylor Swift shows may have been cancelled, but you can’t break the spirit of Swifties.
This is girlhood. Turning something ugly into something beautiful.”
Fans were even seen giving friendship bracelets to local law enforcement who were at the singalongs.
“Swifties singing throughout Vienna, this is incredible to experience and so comforting to unite together in the wake of darkness. Thank you for all the Swiftie love and the Austrian gov’t for keeping us safe,” another fan wrote on X.
An Austrian teenager arrested over an alleged plot to strike a Taylor Swift concert in Vienna planned to carry out a suicide attack that would have caused a “bloodbath” and had vowed loyalty to Islamic State (IS), authorities said.
The 19-year-old man, who has North Macedonian roots, made a full confession in custody, Austria’s general director for public security Franz Ruf told a news conference on Thursday.
He swore allegiance to the IS group’s leader on the internet and had chemicals, machetes and technical devices at his home in the town of Ternitz in preparation for an attack, Ruf added.
The suspect was planning a lethal assault among the estimated 20,000 “Swiftie” fans set to gather outside Vienna’s Ernst Happel Stadium, said national intelligence head Omar Haijawi-Pirchner. Two other Austrian youths aged 17 and 15 were detained on Wednesday over the reported plot.
“The main perpetrator has confessed that he was supposed to carry out a suicide attack with two accomplices,” said Austrian Chancellor Karl Nehammer.
“The suspects actually had very specific and detailed plans … to leave a bloodbath in their wake.”
Authorities painted a picture of the main suspect having self-radicalised, transforming his appearance and sharing Islamist propaganda online. He quit his job on July 25, telling people he had “big plans”, Ruf said.
The 17-year-old suspect had been given a job with a company a few days ago that was providing services at the stadium, according to security officials.
Event organiser Barracuda Music said it had cancelled Swift’s three concerts in Vienna, due to start on Thursday for a sold-out 65,000 audience each, in coordination with the singer’s management team.
“It’s just heartbreaking, just frustrating. But at the end of the day I guess it’s for everyone’s safety,” said Mark del Rosario, who had flown from the Philippines to see the wildly popular US singer.
US broadcaster ABC cited law enforcement and intelligence sources as saying Austrian authorities had received information about the Swift concert threat from US intelligence.
It quoted the sources as saying that at least one of the suspects had pledged allegiance to ISIS-K, a resurgent wing of IS, on Telegram in June, though the plot was IS-inspired rather than directed by the group’s operatives.
Austrian Interior Minister Gerhard Karner said foreign intelligence agencies had helped with the investigation, as Austrian law does not allow monitoring of messenger apps.
Event organiser Live Nation urged fans of Coldplay, which is due to play at the same stadium on August 21, to stay calm and said it was in contact with authorities.
It did not comment on whether the show would take place.
British police said on Thursday there was nothing to indicate that the planned attack in Vienna would have an impact on Swift’s shows at Wembley Stadium in London next week.
“Concerts are often a preferred target of Islamist attackers, large concerts,” said Karner, listing the 2015 attack on the Bataclan venue in Paris and the 2017 bombing at England’s Manchester Arena where US pop star Ariana Grande had played.
The plot in Austria also brought to mind a foiled plan by three IS-linked suspects to attack Vienna’s gay pride parade last year.
Islamic State was largely crushed by a US-led coalition several years ago after establishing a “caliphate” in large areas of Iraq and Syria but has still managed some major attacks while seeking to rebuild and reinvent itself.
This week’s shows were to be part of the record-breaking Eras Tour by American singer-songwriter Swift which started on March 17, 2023, in Glendale, Arizona, and is set to conclude on December 8, 2024, in Vancouver, Canada.
Swift, 34, has not yet commented on the cancellations on her official Instagram account, which has 283 million followers.
Her fans were horrified at the threat, with some begging organisers to postpone the concert instead of cancelling it outright. Promoters have said they will pay back tickets.