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  1. turquoisejewel liked a post in a topic by FormerLanaFan in Lana discusses the Guardian controversy, Frances Bean, & Barrie in Aftonbladet interview   
    http://www.aftonbladet.se/nojesbladet/musik/rockbjornen/article19123254.ab
     
    She puts her cigarette out, just little bit too hard.
    – Yes, sometimes I fucking wish I was dead, but I don't glamorize death or people killing themselves.
            Markus Larsson and Lana Del Rey. Lana Del Ray excuses herself, gets up and starts fiddling with the espresso machine in her hotel suite.
    – Sorry, I can't do interviews without my coffee. Keep talking. I'm listening.
    I've always wondered, why did you create the persona Lana Del Ray?
    – Well, it's not a persona. It's a different name. I've always thought that the way you're kind of born into a name, a geographic location, a family makes it hard to choose for yourself who you want to be. By having a different name I felt more free to be exactly who I am. People seem to think sometimes that I am somebody on stage and then you get off and you're another person, but I have a more alternative way of thinking.
    I thought it was some kind of art project, like a Ziggy Stardust character?
    – Yeah, people think that but actually for me it was just a different name. It has made it easier for me to express a very clear aesthetic that I love.
    So what was the inspiration for your aesthetic?
    – All things dark and beautiful. Everything I love, everything I've been through, everything I've wanted to do. My history and my songs.
    You seem rather interested in the beauty of darkness and despair.
    – I've had despair and grief in my life. In the past four years journalists have always asked me about death, icons and my persona. My own depressions and experiences has gotten miscommunicated as this need to be dark. Actually it's not my preferred way of being. I love when things go really well. Anyone who knows me knows this.
    But what about the interview in The Guardian…
    – I'm not fucking happy about the interview, to start with.
    Well, I know that, and you've made that clear on Twitter. But what did you mean when you said ”I wish I was dead already”?
    – Well, first of all… the questions… Sometimes I do feel like I wish I was dead. I've been through a lot. And yes, sometimes I feel like I fucking wish I was dead. But The Guardian made it sound like I was obsessed with dying because it's glamourous. Me being depressed sometimes has nothing to do with other people wanting to kill themselves.
    It must have been surreal when the daughter of your idol Kurt Cobain, Frances Bean Cobain, critcised you on Twitter?
    – She was saying to me ”don't glamorize death” and I wrote back, and I never write to anyone, but I wrote back and said I didn't glamorize death. I don't even sing about death, except on the title track on ”Born to die”. I sing about relationships. The fact that the headline in The Guardian affected people that way feels unfair. That's the problem with the article.
    You're computer got hacked a couple of years ago and 211 songs got stolen among other things.
    – Yeah, someone remotely accessed my hard drive when I was staying in a hotel. The songs are one of a thousand things that was stolen.
    I would have been devastated.
    – Yeah, the fact that someone is watching you. Knowing that you never gonna have the luxury of discretion. These type of crimes won't ever stop.
    Isn't there some legal action you can take, sue someone?
    – Even if he people that started it got caught, they gave it to 40 other people, so the information is still out there.
    Your life is always turned into headlines Like the recent rumours about your recent relationship. It was said you had broken up, but now I heard that your boyfriend Barrien-James O'Neill told TMZ that it's complete bullshit.
    – I mean… I… I didn't use to talk publicly about my relationships. Because things change all the time. But after not seeing him for several months and people still asking me about him I just said no we're not together right now. And when he got to Los Angeles today and he ran into TMZ I don't think he knew what to say. Sometimes it's not real until you're faced with a camera and somebody asking you.
    Ok, it all seems a bit confused. Well, about the music…
    – It's ok. I get it.
    Back to the music. So… are you together?
    – Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha. (Lana basically rolls over laughing out loud)
    – Oh my god, that's so funny.
    I'm sorry, I'm just joking. Why do you mention The Crystal's controversial song ”He hit me (and it felt like a kiss)” in the title track on your new album?
    – I know that people have different opinions about that song. And they're entitled to. I always use autobiographical elements. Mixed with anything I can use as an innuendo instead of saying something super directly. For me the writing comes first. I never felt the need to edit myself.
    Hmm. What are you actually saying? That you have been in abusive relationships?
    – It's a good question. I have trouble talking about that song, I didn't think I would. I don't know what to say.
    Why did you choose to cover ”The other woman”?
    – Firstly it's a jazz song, covered by Nina Simone, she's my favourite. I feel like ”Ultraviolence” has a jazzy feel to it, shades of blue, shades of cool. I'm a huge jazz fan. Billie Holiday, Nina Simone, the singers, you know.
    What have you stolen from them, as a song writer?
    To start with I was just a fan. But I realized early on that I had an inclination to sing songs in a minor key with a touch of a blue note. They are my influences. Alongside The Eagles and The Beach Boys.
    Beautiful music with a dark heart.
    Yeah, ”Dark heart”. That's the follow up album. (Laughs).
     
  2. Trash Magic liked a post in a topic by FormerLanaFan in Lana discusses the Guardian controversy, Frances Bean, & Barrie in Aftonbladet interview   
    http://www.aftonbladet.se/nojesbladet/musik/rockbjornen/article19123254.ab
     
    She puts her cigarette out, just little bit too hard.
    – Yes, sometimes I fucking wish I was dead, but I don't glamorize death or people killing themselves.
            Markus Larsson and Lana Del Rey. Lana Del Ray excuses herself, gets up and starts fiddling with the espresso machine in her hotel suite.
    – Sorry, I can't do interviews without my coffee. Keep talking. I'm listening.
    I've always wondered, why did you create the persona Lana Del Ray?
    – Well, it's not a persona. It's a different name. I've always thought that the way you're kind of born into a name, a geographic location, a family makes it hard to choose for yourself who you want to be. By having a different name I felt more free to be exactly who I am. People seem to think sometimes that I am somebody on stage and then you get off and you're another person, but I have a more alternative way of thinking.
    I thought it was some kind of art project, like a Ziggy Stardust character?
    – Yeah, people think that but actually for me it was just a different name. It has made it easier for me to express a very clear aesthetic that I love.
    So what was the inspiration for your aesthetic?
    – All things dark and beautiful. Everything I love, everything I've been through, everything I've wanted to do. My history and my songs.
    You seem rather interested in the beauty of darkness and despair.
    – I've had despair and grief in my life. In the past four years journalists have always asked me about death, icons and my persona. My own depressions and experiences has gotten miscommunicated as this need to be dark. Actually it's not my preferred way of being. I love when things go really well. Anyone who knows me knows this.
    But what about the interview in The Guardian…
    – I'm not fucking happy about the interview, to start with.
    Well, I know that, and you've made that clear on Twitter. But what did you mean when you said ”I wish I was dead already”?
    – Well, first of all… the questions… Sometimes I do feel like I wish I was dead. I've been through a lot. And yes, sometimes I feel like I fucking wish I was dead. But The Guardian made it sound like I was obsessed with dying because it's glamourous. Me being depressed sometimes has nothing to do with other people wanting to kill themselves.
    It must have been surreal when the daughter of your idol Kurt Cobain, Frances Bean Cobain, critcised you on Twitter?
    – She was saying to me ”don't glamorize death” and I wrote back, and I never write to anyone, but I wrote back and said I didn't glamorize death. I don't even sing about death, except on the title track on ”Born to die”. I sing about relationships. The fact that the headline in The Guardian affected people that way feels unfair. That's the problem with the article.
    You're computer got hacked a couple of years ago and 211 songs got stolen among other things.
    – Yeah, someone remotely accessed my hard drive when I was staying in a hotel. The songs are one of a thousand things that was stolen.
    I would have been devastated.
    – Yeah, the fact that someone is watching you. Knowing that you never gonna have the luxury of discretion. These type of crimes won't ever stop.
    Isn't there some legal action you can take, sue someone?
    – Even if he people that started it got caught, they gave it to 40 other people, so the information is still out there.
    Your life is always turned into headlines Like the recent rumours about your recent relationship. It was said you had broken up, but now I heard that your boyfriend Barrien-James O'Neill told TMZ that it's complete bullshit.
    – I mean… I… I didn't use to talk publicly about my relationships. Because things change all the time. But after not seeing him for several months and people still asking me about him I just said no we're not together right now. And when he got to Los Angeles today and he ran into TMZ I don't think he knew what to say. Sometimes it's not real until you're faced with a camera and somebody asking you.
    Ok, it all seems a bit confused. Well, about the music…
    – It's ok. I get it.
    Back to the music. So… are you together?
    – Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha. (Lana basically rolls over laughing out loud)
    – Oh my god, that's so funny.
    I'm sorry, I'm just joking. Why do you mention The Crystal's controversial song ”He hit me (and it felt like a kiss)” in the title track on your new album?
    – I know that people have different opinions about that song. And they're entitled to. I always use autobiographical elements. Mixed with anything I can use as an innuendo instead of saying something super directly. For me the writing comes first. I never felt the need to edit myself.
    Hmm. What are you actually saying? That you have been in abusive relationships?
    – It's a good question. I have trouble talking about that song, I didn't think I would. I don't know what to say.
    Why did you choose to cover ”The other woman”?
    – Firstly it's a jazz song, covered by Nina Simone, she's my favourite. I feel like ”Ultraviolence” has a jazzy feel to it, shades of blue, shades of cool. I'm a huge jazz fan. Billie Holiday, Nina Simone, the singers, you know.
    What have you stolen from them, as a song writer?
    To start with I was just a fan. But I realized early on that I had an inclination to sing songs in a minor key with a touch of a blue note. They are my influences. Alongside The Eagles and The Beach Boys.
    Beautiful music with a dark heart.
    Yeah, ”Dark heart”. That's the follow up album. (Laughs).
     
