Lana Del Rey
Ultraviolence


4.3
superb

Review

by Necrotica USER (196 Reviews)
June 18th, 2014 | 399 replies


Release Date: 2014 | Tracklist

Review Summary: Oh it was gorgeousness and gorgeosity made flesh

On a surface level, Lana Del Rey may seem to many like a living musical contradiction. Her attempts to bring back the old-fashioned style of the old greats such as Nancy Sinatra or Leonard Cohen have been known to clash with overly melodramatic modern "bad girl" lyricism that many consider vapid. Also, there's the fact that she hasn't always delivered very solid live shows when compared to her studio performances, as well as the way her baroque pop stylings get mixed in with modern hip-hop-influenced beats. But really, these contradictions bring out many of Lana's best qualities... I've always seen her work, primarily lyrically, as a commentary or possibly critique of the negative aspects of today's society and media. And yes, the lyrics do indeed become really clichéd and recycled after a certain point (proving to be one of Born to Die's biggest flaws); however, one can't deny that her overall style - and mix of styles - is pretty damn unique. This mix of seduction, apathy, aforementioned "bad girl" attitude, as well as happiness based around the little things in life, may seem disjointed but it works startlingly well when combined with such varied (if a little samey atmosphere-wise) music. And on that note, once Born to Die and the Paradise EP came and went, many of us were more than a little curious to see how she would expand upon their successes. The result? Reflection.

Ultraviolence is lush, dreamy, dreary, and ultimately a perfect way to combat the more hollow aspects of its predecessors. If Born to Die was a bold love letter to 60s Americana music and Hollywood-style cinematic orchestration, this record is the scaled-back reflection that follows it. Ultraviolence has been widely considered a dream pop record, and with good reason. Gone is much of the excess and "decadent glamor" of previous works in favor of a more entrancing piece of slow pop bliss; half of the melodies sound as though they could have made it onto a Radiohead or Porcupine Tree record due to their heavily melancholic and layered attributes. Lana herself sounds as beautifully seductive and slow as ever, her vocals washed out in heavy reverb and what sounds like vintage 50s production techniques. The whole thing feels more timeless and less gimmicky than Born to Die, filled to the brim with depressive elegance and thankfully devoid of many of the hip-hop elements than dragged the aforementioned album down. What's so impressive, though, is that most of this album's songs are in extremely slow droning tempos, but rarely get boring because of everything going on above the beats. Sure, a song like "West Coast" switches tempos around for the chorus to presumably give it a dreamier effect (which does work), but the majority of this release is exceptionally slow and somber in execution.

However, I'd like to argue that the repetitive tempos aren't really the point of this record. It's all about the dynamics, the vocals, the layers of sound... basically, everything built around the beats. Hell, "Old Money" doesn't even use any beats at all! The best thing about this entire record, the reason why the instrumentation and overall vibe work so well, is because everything is so intimate and reflective. As the closing R&B-influenced tune "The Other Woman" closes the experience out, there's a genuine feeling of finality and beauty that stems from Lana's emotive crooning; it's the kind of sound that influences someone to spin the record for a second time right after it ends. Ultraviolence is so multifaceted and genuinely beautiful that its replay value is simply extraordinary. For instance, you might initially be hooked by "Brooklyn Baby"'s calm and subtle guitar chords and how they combine with Lana's vocals, only to return and hear the little dynamic changes here and there when aided by the underlying synthesizer work. And of course there's that wonderful guitar reverb in the oddly hopeful-sounding opener "Cruel World," which needs to be heard to be believed.

Ultraviolence does have a tendency to get a bit repetitive because of its incessant use of really slow tempos and just how somber the experience gets, but don't give up if you don't get hooked on the first listen or two. It's the very definition of a grower, and this record has something Born to Die never had: more reflection. It comes across as personal. It comes across as purely genuine. And most of all, it comes across as Lana fitting more snugly into this identity she's been carving out for herself. Adele - as well as you other retro soul/pop revivals out there - you could learn some things from this woman.



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user ratings (865)
3.4
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other reviews of this album
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Comments:Add a Comment 
Necrotica
June 18th 2014


10693 Comments

Album Rating: 4.3

You guys knew full well that I was gonna put a certain reference in that summary

LaughingSkull
June 18th 2014


860 Comments

Album Rating: 1.5

Well...

Sowing
Moderator
June 18th 2014


44662 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Hot damn a 4.3???



Glad you like it so much. To me it is her best work, but still only just "pretty good."

ChoccyPhilly
June 18th 2014


13657 Comments


If Fantano rates it a 1, I rate it a 1!

Nah, but in general, I don't like this chick. Her voice and shallowness does annoy me a lot and Born To Die sounded plastic bar a couple of songs.

Necrotica
June 18th 2014


10693 Comments

Album Rating: 4.3

Anthony Fantano won't be too pleased :[



But yeah, it's grown on me like crazy. I only gave it a 3.5 on my first few listens but just got more and more addicted and intrigued

Nikkolae
June 18th 2014


6782 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

anthony fantano is the video equivalent of P4K, why would you listen to him?

ChoccyPhilly
June 18th 2014


13657 Comments


I'm capable of making up my own mind, but it's decent for recs and I like hearing what he has to say.

Nikkolae
June 18th 2014


6782 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

"it's decent for recs and I like hearing what he has to say."



again just like p4k, not being a dick or anything its just some people seem a bit oblivious that its just one guy's opinion, i rather listen to things first and read reviews later and if we agree well cool /rant

Emyay
June 18th 2014


6282 Comments


i still need to give this more listens. could see it growing hard.

ChoccyPhilly
June 18th 2014


13657 Comments


@Nikkolae Oh yeah, that's true. Some of the comments for the review he did for this were pretty stupid like "why would you review it if you don't even like it?" and other stuff that's painful to reiterate

Emyay
June 18th 2014


6282 Comments


i didn't watch his review but 1 is pretty harsh

Necrotica
June 18th 2014


10693 Comments

Album Rating: 4.3

He gave it a 2, not a 1

Necrotica
June 18th 2014


10693 Comments

Album Rating: 4.3

still harsh though

ChoccyPhilly
June 18th 2014


13657 Comments


Strong 1 to a light 2

Emyay
June 18th 2014


6282 Comments


oh okay. what choccy said confused me. either way, i find it interesting how much weight people put behind his opinion. to me he's just some dude who makes video reviews. seems about as worthy of a mention as your average reviewer on sputnik, yet he gets brought up on here all the time

Necrotica
June 18th 2014


10693 Comments

Album Rating: 4.3

@Choccy: Yeah, gotcha. Although in the video description he still puts a 2. He really hates this chick's work quite a lot :/

Nikkolae
June 18th 2014


6782 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

when rating out of 10 it is pretty harsh, but enough about that, west coast mane m/

ChoccyPhilly
June 18th 2014


13657 Comments


Yeah, he does seem to have a vendetta against her and a 1/2 is way too harsh. It's not that bad. Can't fault the instrumentation at all

Emyay
June 18th 2014


6282 Comments


west coast is an early favorite agreed.

Gyromania
June 18th 2014


37609 Comments


good stuff

this deserves more attention than most people on here are likely to give it



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