![]() Put on a red dress on the album’s opener, “Cruel World,” seduce a famous man with “a little bit of bourbon” and tell him you’re crazy.Įxamine domestic violence on the title track with meaty lines such as “he hurt me but it felt like true love,” but include more questions than answers. ![]() This belief system on “Ultraviolence” preaches a cut-throat approach to finding and retaining bliss. If there’s a central message to “Ultraviolence,” the highly anticipated new album by Lana Del Rey, it is this: Why mind Facebook executive Sheryl Sandberg’s advice that a modern woman “lean in” when she can get what’s desired through reclining?įilled with the kind of echoed, distant seduction that has made the young chanteuse-instigator one of the most polarizing pop stars in recent memory, Del Rey’s follow-up to her multi-platinum “Born to Die” is rife with incitements and further defines her philosophy, one that’s as provocative in its own way as punk rock but without all that screaming.
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