  3. Kommander liked a post in a topic by FormerLanaFan in Lana discusses the Guardian controversy, Frances Bean, & Barrie in Aftonbladet interview   
    http://www.aftonbladet.se/nojesbladet/musik/rockbjornen/article19123254.ab
     
    She puts her cigarette out, just little bit too hard.
    – Yes, sometimes I fucking wish I was dead, but I don't glamorize death or people killing themselves.
            Markus Larsson and Lana Del Rey. Lana Del Ray excuses herself, gets up and starts fiddling with the espresso machine in her hotel suite.
    – Sorry, I can't do interviews without my coffee. Keep talking. I'm listening.
    I've always wondered, why did you create the persona Lana Del Ray?
    – Well, it's not a persona. It's a different name. I've always thought that the way you're kind of born into a name, a geographic location, a family makes it hard to choose for yourself who you want to be. By having a different name I felt more free to be exactly who I am. People seem to think sometimes that I am somebody on stage and then you get off and you're another person, but I have a more alternative way of thinking.
    I thought it was some kind of art project, like a Ziggy Stardust character?
    – Yeah, people think that but actually for me it was just a different name. It has made it easier for me to express a very clear aesthetic that I love.
    So what was the inspiration for your aesthetic?
    – All things dark and beautiful. Everything I love, everything I've been through, everything I've wanted to do. My history and my songs.
    You seem rather interested in the beauty of darkness and despair.
    – I've had despair and grief in my life. In the past four years journalists have always asked me about death, icons and my persona. My own depressions and experiences has gotten miscommunicated as this need to be dark. Actually it's not my preferred way of being. I love when things go really well. Anyone who knows me knows this.
    But what about the interview in The Guardian…
    – I'm not fucking happy about the interview, to start with.
    Well, I know that, and you've made that clear on Twitter. But what did you mean when you said ”I wish I was dead already”?
    – Well, first of all… the questions… Sometimes I do feel like I wish I was dead. I've been through a lot. And yes, sometimes I feel like I fucking wish I was dead. But The Guardian made it sound like I was obsessed with dying because it's glamourous. Me being depressed sometimes has nothing to do with other people wanting to kill themselves.
    It must have been surreal when the daughter of your idol Kurt Cobain, Frances Bean Cobain, critcised you on Twitter?
    – She was saying to me ”don't glamorize death” and I wrote back, and I never write to anyone, but I wrote back and said I didn't glamorize death. I don't even sing about death, except on the title track on ”Born to die”. I sing about relationships. The fact that the headline in The Guardian affected people that way feels unfair. That's the problem with the article.
    You're computer got hacked a couple of years ago and 211 songs got stolen among other things.
    – Yeah, someone remotely accessed my hard drive when I was staying in a hotel. The songs are one of a thousand things that was stolen.
    I would have been devastated.
    – Yeah, the fact that someone is watching you. Knowing that you never gonna have the luxury of discretion. These type of crimes won't ever stop.
    Isn't there some legal action you can take, sue someone?
    – Even if he people that started it got caught, they gave it to 40 other people, so the information is still out there.
    Your life is always turned into headlines Like the recent rumours about your recent relationship. It was said you had broken up, but now I heard that your boyfriend Barrien-James O'Neill told TMZ that it's complete bullshit.
    – I mean… I… I didn't use to talk publicly about my relationships. Because things change all the time. But after not seeing him for several months and people still asking me about him I just said no we're not together right now. And when he got to Los Angeles today and he ran into TMZ I don't think he knew what to say. Sometimes it's not real until you're faced with a camera and somebody asking you.
    Ok, it all seems a bit confused. Well, about the music…
    – It's ok. I get it.
    Back to the music. So… are you together?
    – Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha. (Lana basically rolls over laughing out loud)
    – Oh my god, that's so funny.
    I'm sorry, I'm just joking. Why do you mention The Crystal's controversial song ”He hit me (and it felt like a kiss)” in the title track on your new album?
    – I know that people have different opinions about that song. And they're entitled to. I always use autobiographical elements. Mixed with anything I can use as an innuendo instead of saying something super directly. For me the writing comes first. I never felt the need to edit myself.
    Hmm. What are you actually saying? That you have been in abusive relationships?
    – It's a good question. I have trouble talking about that song, I didn't think I would. I don't know what to say.
    Why did you choose to cover ”The other woman”?
    – Firstly it's a jazz song, covered by Nina Simone, she's my favourite. I feel like ”Ultraviolence” has a jazzy feel to it, shades of blue, shades of cool. I'm a huge jazz fan. Billie Holiday, Nina Simone, the singers, you know.
    What have you stolen from them, as a song writer?
    To start with I was just a fan. But I realized early on that I had an inclination to sing songs in a minor key with a touch of a blue note. They are my influences. Alongside The Eagles and The Beach Boys.
    Beautiful music with a dark heart.
    Yeah, ”Dark heart”. That's the follow up album. (Laughs).
     
  4. TRASHBABY liked a post in a topic by FormerLanaFan in Lana and Barrie are no longer together   
    Well I know little about Barry but this guy made his biggest mistake by getting together with Lana and especially moving with her in LA. He left his band and career behind for becoming practically Lana's wife? I don't think that he has an income, I don't know what is he doing with his music. From little that I heard from him he is quite talented. He needs to forget Lana quickly and get on his feet because that TMZ video wasn't a pretty sight. Go back Barry to Glasgow, let her fuck around with any cute boy that she meets and forget her messy ass.
  5. Allie liked a post in a topic by FormerLanaFan in Lana and Barrie are no longer together   
    Well I know little about Barry but this guy made his biggest mistake by getting together with Lana and especially moving with her in LA. He left his band and career behind for becoming practically Lana's wife? I don't think that he has an income, I don't know what is he doing with his music. From little that I heard from him he is quite talented. He needs to forget Lana quickly and get on his feet because that TMZ video wasn't a pretty sight. Go back Barry to Glasgow, let her fuck around with any cute boy that she meets and forget her messy ass.
  6. evilentity liked a post in a topic by FormerLanaFan in Lana and Barrie are no longer together   
    Well I know little about Barry but this guy made his biggest mistake by getting together with Lana and especially moving with her in LA. He left his band and career behind for becoming practically Lana's wife? I don't think that he has an income, I don't know what is he doing with his music. From little that I heard from him he is quite talented. He needs to forget Lana quickly and get on his feet because that TMZ video wasn't a pretty sight. Go back Barry to Glasgow, let her fuck around with any cute boy that she meets and forget her messy ass.
  7. vmbb liked a post in a topic by FormerLanaFan in Lana and Barrie are no longer together   
    Well I know little about Barry but this guy made his biggest mistake by getting together with Lana and especially moving with her in LA. He left his band and career behind for becoming practically Lana's wife? I don't think that he has an income, I don't know what is he doing with his music. From little that I heard from him he is quite talented. He needs to forget Lana quickly and get on his feet because that TMZ video wasn't a pretty sight. Go back Barry to Glasgow, let her fuck around with any cute boy that she meets and forget her messy ass.
  8. longtimeman liked a post in a topic by FormerLanaFan in Ultraviolence Reviews: 74 Metascore (DISCUSS REVIEWS ONLY)   
    You have to listen to the review NPRmusic
    http://www.npr.org/2014/06/26/325808716/lana-del-reys-ultraviolence-has-a-firm-grasp-on-pop-history?ft=1&f=13
  9. incandescencia liked a post in a topic by FormerLanaFan in Lana discusses the Guardian controversy, Frances Bean, & Barrie in Aftonbladet interview   
    http://www.aftonbladet.se/nojesbladet/musik/rockbjornen/article19123254.ab
     
