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ExoticFlower

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  1. Elle liked a post in a topic by ExoticFlower in Lana Del Rey to VG: "I am still a sad girl" (15.06.2014)   
    I lol'd a bit at the "I still date bad men" bit. Has Barrie been sleeping in the dog house the past few weeks?
  2. Allie liked a post in a topic by ExoticFlower in Lana Del Rey to VG: "I am still a sad girl" (15.06.2014)   
    This was an interview VG did with Lana around the time she performed in Bergen, so it's from yesterday I believe. 
     
    Lana has captured the world with her music, but she points out that not everything in her life is picture perfect. 
     
    After her performance in Bergen she received the high score 5 from VG, and the singer told us that she highly values Norwegian fans.
     
    "I value being here more than ever now. When I see how the audience sings along, it makes me feel like they accept me for who I am. I feel like they understand me." 
    When asked why there are still sad girls and bad men in her songs, Lana laughs, and answers: "I am still a sad girl, I still date bad men." 
     
    On the "I wish I was dead" hysteria
     
    But feeling understood is not always the case for the artist outside of the stage area. In an interview with the guardian published this week, the singer voiced a death wish, which got quoted by media all over the world, including VG.
     
    But to VG Lana says that the whole situation was blown out of proportions. 
     
    "I did not actually say that I thought an early death was a glamorous way to go. I just said that like many other people I admire and take inspiration from those who have passed at an early age," referring to her heroes, Jimi Hendrix and Amy Winehouse, who both died young. (Did he mix up Jimi Hendrix and Jim Morrison when he googled 27 club...?)
     
    The artist admits to having said that she sometimes wishes she was dead, but that it was taken the wrong way. 
     
    "Like many people who go through a lot I sometimes wish for my life to end. Sometimes feel like that, and sometimes I don't."
     
    Lana Del Rey elaborates that every day is different, and that she is not an unhappy person.
    "Sometimes I just feel like it becomes too much."
     
    Talking about Ultraviolence
     
    "To me this album is more relaxed, free and sexy. I didn't feel the need to document as much of my life story as I did in Born to Die. This album goes deeper into important moments from my life." Lana Del Rey adds that the album is like her own little personal jewel. 
     
    The artist struggle when she's trying to explain why so many young girls love her music. 
     
    "I guess they to a certain degree can relate to what I say or how I say things."
     
    Interviewer: "But one of your songs from the new album is called "Fucked My Way to the Top". What do you want to convey to those who listen to this song?"
     
    "I don't censor myself," she says, and adds that all of the songs on the album means something to her and often tells a tale about things she's been trough. 
     
    She admits that sharing her deep and personal songs from the stage has been nerve wracking. But Del Rey says it has become easier with time. Now she sees that the audience is happy to be at her concerts. And that is why she sees the importance in taking "selfies" with her fans during concerts, giving out hugs and pecks on the cheek. 
     
    "It's a part of the experience. For them I am the show, but to me they are the show. So I take part in it."
  3. ExoticFlower liked a post in a topic by Cruel in LDR Live in Bergen, June 14th 2014   
    My video of Ultraviolence live!
  4. ExoticFlower liked a post in a topic by Cruel in LDR Live in Bergen, June 14th 2014   
    My pic   I run the site with mostly 2 others 
     
    SHE WAS AMAZING
    I was front row and she was really close at some point, but she always spends much more time on the other site of the stage, not where I am  And she didn't walk far when she took selfies etc during Cola and National Anthem 

    One of my pics, zoom though but she felt that close in real life 

  5. ExoticFlower liked a post in a topic by HEARTCORE in Videos for "Shades of Cool" and "Ultraviolence" Coming Soon   
    i love how cohesive this album has been, the single & album covers have followed a similar style and the music is so well connected
     
    this era has been amazing so far
  6. ExoticFlower liked a post in a topic by Cruel in Lana Del Rey to VG: "I am still a sad girl" (15.06.2014)   
    I read it earlier today, good interview from VG! ( opposed to their f.ex Gaga interview.)
    I also think she sometimes is misquoted by interviewers, or they put it in a way it's not meant to be. She was so sweet talking about us Norwegians as well 
  7. Summersault liked a post in a topic by ExoticFlower in Lana Del Rey to VG: "I am still a sad girl" (15.06.2014)   
    I lol'd a bit at the "I still date bad men" bit. Has Barrie been sleeping in the dog house the past few weeks?
  8. princess94 liked a post in a topic by ExoticFlower in Lana Del Rey to VG: "I am still a sad girl" (15.06.2014)   
    This was an interview VG did with Lana around the time she performed in Bergen, so it's from yesterday I believe. 
     
