Overview

Music researchers, journalists, and dedicated fans can use Perplexity to track unreleased material through the public record. Deep Research cross-references copyright databases, interview archives, and documented live performances to separate confirmed information from speculation, building a verified picture of what exists in an artist's vault.

Your search

Specify the types of public sources you consider credible. This helps Perplexity prioritize verified records over fan theories and guides the research toward confirmable facts.

Which specific unreleased songs from Taylor Swift's vault have been confirmed through copyright registrations, live performance snippets, or producer interviews? What is known about their original intended albums?

Perplexity's answer

Perplexity organizes the vault era by era from Debut through Reputation, tagging each song with its evidence type: copyright/PRO registration, live performance documentation, or co-writer interview. This three-tier confirmation framework is what makes the response genuinely useful rather than a fan wiki recap.

The strongest entries have multiple independent anchors: "Better Man" appeared in PRO listings before Little Big Town recorded it, "Babe" surfaced through Sugarland's writing credits, and both were later confirmed as Red session cuts. For earlier eras, titles like "Your Anything," "I'd Lie," and "Drama Queen" are traced through co-writer timelines and demo circulation records. The response is equally clear about what isn't knowable: Reputation vault track names remain entirely unconfirmed, and anything beyond vague remarks about those sessions is flagged as speculation.

Tips
  • Ask Perplexity to generate a structured table with columns for song title, evidence type, primary source, and likely album era for a scannable reference

  • Follow up with a specific era (e.g., "What has Liz Rose said about Debut-era sessions?") to trace co-writer documentation