    She puts her cigarette out, just little bit too hard.
    – Yes, sometimes I fucking wish I was dead, but I don't glamorize death or people killing themselves.
            Markus Larsson and Lana Del Rey. Lana Del Ray excuses herself, gets up and starts fiddling with the espresso machine in her hotel suite.
    – Sorry, I can't do interviews without my coffee. Keep talking. I'm listening.
    I've always wondered, why did you create the persona Lana Del Ray?
    – Well, it's not a persona. It's a different name. I've always thought that the way you're kind of born into a name, a geographic location, a family makes it hard to choose for yourself who you want to be. By having a different name I felt more free to be exactly who I am. People seem to think sometimes that I am somebody on stage and then you get off and you're another person, but I have a more alternative way of thinking.
    I thought it was some kind of art project, like a Ziggy Stardust character?
    – Yeah, people think that but actually for me it was just a different name. It has made it easier for me to express a very clear aesthetic that I love.
    So what was the inspiration for your aesthetic?
    – All things dark and beautiful. Everything I love, everything I've been through, everything I've wanted to do. My history and my songs.
    You seem rather interested in the beauty of darkness and despair.
    – I've had despair and grief in my life. In the past four years journalists have always asked me about death, icons and my persona. My own depressions and experiences has gotten miscommunicated as this need to be dark. Actually it's not my preferred way of being. I love when things go really well. Anyone who knows me knows this.
    But what about the interview in The Guardian…
    – I'm not fucking happy about the interview, to start with.
    Well, I know that, and you've made that clear on Twitter. But what did you mean when you said ”I wish I was dead already”?
    – Well, first of all… the questions… Sometimes I do feel like I wish I was dead. I've been through a lot. And yes, sometimes I feel like I fucking wish I was dead. But The Guardian made it sound like I was obsessed with dying because it's glamourous. Me being depressed sometimes has nothing to do with other people wanting to kill themselves.
    It must have been surreal when the daughter of your idol Kurt Cobain, Frances Bean Cobain, critcised you on Twitter?
    – She was saying to me ”don't glamorize death” and I wrote back, and I never write to anyone, but I wrote back and said I didn't glamorize death. I don't even sing about death, except on the title track on ”Born to die”. I sing about relationships. The fact that the headline in The Guardian affected people that way feels unfair. That's the problem with the article.
    You're computer got hacked a couple of years ago and 211 songs got stolen among other things.
    – Yeah, someone remotely accessed my hard drive when I was staying in a hotel. The songs are one of a thousand things that was stolen.
    I would have been devastated.
    – Yeah, the fact that someone is watching you. Knowing that you never gonna have the luxury of discretion. These type of crimes won't ever stop.
    Isn't there some legal action you can take, sue someone?
    – Even if he people that started it got caught, they gave it to 40 other people, so the information is still out there.
    Your life is always turned into headlines Like the recent rumours about your recent relationship. It was said you had broken up, but now I heard that your boyfriend Barrien-James O'Neill told TMZ that it's complete bullshit.
    – I mean… I… I didn't use to talk publicly about my relationships. Because things change all the time. But after not seeing him for several months and people still asking me about him I just said no we're not together right now. And when he got to Los Angeles today and he ran into TMZ I don't think he knew what to say. Sometimes it's not real until you're faced with a camera and somebody asking you.
    Ok, it all seems a bit confused. Well, about the music…
    – It's ok. I get it.
    Back to the music. So… are you together?
    – Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha. (Lana basically rolls over laughing out loud)
    – Oh my god, that's so funny.
    I'm sorry, I'm just joking. Why do you mention The Crystal's controversial song ”He hit me (and it felt like a kiss)” in the title track on your new album?
    – I know that people have different opinions about that song. And they're entitled to. I always use autobiographical elements. Mixed with anything I can use as an innuendo instead of saying something super directly. For me the writing comes first. I never felt the need to edit myself.
    Hmm. What are you actually saying? That you have been in abusive relationships?
    – It's a good question. I have trouble talking about that song, I didn't think I would. I don't know what to say.
    Why did you choose to cover ”The other woman”?
    – Firstly it's a jazz song, covered by Nina Simone, she's my favourite. I feel like ”Ultraviolence” has a jazzy feel to it, shades of blue, shades of cool. I'm a huge jazz fan. Billie Holiday, Nina Simone, the singers, you know.
    What have you stolen from them, as a song writer?
    To start with I was just a fan. But I realized early on that I had an inclination to sing songs in a minor key with a touch of a blue note. They are my influences. Alongside The Eagles and The Beach Boys.
    Beautiful music with a dark heart.
    Yeah, ”Dark heart”. That's the follow up album. (Laughs).
     
  10. Cleopatra liked a post in a topic by FormerLanaFan in Lana discusses the Guardian controversy, Frances Bean, & Barrie in Aftonbladet interview   
    http://www.aftonbladet.se/nojesbladet/musik/rockbjornen/article19123254.ab
     
    She puts her cigarette out, just little bit too hard.
    – Yes, sometimes I fucking wish I was dead, but I don't glamorize death or people killing themselves.
            Markus Larsson and Lana Del Rey. Lana Del Ray excuses herself, gets up and starts fiddling with the espresso machine in her hotel suite.
    – Sorry, I can't do interviews without my coffee. Keep talking. I'm listening.
    I've always wondered, why did you create the persona Lana Del Ray?
    – Well, it's not a persona. It's a different name. I've always thought that the way you're kind of born into a name, a geographic location, a family makes it hard to choose for yourself who you want to be. By having a different name I felt more free to be exactly who I am. People seem to think sometimes that I am somebody on stage and then you get off and you're another person, but I have a more alternative way of thinking.
    I thought it was some kind of art project, like a Ziggy Stardust character?
    – Yeah, people think that but actually for me it was just a different name. It has made it easier for me to express a very clear aesthetic that I love.
    So what was the inspiration for your aesthetic?
    – All things dark and beautiful. Everything I love, everything I've been through, everything I've wanted to do. My history and my songs.
    You seem rather interested in the beauty of darkness and despair.
    – I've had despair and grief in my life. In the past four years journalists have always asked me about death, icons and my persona. My own depressions and experiences has gotten miscommunicated as this need to be dark. Actually it's not my preferred way of being. I love when things go really well. Anyone who knows me knows this.
    But what about the interview in The Guardian…
    – I'm not fucking happy about the interview, to start with.
    Well, I know that, and you've made that clear on Twitter. But what did you mean when you said ”I wish I was dead already”?
    – Well, first of all… the questions… Sometimes I do feel like I wish I was dead. I've been through a lot. And yes, sometimes I feel like I fucking wish I was dead. But The Guardian made it sound like I was obsessed with dying because it's glamourous. Me being depressed sometimes has nothing to do with other people wanting to kill themselves.
    It must have been surreal when the daughter of your idol Kurt Cobain, Frances Bean Cobain, critcised you on Twitter?
    – She was saying to me ”don't glamorize death” and I wrote back, and I never write to anyone, but I wrote back and said I didn't glamorize death. I don't even sing about death, except on the title track on ”Born to die”. I sing about relationships. The fact that the headline in The Guardian affected people that way feels unfair. That's the problem with the article.
    You're computer got hacked a couple of years ago and 211 songs got stolen among other things.
    – Yeah, someone remotely accessed my hard drive when I was staying in a hotel. The songs are one of a thousand things that was stolen.
    I would have been devastated.
    – Yeah, the fact that someone is watching you. Knowing that you never gonna have the luxury of discretion. These type of crimes won't ever stop.
    Isn't there some legal action you can take, sue someone?
    – Even if he people that started it got caught, they gave it to 40 other people, so the information is still out there.
    Your life is always turned into headlines Like the recent rumours about your recent relationship. It was said you had broken up, but now I heard that your boyfriend Barrien-James O'Neill told TMZ that it's complete bullshit.
    – I mean… I… I didn't use to talk publicly about my relationships. Because things change all the time. But after not seeing him for several months and people still asking me about him I just said no we're not together right now. And when he got to Los Angeles today and he ran into TMZ I don't think he knew what to say. Sometimes it's not real until you're faced with a camera and somebody asking you.
    Ok, it all seems a bit confused. Well, about the music…
    – It's ok. I get it.
    Back to the music. So… are you together?
    – Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha. (Lana basically rolls over laughing out loud)
    – Oh my god, that's so funny.
    I'm sorry, I'm just joking. Why do you mention The Crystal's controversial song ”He hit me (and it felt like a kiss)” in the title track on your new album?
    – I know that people have different opinions about that song. And they're entitled to. I always use autobiographical elements. Mixed with anything I can use as an innuendo instead of saying something super directly. For me the writing comes first. I never felt the need to edit myself.
    Hmm. What are you actually saying? That you have been in abusive relationships?
    – It's a good question. I have trouble talking about that song, I didn't think I would. I don't know what to say.
    Why did you choose to cover ”The other woman”?
    – Firstly it's a jazz song, covered by Nina Simone, she's my favourite. I feel like ”Ultraviolence” has a jazzy feel to it, shades of blue, shades of cool. I'm a huge jazz fan. Billie Holiday, Nina Simone, the singers, you know.
    What have you stolen from them, as a song writer?
    To start with I was just a fan. But I realized early on that I had an inclination to sing songs in a minor key with a touch of a blue note. They are my influences. Alongside The Eagles and The Beach Boys.
    Beautiful music with a dark heart.
    Yeah, ”Dark heart”. That's the follow up album. (Laughs).
     
