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Length: 4:09
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"If you're not drinkin', then you're not playin'"
But you've got the music
You've got the music in you, don't you?
Down on the West Coast, I get this feeling like
It all could happen that's why I'm leaving
You for the moment
You for the moment, Boy Blue, yeah you
You're feelin' hot at the show, I'm feelin' hot to the touch
You say you'll miss me the most, I say I'll miss you so much
Something keeps me real quiet, I'm alive I'm a-lush
Your love, your love, your love
I can see my baby swingin'
His Parliament's on fire and his hands are up
On the balcony and I'm singing
Ooh baby, Ooh baby, I'm in love
I can see my sweet boy swayin'
He's crazy y Cubano como yo my love
On the balcony and I'm saying
Move baby, move baby, I'm in love
Down on the West Coast, they got their icons
Their silver starlets, their Queens of Saigon
But you've got the music
You've got the music in you, don't you?
Down on the West Coast, they love their movies
Their golden gods and rock and roll groupies
And you've got the music
You've got the music in you, don't you?
You push it hard up all the way, I'm feeling hot and on fire
I guess that no one ever really made me feel I'm a child
They all say "oh, cariño", boy, it's you I desire
Your love, your love, your love
I can see my baby swingin'
His Parliament's on fire and his hands are up
On the balcony and I'm singing
Ooh baby, Ooh baby, I'm in love
I can see my sweet boy swayin'
He's crazy y Cubano como yo my love
On the balcony and I'm saying
Move baby, move baby, I'm in love
I can see my baby swingin'
His Parliament's on fire and his hands are up
On the balcony and I'm singing
Ooh baby, Ooh baby, I'm in love
I can see my sweet boy swayin'
He's crazy y Cubano como yo my love
On the balcony and I'm saying
Move baby, move baby, I'm in love
She's got a bit 'body positive' too.
Wesht coasht - is it actually meant to sound like this? Or is it just the pseudo-crappy recording?
i hear this a lot in female singers these days. and it drives me bonkers.
i'm not a fan of her music, but she certainly is a gorgeous woman.
It's like they go deaf whenever they hear her.
Sorry folks, I like her. Something about her voice…
Don`t be, it`s sensual and warm.
lizardking wrote:
like Jim M said "The West is the best"
This song however...is not. A 5 from me
To drive the point home by contrast, Joe Strummer and the Mescaleros' "Mondo Bongo" is now on. Even when he's musically mellow, Joe as an individual practically sits in your lap. Let me know if Lana Del Rey ever shows up.
kcar, everybody in my hotel room sees Clockwork Orange all over the world these days... this West Coast song is groovy... Lana Del Rey begins her extended reference to booze as an affirmation when she sings, "If you're not drinkin' then you're not playin..." then she affirms booze as a constructive force when she sings, "I'm alive I'm a lush"... in a general sense, she describes how life is a party, and music is an integral part... we be dancing like bowlegged gypsy muleskinners... time flies when we're having fun... hope life is grand for you now, kcar...
like Jim M said "The West is the best"
This song however...is not. A 5 from me
I wondered that too...very distracting
Sassy and Sultry
I don't think any professional critics (who generally favor this album) have caught the specific literary meaning of this theme album called Ultraviolence... although some critics enjoy the role of a naughty girl embraced by Lana Del Rey, they miss the true point of the message... although the music is not my favorite style, I am impressed with the lyrics, which are much like an avant-garde literary novel...
the title of the album — Ultraviolence — is a direct allusion to what the main character, young Alex, embraces in A Clockwork Orange, which is a movie directed by Stanley Kubrick in 1971, adapted from a science fiction book of the same title by Anthony Burgess in 1962... in the book and the movie, young Alex is a violent and psychopathic criminal who is programmed by the government with classical conditioning while drugged with medications... the conditioning makes young Alex get sick if he does anything wrong... in the end, young Alex is liberated by the government from his conditioning, and he is allowed to revel in the glory of his bad behavior once more...
the meaning of the book can be derived from the title— A Clockwork Orange... a clock is a punctual machine... an orange represents organic life... the motif of the book and the movie is that it is impossible to turn an organic life form into a machine...
Lana Del Rey celebrates her freedom to be a unique individual... conformity is oppressive, which is her ultimate point... again, this music is not my favorite style, but this album Ultraviolence is a bona fide literary powerhouse...
in this specific song, "West Coast", Lana Del Rey begins her extended reference to booze as an affirmation when she sings, "If you're not drinkin' then you're not playin..." then she affirms booze as a constructive force when she sings, "I'm alive I'm a lush"... in a general sense, she describes how life is a party, and music is an integral part...
Lana Del Rey is not a whore for money, like the Walmart owners... she is actually making an artistic statement about freedom versus oppressive conformity...
everybody in my homeless camp loves her writing... we be dancing...
A ClockWork Orange, Ultra ViolenceRead the book, saw the movie. Sorry, Lazarus, but I don't see any connection with LDR. Lana consistently strikes me as the manufactured project of a manager or record company. Yes, her music is well-produced. Yes, there are a lot of hooks. Sure, she's really hot. But it doesn't add up to anything with lasting substance. This is downbeat pop without a discernible personality behind it. Fun to listen to in the background...for a while.
