Artem and Elizaveta were determined to do that this summer. Elizaveta flew via a third country to Greece, for which she had secured a visa, then to Germany. Artem applied - six months ahead - for an Italian visa through an agency.
"I combined it with a general European trip; if I was there just purely for the concert ... it would have been cheaper," he says. "It turned out to be about 300,000 roubles ($3,200)."
The students have learned to adapt to the shifts in geopolitics.
Elizaveta's Apple Music account is registered in Turkey, while Artem and others use "workarounds" to listen to music on Spotify, which stopped streaming in Russia in 2022, after the full-scale war began. Apple paused product sales the same year.
Dmitry, a fan of Taylor Swift, reacts during a meeting with other Swifties in Lyubertsy outside Moscow, Russia September 15, 2024. REUTERS/Evgenia Novozhenina
And another fan, Dmitry, says Swifties around the world are just a click away.
"We are not really isolated from the rest of the world. (We) sit and watch TikTok, there are videos from foreigners and various discussions ...
Fans of Taylor Swift sing with a guitar in a park in Lyubertsy outside Moscow, Russia September 15, 2024. REUTERS/Evgenia Novozhenina
"In principle, we have enough of everything. We have a very rich life."