  11. Swan Song liked a post in a topic by FormerLanaFan in Lana and Barrie are no longer together   
    Lana in a recent interview http://www.aftonbladet.se/nojesbladet/musik/rockbjornen/article19123254.ab
    "Your life is always turned into headlines Like the recent rumours about your recent relationship. It was said you had broken up, but now I heard that your boyfriend Barrien-James O'Neill told TMZ that it's complete bullshit.
    – I mean… I… I didn't use to talk publicly about my relationships. Because things change all the time. But after not seeing him for several months and people still asking me about him I just said no we're not together right now. And when he got to Los Angeles today and he ran into TMZ I don't think he knew what to say. Sometimes it's not real until you're faced with a camera and somebody asking you." (Ouch)
  12. MahaMaha liked a post in a topic by FormerLanaFan in Lana and Barrie are no longer together   
    Lana in a recent interview http://www.aftonbladet.se/nojesbladet/musik/rockbjornen/article19123254.ab
    "Your life is always turned into headlines Like the recent rumours about your recent relationship. It was said you had broken up, but now I heard that your boyfriend Barrien-James O'Neill told TMZ that it's complete bullshit.
    – I mean… I… I didn't use to talk publicly about my relationships. Because things change all the time. But after not seeing him for several months and people still asking me about him I just said no we're not together right now. And when he got to Los Angeles today and he ran into TMZ I don't think he knew what to say. Sometimes it's not real until you're faced with a camera and somebody asking you." (Ouch)
  13. Agnese13 liked a post in a topic by FormerLanaFan in Lana discusses the Guardian controversy, Frances Bean, & Barrie in Aftonbladet interview   
    http://www.aftonbladet.se/nojesbladet/musik/rockbjornen/article19123254.ab
     
    She puts her cigarette out, just little bit too hard.
    – Yes, sometimes I fucking wish I was dead, but I don't glamorize death or people killing themselves.
            Markus Larsson and Lana Del Rey. Lana Del Ray excuses herself, gets up and starts fiddling with the espresso machine in her hotel suite.
    – Sorry, I can't do interviews without my coffee. Keep talking. I'm listening.
    I've always wondered, why did you create the persona Lana Del Ray?
    – Well, it's not a persona. It's a different name. I've always thought that the way you're kind of born into a name, a geographic location, a family makes it hard to choose for yourself who you want to be. By having a different name I felt more free to be exactly who I am. People seem to think sometimes that I am somebody on stage and then you get off and you're another person, but I have a more alternative way of thinking.
    I thought it was some kind of art project, like a Ziggy Stardust character?
    – Yeah, people think that but actually for me it was just a different name. It has made it easier for me to express a very clear aesthetic that I love.
    So what was the inspiration for your aesthetic?
    – All things dark and beautiful. Everything I love, everything I've been through, everything I've wanted to do. My history and my songs.
    You seem rather interested in the beauty of darkness and despair.
    – I've had despair and grief in my life. In the past four years journalists have always asked me about death, icons and my persona. My own depressions and experiences has gotten miscommunicated as this need to be dark. Actually it's not my preferred way of being. I love when things go really well. Anyone who knows me knows this.
    But what about the interview in The Guardian…
    – I'm not fucking happy about the interview, to start with.
    Well, I know that, and you've made that clear on Twitter. But what did you mean when you said ”I wish I was dead already”?
    – Well, first of all… the questions… Sometimes I do feel like I wish I was dead. I've been through a lot. And yes, sometimes I feel like I fucking wish I was dead. But The Guardian made it sound like I was obsessed with dying because it's glamourous. Me being depressed sometimes has nothing to do with other people wanting to kill themselves.
    It must have been surreal when the daughter of your idol Kurt Cobain, Frances Bean Cobain, critcised you on Twitter?
    – She was saying to me ”don't glamorize death” and I wrote back, and I never write to anyone, but I wrote back and said I didn't glamorize death. I don't even sing about death, except on the title track on ”Born to die”. I sing about relationships. The fact that the headline in The Guardian affected people that way feels unfair. That's the problem with the article.
    You're computer got hacked a couple of years ago and 211 songs got stolen among other things.
    – Yeah, someone remotely accessed my hard drive when I was staying in a hotel. The songs are one of a thousand things that was stolen.
    I would have been devastated.
    – Yeah, the fact that someone is watching you. Knowing that you never gonna have the luxury of discretion. These type of crimes won't ever stop.
    Isn't there some legal action you can take, sue someone?
    – Even if he people that started it got caught, they gave it to 40 other people, so the information is still out there.
    Your life is always turned into headlines Like the recent rumours about your recent relationship. It was said you had broken up, but now I heard that your boyfriend Barrien-James O'Neill told TMZ that it's complete bullshit.
    – I mean… I… I didn't use to talk publicly about my relationships. Because things change all the time. But after not seeing him for several months and people still asking me about him I just said no we're not together right now. And when he got to Los Angeles today and he ran into TMZ I don't think he knew what to say. Sometimes it's not real until you're faced with a camera and somebody asking you.
    Ok, it all seems a bit confused. Well, about the music…
    – It's ok. I get it.
    Back to the music. So… are you together?
    – Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha. (Lana basically rolls over laughing out loud)
    – Oh my god, that's so funny.
    I'm sorry, I'm just joking. Why do you mention The Crystal's controversial song ”He hit me (and it felt like a kiss)” in the title track on your new album?
    – I know that people have different opinions about that song. And they're entitled to. I always use autobiographical elements. Mixed with anything I can use as an innuendo instead of saying something super directly. For me the writing comes first. I never felt the need to edit myself.
    Hmm. What are you actually saying? That you have been in abusive relationships?
    – It's a good question. I have trouble talking about that song, I didn't think I would. I don't know what to say.
    Why did you choose to cover ”The other woman”?
    – Firstly it's a jazz song, covered by Nina Simone, she's my favourite. I feel like ”Ultraviolence” has a jazzy feel to it, shades of blue, shades of cool. I'm a huge jazz fan. Billie Holiday, Nina Simone, the singers, you know.
    What have you stolen from them, as a song writer?
    To start with I was just a fan. But I realized early on that I had an inclination to sing songs in a minor key with a touch of a blue note. They are my influences. Alongside The Eagles and The Beach Boys.
    Beautiful music with a dark heart.
    Yeah, ”Dark heart”. That's the follow up album. (Laughs).
     
