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  1. sprkljumpropegangsta liked a post in a topic by BluVelvUnderground in Snippets are letting us know that Lana's albums are still concept, and this one is really thought-out.   
    I originally posted this in the Pre-Release thread, but thought it'd get more attention here. Wanna explain something I happened to notice while checking out the snippets.

    I honestly think "Love" was meant to set the mood for the album overall. It has the guitar, but it has the "wall of sound" hip-hop to it, as well. And then, from "Lust for Life" to "Coachella", it really is like a stretch of sexy, summer-driven hip-hop tracks and ends on a positive track that is political - and then, we get all the guitars, and the veteran folk singers (or related to them) rather than the contemporary artists that feature in the first half. I think it's very intentional that the last half is going to have a Woodstock-vibe, only through some of the familiar hip-hop additions that modernize classic sounds. "Tomorrow Never Came" sounds very 1967-71 rock. Definitely see where she's connecting the "two generations", and why she probably feels kids looking into vintage music may find it denser if they understand that history is sort of repeating itself through the anxiety of the current political American heat. It's exactly what she said she wanted to do with the album, and her chronology of the tracks seems to really suit that concept. Even at around the half-point of the album, if you count "Love" as just the intro/combination of the two sounds, and "Coachella" the track that moves the hip-hop into its poltical, folk-driven side.
     
    Lana still doing concept, for sure. 
     
    A SORT OF CHART (lol):
     
    INTRODUCTION (folk guitar strings open the album, but blends into spacey, "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    01. Love
     
    SEXY, SUMMER-Y, HIP-HOP (7 "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    02. Lust for Life
    03. 13 Beaches
    04. Cherry
    05. White Mustang
    06. Summer Bummer
    07. Groupie Love
    08. In My Feelings
     
    THE BRIDGE (a more stripped back hip-hop beat, letting the album kind of cool off a bit before getting more poltically-minded)
    09. Coachella..
     
    POLITICAL "GANGSTA" FOLKY-Y (7 "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises, but more laid back, with heavier guitar and folk featured artists)
    10. God Bless America..
    11. When the War Was at War...
    12. Beautiful People, Beautiful Problems
    13. Tomorrow Never Came
    14. Heroin
    15. Change
    16. Get Free
     
    It's like she takes us from "Coachella" to "Woodstock" by using that track as a bridge. As I predicted, the song works in concept of the album; but releasing it as a single is bizarre. From what we have in the snippets, this album seems to be very well-thought out. 
  2. WhiteHydrangea liked a post in a topic by BluVelvUnderground in Snippets are letting us know that Lana's albums are still concept, and this one is really thought-out.   
    I originally posted this in the Pre-Release thread, but thought it'd get more attention here. Wanna explain something I happened to notice while checking out the snippets.

    I honestly think "Love" was meant to set the mood for the album overall. It has the guitar, but it has the "wall of sound" hip-hop to it, as well. And then, from "Lust for Life" to "Coachella", it really is like a stretch of sexy, summer-driven hip-hop tracks and ends on a positive track that is political - and then, we get all the guitars, and the veteran folk singers (or related to them) rather than the contemporary artists that feature in the first half. I think it's very intentional that the last half is going to have a Woodstock-vibe, only through some of the familiar hip-hop additions that modernize classic sounds. "Tomorrow Never Came" sounds very 1967-71 rock. Definitely see where she's connecting the "two generations", and why she probably feels kids looking into vintage music may find it denser if they understand that history is sort of repeating itself through the anxiety of the current political American heat. It's exactly what she said she wanted to do with the album, and her chronology of the tracks seems to really suit that concept. Even at around the half-point of the album, if you count "Love" as just the intro/combination of the two sounds, and "Coachella" the track that moves the hip-hop into its poltical, folk-driven side.
     
    Lana still doing concept, for sure. 
     
    A SORT OF CHART (lol):
     
    INTRODUCTION (folk guitar strings open the album, but blends into spacey, "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    01. Love
     
    SEXY, SUMMER-Y, HIP-HOP (7 "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    02. Lust for Life
    03. 13 Beaches
    04. Cherry
    05. White Mustang
    06. Summer Bummer
    07. Groupie Love
    08. In My Feelings
     
    THE BRIDGE (a more stripped back hip-hop beat, letting the album kind of cool off a bit before getting more poltically-minded)
    09. Coachella..
     
    POLITICAL "GANGSTA" FOLKY-Y (7 "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises, but more laid back, with heavier guitar and folk featured artists)
    10. God Bless America..
    11. When the War Was at War...
    12. Beautiful People, Beautiful Problems
    13. Tomorrow Never Came
    14. Heroin
    15. Change
    16. Get Free
     
    It's like she takes us from "Coachella" to "Woodstock" by using that track as a bridge. As I predicted, the song works in concept of the album; but releasing it as a single is bizarre. From what we have in the snippets, this album seems to be very well-thought out. 
  3. pawn shop blues liked a post in a topic by BluVelvUnderground in Snippets are letting us know that Lana's albums are still concept, and this one is really thought-out.   
    I originally posted this in the Pre-Release thread, but thought it'd get more attention here. Wanna explain something I happened to notice while checking out the snippets.

    I honestly think "Love" was meant to set the mood for the album overall. It has the guitar, but it has the "wall of sound" hip-hop to it, as well. And then, from "Lust for Life" to "Coachella", it really is like a stretch of sexy, summer-driven hip-hop tracks and ends on a positive track that is political - and then, we get all the guitars, and the veteran folk singers (or related to them) rather than the contemporary artists that feature in the first half. I think it's very intentional that the last half is going to have a Woodstock-vibe, only through some of the familiar hip-hop additions that modernize classic sounds. "Tomorrow Never Came" sounds very 1967-71 rock. Definitely see where she's connecting the "two generations", and why she probably feels kids looking into vintage music may find it denser if they understand that history is sort of repeating itself through the anxiety of the current political American heat. It's exactly what she said she wanted to do with the album, and her chronology of the tracks seems to really suit that concept. Even at around the half-point of the album, if you count "Love" as just the intro/combination of the two sounds, and "Coachella" the track that moves the hip-hop into its poltical, folk-driven side.
     
    Lana still doing concept, for sure. 
     
    A SORT OF CHART (lol):
     
    INTRODUCTION (folk guitar strings open the album, but blends into spacey, "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    01. Love
     
    SEXY, SUMMER-Y, HIP-HOP (7 "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    02. Lust for Life
    03. 13 Beaches
    04. Cherry
    05. White Mustang
    06. Summer Bummer
    07. Groupie Love
    08. In My Feelings
     
    THE BRIDGE (a more stripped back hip-hop beat, letting the album kind of cool off a bit before getting more poltically-minded)
    09. Coachella..
     
