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uzzunov

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  1. uzzunov liked a post in a topic by National Anthem in Lana changes Instagram profile photo to Lizzy era pic   
    Idk if anyone else would consider this "news" or interesting at all really but omg could this mean Lana is finally embracing her Lana Del Ray persona?!
     

     
    inb4 people reaching @ this pointing to an AKA re-release.
  2. uzzunov liked a post in a topic by ilovetati in Honeymoon - Pre-Release and Discussion Thread   
    I thought it might be useful to dedicate one thread to the early tidbits of info we are getting about Lana'a up-coming fourth studio album.

    Here's what we have thus far:
     
    Interview for The Fader:
    I’m a big jazz aficionado. Hopefully my next foray will be into jazz. I feel like I’m getting there with songs like ‘Shades of Cool’ and ‘Cruel World’ and a cover of ‘The Other Woman’ by Nina Simone. I’m inching towards what I really love, which is kind of a Chet Baker, Nina Simone-inspired sound. It’s hard to get that sound because you need great jazz musicians. 
     
    ---

    http://lizzydelgrant.tumblr.com/post/90085038067

    Interviewer: You will record something tonight, do you know what it is, or right now?

    Lana: I do, yeah I do. I have this idea for this record called "Music to Watch Boys To," so. Yeah, I'm just kind of thinking about that and what that would mean [laughs].

    ---

    Interview for Galore Magazine:

    Are you working on anything new?
    Yeah, I just wrote two songs for Tim Burton and Harvey Weinstein’s film called Big Eyes and I’m working on a new record. I’m also always writing small pieces for independent films etc. Dan Heath and Rick Nowels are two of my dearest friends and producers and we are always up to something.

    ---

    Interview for Grazia Magazine

    What is your state of mind now?
    I’m afraid this album will be forgotten. I’m always afraid good things will be forgotten, burried. Musically, I’m still looking for something different, with majestic choruses, beautiful orchestrations, a type of 50s vibe with a bit of soft grunge. Since march, I’ve been writing a lot of new songs, in a more conventional way -the verses, then the refrain, with a strong jazzy influence. I’m having a lot of fun with all of that. And next year, I’ll tour across the USA. I’ve been doing it only once before and I was really moved, especially in Detroit where I could feel the weight of its History. So, that’s why I decided I wanted to do it again, this time with my friend Courtney Love, for two months. My new album will come out after, maybe for late-august.
    Did you writing style change for this next record?
    My lyrics are very similar to me, who I truly am, but I must admit that I’m currently trying to do some new things. It’s a bit surrealist, full of colors. I feel much more inspired by people like Mark Ryden, Fellini or Picasso… Oh, I’m totally fond of this documentary: “Fellini : I’m a Born Liar”, which explains that the film-maker was in love with his hometown, and each of his movies is like one of its facets. I like his idea, the fact that truth should never impede to a beautiful lie… (she smiles)

    You seem to like evoking the 50s imagery in your songs: the golden age of recording studios, ladies singing late at night with their big band…
    Yeah, I love it. I love nightlife, the mood that comes from it. That’s why I wanted to meet Mark Ronson: I played him ten songs I just composed for this next album. Not so much that he added his usual signature, soul and funk, but rather it explores a sound close to the golden age of jazz. I wasn’t even born in the 50s but I feel like I was there. And when I still was living in New York, I was looking for this dream, maybe some other girls had the same, to live as a singer in a jazz club where I could sing some standards, but my own compositions too. I had a very ‘romantic’ vision of what a singer’s life should be. I daydreamed about tours in Europe, just like Chet Baker did, for example.
     
    ---
     
    Billboard Magazine:
     
    Lana Del Rey has nine songs written for her next album, titled Honeymoon -- four of which "the production is perfect; I'm looking for a few more songs to tie everything together" -- and thanks to her cinematic new song, she's also in the thick of awards season.
     