  14. tiffanydale liked a post in a topic by FormerLanaFan in Lana discusses the Guardian controversy, Frances Bean, & Barrie in Aftonbladet interview   
    http://www.aftonbladet.se/nojesbladet/musik/rockbjornen/article19123254.ab
     
    She puts her cigarette out, just little bit too hard.
    – Yes, sometimes I fucking wish I was dead, but I don't glamorize death or people killing themselves.
            Markus Larsson and Lana Del Rey. Lana Del Ray excuses herself, gets up and starts fiddling with the espresso machine in her hotel suite.
    – Sorry, I can't do interviews without my coffee. Keep talking. I'm listening.
    I've always wondered, why did you create the persona Lana Del Ray?
    – Well, it's not a persona. It's a different name. I've always thought that the way you're kind of born into a name, a geographic location, a family makes it hard to choose for yourself who you want to be. By having a different name I felt more free to be exactly who I am. People seem to think sometimes that I am somebody on stage and then you get off and you're another person, but I have a more alternative way of thinking.
    I thought it was some kind of art project, like a Ziggy Stardust character?
    – Yeah, people think that but actually for me it was just a different name. It has made it easier for me to express a very clear aesthetic that I love.
    So what was the inspiration for your aesthetic?
    – All things dark and beautiful. Everything I love, everything I've been through, everything I've wanted to do. My history and my songs.
    You seem rather interested in the beauty of darkness and despair.
    – I've had despair and grief in my life. In the past four years journalists have always asked me about death, icons and my persona. My own depressions and experiences has gotten miscommunicated as this need to be dark. Actually it's not my preferred way of being. I love when things go really well. Anyone who knows me knows this.
    But what about the interview in The Guardian…
    – I'm not fucking happy about the interview, to start with.
    Well, I know that, and you've made that clear on Twitter. But what did you mean when you said ”I wish I was dead already”?
    – Well, first of all… the questions… Sometimes I do feel like I wish I was dead. I've been through a lot. And yes, sometimes I feel like I fucking wish I was dead. But The Guardian made it sound like I was obsessed with dying because it's glamourous. Me being depressed sometimes has nothing to do with other people wanting to kill themselves.
    It must have been surreal when the daughter of your idol Kurt Cobain, Frances Bean Cobain, critcised you on Twitter?
    – She was saying to me ”don't glamorize death” and I wrote back, and I never write to anyone, but I wrote back and said I didn't glamorize death. I don't even sing about death, except on the title track on ”Born to die”. I sing about relationships. The fact that the headline in The Guardian affected people that way feels unfair. That's the problem with the article.
    You're computer got hacked a couple of years ago and 211 songs got stolen among other things.
    – Yeah, someone remotely accessed my hard drive when I was staying in a hotel. The songs are one of a thousand things that was stolen.
    I would have been devastated.
    – Yeah, the fact that someone is watching you. Knowing that you never gonna have the luxury of discretion. These type of crimes won't ever stop.
    Isn't there some legal action you can take, sue someone?
    – Even if he people that started it got caught, they gave it to 40 other people, so the information is still out there.
    Your life is always turned into headlines Like the recent rumours about your recent relationship. It was said you had broken up, but now I heard that your boyfriend Barrien-James O'Neill told TMZ that it's complete bullshit.
    – I mean… I… I didn't use to talk publicly about my relationships. Because things change all the time. But after not seeing him for several months and people still asking me about him I just said no we're not together right now. And when he got to Los Angeles today and he ran into TMZ I don't think he knew what to say. Sometimes it's not real until you're faced with a camera and somebody asking you.
    Ok, it all seems a bit confused. Well, about the music…
    – It's ok. I get it.
    Back to the music. So… are you together?
    – Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha. (Lana basically rolls over laughing out loud)
    – Oh my god, that's so funny.
    I'm sorry, I'm just joking. Why do you mention The Crystal's controversial song ”He hit me (and it felt like a kiss)” in the title track on your new album?
    – I know that people have different opinions about that song. And they're entitled to. I always use autobiographical elements. Mixed with anything I can use as an innuendo instead of saying something super directly. For me the writing comes first. I never felt the need to edit myself.
    Hmm. What are you actually saying? That you have been in abusive relationships?
    – It's a good question. I have trouble talking about that song, I didn't think I would. I don't know what to say.
    Why did you choose to cover ”The other woman”?
    – Firstly it's a jazz song, covered by Nina Simone, she's my favourite. I feel like ”Ultraviolence” has a jazzy feel to it, shades of blue, shades of cool. I'm a huge jazz fan. Billie Holiday, Nina Simone, the singers, you know.
    What have you stolen from them, as a song writer?
    To start with I was just a fan. But I realized early on that I had an inclination to sing songs in a minor key with a touch of a blue note. They are my influences. Alongside The Eagles and The Beach Boys.
    Beautiful music with a dark heart.
    Yeah, ”Dark heart”. That's the follow up album. (Laughs).
     
  15. naachoboy liked a post in a topic by FormerLanaFan in Lana discusses the Guardian controversy, Frances Bean, & Barrie in Aftonbladet interview   
    http://www.aftonbladet.se/nojesbladet/musik/rockbjornen/article19123254.ab
     
    She puts her cigarette out, just little bit too hard.
    – Yes, sometimes I fucking wish I was dead, but I don't glamorize death or people killing themselves.
            Markus Larsson and Lana Del Rey. Lana Del Ray excuses herself, gets up and starts fiddling with the espresso machine in her hotel suite.
    – Sorry, I can't do interviews without my coffee. Keep talking. I'm listening.
    I've always wondered, why did you create the persona Lana Del Ray?
    – Well, it's not a persona. It's a different name. I've always thought that the way you're kind of born into a name, a geographic location, a family makes it hard to choose for yourself who you want to be. By having a different name I felt more free to be exactly who I am. People seem to think sometimes that I am somebody on stage and then you get off and you're another person, but I have a more alternative way of thinking.
    I thought it was some kind of art project, like a Ziggy Stardust character?
    – Yeah, people think that but actually for me it was just a different name. It has made it easier for me to express a very clear aesthetic that I love.
    So what was the inspiration for your aesthetic?
    – All things dark and beautiful. Everything I love, everything I've been through, everything I've wanted to do. My history and my songs.
    You seem rather interested in the beauty of darkness and despair.
    – I've had despair and grief in my life. In the past four years journalists have always asked me about death, icons and my persona. My own depressions and experiences has gotten miscommunicated as this need to be dark. Actually it's not my preferred way of being. I love when things go really well. Anyone who knows me knows this.
    But what about the interview in The Guardian…
    – I'm not fucking happy about the interview, to start with.
    Well, I know that, and you've made that clear on Twitter. But what did you mean when you said ”I wish I was dead already”?
    – Well, first of all… the questions… Sometimes I do feel like I wish I was dead. I've been through a lot. And yes, sometimes I feel like I fucking wish I was dead. But The Guardian made it sound like I was obsessed with dying because it's glamourous. Me being depressed sometimes has nothing to do with other people wanting to kill themselves.
    It must have been surreal when the daughter of your idol Kurt Cobain, Frances Bean Cobain, critcised you on Twitter?
    – She was saying to me ”don't glamorize death” and I wrote back, and I never write to anyone, but I wrote back and said I didn't glamorize death. I don't even sing about death, except on the title track on ”Born to die”. I sing about relationships. The fact that the headline in The Guardian affected people that way feels unfair. That's the problem with the article.
    You're computer got hacked a couple of years ago and 211 songs got stolen among other things.
    – Yeah, someone remotely accessed my hard drive when I was staying in a hotel. The songs are one of a thousand things that was stolen.
    I would have been devastated.
    – Yeah, the fact that someone is watching you. Knowing that you never gonna have the luxury of discretion. These type of crimes won't ever stop.
    Isn't there some legal action you can take, sue someone?
    – Even if he people that started it got caught, they gave it to 40 other people, so the information is still out there.
    Your life is always turned into headlines Like the recent rumours about your recent relationship. It was said you had broken up, but now I heard that your boyfriend Barrien-James O'Neill told TMZ that it's complete bullshit.
    – I mean… I… I didn't use to talk publicly about my relationships. Because things change all the time. But after not seeing him for several months and people still asking me about him I just said no we're not together right now. And when he got to Los Angeles today and he ran into TMZ I don't think he knew what to say. Sometimes it's not real until you're faced with a camera and somebody asking you.
    Ok, it all seems a bit confused. Well, about the music…
    – It's ok. I get it.
    Back to the music. So… are you together?
    – Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha. (Lana basically rolls over laughing out loud)
    – Oh my god, that's so funny.
    I'm sorry, I'm just joking. Why do you mention The Crystal's controversial song ”He hit me (and it felt like a kiss)” in the title track on your new album?
    – I know that people have different opinions about that song. And they're entitled to. I always use autobiographical elements. Mixed with anything I can use as an innuendo instead of saying something super directly. For me the writing comes first. I never felt the need to edit myself.
    Hmm. What are you actually saying? That you have been in abusive relationships?
    – It's a good question. I have trouble talking about that song, I didn't think I would. I don't know what to say.
    Why did you choose to cover ”The other woman”?
    – Firstly it's a jazz song, covered by Nina Simone, she's my favourite. I feel like ”Ultraviolence” has a jazzy feel to it, shades of blue, shades of cool. I'm a huge jazz fan. Billie Holiday, Nina Simone, the singers, you know.
    What have you stolen from them, as a song writer?
    To start with I was just a fan. But I realized early on that I had an inclination to sing songs in a minor key with a touch of a blue note. They are my influences. Alongside The Eagles and The Beach Boys.
    Beautiful music with a dark heart.
    Yeah, ”Dark heart”. That's the follow up album. (Laughs).
     