    POLITICAL "GANGSTA" FOLKY-Y (7 "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises, but more laid back, with heavier guitar and folk featured artists)
    10. God Bless America..
    11. When the War Was at War...
    12. Beautiful People, Beautiful Problems
    13. Tomorrow Never Came
    14. Heroin
    15. Change
    16. Get Free
     
    It's like she takes us from "Coachella" to "Woodstock" by using that track as a bridge. As I predicted, the song works in concept of the album; but releasing it as a single is bizarre. From what we have in the snippets, this album seems to be very well-thought out. 
  4. xcx liked a post in a topic by BluVelvUnderground in Snippets are letting us know that Lana's albums are still concept, and this one is really thought-out.   
    I originally posted this in the Pre-Release thread, but thought it'd get more attention here. Wanna explain something I happened to notice while checking out the snippets.

    I honestly think "Love" was meant to set the mood for the album overall. It has the guitar, but it has the "wall of sound" hip-hop to it, as well. And then, from "Lust for Life" to "Coachella", it really is like a stretch of sexy, summer-driven hip-hop tracks and ends on a positive track that is political - and then, we get all the guitars, and the veteran folk singers (or related to them) rather than the contemporary artists that feature in the first half. I think it's very intentional that the last half is going to have a Woodstock-vibe, only through some of the familiar hip-hop additions that modernize classic sounds. "Tomorrow Never Came" sounds very 1967-71 rock. Definitely see where she's connecting the "two generations", and why she probably feels kids looking into vintage music may find it denser if they understand that history is sort of repeating itself through the anxiety of the current political American heat. It's exactly what she said she wanted to do with the album, and her chronology of the tracks seems to really suit that concept. Even at around the half-point of the album, if you count "Love" as just the intro/combination of the two sounds, and "Coachella" the track that moves the hip-hop into its poltical, folk-driven side.
     
    Lana still doing concept, for sure. 
     
    A SORT OF CHART (lol):
     
    INTRODUCTION (folk guitar strings open the album, but blends into spacey, "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    01. Love
     
    SEXY, SUMMER-Y, HIP-HOP (7 "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    02. Lust for Life
    03. 13 Beaches
    04. Cherry
    05. White Mustang
    06. Summer Bummer
    07. Groupie Love
    08. In My Feelings
     
    THE BRIDGE (a more stripped back hip-hop beat, letting the album kind of cool off a bit before getting more poltically-minded)
    09. Coachella..
     
    POLITICAL "GANGSTA" FOLKY-Y (7 "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises, but more laid back, with heavier guitar and folk featured artists)
    10. God Bless America..
    11. When the War Was at War...
    12. Beautiful People, Beautiful Problems
    13. Tomorrow Never Came
    14. Heroin
    15. Change
    16. Get Free
     
    It's like she takes us from "Coachella" to "Woodstock" by using that track as a bridge. As I predicted, the song works in concept of the album; but releasing it as a single is bizarre. From what we have in the snippets, this album seems to be very well-thought out. 
  5. kitschesque liked a post in a topic by BluVelvUnderground in Snippets are letting us know that Lana's albums are still concept, and this one is really thought-out.   
    I originally posted this in the Pre-Release thread, but thought it'd get more attention here. Wanna explain something I happened to notice while checking out the snippets.

    I honestly think "Love" was meant to set the mood for the album overall. It has the guitar, but it has the "wall of sound" hip-hop to it, as well. And then, from "Lust for Life" to "Coachella", it really is like a stretch of sexy, summer-driven hip-hop tracks and ends on a positive track that is political - and then, we get all the guitars, and the veteran folk singers (or related to them) rather than the contemporary artists that feature in the first half. I think it's very intentional that the last half is going to have a Woodstock-vibe, only through some of the familiar hip-hop additions that modernize classic sounds. "Tomorrow Never Came" sounds very 1967-71 rock. Definitely see where she's connecting the "two generations", and why she probably feels kids looking into vintage music may find it denser if they understand that history is sort of repeating itself through the anxiety of the current political American heat. It's exactly what she said she wanted to do with the album, and her chronology of the tracks seems to really suit that concept. Even at around the half-point of the album, if you count "Love" as just the intro/combination of the two sounds, and "Coachella" the track that moves the hip-hop into its poltical, folk-driven side.
     
    Lana still doing concept, for sure. 
     
    A SORT OF CHART (lol):
     
    INTRODUCTION (folk guitar strings open the album, but blends into spacey, "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    01. Love
     
    SEXY, SUMMER-Y, HIP-HOP (7 "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    02. Lust for Life
    03. 13 Beaches
    04. Cherry
    05. White Mustang
    06. Summer Bummer
    07. Groupie Love
    08. In My Feelings
     
    THE BRIDGE (a more stripped back hip-hop beat, letting the album kind of cool off a bit before getting more poltically-minded)
    09. Coachella..
     
    POLITICAL "GANGSTA" FOLKY-Y (7 "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises, but more laid back, with heavier guitar and folk featured artists)
    10. God Bless America..
    11. When the War Was at War...
    12. Beautiful People, Beautiful Problems
    13. Tomorrow Never Came
    14. Heroin
    15. Change
    16. Get Free
     
    It's like she takes us from "Coachella" to "Woodstock" by using that track as a bridge. As I predicted, the song works in concept of the album; but releasing it as a single is bizarre. From what we have in the snippets, this album seems to be very well-thought out. 
  6. Benvolio liked a post in a topic by BluVelvUnderground in Snippets are letting us know that Lana's albums are still concept, and this one is really thought-out.   
    I originally posted this in the Pre-Release thread, but thought it'd get more attention here. Wanna explain something I happened to notice while checking out the snippets.

    I honestly think "Love" was meant to set the mood for the album overall. It has the guitar, but it has the "wall of sound" hip-hop to it, as well. And then, from "Lust for Life" to "Coachella", it really is like a stretch of sexy, summer-driven hip-hop tracks and ends on a positive track that is political - and then, we get all the guitars, and the veteran folk singers (or related to them) rather than the contemporary artists that feature in the first half. I think it's very intentional that the last half is going to have a Woodstock-vibe, only through some of the familiar hip-hop additions that modernize classic sounds. "Tomorrow Never Came" sounds very 1967-71 rock. Definitely see where she's connecting the "two generations", and why she probably feels kids looking into vintage music may find it denser if they understand that history is sort of repeating itself through the anxiety of the current political American heat. It's exactly what she said she wanted to do with the album, and her chronology of the tracks seems to really suit that concept. Even at around the half-point of the album, if you count "Love" as just the intro/combination of the two sounds, and "Coachella" the track that moves the hip-hop into its poltical, folk-driven side.
     
    Lana still doing concept, for sure. 
     
    A SORT OF CHART (lol):
     
    INTRODUCTION (folk guitar strings open the album, but blends into spacey, "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    01. Love
     
    SEXY, SUMMER-Y, HIP-HOP (7 "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    02. Lust for Life
    03. 13 Beaches
    04. Cherry
    05. White Mustang
    06. Summer Bummer
    07. Groupie Love
    08. In My Feelings
     
    THE BRIDGE (a more stripped back hip-hop beat, letting the album kind of cool off a bit before getting more poltically-minded)
    09. Coachella..
     