    Lana has captured the world with her music, but she points out that not everything in her life is picture perfect. 
     
    After her performance in Bergen she received the high score 5 from VG, and the singer told us that she highly values Norwegian fans.
     
    "I value being here more than ever now. When I see how the audience sings along, it makes me feel like they accept me for who I am. I feel like they understand me." 
    When asked why there are still sad girls and bad men in her songs, Lana laughs, and answers: "I am still a sad girl, I still date bad men." 
     
    On the "I wish I was dead" hysteria
     
    But feeling understood is not always the case for the artist outside of the stage area. In an interview with the guardian published this week, the singer voiced a death wish, which got quoted by media all over the world, including VG.
     
    But to VG Lana says that the whole situation was blown out of proportions. 
     
    "I did not actually say that I thought an early death was a glamorous way to go. I just said that like many other people I admire and take inspiration from those who have passed at an early age," referring to her heroes, Jimi Hendrix and Amy Winehouse, who both died young. (Did he mix up Jimi Hendrix and Jim Morrison when he googled 27 club...?)
     
    The artist admits to having said that she sometimes wishes she was dead, but that it was taken the wrong way. 
     
    "Like many people who go through a lot I sometimes wish for my life to end. Sometimes feel like that, and sometimes I don't."
     
    Lana Del Rey elaborates that every day is different, and that she is not an unhappy person.
    "Sometimes I just feel like it becomes too much."
     
    Talking about Ultraviolence
     
    "To me this album is more relaxed, free and sexy. I didn't feel the need to document as much of my life story as I did in Born to Die. This album goes deeper into important moments from my life." Lana Del Rey adds that the album is like her own little personal jewel. 
     
    The artist struggle when she's trying to explain why so many young girls love her music. 
     
    "I guess they to a certain degree can relate to what I say or how I say things."
     
    Interviewer: "But one of your songs from the new album is called "Fucked My Way to the Top". What do you want to convey to those who listen to this song?"
     
    "I don't censor myself," she says, and adds that all of the songs on the album means something to her and often tells a tale about things she's been trough. 
     
    She admits that sharing her deep and personal songs from the stage has been nerve wracking. But Del Rey says it has become easier with time. Now she sees that the audience is happy to be at her concerts. And that is why she sees the importance in taking "selfies" with her fans during concerts, giving out hugs and pecks on the cheek. 
     
    "It's a part of the experience. For them I am the show, but to me they are the show. So I take part in it."
  9. BLOODSHOT liked a post in a topic by ExoticFlower in Lana Del Rey to VG: "I am still a sad girl" (15.06.2014)   
    I lol'd a bit at the "I still date bad men" bit. Has Barrie been sleeping in the dog house the past few weeks?
  10. vanillaiceys liked a post in a topic by ExoticFlower in Lana Del Rey to VG: "I am still a sad girl" (15.06.2014)   
    This was an interview VG did with Lana around the time she performed in Bergen, so it's from yesterday I believe. 
     
    Lana has captured the world with her music, but she points out that not everything in her life is picture perfect. 
     
    After her performance in Bergen she received the high score 5 from VG, and the singer told us that she highly values Norwegian fans.
     
    "I value being here more than ever now. When I see how the audience sings along, it makes me feel like they accept me for who I am. I feel like they understand me." 
    When asked why there are still sad girls and bad men in her songs, Lana laughs, and answers: "I am still a sad girl, I still date bad men." 
     
    On the "I wish I was dead" hysteria
     
    But feeling understood is not always the case for the artist outside of the stage area. In an interview with the guardian published this week, the singer voiced a death wish, which got quoted by media all over the world, including VG.
     
    But to VG Lana says that the whole situation was blown out of proportions. 
     
    "I did not actually say that I thought an early death was a glamorous way to go. I just said that like many other people I admire and take inspiration from those who have passed at an early age," referring to her heroes, Jimi Hendrix and Amy Winehouse, who both died young. (Did he mix up Jimi Hendrix and Jim Morrison when he googled 27 club...?)
     
    The artist admits to having said that she sometimes wishes she was dead, but that it was taken the wrong way. 
     
    "Like many people who go through a lot I sometimes wish for my life to end. Sometimes feel like that, and sometimes I don't."
     