    Does the Big Eyes song give us any indication of how the new album will sound?
    It's very different from the last one and similar to the first two, Born to Die and Paradise. I finished my last one [Ultraviolence] in March and released it in June and I had a follow-up idea. It's growing into something I really like. I'm kind of enjoying sinking into this more noirish feel for this one. It's been good.
    You're still writing everything?
    I'm doing a cover of "Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood." After doing a cover of [Jessie Mae Robinson's] "The Other Woman," I like summarizing the record with a jazz song. I'm having fun with my interpretation.
    I assume you're relying on the Nina Simone versions?
    "Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood" and "The Other Woman" are my favorites. I'm so so much [a fan].
    ---
     
    Mark Ronson for Triple J:
    http://www.abc.net.au/triplej/media/s4174087.htm
     
    Says that he rumors of his involvement with Honeymoon are an "internet thing," but says he has heard "beautiful tracks" and does not want to comment on anything before Lana does. However, he says that he has not worked on anything (yet?)
     
    ---
     
    The Inquirer:
    " I feel that the three records were so heavy and autobiographical. It’s been so cathartic. I like to use my previous work as a jump-off point to do something new. I’m ready to go into more of a ‘Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds’ surrealist place. That’s why I really do like what I heard about Fellini and all of the movies that were overdubbed and the actors were counting and not saying lines. I couldn’t believe that.
     
    ---
     
    Inrockuptibles:
    "Everybody has asked why I wanted to end Ultraviolence by a cover of The Other Woman by Nina Simone. Because she says everything, because I love jazz and may be because it could a door for what could be the next album."
     
    ---
     
    Mark Ronson for Interview Magazine:
     
    "Q-TIP: What are you doing in L.A.?
    Mark RONSON: I'm going to do some recording with Lana Del Rey today and tomorrow. I found this cool old studio out here. 

    Q-TIP: Are you producing? 

    RONSON: I don't know. She has some songs and I said I had some demo ideas, and if they are any good, then maybe she'll like them and we'll go from there. "
     
    ---
     
    On Instagram:

     
    ---
     
    Video from tour saying that the record will be released in September:
    https://twitter.com/LanaDeIReyDaily/status/602515526649163776
     
    ---
    Honeymoon lyrics found in tour merch:
    http://www.nme.com/news/lana-del-rey/85451?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=lanadelrey
  3. uzzunov liked a post in a topic by Honeymooner in Lana nominated for an EMA: Best Alternative   
    We need #EMABiggestFansLanaDelRey
  4. ednafrau liked a post in a topic by uzzunov in uvuv   
    I work in music store in Bulgaria. Ultraviolence is one of 10 most selling albums  
  5. timinmass101 liked a post in a topic by uzzunov in Virgin Radio Station Boycotts Lana   
    I can say: F*ck Virgin radio ... 
  6. uzzunov liked a post in a topic by GangstaBoy in VIDEO PREMIERE: Ultraviolence   
    You are so wrong, pls leave
  7. uzzunov liked a post in a topic by wraith in VIDEO PREMIERE: Ultraviolence   
    what happened to this tho 
    hope we get this video 
  8. uzzunov liked a post in a topic by ConeyIslandQueen262 in VIDEO PREMIERE: Ultraviolence   
    I could arrange myself with the West Coast video and I was surprised how much I loved the Shades Of Cool video but the new one.. 
     
    I've really tried to find some great aspects in that music video but tbh I have a hard time doing so.
    It's only Lana in a wedding dress, putting on an ugly veil, picking up some flowers that she randomly finds on the ground, eating an orange in a disgusting way, sucking fingers and kneeling down in front of an altar.
    If she looked stunningly beautiful I could live with it but her face and especially her lips look so weird and awkward.
     
    Anyways, I tried to figure out a storyline (even though there is no plot at all probably):
    Imo the Ultraviolence video is a music video that is about a homemade video. Lana and that man who is filming her with his iPhone are a couple and he is the boss in their relationship. Maybe they feel too young for marriage or they want to capture their wedding in a special way, perhaps what we see is their real wedding actually, like they run away from home and only have each other and that's why there are no family or friends. So after they have found a nice location, he starts filming the preparations and the walk to the altar. They are totally attracted to each other but I wouldn't talk about unconditional love, he wants to capture her beautiful face and she sucks his fingers in order to show her desire for him. In the end it seems like he sits down next to her as her groom. Maybe she doesn't know that these flowers are normally used for funerals and thinking of her man as a difficult, ultraviolent man I assume that he has many other women and plans to leave her, this means that the flowers are a death symbol of their relationship.
     
    very speculative though.
  9. uzzunov liked a post in a topic by Chris Cuomo in VIDEO PREMIERE: Ultraviolence   
    The video was directed by her and it looks like she was 100% in charge.
     