  16. CatchTheBreeze liked a post in a topic by FormerLanaFan in Lana discusses the Guardian controversy, Frances Bean, & Barrie in Aftonbladet interview   
    http://www.aftonbladet.se/nojesbladet/musik/rockbjornen/article19123254.ab
     
    She puts her cigarette out, just little bit too hard.
    – Yes, sometimes I fucking wish I was dead, but I don't glamorize death or people killing themselves.
            Markus Larsson and Lana Del Rey. Lana Del Ray excuses herself, gets up and starts fiddling with the espresso machine in her hotel suite.
    – Sorry, I can't do interviews without my coffee. Keep talking. I'm listening.
    I've always wondered, why did you create the persona Lana Del Ray?
    – Well, it's not a persona. It's a different name. I've always thought that the way you're kind of born into a name, a geographic location, a family makes it hard to choose for yourself who you want to be. By having a different name I felt more free to be exactly who I am. People seem to think sometimes that I am somebody on stage and then you get off and you're another person, but I have a more alternative way of thinking.
    I thought it was some kind of art project, like a Ziggy Stardust character?
    – Yeah, people think that but actually for me it was just a different name. It has made it easier for me to express a very clear aesthetic that I love.
    So what was the inspiration for your aesthetic?
    – All things dark and beautiful. Everything I love, everything I've been through, everything I've wanted to do. My history and my songs.
    You seem rather interested in the beauty of darkness and despair.
    – I've had despair and grief in my life. In the past four years journalists have always asked me about death, icons and my persona. My own depressions and experiences has gotten miscommunicated as this need to be dark. Actually it's not my preferred way of being. I love when things go really well. Anyone who knows me knows this.
    But what about the interview in The Guardian…
    – I'm not fucking happy about the interview, to start with.
    Well, I know that, and you've made that clear on Twitter. But what did you mean when you said ”I wish I was dead already”?
    – Well, first of all… the questions… Sometimes I do feel like I wish I was dead. I've been through a lot. And yes, sometimes I feel like I fucking wish I was dead. But The Guardian made it sound like I was obsessed with dying because it's glamourous. Me being depressed sometimes has nothing to do with other people wanting to kill themselves.
    It must have been surreal when the daughter of your idol Kurt Cobain, Frances Bean Cobain, critcised you on Twitter?
    – She was saying to me ”don't glamorize death” and I wrote back, and I never write to anyone, but I wrote back and said I didn't glamorize death. I don't even sing about death, except on the title track on ”Born to die”. I sing about relationships. The fact that the headline in The Guardian affected people that way feels unfair. That's the problem with the article.
    You're computer got hacked a couple of years ago and 211 songs got stolen among other things.
    – Yeah, someone remotely accessed my hard drive when I was staying in a hotel. The songs are one of a thousand things that was stolen.
    I would have been devastated.
    – Yeah, the fact that someone is watching you. Knowing that you never gonna have the luxury of discretion. These type of crimes won't ever stop.
    Isn't there some legal action you can take, sue someone?
    – Even if he people that started it got caught, they gave it to 40 other people, so the information is still out there.
    Your life is always turned into headlines Like the recent rumours about your recent relationship. It was said you had broken up, but now I heard that your boyfriend Barrien-James O'Neill told TMZ that it's complete bullshit.
    – I mean… I… I didn't use to talk publicly about my relationships. Because things change all the time. But after not seeing him for several months and people still asking me about him I just said no we're not together right now. And when he got to Los Angeles today and he ran into TMZ I don't think he knew what to say. Sometimes it's not real until you're faced with a camera and somebody asking you.
    Ok, it all seems a bit confused. Well, about the music…
    – It's ok. I get it.
    Back to the music. So… are you together?
    – Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha. (Lana basically rolls over laughing out loud)
    – Oh my god, that's so funny.
    I'm sorry, I'm just joking. Why do you mention The Crystal's controversial song ”He hit me (and it felt like a kiss)” in the title track on your new album?
    – I know that people have different opinions about that song. And they're entitled to. I always use autobiographical elements. Mixed with anything I can use as an innuendo instead of saying something super directly. For me the writing comes first. I never felt the need to edit myself.
    Hmm. What are you actually saying? That you have been in abusive relationships?
    – It's a good question. I have trouble talking about that song, I didn't think I would. I don't know what to say.
    Why did you choose to cover ”The other woman”?
    – Firstly it's a jazz song, covered by Nina Simone, she's my favourite. I feel like ”Ultraviolence” has a jazzy feel to it, shades of blue, shades of cool. I'm a huge jazz fan. Billie Holiday, Nina Simone, the singers, you know.
    What have you stolen from them, as a song writer?
    To start with I was just a fan. But I realized early on that I had an inclination to sing songs in a minor key with a touch of a blue note. They are my influences. Alongside The Eagles and The Beach Boys.
    Beautiful music with a dark heart.
    Yeah, ”Dark heart”. That's the follow up album. (Laughs).
     
  17. CruelWorld liked a post in a topic by FormerLanaFan in Lana discusses the Guardian controversy, Frances Bean, & Barrie in Aftonbladet interview   
    http://www.aftonbladet.se/nojesbladet/musik/rockbjornen/article19123254.ab
     
    She puts her cigarette out, just little bit too hard.
    – Yes, sometimes I fucking wish I was dead, but I don't glamorize death or people killing themselves.
            Markus Larsson and Lana Del Rey. Lana Del Ray excuses herself, gets up and starts fiddling with the espresso machine in her hotel suite.
    – Sorry, I can't do interviews without my coffee. Keep talking. I'm listening.
    I've always wondered, why did you create the persona Lana Del Ray?
    – Well, it's not a persona. It's a different name. I've always thought that the way you're kind of born into a name, a geographic location, a family makes it hard to choose for yourself who you want to be. By having a different name I felt more free to be exactly who I am. People seem to think sometimes that I am somebody on stage and then you get off and you're another person, but I have a more alternative way of thinking.
    I thought it was some kind of art project, like a Ziggy Stardust character?
    – Yeah, people think that but actually for me it was just a different name. It has made it easier for me to express a very clear aesthetic that I love.
    So what was the inspiration for your aesthetic?
    – All things dark and beautiful. Everything I love, everything I've been through, everything I've wanted to do. My history and my songs.
    You seem rather interested in the beauty of darkness and despair.
    – I've had despair and grief in my life. In the past four years journalists have always asked me about death, icons and my persona. My own depressions and experiences has gotten miscommunicated as this need to be dark. Actually it's not my preferred way of being. I love when things go really well. Anyone who knows me knows this.
    But what about the interview in The Guardian…
    – I'm not fucking happy about the interview, to start with.
    Well, I know that, and you've made that clear on Twitter. But what did you mean when you said ”I wish I was dead already”?
    – Well, first of all… the questions… Sometimes I do feel like I wish I was dead. I've been through a lot. And yes, sometimes I feel like I fucking wish I was dead. But The Guardian made it sound like I was obsessed with dying because it's glamourous. Me being depressed sometimes has nothing to do with other people wanting to kill themselves.
    It must have been surreal when the daughter of your idol Kurt Cobain, Frances Bean Cobain, critcised you on Twitter?
    – She was saying to me ”don't glamorize death” and I wrote back, and I never write to anyone, but I wrote back and said I didn't glamorize death. I don't even sing about death, except on the title track on ”Born to die”. I sing about relationships. The fact that the headline in The Guardian affected people that way feels unfair. That's the problem with the article.
    You're computer got hacked a couple of years ago and 211 songs got stolen among other things.
    – Yeah, someone remotely accessed my hard drive when I was staying in a hotel. The songs are one of a thousand things that was stolen.
    I would have been devastated.
    – Yeah, the fact that someone is watching you. Knowing that you never gonna have the luxury of discretion. These type of crimes won't ever stop.
    Isn't there some legal action you can take, sue someone?
    – Even if he people that started it got caught, they gave it to 40 other people, so the information is still out there.
    Your life is always turned into headlines Like the recent rumours about your recent relationship. It was said you had broken up, but now I heard that your boyfriend Barrien-James O'Neill told TMZ that it's complete bullshit.
    – I mean… I… I didn't use to talk publicly about my relationships. Because things change all the time. But after not seeing him for several months and people still asking me about him I just said no we're not together right now. And when he got to Los Angeles today and he ran into TMZ I don't think he knew what to say. Sometimes it's not real until you're faced with a camera and somebody asking you.
    Ok, it all seems a bit confused. Well, about the music…
    – It's ok. I get it.
    Back to the music. So… are you together?
    – Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha. (Lana basically rolls over laughing out loud)
    – Oh my god, that's so funny.
    I'm sorry, I'm just joking. Why do you mention The Crystal's controversial song ”He hit me (and it felt like a kiss)” in the title track on your new album?
    – I know that people have different opinions about that song. And they're entitled to. I always use autobiographical elements. Mixed with anything I can use as an innuendo instead of saying something super directly. For me the writing comes first. I never felt the need to edit myself.
    Hmm. What are you actually saying? That you have been in abusive relationships?
    – It's a good question. I have trouble talking about that song, I didn't think I would. I don't know what to say.
    Why did you choose to cover ”The other woman”?
    – Firstly it's a jazz song, covered by Nina Simone, she's my favourite. I feel like ”Ultraviolence” has a jazzy feel to it, shades of blue, shades of cool. I'm a huge jazz fan. Billie Holiday, Nina Simone, the singers, you know.
    What have you stolen from them, as a song writer?
    To start with I was just a fan. But I realized early on that I had an inclination to sing songs in a minor key with a touch of a blue note. They are my influences. Alongside The Eagles and The Beach Boys.
    Beautiful music with a dark heart.
    Yeah, ”Dark heart”. That's the follow up album. (Laughs).
     