    Lana Del Rey elaborates that every day is different, and that she is not an unhappy person.
    "Sometimes I just feel like it becomes too much."
     
    Talking about Ultraviolence
     
    "To me this album is more relaxed, free and sexy. I didn't feel the need to document as much of my life story as I did in Born to Die. This album goes deeper into important moments from my life." Lana Del Rey adds that the album is like her own little personal jewel. 
     
    The artist struggle when she's trying to explain why so many young girls love her music. 
     
    "I guess they to a certain degree can relate to what I say or how I say things."
     
    Interviewer: "But one of your songs from the new album is called "Fucked My Way to the Top". What do you want to convey to those who listen to this song?"
     
    "I don't censor myself," she says, and adds that all of the songs on the album means something to her and often tells a tale about things she's been trough. 
     
    She admits that sharing her deep and personal songs from the stage has been nerve wracking. But Del Rey says it has become easier with time. Now she sees that the audience is happy to be at her concerts. And that is why she sees the importance in taking "selfies" with her fans during concerts, giving out hugs and pecks on the cheek. 
     
    "It's a part of the experience. For them I am the show, but to me they are the show. So I take part in it."
  11. James19709 liked a post in a topic by ExoticFlower in Lana Del Rey to VG: "I am still a sad girl" (15.06.2014)   
    This was an interview VG did with Lana around the time she performed in Bergen, so it's from yesterday I believe. 
     
    Lana has captured the world with her music, but she points out that not everything in her life is picture perfect. 
     
    After her performance in Bergen she received the high score 5 from VG, and the singer told us that she highly values Norwegian fans.
     
    "I value being here more than ever now. When I see how the audience sings along, it makes me feel like they accept me for who I am. I feel like they understand me." 
    When asked why there are still sad girls and bad men in her songs, Lana laughs, and answers: "I am still a sad girl, I still date bad men." 
     
    On the "I wish I was dead" hysteria
     
    But feeling understood is not always the case for the artist outside of the stage area. In an interview with the guardian published this week, the singer voiced a death wish, which got quoted by media all over the world, including VG.
     
    But to VG Lana says that the whole situation was blown out of proportions. 
     
    "I did not actually say that I thought an early death was a glamorous way to go. I just said that like many other people I admire and take inspiration from those who have passed at an early age," referring to her heroes, Jimi Hendrix and Amy Winehouse, who both died young. (Did he mix up Jimi Hendrix and Jim Morrison when he googled 27 club...?)
     
    The artist admits to having said that she sometimes wishes she was dead, but that it was taken the wrong way. 
     
    "Like many people who go through a lot I sometimes wish for my life to end. Sometimes feel like that, and sometimes I don't."
     
    Lana Del Rey elaborates that every day is different, and that she is not an unhappy person.
    "Sometimes I just feel like it becomes too much."
     
    Talking about Ultraviolence
     
    "To me this album is more relaxed, free and sexy. I didn't feel the need to document as much of my life story as I did in Born to Die. This album goes deeper into important moments from my life." Lana Del Rey adds that the album is like her own little personal jewel. 
     
    The artist struggle when she's trying to explain why so many young girls love her music. 
     
    "I guess they to a certain degree can relate to what I say or how I say things."
     
    Interviewer: "But one of your songs from the new album is called "Fucked My Way to the Top". What do you want to convey to those who listen to this song?"
     
    "I don't censor myself," she says, and adds that all of the songs on the album means something to her and often tells a tale about things she's been trough. 
     
    She admits that sharing her deep and personal songs from the stage has been nerve wracking. But Del Rey says it has become easier with time. Now she sees that the audience is happy to be at her concerts. And that is why she sees the importance in taking "selfies" with her fans during concerts, giving out hugs and pecks on the cheek. 
     
    "It's a part of the experience. For them I am the show, but to me they are the show. So I take part in it."
  12. Summersault liked a post in a topic by ExoticFlower in Lana Del Rey to VG: "I am still a sad girl" (15.06.2014)   
    This was an interview VG did with Lana around the time she performed in Bergen, so it's from yesterday I believe. 
     
    Lana has captured the world with her music, but she points out that not everything in her life is picture perfect. 
     
    After her performance in Bergen she received the high score 5 from VG, and the singer told us that she highly values Norwegian fans.
     
    "I value being here more than ever now. When I see how the audience sings along, it makes me feel like they accept me for who I am. I feel like they understand me." 
    When asked why there are still sad girls and bad men in her songs, Lana laughs, and answers: "I am still a sad girl, I still date bad men." 
     