    only lana would cancel a big budget video and opt out for this trash instead.
  10. butterflies liked a post in a topic by uzzunov in VIDEO PREMIERE: Ultraviolence   
    Yep! In Bulgaria I work in one store - ORANGE :D :D 
    So strange video ... I don't know. Perfect song, but the concept? 
  11. uzzunov liked a post in a topic by butterflies in VIDEO PREMIERE: Ultraviolence   
    the most expensive thing in this video is an orange
  12. uzzunov liked a post in a topic by James Dean in VIDEO PREMIERE: Ultraviolence   
    looks like a homemade video
  13. uzzunov liked a post in a topic by timinmass101 in Lana Del Rey's Ultraviolent, True Love Story   
    Nicole Sia at Wondering Sound is yet another journalist that has come to the conclusion that our girl is not an act, but rather a real person telling her story through her music, and sometimes painfully honest interviews.
     
    http://www.wonderingsound.com/feature/lana-del-rey-ultraviolence-review/
     
     
    On Ultraviolence, her second album since her Norma Jeane-style transformation from bottle-blond folk singer to pin-curled indie lightning rod, Lana Del Rey tells us a secret: She was once the Other Woman.
     
    Self-identifying as a mistress may feel like a minor revelation, but it gives context for the self-destructive Lolita persona that’s become Del Rey’s trademark. On one hand, the role can be read as a metaphor — the artist fully embracing her identity as the music industry’s beautiful, dirty shame, derided and cast off by critics while her debut album quietly moved 7 million copies worldwide. Or we can read it as autobiography, the experiences of the woman born Elizabeth Grant bleeding into the Lana Del Rey mythology like a red bra through a translucent collared shirt. Each of her aesthetic choices — the girlish pout, the baby-doll register, the “It’s you, it’s you, it’s all for you” pathology — are the lamentations of a woman forced to define herself through stolen moments and dark corners. It’s a dangerous line to take, to cop to being a home wrecker. No one pities the mistress, and Del Rey knows this. But the singer isn’t concerned with forgiveness. Half confession, half redemption and written from a safe remove, Ultraviolence is, instead, a medallion of recovery.
     
    “I’m finally happy now that you’re gone,” she sings on opener “Cruel World,” flexing her muscular lower register over steady tom-tom rhythm. “I did what I had to do, I found another anyhow.” Album closer “The Other Woman” is even more on-the-nose: “The other woman will always cry herself to sleep/ The other woman will never have his love to keep.”
     
    For a singer repeatedly taken to task for her lack of authenticity, on Ultraviolence Del Rey comes across both honest and unguarded. Produced by the Black Keys’ Dan Auerbach (that’s his indelible wah-wah on “West Coast”) the album strips out the sonic Webdings that plagued Born to Die (the incessant “Blue Jeans” “Shyah!” sample; the self-conscious boom-bap of “Diet Mtn Dew.”) Instead, the album evolves the full-band sound of her Rick Rubin-led 2012 Paradise EP into something raw and unadorned. It’s also steeped in pop history: The symphonic guitar work on “Cruel World” summons visions of Magical Mystery-era Beatles. The fuzzy saxophone drawl on “The Other Woman” recalls Gene Pitney’s “Town Without Pity.” And a more oblique reference to the classics appears on the title track, which cribs lyrics from the Crystals’ “He Hit Me (It Felt Like a Kiss)” — the ’60s pop-progenitor of negative feedback loops in dysfunctional relationships.
     
    And there are subtle nods to her own past: The strings on Ultraviolence‘s title track reuse the chord progression that opened “Born to Die.” The synth glide in the last minute of “West Coast” scans as a cute wink at Born to Die‘s hip-hop non-sequiturs. “Brooklyn Baby,” with its arch references to rare jazz records and hydroponic weed, and “Fucked My Way Up to the Top,” with its tongue-in-cheek title, come off like fuck-yous to the canon of think pieces written in her wake. Del Rey, as this writer was once assured, “reads everything.”
     
    So, she’s most likely caught wind of the backlash to her recent open-for-interpretation sound bite about feminism. “For me, the issue of feminism is just not an interesting concept,” she told The Fader. “Whenever people bring up feminism, I’m like, god. I’m just not really that interested.”
     