  18. Wilde_child liked a post in a topic by FormerLanaFan in Lana discusses the Guardian controversy, Frances Bean, & Barrie in Aftonbladet interview   
    http://www.aftonbladet.se/nojesbladet/musik/rockbjornen/article19123254.ab
     
    She puts her cigarette out, just little bit too hard.
    – Yes, sometimes I fucking wish I was dead, but I don't glamorize death or people killing themselves.
            Markus Larsson and Lana Del Rey. Lana Del Ray excuses herself, gets up and starts fiddling with the espresso machine in her hotel suite.
    – Sorry, I can't do interviews without my coffee. Keep talking. I'm listening.
    I've always wondered, why did you create the persona Lana Del Ray?
    – Well, it's not a persona. It's a different name. I've always thought that the way you're kind of born into a name, a geographic location, a family makes it hard to choose for yourself who you want to be. By having a different name I felt more free to be exactly who I am. People seem to think sometimes that I am somebody on stage and then you get off and you're another person, but I have a more alternative way of thinking.
    I thought it was some kind of art project, like a Ziggy Stardust character?
    – Yeah, people think that but actually for me it was just a different name. It has made it easier for me to express a very clear aesthetic that I love.
    So what was the inspiration for your aesthetic?
    – All things dark and beautiful. Everything I love, everything I've been through, everything I've wanted to do. My history and my songs.
    You seem rather interested in the beauty of darkness and despair.
    – I've had despair and grief in my life. In the past four years journalists have always asked me about death, icons and my persona. My own depressions and experiences has gotten miscommunicated as this need to be dark. Actually it's not my preferred way of being. I love when things go really well. Anyone who knows me knows this.
    But what about the interview in The Guardian…
    – I'm not fucking happy about the interview, to start with.
    Well, I know that, and you've made that clear on Twitter. But what did you mean when you said ”I wish I was dead already”?
    – Well, first of all… the questions… Sometimes I do feel like I wish I was dead. I've been through a lot. And yes, sometimes I feel like I fucking wish I was dead. But The Guardian made it sound like I was obsessed with dying because it's glamourous. Me being depressed sometimes has nothing to do with other people wanting to kill themselves.
    It must have been surreal when the daughter of your idol Kurt Cobain, Frances Bean Cobain, critcised you on Twitter?
    – She was saying to me ”don't glamorize death” and I wrote back, and I never write to anyone, but I wrote back and said I didn't glamorize death. I don't even sing about death, except on the title track on ”Born to die”. I sing about relationships. The fact that the headline in The Guardian affected people that way feels unfair. That's the problem with the article.
    You're computer got hacked a couple of years ago and 211 songs got stolen among other things.
    – Yeah, someone remotely accessed my hard drive when I was staying in a hotel. The songs are one of a thousand things that was stolen.
    I would have been devastated.
    – Yeah, the fact that someone is watching you. Knowing that you never gonna have the luxury of discretion. These type of crimes won't ever stop.
    Isn't there some legal action you can take, sue someone?
    – Even if he people that started it got caught, they gave it to 40 other people, so the information is still out there.
    Your life is always turned into headlines Like the recent rumours about your recent relationship. It was said you had broken up, but now I heard that your boyfriend Barrien-James O'Neill told TMZ that it's complete bullshit.
    – I mean… I… I didn't use to talk publicly about my relationships. Because things change all the time. But after not seeing him for several months and people still asking me about him I just said no we're not together right now. And when he got to Los Angeles today and he ran into TMZ I don't think he knew what to say. Sometimes it's not real until you're faced with a camera and somebody asking you.
    Ok, it all seems a bit confused. Well, about the music…
    – It's ok. I get it.
    Back to the music. So… are you together?
    – Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha. (Lana basically rolls over laughing out loud)
    – Oh my god, that's so funny.
    I'm sorry, I'm just joking. Why do you mention The Crystal's controversial song ”He hit me (and it felt like a kiss)” in the title track on your new album?
    – I know that people have different opinions about that song. And they're entitled to. I always use autobiographical elements. Mixed with anything I can use as an innuendo instead of saying something super directly. For me the writing comes first. I never felt the need to edit myself.
    Hmm. What are you actually saying? That you have been in abusive relationships?
    – It's a good question. I have trouble talking about that song, I didn't think I would. I don't know what to say.
    Why did you choose to cover ”The other woman”?
    – Firstly it's a jazz song, covered by Nina Simone, she's my favourite. I feel like ”Ultraviolence” has a jazzy feel to it, shades of blue, shades of cool. I'm a huge jazz fan. Billie Holiday, Nina Simone, the singers, you know.
    What have you stolen from them, as a song writer?
    To start with I was just a fan. But I realized early on that I had an inclination to sing songs in a minor key with a touch of a blue note. They are my influences. Alongside The Eagles and The Beach Boys.
    Beautiful music with a dark heart.
    Yeah, ”Dark heart”. That's the follow up album. (Laughs).
     
  19. Januli liked a post in a topic by FormerLanaFan in Lana discusses the Guardian controversy, Frances Bean, & Barrie in Aftonbladet interview   
    http://www.aftonbladet.se/nojesbladet/musik/rockbjornen/article19123254.ab
     