    On the "I wish I was dead" hysteria
     
    But feeling understood is not always the case for the artist outside of the stage area. In an interview with the guardian published this week, the singer voiced a death wish, which got quoted by media all over the world, including VG.
     
    But to VG Lana says that the whole situation was blown out of proportions. 
     
    "I did not actually say that I thought an early death was a glamorous way to go. I just said that like many other people I admire and take inspiration from those who have passed at an early age," referring to her heroes, Jimi Hendrix and Amy Winehouse, who both died young. (Did he mix up Jimi Hendrix and Jim Morrison when he googled 27 club...?)
     
    The artist admits to having said that she sometimes wishes she was dead, but that it was taken the wrong way. 
     
    "Like many people who go through a lot I sometimes wish for my life to end. Sometimes feel like that, and sometimes I don't."
     
    Lana Del Rey elaborates that every day is different, and that she is not an unhappy person.
    "Sometimes I just feel like it becomes too much."
     
    Talking about Ultraviolence
     
    "To me this album is more relaxed, free and sexy. I didn't feel the need to document as much of my life story as I did in Born to Die. This album goes deeper into important moments from my life." Lana Del Rey adds that the album is like her own little personal jewel. 
     
    The artist struggle when she's trying to explain why so many young girls love her music. 
     
    "I guess they to a certain degree can relate to what I say or how I say things."
     
    Interviewer: "But one of your songs from the new album is called "Fucked My Way to the Top". What do you want to convey to those who listen to this song?"
     
    "I don't censor myself," she says, and adds that all of the songs on the album means something to her and often tells a tale about things she's been trough. 
     
    She admits that sharing her deep and personal songs from the stage has been nerve wracking. But Del Rey says it has become easier with time. Now she sees that the audience is happy to be at her concerts. And that is why she sees the importance in taking "selfies" with her fans during concerts, giving out hugs and pecks on the cheek. 
     
    "It's a part of the experience. For them I am the show, but to me they are the show. So I take part in it."
  13. tiffanydale liked a post in a topic by ExoticFlower in Lana Del Rey to VG: "I am still a sad girl" (15.06.2014)   
    This was an interview VG did with Lana around the time she performed in Bergen, so it's from yesterday I believe. 
     
    Lana has captured the world with her music, but she points out that not everything in her life is picture perfect. 
     
    After her performance in Bergen she received the high score 5 from VG, and the singer told us that she highly values Norwegian fans.
     
    "I value being here more than ever now. When I see how the audience sings along, it makes me feel like they accept me for who I am. I feel like they understand me." 
    When asked why there are still sad girls and bad men in her songs, Lana laughs, and answers: "I am still a sad girl, I still date bad men." 
     
    On the "I wish I was dead" hysteria
     
    But feeling understood is not always the case for the artist outside of the stage area. In an interview with the guardian published this week, the singer voiced a death wish, which got quoted by media all over the world, including VG.
     
    But to VG Lana says that the whole situation was blown out of proportions. 
     
    "I did not actually say that I thought an early death was a glamorous way to go. I just said that like many other people I admire and take inspiration from those who have passed at an early age," referring to her heroes, Jimi Hendrix and Amy Winehouse, who both died young. (Did he mix up Jimi Hendrix and Jim Morrison when he googled 27 club...?)
     
    The artist admits to having said that she sometimes wishes she was dead, but that it was taken the wrong way. 
     
    "Like many people who go through a lot I sometimes wish for my life to end. Sometimes feel like that, and sometimes I don't."
     
    Lana Del Rey elaborates that every day is different, and that she is not an unhappy person.
    "Sometimes I just feel like it becomes too much."
     
    Talking about Ultraviolence
     
    "To me this album is more relaxed, free and sexy. I didn't feel the need to document as much of my life story as I did in Born to Die. This album goes deeper into important moments from my life." Lana Del Rey adds that the album is like her own little personal jewel. 
     
    The artist struggle when she's trying to explain why so many young girls love her music. 
     
    "I guess they to a certain degree can relate to what I say or how I say things."
     
    Interviewer: "But one of your songs from the new album is called "Fucked My Way to the Top". What do you want to convey to those who listen to this song?"
     
    "I don't censor myself," she says, and adds that all of the songs on the album means something to her and often tells a tale about things she's been trough. 
     
    She admits that sharing her deep and personal songs from the stage has been nerve wracking. But Del Rey says it has become easier with time. Now she sees that the audience is happy to be at her concerts. And that is why she sees the importance in taking "selfies" with her fans during concerts, giving out hugs and pecks on the cheek. 
     