    POLITICAL "GANGSTA" FOLKY-Y (7 "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises, but more laid back, with heavier guitar and folk featured artists)
    10. God Bless America..
    11. When the War Was at War...
    12. Beautiful People, Beautiful Problems
    13. Tomorrow Never Came
    14. Heroin
    15. Change
    16. Get Free
     
    It's like she takes us from "Coachella" to "Woodstock" by using that track as a bridge. As I predicted, the song works in concept of the album; but releasing it as a single is bizarre. From what we have in the snippets, this album seems to be very well-thought out. 
  7. BluVelvUnderground liked a post in a topic by IanadeIrey in Snippets are letting us know that Lana's albums are still concept, and this one is really thought-out.   
    Couldn't agree with this more, I don't think the tracklist could just "coincidentally" end up like this. Lana truly did plan this out well. I love how the first half has more summery and gritty songs with a contemporary production, while the second half has a more stripped back, lowkey feeling that speaks to the lost era of Woodstock. She truly bridges the gap between the past and the present and is appealing to both the younger and older audiences she has. She truly has outdone herself with this record.
  8. AngelHeadedHipster liked a post in a topic by BluVelvUnderground in Snippets are letting us know that Lana's albums are still concept, and this one is really thought-out.   
    I originally posted this in the Pre-Release thread, but thought it'd get more attention here. Wanna explain something I happened to notice while checking out the snippets.

    I honestly think "Love" was meant to set the mood for the album overall. It has the guitar, but it has the "wall of sound" hip-hop to it, as well. And then, from "Lust for Life" to "Coachella", it really is like a stretch of sexy, summer-driven hip-hop tracks and ends on a positive track that is political - and then, we get all the guitars, and the veteran folk singers (or related to them) rather than the contemporary artists that feature in the first half. I think it's very intentional that the last half is going to have a Woodstock-vibe, only through some of the familiar hip-hop additions that modernize classic sounds. "Tomorrow Never Came" sounds very 1967-71 rock. Definitely see where she's connecting the "two generations", and why she probably feels kids looking into vintage music may find it denser if they understand that history is sort of repeating itself through the anxiety of the current political American heat. It's exactly what she said she wanted to do with the album, and her chronology of the tracks seems to really suit that concept. Even at around the half-point of the album, if you count "Love" as just the intro/combination of the two sounds, and "Coachella" the track that moves the hip-hop into its poltical, folk-driven side.
     
    Lana still doing concept, for sure. 
     
    A SORT OF CHART (lol):
     
    INTRODUCTION (folk guitar strings open the album, but blends into spacey, "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    01. Love
     
    SEXY, SUMMER-Y, HIP-HOP (7 "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    02. Lust for Life
    03. 13 Beaches
    04. Cherry
    05. White Mustang
    06. Summer Bummer
    07. Groupie Love
    08. In My Feelings
     
    THE BRIDGE (a more stripped back hip-hop beat, letting the album kind of cool off a bit before getting more poltically-minded)
    09. Coachella..
     
    POLITICAL "GANGSTA" FOLKY-Y (7 "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises, but more laid back, with heavier guitar and folk featured artists)
    10. God Bless America..
    11. When the War Was at War...
    12. Beautiful People, Beautiful Problems
    13. Tomorrow Never Came
    14. Heroin
    15. Change
    16. Get Free
     
    It's like she takes us from "Coachella" to "Woodstock" by using that track as a bridge. As I predicted, the song works in concept of the album; but releasing it as a single is bizarre. From what we have in the snippets, this album seems to be very well-thought out. 
  9. expandableclitoris liked a post in a topic by BluVelvUnderground in Snippets are letting us know that Lana's albums are still concept, and this one is really thought-out.   
    I originally posted this in the Pre-Release thread, but thought it'd get more attention here. Wanna explain something I happened to notice while checking out the snippets.

    I honestly think "Love" was meant to set the mood for the album overall. It has the guitar, but it has the "wall of sound" hip-hop to it, as well. And then, from "Lust for Life" to "Coachella", it really is like a stretch of sexy, summer-driven hip-hop tracks and ends on a positive track that is political - and then, we get all the guitars, and the veteran folk singers (or related to them) rather than the contemporary artists that feature in the first half. I think it's very intentional that the last half is going to have a Woodstock-vibe, only through some of the familiar hip-hop additions that modernize classic sounds. "Tomorrow Never Came" sounds very 1967-71 rock. Definitely see where she's connecting the "two generations", and why she probably feels kids looking into vintage music may find it denser if they understand that history is sort of repeating itself through the anxiety of the current political American heat. It's exactly what she said she wanted to do with the album, and her chronology of the tracks seems to really suit that concept. Even at around the half-point of the album, if you count "Love" as just the intro/combination of the two sounds, and "Coachella" the track that moves the hip-hop into its poltical, folk-driven side.
     
    Lana still doing concept, for sure. 
     
    A SORT OF CHART (lol):
     
    INTRODUCTION (folk guitar strings open the album, but blends into spacey, "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    01. Love
     
    SEXY, SUMMER-Y, HIP-HOP (7 "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    02. Lust for Life
    03. 13 Beaches
    04. Cherry
    05. White Mustang
    06. Summer Bummer
    07. Groupie Love
    08. In My Feelings
     
    THE BRIDGE (a more stripped back hip-hop beat, letting the album kind of cool off a bit before getting more poltically-minded)
    09. Coachella..
     
    POLITICAL "GANGSTA" FOLKY-Y (7 "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises, but more laid back, with heavier guitar and folk featured artists)
    10. God Bless America..
    11. When the War Was at War...
    12. Beautiful People, Beautiful Problems
    13. Tomorrow Never Came
    14. Heroin
    15. Change
    16. Get Free
     
    It's like she takes us from "Coachella" to "Woodstock" by using that track as a bridge. As I predicted, the song works in concept of the album; but releasing it as a single is bizarre. From what we have in the snippets, this album seems to be very well-thought out. 
  10. lannisterpussy liked a post in a topic by BluVelvUnderground in Lust For Life - Pre-Release Thread   
    I honestly think "Love" was meant to set the mood for the album overall. It has the guitar, but it has the "wall of sound" hip-hop to it, as well. And then, from "Lust for Life" to "Coachella", it really is like a stretch of sexy, summer-driven hip-hop tracks and ends on a positive track that is political - and then, we get all the guitars, and the veteran folk singers (or related to them) rather than the contemporary artists that feature in the first half. I think it's very intentional that the last half is going to have a Woodstock-vibe, only through some of the familiar hip-hop additions that modernize classic sounds. "Tomorrow Never Came" sounds very 1967-71 rock. Definitely see where she's connecting the "two generations", and why she probably feels kids looking into vintage music may find it denser if they understand that history is sort of repeating itself through the anxiety of the current political American heat. It's exactly what she said she wanted to do with the album, and her chronology of the tracks seems to really suit that concept. Even at around the half-point of the album, if you count "Love" as just the intro/combination of the two sounds, and "Coachella" the track that moves the hip-hop into its poltical, folk-driven side.
     
    Lana still doing concept, for sure. 
     