    Indelicately put and poorly timed, the quote got her in hot water, critics’ hands already full with young Hollywood star Shailene Woodley distancing herself from the F-word. But let’s be fair: Del Rey’s personal indifference and Woodley’s feminist dodge — “I think the idea of ‘raise women to power, take the men away from the power’ is never going to work out because you need balance,” she told Time — are two different opinions. Perhaps Del Rey, who’s been held over the fire for perpetuating anti-feminist ideas is done with being forced into a conversation she never sought in the first place, just as she’s over her Million Dollar Man.
     
    Or perhaps she’d prefer to let her music speak for her. Because taken as a whole, Ultraviolence is her most feminist work to date. It presents, without judgment, the ecstasy and agony of one woman’s choices — a bird’s-eye view of a woman suffocating, then escaping from under the weight of her man. She treats her former self tenderly: “The Other Woman is perfect where her rival fails,” she sings. But that was then. Now she’s got a cool boyfriend in her band, “but he’s not as cool as me.” And she’s out for money, power and glory. Hallelujah
  14. lazybooklet liked a post in a topic by uzzunov in "West Coast" music video nominated for VMA   
    I hate MTV VMA 
    Always the same... and this year - "the queen Beyonce" - WTF? Queen?
     
    And many of disgusting people like: Usher, Ariana Grande and 5 Seconds of Summer       
  15. inesmatias liked a post in a topic by uzzunov in "West Coast" music video nominated for VMA   
    I hate MTV VMA 
    Always the same... and this year - "the queen Beyonce" - WTF? Queen?
     
    And many of disgusting people like: Usher, Ariana Grande and 5 Seconds of Summer       
  16. uzzunov liked a post in a topic in Official 2nd Single - Ultraviolence (Release August 18th)   
    West Coast wasn't a radio-friendly song, lbr.
     
    Ultraviolence is a radio-friendly song, yes, but it's being released at the wrong time of the year. It's late summer and Brooklyn Baby is one of the most positively received songs of the record and would ne the most befitting single choice due to it's summery vibe.
     
    In my opinion that song along with MPG is the most radio-friendly. It has a catchy chorus and the overall vibe of the song is similar to SS, which was a hit in Germany and other parts of Europe. MPG is very close to most of her BTD stuff and it's easy to sing along to. I also think that eventhough they're bonus tracks that Florida Kilos and Black Beauty could make good singles as well.
  17. uzzunov liked a post in a topic by Coney Island King in Official 2nd Single - Ultraviolence (Release August 18th)   
    Its the only song on the album other than West Coast that sounds like radio may play it, so it's certainly an obvious single.....but i find the song a bit dull. 
     
    Shades of Cool should have been single #2, it was well received and has a gorgeous video.
     
    x.
  18. uzzunov liked a post in a topic by Sitar in "Ms. America": A Supplement on Lana Del Rey by The New Inquiry   
    From their website, "The New Inquiry is a space for discussion that aspires to enrich cultural and public life by putting all available resources—both digital and material—toward the promotion and exploration of ideas." They dedicated a whole, 24-page issue to Lana, and it's actually very interesting! Different essays discuss the appropriateness of Lana's inclusion on the Maleficent soundtrack, her glamorization of Americana as a lie, femininity, whiteness, and especially Ultraviolence. On the whole, it's pretty positive, though--my favorite is "The Fake as More," which focuses on her image. It's free!

     



     

    Source: http://thenewinquiry.com/features/ms-america/

  19. uzzunov liked a post in a topic by Macintosh Manhattan in Salon: "Lana Is The Perfect Artist For An America In Decline"   
    Found this facinating article from Salon website that talks about how Lana's music and fascination with death suits today's scociety. Here is the link...
     
    http://www.salon.com/2014/07/08/why_lana_del_ray_is_the_perfect_artist_for_an_a
    merica_in_decline_partner/
     
    And here is transcript...
    In case you have been under a rock, Lana Del Rey is pop music’s It Girl right now, sauntering past Queen Beyoncé and Miley Cyrus with her languid sex appeal and self-professed death wish. With a sound described as “narco-swing,” Del Rey floats through ghostly videos in various poses of drowning and despair, blowing a pouty kiss to the Grim Reaper in the guise of a Gothic pinup.
     