    "It's a part of the experience. For them I am the show, but to me they are the show. So I take part in it."
  14. Tyler liked a post in a topic by ExoticFlower in Lana Del Rey to VG: "I am still a sad girl" (15.06.2014)   
    I lol'd a bit at the "I still date bad men" bit. Has Barrie been sleeping in the dog house the past few weeks?
  15. Rayse liked a post in a topic by ExoticFlower in Lana Del Rey to VG: "I am still a sad girl" (15.06.2014)   
    I lol'd a bit at the "I still date bad men" bit. Has Barrie been sleeping in the dog house the past few weeks?
  16. Kommander liked a post in a topic by ExoticFlower in Lana Del Rey to VG: "I am still a sad girl" (15.06.2014)   
    I lol'd a bit at the "I still date bad men" bit. Has Barrie been sleeping in the dog house the past few weeks?
  17. Go Go Dancer liked a post in a topic by ExoticFlower in Lana Del Rey to VG: "I am still a sad girl" (15.06.2014)   
    This was an interview VG did with Lana around the time she performed in Bergen, so it's from yesterday I believe. 
     
    Lana has captured the world with her music, but she points out that not everything in her life is picture perfect. 
     
    After her performance in Bergen she received the high score 5 from VG, and the singer told us that she highly values Norwegian fans.
     
    "I value being here more than ever now. When I see how the audience sings along, it makes me feel like they accept me for who I am. I feel like they understand me." 
    When asked why there are still sad girls and bad men in her songs, Lana laughs, and answers: "I am still a sad girl, I still date bad men." 
     
    On the "I wish I was dead" hysteria
     
    But feeling understood is not always the case for the artist outside of the stage area. In an interview with the guardian published this week, the singer voiced a death wish, which got quoted by media all over the world, including VG.
     
    But to VG Lana says that the whole situation was blown out of proportions. 
     
    "I did not actually say that I thought an early death was a glamorous way to go. I just said that like many other people I admire and take inspiration from those who have passed at an early age," referring to her heroes, Jimi Hendrix and Amy Winehouse, who both died young. (Did he mix up Jimi Hendrix and Jim Morrison when he googled 27 club...?)
     
    The artist admits to having said that she sometimes wishes she was dead, but that it was taken the wrong way. 
     
    "Like many people who go through a lot I sometimes wish for my life to end. Sometimes feel like that, and sometimes I don't."
     
    Lana Del Rey elaborates that every day is different, and that she is not an unhappy person.
    "Sometimes I just feel like it becomes too much."
     
    Talking about Ultraviolence
     
    "To me this album is more relaxed, free and sexy. I didn't feel the need to document as much of my life story as I did in Born to Die. This album goes deeper into important moments from my life." Lana Del Rey adds that the album is like her own little personal jewel. 
     
    The artist struggle when she's trying to explain why so many young girls love her music. 
     
    "I guess they to a certain degree can relate to what I say or how I say things."
     
    Interviewer: "But one of your songs from the new album is called "Fucked My Way to the Top". What do you want to convey to those who listen to this song?"
     
    "I don't censor myself," she says, and adds that all of the songs on the album means something to her and often tells a tale about things she's been trough. 
     
    She admits that sharing her deep and personal songs from the stage has been nerve wracking. But Del Rey says it has become easier with time. Now she sees that the audience is happy to be at her concerts. And that is why she sees the importance in taking "selfies" with her fans during concerts, giving out hugs and pecks on the cheek. 
     
    "It's a part of the experience. For them I am the show, but to me they are the show. So I take part in it."
  18. MaterialDiamond liked a post in a topic by ExoticFlower in Lana Del Rey to VG: "I am still a sad girl" (15.06.2014)   
    I lol'd a bit at the "I still date bad men" bit. Has Barrie been sleeping in the dog house the past few weeks?
  19. ednafrau liked a post in a topic by ExoticFlower in Lana Del Rey to VG: "I am still a sad girl" (15.06.2014)   
    This was an interview VG did with Lana around the time she performed in Bergen, so it's from yesterday I believe. 
     
    Lana has captured the world with her music, but she points out that not everything in her life is picture perfect. 
     
    After her performance in Bergen she received the high score 5 from VG, and the singer told us that she highly values Norwegian fans.
     