    A SORT OF CHART (lol):
     
    INTRODUCTION (folk guitar strings open the album, but blends into spacey, "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    01. Love
     
    SEXY, SUMMER-Y, HIP-HOP ("wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    02. Lust for Life
    03. 13 Beaches
    04. Cherry
    05. White Mustang
    06. Summer Bummer
    07. Groupie Love
    08. In My Feelings
     
    THE BRIDGE (a more stripped back hip-hop beat, letting the album kind of cool off a bit before getting more poltically-minded)
    09. Coachella..
     
    POLITICAL "GANGSTA" FOLKY-Y ("wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises, but more laid back, with heavier guitar and folk featured artists)
    10. God Bless America..
    11. When the War Was at War...
    12. Beautiful People, Beautiful Problems
    13. Tomorrow Never Came
    14. Heroin
    15. Change
    16. Get Free
     
    It's like she takes us from "Coachella" to "Woodstock" by using that track as a bridge. As I predicted, the song works in concept of the album; but releasing it as a single is bizarre. From what we have in the snippets, this album seems to be very well-thought out. 
  11. peach perfume liked a post in a topic by BluVelvUnderground in Lust For Life - Pre-Release Thread   
    I honestly think "Love" was meant to set the mood for the album overall. It has the guitar, but it has the "wall of sound" hip-hop to it, as well. And then, from "Lust for Life" to "Coachella", it really is like a stretch of sexy, summer-driven hip-hop tracks and ends on a positive track that is political - and then, we get all the guitars, and the veteran folk singers (or related to them) rather than the contemporary artists that feature in the first half. I think it's very intentional that the last half is going to have a Woodstock-vibe, only through some of the familiar hip-hop additions that modernize classic sounds. "Tomorrow Never Came" sounds very 1967-71 rock. Definitely see where she's connecting the "two generations", and why she probably feels kids looking into vintage music may find it denser if they understand that history is sort of repeating itself through the anxiety of the current political American heat. It's exactly what she said she wanted to do with the album, and her chronology of the tracks seems to really suit that concept. Even at around the half-point of the album, if you count "Love" as just the intro/combination of the two sounds, and "Coachella" the track that moves the hip-hop into its poltical, folk-driven side.
     
    Lana still doing concept, for sure. 
     
    A SORT OF CHART (lol):
     
    INTRODUCTION (folk guitar strings open the album, but blends into spacey, "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    01. Love
     
    SEXY, SUMMER-Y, HIP-HOP ("wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    02. Lust for Life
    03. 13 Beaches
    04. Cherry
    05. White Mustang
    06. Summer Bummer
    07. Groupie Love
    08. In My Feelings
     
    THE BRIDGE (a more stripped back hip-hop beat, letting the album kind of cool off a bit before getting more poltically-minded)
    09. Coachella..
     
    POLITICAL "GANGSTA" FOLKY-Y ("wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises, but more laid back, with heavier guitar and folk featured artists)
    10. God Bless America..
    11. When the War Was at War...
    12. Beautiful People, Beautiful Problems
    13. Tomorrow Never Came
    14. Heroin
    15. Change
    16. Get Free
     
    It's like she takes us from "Coachella" to "Woodstock" by using that track as a bridge. As I predicted, the song works in concept of the album; but releasing it as a single is bizarre. From what we have in the snippets, this album seems to be very well-thought out. 
  12. therealmikedealer liked a post in a topic by BluVelvUnderground in Lust For Life - Pre-Release Thread   
    I honestly think "Love" was meant to set the mood for the album overall. It has the guitar, but it has the "wall of sound" hip-hop to it, as well. And then, from "Lust for Life" to "Coachella", it really is like a stretch of sexy, summer-driven hip-hop tracks and ends on a positive track that is political - and then, we get all the guitars, and the veteran folk singers (or related to them) rather than the contemporary artists that feature in the first half. I think it's very intentional that the last half is going to have a Woodstock-vibe, only through some of the familiar hip-hop additions that modernize classic sounds. "Tomorrow Never Came" sounds very 1967-71 rock. Definitely see where she's connecting the "two generations", and why she probably feels kids looking into vintage music may find it denser if they understand that history is sort of repeating itself through the anxiety of the current political American heat. It's exactly what she said she wanted to do with the album, and her chronology of the tracks seems to really suit that concept. Even at around the half-point of the album, if you count "Love" as just the intro/combination of the two sounds, and "Coachella" the track that moves the hip-hop into its poltical, folk-driven side.
     
    Lana still doing concept, for sure. 
     
    A SORT OF CHART (lol):
     
    INTRODUCTION (folk guitar strings open the album, but blends into spacey, "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    01. Love
     
    SEXY, SUMMER-Y, HIP-HOP ("wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    02. Lust for Life
    03. 13 Beaches
    04. Cherry
    05. White Mustang
    06. Summer Bummer
    07. Groupie Love
    08. In My Feelings
     
    THE BRIDGE (a more stripped back hip-hop beat, letting the album kind of cool off a bit before getting more poltically-minded)
    09. Coachella..
     
    POLITICAL "GANGSTA" FOLKY-Y ("wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises, but more laid back, with heavier guitar and folk featured artists)
    10. God Bless America..
    11. When the War Was at War...
    12. Beautiful People, Beautiful Problems
    13. Tomorrow Never Came
    14. Heroin
    15. Change
    16. Get Free
     
    It's like she takes us from "Coachella" to "Woodstock" by using that track as a bridge. As I predicted, the song works in concept of the album; but releasing it as a single is bizarre. From what we have in the snippets, this album seems to be very well-thought out. 
  13. Make me your Dream Life liked a post in a topic by BluVelvUnderground in Snippets are letting us know that Lana's albums are still concept, and this one is really thought-out.   
    I originally posted this in the Pre-Release thread, but thought it'd get more attention here. Wanna explain something I happened to notice while checking out the snippets.

    I honestly think "Love" was meant to set the mood for the album overall. It has the guitar, but it has the "wall of sound" hip-hop to it, as well. And then, from "Lust for Life" to "Coachella", it really is like a stretch of sexy, summer-driven hip-hop tracks and ends on a positive track that is political - and then, we get all the guitars, and the veteran folk singers (or related to them) rather than the contemporary artists that feature in the first half. I think it's very intentional that the last half is going to have a Woodstock-vibe, only through some of the familiar hip-hop additions that modernize classic sounds. "Tomorrow Never Came" sounds very 1967-71 rock. Definitely see where she's connecting the "two generations", and why she probably feels kids looking into vintage music may find it denser if they understand that history is sort of repeating itself through the anxiety of the current political American heat. It's exactly what she said she wanted to do with the album, and her chronology of the tracks seems to really suit that concept. Even at around the half-point of the album, if you count "Love" as just the intro/combination of the two sounds, and "Coachella" the track that moves the hip-hop into its poltical, folk-driven side.
     
    Lana still doing concept, for sure. 
     
    A SORT OF CHART (lol):
     
    INTRODUCTION (folk guitar strings open the album, but blends into spacey, "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    01. Love
     
    SEXY, SUMMER-Y, HIP-HOP (7 "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    02. Lust for Life
    03. 13 Beaches
    04. Cherry
    05. White Mustang
    06. Summer Bummer
    07. Groupie Love
    08. In My Feelings
     
    THE BRIDGE (a more stripped back hip-hop beat, letting the album kind of cool off a bit before getting more poltically-minded)
    09. Coachella..
     