    The kids can’t get enough. Her album “Ultraviolence” has just topped her hit debut “Born to Die” to land at No. 1 on the Billboard 200.
     
    “I wish I was dead already,” she confides to the Guardian in a kittenish voice (interview clip here). Asked if she thinks an early demise a la Kurt Cobain is glamorous, she murmurs, “Um, yeah,” setting off a twitterstorm in which Frances Bean Cobain, daughter of the singer who shot himself at 27, slammed her for romanticizing youthful death. “People like you think it’s ‘cool,’” blasted Cobain. “Well, it’s f–king not.”
     
    But ask a Goth kid or a vampire fan, or for that matter a Pre-Raphaelite or an aficionado of European Romanticism, and you will quickly find that the pose of eroticized death has been a perennial favorite of youth culture — and it tends to crop up in seasons where young people see an epic fail in society.
     
    Enter Lana Del Rey.
     
    Love Story for the New Age
     
    Del Rey has more than her share of detractors. Some feminists are irked by what they perceive to be the singer’s victim stance (not to mention her professed boredom with feminism), comparing her style unfavorably to Beyoncé’s brand of bootylicious empowerment. Indie music writers complain of her gimmicky transformation from under-the-radar Brooklyn songstress Lizzy Grant to pop phenom Lana Del Rey. (Do they feel similarly peeved with Bob Dylan, once known as Bob Zimmerman?)
    On Del Rey’s much-panned 2012 Saturday Night Live performance, where she stood looking like she’d just popped a Xanax in pale gown, news anchor Brian Williams dubbed it “one of the worst outings in SNL history.” True, it was weird: Del Rey seemed, if anything, painfully bored with the SNL proceedings. No hopping around the stage shaking her bon-bon. No painfully earnest emotional appeals. What was this blasé siren up to?
     
    Becoming the hottest ticket in town, is what. While the critics panned her, fans swooned. Angelina Jolie, remembered for her own youthful Goth phase, handpicked Del Rey to record the theme song for the summer’s hit Disney film “Maleficent.” Kanye and Kim asked her to sing at their A-list wedding. Del Rey is en fuego.
     
    Too awkward for the medium of live television, too ethereal for the stage, Lana Del Rey seems to know her bread is buttered on the Internet (she is literally a child of that medium, the daughter of a web entrepreneur who made his dough hawking Internet domains). There, fans embrace her eclectic video mashups and twisted takes on pop culture clichés. There, she can be as detached, noncommittal and as rapturously bored with it all as her audience.
     
    With her well-honed weltschmerz and mesmerizing monotony, Del Rey expresses the winter of America’s discontent through the eyes of the youthful bourgeoisie.
     
    In “Shades of Cool,” Del Rey transforms the sunny myth of California dreamin’ into a nihilistic ride to oblivion in a Chevy Malibu. Her most recent insta-contraversial hit “Ultraviolence” throws a stink bomb into ’60s dreams of peace and harmony with a fantasy of being roughed up by a cult leader/lover. “We could go back to Woodstock,” she sings. “But they don’t know who we are.” In “National Anthem” she gives a ghoulish rendition of Marilyn Monroe’s breathy birthday address to President Kennedy, followed by assassination clips that segue to a cynical anthem about America real obsession, money, which kills every other youthful aspiration.
     
    “It’s a love story for the new age
    For the six page
    We’re on a quick sick rampage
    Wining and dining
    Drinking and driving
    Excessive buying
    Overdose and dyin’
    On our drugs and our love
    And our dreams and our rage”
     
    Lana Del Rey is pushing the envelope, and here’s her message, delivered with a languid pout: 21st-century America is a rotting corpse, deadlocked culturally, economically, and politically, and since there’s nothing we can do about it, let’s enjoy ourselves as the body-politic disintegrates, perhaps by savoring some toothsome bites of the past: candy-colored Super 8 films, juicy jazz tunes and clips of sultry screen sirens. The future is a retrospective.
     
    All of this echoes the ancient danse macabre, the dance of death, the motif that sprang out of the medieval horrors of war and the plague. It’s a plea for fevered amusement while you’ve still got time.
     