    "I value being here more than ever now. When I see how the audience sings along, it makes me feel like they accept me for who I am. I feel like they understand me." 
    When asked why there are still sad girls and bad men in her songs, Lana laughs, and answers: "I am still a sad girl, I still date bad men." 
     
    On the "I wish I was dead" hysteria
     
    But feeling understood is not always the case for the artist outside of the stage area. In an interview with the guardian published this week, the singer voiced a death wish, which got quoted by media all over the world, including VG.
     
    But to VG Lana says that the whole situation was blown out of proportions. 
     
    "I did not actually say that I thought an early death was a glamorous way to go. I just said that like many other people I admire and take inspiration from those who have passed at an early age," referring to her heroes, Jimi Hendrix and Amy Winehouse, who both died young. (Did he mix up Jimi Hendrix and Jim Morrison when he googled 27 club...?)
     
    The artist admits to having said that she sometimes wishes she was dead, but that it was taken the wrong way. 
     
    "Like many people who go through a lot I sometimes wish for my life to end. Sometimes feel like that, and sometimes I don't."
     
    Lana Del Rey elaborates that every day is different, and that she is not an unhappy person.
    "Sometimes I just feel like it becomes too much."
     
    Talking about Ultraviolence
     
    "To me this album is more relaxed, free and sexy. I didn't feel the need to document as much of my life story as I did in Born to Die. This album goes deeper into important moments from my life." Lana Del Rey adds that the album is like her own little personal jewel. 
     
    The artist struggle when she's trying to explain why so many young girls love her music. 
     
    "I guess they to a certain degree can relate to what I say or how I say things."
     
    Interviewer: "But one of your songs from the new album is called "Fucked My Way to the Top". What do you want to convey to those who listen to this song?"
     
    "I don't censor myself," she says, and adds that all of the songs on the album means something to her and often tells a tale about things she's been trough. 
     
    She admits that sharing her deep and personal songs from the stage has been nerve wracking. But Del Rey says it has become easier with time. Now she sees that the audience is happy to be at her concerts. And that is why she sees the importance in taking "selfies" with her fans during concerts, giving out hugs and pecks on the cheek. 
     
    "It's a part of the experience. For them I am the show, but to me they are the show. So I take part in it."
  20. Januli liked a post in a topic by ExoticFlower in Lana Del Rey to VG: "I am still a sad girl" (15.06.2014)   
    This was an interview VG did with Lana around the time she performed in Bergen, so it's from yesterday I believe. 
     
    Lana has captured the world with her music, but she points out that not everything in her life is picture perfect. 
     
    After her performance in Bergen she received the high score 5 from VG, and the singer told us that she highly values Norwegian fans.
     
    "I value being here more than ever now. When I see how the audience sings along, it makes me feel like they accept me for who I am. I feel like they understand me." 
    When asked why there are still sad girls and bad men in her songs, Lana laughs, and answers: "I am still a sad girl, I still date bad men." 
     
    On the "I wish I was dead" hysteria
     
    But feeling understood is not always the case for the artist outside of the stage area. In an interview with the guardian published this week, the singer voiced a death wish, which got quoted by media all over the world, including VG.
     
    But to VG Lana says that the whole situation was blown out of proportions. 
     
    "I did not actually say that I thought an early death was a glamorous way to go. I just said that like many other people I admire and take inspiration from those who have passed at an early age," referring to her heroes, Jimi Hendrix and Amy Winehouse, who both died young. (Did he mix up Jimi Hendrix and Jim Morrison when he googled 27 club...?)
     
    The artist admits to having said that she sometimes wishes she was dead, but that it was taken the wrong way. 
     
    "Like many people who go through a lot I sometimes wish for my life to end. Sometimes feel like that, and sometimes I don't."
     
    Lana Del Rey elaborates that every day is different, and that she is not an unhappy person.
    "Sometimes I just feel like it becomes too much."
     
    Talking about Ultraviolence
     
    "To me this album is more relaxed, free and sexy. I didn't feel the need to document as much of my life story as I did in Born to Die. This album goes deeper into important moments from my life." Lana Del Rey adds that the album is like her own little personal jewel. 
     
    The artist struggle when she's trying to explain why so many young girls love her music. 
     
    "I guess they to a certain degree can relate to what I say or how I say things."
     
    Interviewer: "But one of your songs from the new album is called "Fucked My Way to the Top". What do you want to convey to those who listen to this song?"
     
    "I don't censor myself," she says, and adds that all of the songs on the album means something to her and often tells a tale about things she's been trough. 
     