    POLITICAL "GANGSTA" FOLKY-Y (7 "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises, but more laid back, with heavier guitar and folk featured artists)
    10. God Bless America..
    11. When the War Was at War...
    12. Beautiful People, Beautiful Problems
    13. Tomorrow Never Came
    14. Heroin
    15. Change
    16. Get Free
     
    It's like she takes us from "Coachella" to "Woodstock" by using that track as a bridge. As I predicted, the song works in concept of the album; but releasing it as a single is bizarre. From what we have in the snippets, this album seems to be very well-thought out. 
  14. ivy liked a post in a topic by BluVelvUnderground in Snippets are letting us know that Lana's albums are still concept, and this one is really thought-out.   
    I originally posted this in the Pre-Release thread, but thought it'd get more attention here. Wanna explain something I happened to notice while checking out the snippets.

    I honestly think "Love" was meant to set the mood for the album overall. It has the guitar, but it has the "wall of sound" hip-hop to it, as well. And then, from "Lust for Life" to "Coachella", it really is like a stretch of sexy, summer-driven hip-hop tracks and ends on a positive track that is political - and then, we get all the guitars, and the veteran folk singers (or related to them) rather than the contemporary artists that feature in the first half. I think it's very intentional that the last half is going to have a Woodstock-vibe, only through some of the familiar hip-hop additions that modernize classic sounds. "Tomorrow Never Came" sounds very 1967-71 rock. Definitely see where she's connecting the "two generations", and why she probably feels kids looking into vintage music may find it denser if they understand that history is sort of repeating itself through the anxiety of the current political American heat. It's exactly what she said she wanted to do with the album, and her chronology of the tracks seems to really suit that concept. Even at around the half-point of the album, if you count "Love" as just the intro/combination of the two sounds, and "Coachella" the track that moves the hip-hop into its poltical, folk-driven side.
     
    Lana still doing concept, for sure. 
     
    A SORT OF CHART (lol):
     
    INTRODUCTION (folk guitar strings open the album, but blends into spacey, "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    01. Love
     
    SEXY, SUMMER-Y, HIP-HOP (7 "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    02. Lust for Life
    03. 13 Beaches
    04. Cherry
    05. White Mustang
    06. Summer Bummer
    07. Groupie Love
    08. In My Feelings
     
    THE BRIDGE (a more stripped back hip-hop beat, letting the album kind of cool off a bit before getting more poltically-minded)
    09. Coachella..
     
    POLITICAL "GANGSTA" FOLKY-Y (7 "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises, but more laid back, with heavier guitar and folk featured artists)
    10. God Bless America..
    11. When the War Was at War...
    12. Beautiful People, Beautiful Problems
    13. Tomorrow Never Came
    14. Heroin
    15. Change
    16. Get Free
     
    It's like she takes us from "Coachella" to "Woodstock" by using that track as a bridge. As I predicted, the song works in concept of the album; but releasing it as a single is bizarre. From what we have in the snippets, this album seems to be very well-thought out. 
  15. Doll Harlow liked a post in a topic by BluVelvUnderground in Snippets are letting us know that Lana's albums are still concept, and this one is really thought-out.   
    I originally posted this in the Pre-Release thread, but thought it'd get more attention here. Wanna explain something I happened to notice while checking out the snippets.

    I honestly think "Love" was meant to set the mood for the album overall. It has the guitar, but it has the "wall of sound" hip-hop to it, as well. And then, from "Lust for Life" to "Coachella", it really is like a stretch of sexy, summer-driven hip-hop tracks and ends on a positive track that is political - and then, we get all the guitars, and the veteran folk singers (or related to them) rather than the contemporary artists that feature in the first half. I think it's very intentional that the last half is going to have a Woodstock-vibe, only through some of the familiar hip-hop additions that modernize classic sounds. "Tomorrow Never Came" sounds very 1967-71 rock. Definitely see where she's connecting the "two generations", and why she probably feels kids looking into vintage music may find it denser if they understand that history is sort of repeating itself through the anxiety of the current political American heat. It's exactly what she said she wanted to do with the album, and her chronology of the tracks seems to really suit that concept. Even at around the half-point of the album, if you count "Love" as just the intro/combination of the two sounds, and "Coachella" the track that moves the hip-hop into its poltical, folk-driven side.
     
    Lana still doing concept, for sure. 
     
    A SORT OF CHART (lol):
     
    INTRODUCTION (folk guitar strings open the album, but blends into spacey, "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    01. Love
     
    SEXY, SUMMER-Y, HIP-HOP (7 "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    02. Lust for Life
    03. 13 Beaches
    04. Cherry
    05. White Mustang
    06. Summer Bummer
    07. Groupie Love
    08. In My Feelings
     
    THE BRIDGE (a more stripped back hip-hop beat, letting the album kind of cool off a bit before getting more poltically-minded)
    09. Coachella..
     
    POLITICAL "GANGSTA" FOLKY-Y (7 "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises, but more laid back, with heavier guitar and folk featured artists)
    10. God Bless America..
    11. When the War Was at War...
    12. Beautiful People, Beautiful Problems
    13. Tomorrow Never Came
    14. Heroin
    15. Change
    16. Get Free
     
    It's like she takes us from "Coachella" to "Woodstock" by using that track as a bridge. As I predicted, the song works in concept of the album; but releasing it as a single is bizarre. From what we have in the snippets, this album seems to be very well-thought out. 
  16. Kommander liked a post in a topic by BluVelvUnderground in Snippets are letting us know that Lana's albums are still concept, and this one is really thought-out.   
    I originally posted this in the Pre-Release thread, but thought it'd get more attention here. Wanna explain something I happened to notice while checking out the snippets.

    I honestly think "Love" was meant to set the mood for the album overall. It has the guitar, but it has the "wall of sound" hip-hop to it, as well. And then, from "Lust for Life" to "Coachella", it really is like a stretch of sexy, summer-driven hip-hop tracks and ends on a positive track that is political - and then, we get all the guitars, and the veteran folk singers (or related to them) rather than the contemporary artists that feature in the first half. I think it's very intentional that the last half is going to have a Woodstock-vibe, only through some of the familiar hip-hop additions that modernize classic sounds. "Tomorrow Never Came" sounds very 1967-71 rock. Definitely see where she's connecting the "two generations", and why she probably feels kids looking into vintage music may find it denser if they understand that history is sort of repeating itself through the anxiety of the current political American heat. It's exactly what she said she wanted to do with the album, and her chronology of the tracks seems to really suit that concept. Even at around the half-point of the album, if you count "Love" as just the intro/combination of the two sounds, and "Coachella" the track that moves the hip-hop into its poltical, folk-driven side.
     
    Lana still doing concept, for sure. 
     
