By continuing your navigation on this website, you accept the use of cookies for statistical purposes.
Lana Del Rey
Ultraviolence
Polydor (3787448)
Interscope Records (3787448)
Release date: Jun 12, 2014, UK
Slow and low is the name of the game and no one’s sad shtick is more seductive than Madame Melancholia herself, Lana Del Rey. After her breakthrough Born To Die, Lana Del Rey honed her hazy noir sound and added depth and personality to her wayward character. Star-crossed lovers of porcelain fragile women and bullish men are still central to the story (a certain factor in choosing to reinterpret the eternal Romeo and Juliet’s Love Theme by Nino Rota for Old Money) but she finds the space to bite back on Fucked My Way To The Top, Brooklyn Baby and Cruel World. Where Born To Die felt hollow and a little bit, shall we say, formulaic, Ultraviolence is rich and patient. She also allows her voice break free from its timbre cell displaying a vocal range unheard before. She glides angelically on Shades of Cool and Sad Girl and sings with an aerated soft touch. Ultraviolence slow rush that overwhelms. The magmaic power of Ultraviolence seems innocuous but once it gets you it will destroy you.
A1
Cruel World
A2
Ultraviolence
A3
Shades Of Cool
B1
Brooklyn Baby
B2
West Coast
B3
Sad Girl
C1
Pretty When You Cry
C2
Money Power Glory
C3
Fucked My Way Up To The Top
C4
Old Money
D1
The Other Woman
D2
Black Beauty
D3
Guns And Roses
D4
Florida Kilos