    She admits that sharing her deep and personal songs from the stage has been nerve wracking. But Del Rey says it has become easier with time. Now she sees that the audience is happy to be at her concerts. And that is why she sees the importance in taking "selfies" with her fans during concerts, giving out hugs and pecks on the cheek. 
     
    "It's a part of the experience. For them I am the show, but to me they are the show. So I take part in it."
  21. Deadly Nightshade liked a post in a topic by ExoticFlower in Lana Del Rey to VG: "I am still a sad girl" (15.06.2014)   
    This was an interview VG did with Lana around the time she performed in Bergen, so it's from yesterday I believe. 
     
    Lana has captured the world with her music, but she points out that not everything in her life is picture perfect. 
     
    After her performance in Bergen she received the high score 5 from VG, and the singer told us that she highly values Norwegian fans.
     
    "I value being here more than ever now. When I see how the audience sings along, it makes me feel like they accept me for who I am. I feel like they understand me." 
    When asked why there are still sad girls and bad men in her songs, Lana laughs, and answers: "I am still a sad girl, I still date bad men." 
     
    On the "I wish I was dead" hysteria
     
    But feeling understood is not always the case for the artist outside of the stage area. In an interview with the guardian published this week, the singer voiced a death wish, which got quoted by media all over the world, including VG.
     
    But to VG Lana says that the whole situation was blown out of proportions. 
     
    "I did not actually say that I thought an early death was a glamorous way to go. I just said that like many other people I admire and take inspiration from those who have passed at an early age," referring to her heroes, Jimi Hendrix and Amy Winehouse, who both died young. (Did he mix up Jimi Hendrix and Jim Morrison when he googled 27 club...?)
     
    The artist admits to having said that she sometimes wishes she was dead, but that it was taken the wrong way. 
     
    "Like many people who go through a lot I sometimes wish for my life to end. Sometimes feel like that, and sometimes I don't."
     
    Lana Del Rey elaborates that every day is different, and that she is not an unhappy person.
    "Sometimes I just feel like it becomes too much."
     
    Talking about Ultraviolence
     
    "To me this album is more relaxed, free and sexy. I didn't feel the need to document as much of my life story as I did in Born to Die. This album goes deeper into important moments from my life." Lana Del Rey adds that the album is like her own little personal jewel. 
     
    The artist struggle when she's trying to explain why so many young girls love her music. 
     
    "I guess they to a certain degree can relate to what I say or how I say things."
     
    Interviewer: "But one of your songs from the new album is called "Fucked My Way to the Top". What do you want to convey to those who listen to this song?"
     
    "I don't censor myself," she says, and adds that all of the songs on the album means something to her and often tells a tale about things she's been trough. 
     
    She admits that sharing her deep and personal songs from the stage has been nerve wracking. But Del Rey says it has become easier with time. Now she sees that the audience is happy to be at her concerts. And that is why she sees the importance in taking "selfies" with her fans during concerts, giving out hugs and pecks on the cheek. 
     
    "It's a part of the experience. For them I am the show, but to me they are the show. So I take part in it."
  22. Mafiosa liked a post in a topic by ExoticFlower in If you could choose ONE unreleased song for Lana to release, which would it be?   
    Pin Up Galore
     
    The lyrics and the overall sound... ugh, so dark and tantalizing. Imagine what she could do with it now. 
  23. Hellion liked a post in a topic by ExoticFlower in Lana Del Rey to VG: "I am still a sad girl" (15.06.2014)   
    This was an interview VG did with Lana around the time she performed in Bergen, so it's from yesterday I believe. 
     
    Lana has captured the world with her music, but she points out that not everything in her life is picture perfect. 
     
    After her performance in Bergen she received the high score 5 from VG, and the singer told us that she highly values Norwegian fans.
     
    "I value being here more than ever now. When I see how the audience sings along, it makes me feel like they accept me for who I am. I feel like they understand me." 
    When asked why there are still sad girls and bad men in her songs, Lana laughs, and answers: "I am still a sad girl, I still date bad men." 
     
    On the "I wish I was dead" hysteria
     
    But feeling understood is not always the case for the artist outside of the stage area. In an interview with the guardian published this week, the singer voiced a death wish, which got quoted by media all over the world, including VG.
     
    But to VG Lana says that the whole situation was blown out of proportions. 
     
    "I did not actually say that I thought an early death was a glamorous way to go. I just said that like many other people I admire and take inspiration from those who have passed at an early age," referring to her heroes, Jimi Hendrix and Amy Winehouse, who both died young. (Did he mix up Jimi Hendrix and Jim Morrison when he googled 27 club...?)
     