    A SORT OF CHART (lol):
     
    INTRODUCTION (folk guitar strings open the album, but blends into spacey, "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    01. Love
     
    SEXY, SUMMER-Y, HIP-HOP (7 "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    02. Lust for Life
    03. 13 Beaches
    04. Cherry
    05. White Mustang
    06. Summer Bummer
    07. Groupie Love
    08. In My Feelings
     
    THE BRIDGE (a more stripped back hip-hop beat, letting the album kind of cool off a bit before getting more poltically-minded)
    09. Coachella..
     
    POLITICAL "GANGSTA" FOLKY-Y (7 "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises, but more laid back, with heavier guitar and folk featured artists)
    10. God Bless America..
    11. When the War Was at War...
    12. Beautiful People, Beautiful Problems
    13. Tomorrow Never Came
    14. Heroin
    15. Change
    16. Get Free
     
    It's like she takes us from "Coachella" to "Woodstock" by using that track as a bridge. As I predicted, the song works in concept of the album; but releasing it as a single is bizarre. From what we have in the snippets, this album seems to be very well-thought out. 
  17. BluVelvUnderground liked a post in a topic by AphroditeBaby in Lust For Life - Pre-Release Thread   
    I have yet to hear anything of 8 tracks, but wow, this is a beautiful breakdown. "Retro Futurism" come through afterall Love is truly such a special song production wise and lyrically and I always knew it would be the perfect opener. There's such a theme of looking to the past in order to deal with the present and into the future throughout this era and i can not wait to hear how it manifests lyrically on the latter half of the record. When she talked about anxiety about the future and the state of the world in the Album Trailer, I really didn't get what she was saying - to me maybe she was even downplaying things... but if you consider Lana as being a fan of musicians who wouldve gone to things like Woodstock, of the more classic rock and folk music era of the 20th century... it really makes sense. She's right, its not like the people of that era didn't feel the world was ending too, but they still used music to make the most of things, and advocate and speak out as well as they could, and tbh they inspired a generation. I don't know if any of this is even intentional, but its lovely to think of in such a way and it really does make sense. 
     
    I know she said the tracklist made a few changes in the last 3 months, If anything, it feels like Lana's experience at Coachella was actually really impactful and kind of shaped the current tracklist - perhaps the ordering of things and the replacing of a few tracks other than just the inclusion of Coachella. Even if I don't love the song (I just don't feel like the production on it makes much sense compared to the lyrics for Lana, but the last minute is heavenly) I've always defended that the concept --- of being at a music festival, celebrating life and joy and music, but having kind of flash backs to another festival where the focus was on Love & Peace, but in the middle of tensions rising yet again in the world... It didn't make Lana go all hippie "save the world kids, you're the future!" I don't think based on what we know of the track's lyrically, but its certainly quite profound and perhaps even a bit awe-inspiring. Like, "wow, this is happening again, and I don't want to just sit here and do nothing about it, but what can I, as a voice do?" Whether you think the track Coachella - Woodstock In My Mind was successful in conveying this or not, I think it's still really important. (And personally, I love the lyrics).
     
    Personally now, I want some kind of video - whether it be homemade, or studio funded, etc. for a track on the latter half of the record
    I get the feeling that Lana doesn't feel overly satisfied with how her videos were handled in the UV era and the HM era, but so far (other than the album cover ~) I feel like LFL has been on point aesthetically and so far there seems to be evidence that Lana and her management are on the same wave length in regards to her videos. Love and LFL are imo some of her best videos, especially the former (it just needed one gay couple )
  18. Flowerbomb liked a post in a topic by BluVelvUnderground in Lust For Life - Pre-Release Thread   
    I honestly think "Love" was meant to set the mood for the album overall. It has the guitar, but it has the "wall of sound" hip-hop to it, as well. And then, from "Lust for Life" to "Coachella", it really is like a stretch of sexy, summer-driven hip-hop tracks and ends on a positive track that is political - and then, we get all the guitars, and the veteran folk singers (or related to them) rather than the contemporary artists that feature in the first half. I think it's very intentional that the last half is going to have a Woodstock-vibe, only through some of the familiar hip-hop additions that modernize classic sounds. "Tomorrow Never Came" sounds very 1967-71 rock. Definitely see where she's connecting the "two generations", and why she probably feels kids looking into vintage music may find it denser if they understand that history is sort of repeating itself through the anxiety of the current political American heat. It's exactly what she said she wanted to do with the album, and her chronology of the tracks seems to really suit that concept. Even at around the half-point of the album, if you count "Love" as just the intro/combination of the two sounds, and "Coachella" the track that moves the hip-hop into its poltical, folk-driven side.
     
    Lana still doing concept, for sure. 
     
    A SORT OF CHART (lol):
     
    INTRODUCTION (folk guitar strings open the album, but blends into spacey, "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    01. Love
     
    SEXY, SUMMER-Y, HIP-HOP ("wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    02. Lust for Life
    03. 13 Beaches
    04. Cherry
    05. White Mustang
    06. Summer Bummer
    07. Groupie Love
    08. In My Feelings
     
    THE BRIDGE (a more stripped back hip-hop beat, letting the album kind of cool off a bit before getting more poltically-minded)
    09. Coachella..
     
    POLITICAL "GANGSTA" FOLKY-Y ("wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises, but more laid back, with heavier guitar and folk featured artists)
    10. God Bless America..
    11. When the War Was at War...
    12. Beautiful People, Beautiful Problems
    13. Tomorrow Never Came
    14. Heroin
    15. Change
    16. Get Free
     
    It's like she takes us from "Coachella" to "Woodstock" by using that track as a bridge. As I predicted, the song works in concept of the album; but releasing it as a single is bizarre. From what we have in the snippets, this album seems to be very well-thought out. 
  19. Rockwell liked a post in a topic by BluVelvUnderground in Lust For Life - Pre-Release Thread   
    I honestly think "Love" was meant to set the mood for the album overall. It has the guitar, but it has the "wall of sound" hip-hop to it, as well. And then, from "Lust for Life" to "Coachella", it really is like a stretch of sexy, summer-driven hip-hop tracks and ends on a positive track that is political - and then, we get all the guitars, and the veteran folk singers (or related to them) rather than the contemporary artists that feature in the first half. I think it's very intentional that the last half is going to have a Woodstock-vibe, only through some of the familiar hip-hop additions that modernize classic sounds. "Tomorrow Never Came" sounds very 1967-71 rock. Definitely see where she's connecting the "two generations", and why she probably feels kids looking into vintage music may find it denser if they understand that history is sort of repeating itself through the anxiety of the current political American heat. It's exactly what she said she wanted to do with the album, and her chronology of the tracks seems to really suit that concept. Even at around the half-point of the album, if you count "Love" as just the intro/combination of the two sounds, and "Coachella" the track that moves the hip-hop into its poltical, folk-driven side.
     
    Lana still doing concept, for sure. 
     
    A SORT OF CHART (lol):
     
    INTRODUCTION (folk guitar strings open the album, but blends into spacey, "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    01. Love
     
    SEXY, SUMMER-Y, HIP-HOP ("wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    02. Lust for Life
    03. 13 Beaches
    04. Cherry
    05. White Mustang
    06. Summer Bummer
    07. Groupie Love
    08. In My Feelings
     
    THE BRIDGE (a more stripped back hip-hop beat, letting the album kind of cool off a bit before getting more poltically-minded)
    09. Coachella..
     