    Queen of the Damned
     
    You might call Del Rey a musical Queen of the Damned: the expression of a generational sense that America has lost its way, and there’s little hope for redemption. Del Rey’s haunting sense of exhausted sadness is perfect pitch for an era when climate change threatens the planet, bloodsucking financial predators steal the future of our youth and consumer culture deadens everyone. The kingdom of wealth is sterile and limiting; perhaps the kingdom of death is preferable. Del Rey’s pose of expectant pleasure at the coming apocalypse strikes a resonant chord — a cool bravado that eases the pain. In her romantic fantasies, you can almost hear strains of Wagner’s Tristan and Isolde, a love story in which young lovers seek peace through annihilation.
     
    Del Rey and fellow avatars of the death-and-the-maiden trope —one of the oldest in art — have been creeping onto the cultural scene since the global financial meltdown of 2007-’08, and not just in America. In Lars Von Trier’s 2011 film “Melancholia,” Kirsten Dunst’s character Justine welcomes the end of the world by offering her sprawling naked body to a rogue planet hurtling toward earth. “Life on earth is evil,” murmurs Justine. “No one will miss it.”
     
    All of this is no surprise to students of psychoanalysis. It was a woman, Sabina Spielrein, who gave Sigmund Freud the inspiration for his theory of the death drive, writing of young women who dream of lying in a coffin, yearning to return to the womb through the tomb. It is women who are most acutely aware of the limitations of society’s institutions and its life-denying strictures: scripts for marriage, motherhood, and career still don’t accommodate women’s desires and creative potential. Why not just imagine sinking into a blissful abyss with your lover?
     
    For millennials, the desire to reject an inhumane future in favor of a sensual plunge into undifferentiated nature is mirrored in Del Rey’s videos, where she is often submerged in water, as if suspended in Earth’s amniotic fluid. The world can be saved only when life returns to its primal source.
     
    This potent combination of women, sex and death is going to be one of the calling cards of late-stage capitalism. We are experiencing fearsome global dislocations and distorted social and economic systems that are killing our life-affirming instincts. The death drive is perennial, but when a society seems to hover on the eve of destruction, these Eves of the Apocalypse — suicidal brides, young women fixated on pain and death — emerge to speak our well-founded anxieties. They signal that just now, the death drive is very strong.
     
    The sociologist Emile Durkheim wrote of “anomic suicide,” a desire for death that comes from confusion and lack of social direction in the face of hard economic times and societal upheaval. When young people can’t find legitimate aspirations, they feel lost and disoriented. They begin to lose any sense of the limits of desires and become mired in a sense of chronic disappointment. A bankruptcy of expectations leads to a nostalgic fixation on the past and inability to actively meet the future.
     
    What Lana Del Rey is selling is what a big chunk of America’s youth is feeling: contemporary capitalist society is a deathly bore.
  20. uzzunov liked a post in a topic by leaked_version in Lana Del Rey Speaks About Next Record, "Music to Watch Boys To"   
    Or she was watching the kind of music that boys actually make on www.men.com 
  21. uzzunov liked a post in a topic by Rafael in Lana's first ever written song named "China Palace"!   
    Lana had an interview with a major radio station in Sweden last week where she revealed that her first ever written song was called "China Palace" and it's about strawberry daiquiri!
     
    Edited all the redundant stuff and here's what we got:


     
    Transcribed version by yours sincerely:
     
  22. uzzunov liked a post in a topic by Linethic in Lana Del Rey Speaks About Next Record, "Music to Watch Boys To"   
    From a recent (currently) unknown radio interview.
     
    Interviewer: ... record something tonight, do you know what it is, or right now?
     
    Lana: I do, yeah I do. I have this idea for this record called "Music to Watch Boys To," so. Yeah, I'm just kind of thinking about that and what that would mean [laughs].
     
    Audio -
    http://lizzydelgrant.tumblr.com/post/90085038067
  23. uzzunov liked a post in a topic by stadiumarcadium in Possibility of Another Tour   
    She has to come to Frankfurt again, at least Germany in general. I'm DYING to see her again.
  24. uzzunov liked a post in a topic by TrailerParkDarling in Possibility of Another Tour   
    ya she's doing a 50 show tour exclusively in the state of delaware. also heard she's announcing her christmas album UltraSilent (Night) there but idk..
  25. uzzunov liked a post in a topic by yourdangerousgirl in Ultraviolence Order Directory   
    lmao you're from my country but yes, it's a bonus track that appears in some of the physical copies of ultraviolence
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