Lana Del Rey declared that the 27-minute short film would be a “farewell.” To what exactly was unclear at the time: Some speculated that the singer was leaving the business, a naïve suggestion given her preoccupation, however ironic, with the insatiable allure of “money, power, glory,...
在Ultraviolence这首歌里的表现是“He hit me and it felt like a kiss”这个意象,批判者认为这表现...
Each record represented Lana Del Rey in different stages of her life. As each album has come out, her growth in character and sense of self is evident, not only in theme but the music itself has matured. Listening to the records in order, from Born to Die, to Ultraviolence all the way...
Discuss the deeper meaning of Lana Del Rey's song Diet Mountain Dew. Read and vote on user submitted song interpretations.
Album: Ultraviolence Producer: Greg Kurstin A vow of revenge and a prayer for success, “Money Power Glory” is that moment in the movie when the villain reveals their plan to the helpless hero. But this is Lana Del Rey’s moment, meaning that when she reveals her concealed weapon, you ...
With time, Del Rey’s musical similarities to Morrissey have grown clearer. No, the trip-hop gauze and hip-hop boom-bap of 2012’s Born to Die didn’t recall Johnny Marr’s intricate Smiths guitar lines. But Lana’s sonic touchstones on 2014’s Ultraviolence—’60s girl groups like the...
A dreamier song of Lana's, "Brooklyn Baby" shows off the singer's soprano range while also containing peaceful, soothing music production and pride for the New York borough where Del Rey lived for four years. It's the fourth single released from her third studio album,Ultraviolence. Like ...
After two albums that found Del Rey doubling back to the hip-hop-inflected baroque pop of her 2012 breakthrough,Born to Die,Norman Fucking Rockwellpicks up where 2014’s sludgy, more roots-orientedUltraviolenceleft off. The singer has aptly described the new album as a “mood recor...