    POLITICAL "GANGSTA" FOLKY-Y ("wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises, but more laid back, with heavier guitar and folk featured artists)
    10. God Bless America..
    11. When the War Was at War...
    12. Beautiful People, Beautiful Problems
    13. Tomorrow Never Came
    14. Heroin
    15. Change
    16. Get Free
     
    It's like she takes us from "Coachella" to "Woodstock" by using that track as a bridge. As I predicted, the song works in concept of the album; but releasing it as a single is bizarre. From what we have in the snippets, this album seems to be very well-thought out. 
  20. grabmebymyribbons liked a post in a topic by BluVelvUnderground in Lust For Life - Pre-Release Thread   
    I honestly think "Love" was meant to set the mood for the album overall. It has the guitar, but it has the "wall of sound" hip-hop to it, as well. And then, from "Lust for Life" to "Coachella", it really is like a stretch of sexy, summer-driven hip-hop tracks and ends on a positive track that is political - and then, we get all the guitars, and the veteran folk singers (or related to them) rather than the contemporary artists that feature in the first half. I think it's very intentional that the last half is going to have a Woodstock-vibe, only through some of the familiar hip-hop additions that modernize classic sounds. "Tomorrow Never Came" sounds very 1967-71 rock. Definitely see where she's connecting the "two generations", and why she probably feels kids looking into vintage music may find it denser if they understand that history is sort of repeating itself through the anxiety of the current political American heat. It's exactly what she said she wanted to do with the album, and her chronology of the tracks seems to really suit that concept. Even at around the half-point of the album, if you count "Love" as just the intro/combination of the two sounds, and "Coachella" the track that moves the hip-hop into its poltical, folk-driven side.
     
    Lana still doing concept, for sure. 
     
    A SORT OF CHART (lol):
     
    INTRODUCTION (folk guitar strings open the album, but blends into spacey, "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    01. Love
     
    SEXY, SUMMER-Y, HIP-HOP ("wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    02. Lust for Life
    03. 13 Beaches
    04. Cherry
    05. White Mustang
    06. Summer Bummer
    07. Groupie Love
    08. In My Feelings
     
    THE BRIDGE (a more stripped back hip-hop beat, letting the album kind of cool off a bit before getting more poltically-minded)
    09. Coachella..
     
    POLITICAL "GANGSTA" FOLKY-Y ("wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises, but more laid back, with heavier guitar and folk featured artists)
    10. God Bless America..
    11. When the War Was at War...
    12. Beautiful People, Beautiful Problems
    13. Tomorrow Never Came
    14. Heroin
    15. Change
    16. Get Free
     
    It's like she takes us from "Coachella" to "Woodstock" by using that track as a bridge. As I predicted, the song works in concept of the album; but releasing it as a single is bizarre. From what we have in the snippets, this album seems to be very well-thought out. 
  21. Constantine liked a post in a topic by BluVelvUnderground in Lust For Life - Pre-Release Thread   
    I honestly think "Love" was meant to set the mood for the album overall. It has the guitar, but it has the "wall of sound" hip-hop to it, as well. And then, from "Lust for Life" to "Coachella", it really is like a stretch of sexy, summer-driven hip-hop tracks and ends on a positive track that is political - and then, we get all the guitars, and the veteran folk singers (or related to them) rather than the contemporary artists that feature in the first half. I think it's very intentional that the last half is going to have a Woodstock-vibe, only through some of the familiar hip-hop additions that modernize classic sounds. "Tomorrow Never Came" sounds very 1967-71 rock. Definitely see where she's connecting the "two generations", and why she probably feels kids looking into vintage music may find it denser if they understand that history is sort of repeating itself through the anxiety of the current political American heat. It's exactly what she said she wanted to do with the album, and her chronology of the tracks seems to really suit that concept. Even at around the half-point of the album, if you count "Love" as just the intro/combination of the two sounds, and "Coachella" the track that moves the hip-hop into its poltical, folk-driven side.
     
    Lana still doing concept, for sure. 
     
    A SORT OF CHART (lol):
     
    INTRODUCTION (folk guitar strings open the album, but blends into spacey, "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    01. Love
     
    SEXY, SUMMER-Y, HIP-HOP ("wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    02. Lust for Life
    03. 13 Beaches
    04. Cherry
    05. White Mustang
    06. Summer Bummer
    07. Groupie Love
    08. In My Feelings
     
    THE BRIDGE (a more stripped back hip-hop beat, letting the album kind of cool off a bit before getting more poltically-minded)
    09. Coachella..
     
    POLITICAL "GANGSTA" FOLKY-Y ("wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises, but more laid back, with heavier guitar and folk featured artists)
    10. God Bless America..
    11. When the War Was at War...
    12. Beautiful People, Beautiful Problems
    13. Tomorrow Never Came
    14. Heroin
    15. Change
    16. Get Free
     
    It's like she takes us from "Coachella" to "Woodstock" by using that track as a bridge. As I predicted, the song works in concept of the album; but releasing it as a single is bizarre. From what we have in the snippets, this album seems to be very well-thought out. 
  22. Lana De Los Reyes liked a post in a topic by BluVelvUnderground in Lust For Life - Pre-Release Thread   
    I honestly think "Love" was meant to set the mood for the album overall. It has the guitar, but it has the "wall of sound" hip-hop to it, as well. And then, from "Lust for Life" to "Coachella", it really is like a stretch of sexy, summer-driven hip-hop tracks and ends on a positive track that is political - and then, we get all the guitars, and the veteran folk singers (or related to them) rather than the contemporary artists that feature in the first half. I think it's very intentional that the last half is going to have a Woodstock-vibe, only through some of the familiar hip-hop additions that modernize classic sounds. "Tomorrow Never Came" sounds very 1967-71 rock. Definitely see where she's connecting the "two generations", and why she probably feels kids looking into vintage music may find it denser if they understand that history is sort of repeating itself through the anxiety of the current political American heat. It's exactly what she said she wanted to do with the album, and her chronology of the tracks seems to really suit that concept. Even at around the half-point of the album, if you count "Love" as just the intro/combination of the two sounds, and "Coachella" the track that moves the hip-hop into its poltical, folk-driven side.
     
    Lana still doing concept, for sure. 
     
    A SORT OF CHART (lol):
     
    INTRODUCTION (folk guitar strings open the album, but blends into spacey, "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    01. Love
     
    SEXY, SUMMER-Y, HIP-HOP ("wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    02. Lust for Life
    03. 13 Beaches
    04. Cherry
    05. White Mustang
    06. Summer Bummer
    07. Groupie Love
    08. In My Feelings
     
    THE BRIDGE (a more stripped back hip-hop beat, letting the album kind of cool off a bit before getting more poltically-minded)
    09. Coachella..
     