    The artist admits to having said that she sometimes wishes she was dead, but that it was taken the wrong way. 
     
    "Like many people who go through a lot I sometimes wish for my life to end. Sometimes feel like that, and sometimes I don't."
     
    Lana Del Rey elaborates that every day is different, and that she is not an unhappy person.
    "Sometimes I just feel like it becomes too much."
     
    Talking about Ultraviolence
     
    "To me this album is more relaxed, free and sexy. I didn't feel the need to document as much of my life story as I did in Born to Die. This album goes deeper into important moments from my life." Lana Del Rey adds that the album is like her own little personal jewel. 
     
    The artist struggle when she's trying to explain why so many young girls love her music. 
     
    "I guess they to a certain degree can relate to what I say or how I say things."
     
    Interviewer: "But one of your songs from the new album is called "Fucked My Way to the Top". What do you want to convey to those who listen to this song?"
     
    "I don't censor myself," she says, and adds that all of the songs on the album means something to her and often tells a tale about things she's been trough. 
     
    She admits that sharing her deep and personal songs from the stage has been nerve wracking. But Del Rey says it has become easier with time. Now she sees that the audience is happy to be at her concerts. And that is why she sees the importance in taking "selfies" with her fans during concerts, giving out hugs and pecks on the cheek. 
     
    "It's a part of the experience. For them I am the show, but to me they are the show. So I take part in it."
  24. AngelHeadedHipster liked a post in a topic by ExoticFlower in Lana Del Rey to VG: "I am still a sad girl" (15.06.2014)   
    This was an interview VG did with Lana around the time she performed in Bergen, so it's from yesterday I believe. 
     
    Lana has captured the world with her music, but she points out that not everything in her life is picture perfect. 
     
    After her performance in Bergen she received the high score 5 from VG, and the singer told us that she highly values Norwegian fans.
     
    "I value being here more than ever now. When I see how the audience sings along, it makes me feel like they accept me for who I am. I feel like they understand me." 
    When asked why there are still sad girls and bad men in her songs, Lana laughs, and answers: "I am still a sad girl, I still date bad men." 
     
    On the "I wish I was dead" hysteria
     
    But feeling understood is not always the case for the artist outside of the stage area. In an interview with the guardian published this week, the singer voiced a death wish, which got quoted by media all over the world, including VG.
     
    But to VG Lana says that the whole situation was blown out of proportions. 
     
    "I did not actually say that I thought an early death was a glamorous way to go. I just said that like many other people I admire and take inspiration from those who have passed at an early age," referring to her heroes, Jimi Hendrix and Amy Winehouse, who both died young. (Did he mix up Jimi Hendrix and Jim Morrison when he googled 27 club...?)
     
    The artist admits to having said that she sometimes wishes she was dead, but that it was taken the wrong way. 
     
    "Like many people who go through a lot I sometimes wish for my life to end. Sometimes feel like that, and sometimes I don't."
     
    Lana Del Rey elaborates that every day is different, and that she is not an unhappy person.
    "Sometimes I just feel like it becomes too much."
     
    Talking about Ultraviolence
     
    "To me this album is more relaxed, free and sexy. I didn't feel the need to document as much of my life story as I did in Born to Die. This album goes deeper into important moments from my life." Lana Del Rey adds that the album is like her own little personal jewel. 
     
    The artist struggle when she's trying to explain why so many young girls love her music. 
     
    "I guess they to a certain degree can relate to what I say or how I say things."
     
    Interviewer: "But one of your songs from the new album is called "Fucked My Way to the Top". What do you want to convey to those who listen to this song?"
     
    "I don't censor myself," she says, and adds that all of the songs on the album means something to her and often tells a tale about things she's been trough. 
     
    She admits that sharing her deep and personal songs from the stage has been nerve wracking. But Del Rey says it has become easier with time. Now she sees that the audience is happy to be at her concerts. And that is why she sees the importance in taking "selfies" with her fans during concerts, giving out hugs and pecks on the cheek. 
     
    "It's a part of the experience. For them I am the show, but to me they are the show. So I take part in it."
  25. Philomene liked a post in a topic by ExoticFlower in Lana Del Rey to VG: "I am still a sad girl" (15.06.2014)   
    I lol'd a bit at the "I still date bad men" bit. Has Barrie been sleeping in the dog house the past few weeks?
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