To drive the point home by contrast, Joe Strummer and the Mescaleros' "Mondo Bongo" is now on. Even when he's musically mellow, Joe as an individual practically sits in your lap. Let me know if Lana Del Rey ever shows up.
...if Britney Spears had an Axis II personality disorder. Is there any singer active in the music business today who puts less emotion into her performance? (Is Lana Del Ray really a Vocaloid animation?)
Besides, I am wondering about atomic.
oo la la...
"Just like a white-winged dove...." Oooh baby.
And the opening notes, stolen from the Beatles. (I give her all my love...)
I wish that I had said something as lucid as brookap did...
"Just like a white-winged dove...." Oooh baby.
I suppose it would be pretty creepy to post something like, "I love this woman", when I've never met her and she's younger than my own children.
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Yeah, that would probably be creepy.
Join the queue of stalkers, Uncle
I suppose it would be pretty creepy to post something like, "I love this woman", when I've never met her and she's younger than my own children.
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Yeah, that would probably be creepy.
It is easy to do, generally the more haters an artists has the bigger the fan base and banking account. Quality? Probably not a good indicator. The masses are not called the "great unwashed" for displaying good taste.
This isn't a bad song on first listen but I'm skeptical that "she has a fairly high cred following", especially because you're the one making such a fatuous claim.
You go girl...
Her ultimate theme is that she is going to be herself no matter what...
everybody in my alien space craft loves this song...
hope you are having fun right this minute, sajitjacob...
Funny, that's the first thought I had without even looking at the comments. Too many ooh baby ooh baby oohs. Reminded me of Stevie Nicks immediately.
Lazarus wrote:
Lana Del Rey's 'Ultraviolence' Has A Firm Grasp On Pop History
Del Rey has been a controversial figure, as critics debate the extent of her vocal talent versus her talent for publicity. And she recently caused a stir when she gave an interview in which she said, quote, "I wish I was dead already" and drew criticism from, among others, Kurt Cobain's daughter, Frances Bean. Ken says Del Rey is continuing a time-honored pop tradition of developing a public persona that challenges fans to decide what's real and what's not.
This doesn't sound remotely like any Stevie Nicks vocal track I've ever heard, but I suppose people hear different things.
Lana Del Rey's 'Ultraviolence' Has A Firm Grasp On Pop History
Del Rey has been a controversial figure, as critics debate the extent of her vocal talent versus her talent for publicity. And she recently caused a stir when she gave an interview in which she said, quote, "I wish I was dead already" and drew criticism from, among others, Kurt Cobain's daughter, Frances Bean. Ken says Del Rey is continuing a time-honored pop tradition of developing a public persona that challenges fans to decide what's real and what's not.
If you actually listen to the song or read the lyrics, it's got nothing at all to do with Clockwork Orange.
can't stand him, either. ugh.
I don't think any professional critics (who generally favor this album) have caught the specific literary meaning of this theme album called Ultraviolence... although some critics enjoy the role of a naughty girl embraced by Lana Del Rey, they miss the true point of the message... although the music is not my favorite style, I am impressed with the lyrics, which are much like an avant-garde literary novel...
the title of the album — Ultraviolence — is a direct allusion to what the main character, young Alex, embraces in A Clockwork Orange, which is a movie directed by Stanley Kubrick in 1971, adapted from a science fiction book of the same title by Anthony Burgess in 1962... in the book and the movie, young Alex is a violent and psychopathic criminal who is programmed by the government with classical conditioning while drugged with medications... the conditioning makes young Alex get sick if he does anything wrong... in the end, young Alex is liberated by the government from his conditioning, and he is allowed to revel in the glory of his bad behavior once more...
the meaning of the book can be derived from the title— A Clockwork Orange... a clock is a punctual machine... an orange represents organic life... the motif of the book and the movie is that it is impossible to turn an organic life form into a machine...
Lana Del Rey celebrates her freedom to be a unique individual... conformity is oppressive, which is her ultimate point... again, this music is not my favorite style, but this album Ultraviolence is a bona fide literary powerhouse...
in this specific song, "West Coast", Lana Del Rey begins her extended reference to booze as an affirmation when she sings, "If you're not drinkin' then you're not playin..." then she affirms booze as a constructive force when she sings, "I'm alive I'm a lush"... in a general sense, she describes how life is a party, and music is an integral part...
Lana Del Rey is not a whore for money, like the Walmart owners... she is actually making an artistic statement about freedom versus oppressive conformity...
everybody in my homeless camp loves her writing... we be dancing...
A ClockWork Orange, Ultra ViolenceBut it's so hard when your lips are shot full of collagen!
Quite a remarkable effort that they are covering the World Cup, Wimbledon & Glastonbury all at the same time!
??
This doesn't do much for me but I wouldn't call it any of those things.
Perhaps you were listening to One Direction when you wrote this?
You probably should have gotten SNL out of your mind 25 years ago.
Amen to that!
OK, I'll try a little harder. But I can't get SNL out of my mind. Unforgettable.
You probably should have gotten SNL out of your mind 25 years ago.
rdo wrote:
OK, I'll try a little harder. But I can't get SNL out of my mind. Unforgettable.
If she could, I wish she would.
This song certainly delivers on that last part.
She's got a bit 'body positive' too.
LOL