    POLITICAL "GANGSTA" FOLKY-Y ("wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises, but more laid back, with heavier guitar and folk featured artists)
    10. God Bless America..
    11. When the War Was at War...
    12. Beautiful People, Beautiful Problems
    13. Tomorrow Never Came
    14. Heroin
    15. Change
    16. Get Free
     
    It's like she takes us from "Coachella" to "Woodstock" by using that track as a bridge. As I predicted, the song works in concept of the album; but releasing it as a single is bizarre. From what we have in the snippets, this album seems to be very well-thought out. 
  23. Melmoth liked a post in a topic by BluVelvUnderground in Lust For Life - Pre-Release Thread   
    I honestly think "Love" was meant to set the mood for the album overall. It has the guitar, but it has the "wall of sound" hip-hop to it, as well. And then, from "Lust for Life" to "Coachella", it really is like a stretch of sexy, summer-driven hip-hop tracks and ends on a positive track that is political - and then, we get all the guitars, and the veteran folk singers (or related to them) rather than the contemporary artists that feature in the first half. I think it's very intentional that the last half is going to have a Woodstock-vibe, only through some of the familiar hip-hop additions that modernize classic sounds. "Tomorrow Never Came" sounds very 1967-71 rock. Definitely see where she's connecting the "two generations", and why she probably feels kids looking into vintage music may find it denser if they understand that history is sort of repeating itself through the anxiety of the current political American heat. It's exactly what she said she wanted to do with the album, and her chronology of the tracks seems to really suit that concept. Even at around the half-point of the album, if you count "Love" as just the intro/combination of the two sounds, and "Coachella" the track that moves the hip-hop into its poltical, folk-driven side.
     
    Lana still doing concept, for sure. 
     
    A SORT OF CHART (lol):
     
    INTRODUCTION (folk guitar strings open the album, but blends into spacey, "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    01. Love
     
    SEXY, SUMMER-Y, HIP-HOP ("wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    02. Lust for Life
    03. 13 Beaches
    04. Cherry
    05. White Mustang
    06. Summer Bummer
    07. Groupie Love
    08. In My Feelings
     
    THE BRIDGE (a more stripped back hip-hop beat, letting the album kind of cool off a bit before getting more poltically-minded)
    09. Coachella..
     
    POLITICAL "GANGSTA" FOLKY-Y ("wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises, but more laid back, with heavier guitar and folk featured artists)
    10. God Bless America..
    11. When the War Was at War...
    12. Beautiful People, Beautiful Problems
    13. Tomorrow Never Came
    14. Heroin
    15. Change
    16. Get Free
     
    It's like she takes us from "Coachella" to "Woodstock" by using that track as a bridge. As I predicted, the song works in concept of the album; but releasing it as a single is bizarre. From what we have in the snippets, this album seems to be very well-thought out. 
  24. nope liked a post in a topic by BluVelvUnderground in Lust For Life - Pre-Release Thread   
    I honestly think "Love" was meant to set the mood for the album overall. It has the guitar, but it has the "wall of sound" hip-hop to it, as well. And then, from "Lust for Life" to "Coachella", it really is like a stretch of sexy, summer-driven hip-hop tracks and ends on a positive track that is political - and then, we get all the guitars, and the veteran folk singers (or related to them) rather than the contemporary artists that feature in the first half. I think it's very intentional that the last half is going to have a Woodstock-vibe, only through some of the familiar hip-hop additions that modernize classic sounds. "Tomorrow Never Came" sounds very 1967-71 rock. Definitely see where she's connecting the "two generations", and why she probably feels kids looking into vintage music may find it denser if they understand that history is sort of repeating itself through the anxiety of the current political American heat. It's exactly what she said she wanted to do with the album, and her chronology of the tracks seems to really suit that concept. Even at around the half-point of the album, if you count "Love" as just the intro/combination of the two sounds, and "Coachella" the track that moves the hip-hop into its poltical, folk-driven side.
     
    Lana still doing concept, for sure. 
     
    A SORT OF CHART (lol):
     
    INTRODUCTION (folk guitar strings open the album, but blends into spacey, "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    01. Love
     
    SEXY, SUMMER-Y, HIP-HOP ("wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    02. Lust for Life
    03. 13 Beaches
    04. Cherry
    05. White Mustang
    06. Summer Bummer
    07. Groupie Love
    08. In My Feelings
     
    THE BRIDGE (a more stripped back hip-hop beat, letting the album kind of cool off a bit before getting more poltically-minded)
    09. Coachella..
     
    POLITICAL "GANGSTA" FOLKY-Y ("wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises, but more laid back, with heavier guitar and folk featured artists)
    10. God Bless America..
    11. When the War Was at War...
    12. Beautiful People, Beautiful Problems
    13. Tomorrow Never Came
    14. Heroin
    15. Change
    16. Get Free
     
    It's like she takes us from "Coachella" to "Woodstock" by using that track as a bridge. As I predicted, the song works in concept of the album; but releasing it as a single is bizarre. From what we have in the snippets, this album seems to be very well-thought out. 
  25. CatchTheBreeze liked a post in a topic by BluVelvUnderground in Lust For Life - Pre-Release Thread   
    I honestly think "Love" was meant to set the mood for the album overall. It has the guitar, but it has the "wall of sound" hip-hop to it, as well. And then, from "Lust for Life" to "Coachella", it really is like a stretch of sexy, summer-driven hip-hop tracks and ends on a positive track that is political - and then, we get all the guitars, and the veteran folk singers (or related to them) rather than the contemporary artists that feature in the first half. I think it's very intentional that the last half is going to have a Woodstock-vibe, only through some of the familiar hip-hop additions that modernize classic sounds. "Tomorrow Never Came" sounds very 1967-71 rock. Definitely see where she's connecting the "two generations", and why she probably feels kids looking into vintage music may find it denser if they understand that history is sort of repeating itself through the anxiety of the current political American heat. It's exactly what she said she wanted to do with the album, and her chronology of the tracks seems to really suit that concept. Even at around the half-point of the album, if you count "Love" as just the intro/combination of the two sounds, and "Coachella" the track that moves the hip-hop into its poltical, folk-driven side.
     
    Lana still doing concept, for sure. 
     
    A SORT OF CHART (lol):
     
    INTRODUCTION (folk guitar strings open the album, but blends into spacey, "wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    01. Love
     
    SEXY, SUMMER-Y, HIP-HOP ("wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises)
    02. Lust for Life
    03. 13 Beaches
    04. Cherry
    05. White Mustang
    06. Summer Bummer
    07. Groupie Love
    08. In My Feelings
     
    THE BRIDGE (a more stripped back hip-hop beat, letting the album kind of cool off a bit before getting more poltically-minded)
    09. Coachella..
     
    POLITICAL "GANGSTA" FOLKY-Y ("wall-to-wall" hip-hop noises, but more laid back, with heavier guitar and folk featured artists)
    10. God Bless America..
    11. When the War Was at War...
    12. Beautiful People, Beautiful Problems
    13. Tomorrow Never Came
    14. Heroin
    15. Change
    16. Get Free
     
    It's like she takes us from "Coachella" to "Woodstock" by using that track as a bridge. As I predicted, the song works in concept of the album; but releasing it as a single is bizarre. From what we have in the snippets, this album seems to be very well-thought out. 
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