    She puts her cigarette out, just little bit too hard.
    – Yes, sometimes I fucking wish I was dead, but I don't glamorize death or people killing themselves.
            Markus Larsson and Lana Del Rey. Lana Del Ray excuses herself, gets up and starts fiddling with the espresso machine in her hotel suite.
    – Sorry, I can't do interviews without my coffee. Keep talking. I'm listening.
    I've always wondered, why did you create the persona Lana Del Ray?
    – Well, it's not a persona. It's a different name. I've always thought that the way you're kind of born into a name, a geographic location, a family makes it hard to choose for yourself who you want to be. By having a different name I felt more free to be exactly who I am. People seem to think sometimes that I am somebody on stage and then you get off and you're another person, but I have a more alternative way of thinking.
    I thought it was some kind of art project, like a Ziggy Stardust character?
    – Yeah, people think that but actually for me it was just a different name. It has made it easier for me to express a very clear aesthetic that I love.
    So what was the inspiration for your aesthetic?
    – All things dark and beautiful. Everything I love, everything I've been through, everything I've wanted to do. My history and my songs.
    You seem rather interested in the beauty of darkness and despair.
    – I've had despair and grief in my life. In the past four years journalists have always asked me about death, icons and my persona. My own depressions and experiences has gotten miscommunicated as this need to be dark. Actually it's not my preferred way of being. I love when things go really well. Anyone who knows me knows this.
    But what about the interview in The Guardian…
    – I'm not fucking happy about the interview, to start with.
    Well, I know that, and you've made that clear on Twitter. But what did you mean when you said ”I wish I was dead already”?
    – Well, first of all… the questions… Sometimes I do feel like I wish I was dead. I've been through a lot. And yes, sometimes I feel like I fucking wish I was dead. But The Guardian made it sound like I was obsessed with dying because it's glamourous. Me being depressed sometimes has nothing to do with other people wanting to kill themselves.
    It must have been surreal when the daughter of your idol Kurt Cobain, Frances Bean Cobain, critcised you on Twitter?
    – She was saying to me ”don't glamorize death” and I wrote back, and I never write to anyone, but I wrote back and said I didn't glamorize death. I don't even sing about death, except on the title track on ”Born to die”. I sing about relationships. The fact that the headline in The Guardian affected people that way feels unfair. That's the problem with the article.
    You're computer got hacked a couple of years ago and 211 songs got stolen among other things.
    – Yeah, someone remotely accessed my hard drive when I was staying in a hotel. The songs are one of a thousand things that was stolen.
    I would have been devastated.
    – Yeah, the fact that someone is watching you. Knowing that you never gonna have the luxury of discretion. These type of crimes won't ever stop.
    Isn't there some legal action you can take, sue someone?
    – Even if he people that started it got caught, they gave it to 40 other people, so the information is still out there.
    Your life is always turned into headlines Like the recent rumours about your recent relationship. It was said you had broken up, but now I heard that your boyfriend Barrien-James O'Neill told TMZ that it's complete bullshit.
    – I mean… I… I didn't use to talk publicly about my relationships. Because things change all the time. But after not seeing him for several months and people still asking me about him I just said no we're not together right now. And when he got to Los Angeles today and he ran into TMZ I don't think he knew what to say. Sometimes it's not real until you're faced with a camera and somebody asking you.
    Ok, it all seems a bit confused. Well, about the music…
    – It's ok. I get it.
    Back to the music. So… are you together?
    – Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha. (Lana basically rolls over laughing out loud)
    – Oh my god, that's so funny.
    I'm sorry, I'm just joking. Why do you mention The Crystal's controversial song ”He hit me (and it felt like a kiss)” in the title track on your new album?
    – I know that people have different opinions about that song. And they're entitled to. I always use autobiographical elements. Mixed with anything I can use as an innuendo instead of saying something super directly. For me the writing comes first. I never felt the need to edit myself.
    Hmm. What are you actually saying? That you have been in abusive relationships?
    – It's a good question. I have trouble talking about that song, I didn't think I would. I don't know what to say.
    Why did you choose to cover ”The other woman”?
    – Firstly it's a jazz song, covered by Nina Simone, she's my favourite. I feel like ”Ultraviolence” has a jazzy feel to it, shades of blue, shades of cool. I'm a huge jazz fan. Billie Holiday, Nina Simone, the singers, you know.
    What have you stolen from them, as a song writer?
    To start with I was just a fan. But I realized early on that I had an inclination to sing songs in a minor key with a touch of a blue note. They are my influences. Alongside The Eagles and The Beach Boys.
    Beautiful music with a dark heart.
    Yeah, ”Dark heart”. That's the follow up album. (Laughs).
     
  20. slang liked a post in a topic by FormerLanaFan in Lana discusses the Guardian controversy, Frances Bean, & Barrie in Aftonbladet interview   
    http://www.aftonbladet.se/nojesbladet/musik/rockbjornen/article19123254.ab
     
    She puts her cigarette out, just little bit too hard.
    – Yes, sometimes I fucking wish I was dead, but I don't glamorize death or people killing themselves.
            Markus Larsson and Lana Del Rey. Lana Del Ray excuses herself, gets up and starts fiddling with the espresso machine in her hotel suite.
    – Sorry, I can't do interviews without my coffee. Keep talking. I'm listening.
    I've always wondered, why did you create the persona Lana Del Ray?
    – Well, it's not a persona. It's a different name. I've always thought that the way you're kind of born into a name, a geographic location, a family makes it hard to choose for yourself who you want to be. By having a different name I felt more free to be exactly who I am. People seem to think sometimes that I am somebody on stage and then you get off and you're another person, but I have a more alternative way of thinking.
    I thought it was some kind of art project, like a Ziggy Stardust character?
    – Yeah, people think that but actually for me it was just a different name. It has made it easier for me to express a very clear aesthetic that I love.
    So what was the inspiration for your aesthetic?
    – All things dark and beautiful. Everything I love, everything I've been through, everything I've wanted to do. My history and my songs.
    You seem rather interested in the beauty of darkness and despair.
    – I've had despair and grief in my life. In the past four years journalists have always asked me about death, icons and my persona. My own depressions and experiences has gotten miscommunicated as this need to be dark. Actually it's not my preferred way of being. I love when things go really well. Anyone who knows me knows this.
    But what about the interview in The Guardian…
    – I'm not fucking happy about the interview, to start with.
    Well, I know that, and you've made that clear on Twitter. But what did you mean when you said ”I wish I was dead already”?
    – Well, first of all… the questions… Sometimes I do feel like I wish I was dead. I've been through a lot. And yes, sometimes I feel like I fucking wish I was dead. But The Guardian made it sound like I was obsessed with dying because it's glamourous. Me being depressed sometimes has nothing to do with other people wanting to kill themselves.
    It must have been surreal when the daughter of your idol Kurt Cobain, Frances Bean Cobain, critcised you on Twitter?
    – She was saying to me ”don't glamorize death” and I wrote back, and I never write to anyone, but I wrote back and said I didn't glamorize death. I don't even sing about death, except on the title track on ”Born to die”. I sing about relationships. The fact that the headline in The Guardian affected people that way feels unfair. That's the problem with the article.
    You're computer got hacked a couple of years ago and 211 songs got stolen among other things.
    – Yeah, someone remotely accessed my hard drive when I was staying in a hotel. The songs are one of a thousand things that was stolen.
    I would have been devastated.
    – Yeah, the fact that someone is watching you. Knowing that you never gonna have the luxury of discretion. These type of crimes won't ever stop.
    Isn't there some legal action you can take, sue someone?
    – Even if he people that started it got caught, they gave it to 40 other people, so the information is still out there.
    Your life is always turned into headlines Like the recent rumours about your recent relationship. It was said you had broken up, but now I heard that your boyfriend Barrien-James O'Neill told TMZ that it's complete bullshit.
    – I mean… I… I didn't use to talk publicly about my relationships. Because things change all the time. But after not seeing him for several months and people still asking me about him I just said no we're not together right now. And when he got to Los Angeles today and he ran into TMZ I don't think he knew what to say. Sometimes it's not real until you're faced with a camera and somebody asking you.
    Ok, it all seems a bit confused. Well, about the music…
    – It's ok. I get it.
    Back to the music. So… are you together?
    – Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha. (Lana basically rolls over laughing out loud)
    – Oh my god, that's so funny.
    I'm sorry, I'm just joking. Why do you mention The Crystal's controversial song ”He hit me (and it felt like a kiss)” in the title track on your new album?
    – I know that people have different opinions about that song. And they're entitled to. I always use autobiographical elements. Mixed with anything I can use as an innuendo instead of saying something super directly. For me the writing comes first. I never felt the need to edit myself.
    Hmm. What are you actually saying? That you have been in abusive relationships?
    – It's a good question. I have trouble talking about that song, I didn't think I would. I don't know what to say.
    Why did you choose to cover ”The other woman”?
    – Firstly it's a jazz song, covered by Nina Simone, she's my favourite. I feel like ”Ultraviolence” has a jazzy feel to it, shades of blue, shades of cool. I'm a huge jazz fan. Billie Holiday, Nina Simone, the singers, you know.
    What have you stolen from them, as a song writer?
    To start with I was just a fan. But I realized early on that I had an inclination to sing songs in a minor key with a touch of a blue note. They are my influences. Alongside The Eagles and The Beach Boys.
    Beautiful music with a dark heart.
    Yeah, ”Dark heart”. That's the follow up album. (Laughs).
     
  21. ednafrau liked a post in a topic by FormerLanaFan in Lana discusses the Guardian controversy, Frances Bean, & Barrie in Aftonbladet interview   
    http://www.aftonbladet.se/nojesbladet/musik/rockbjornen/article19123254.ab
     
    She puts her cigarette out, just little bit too hard.
    – Yes, sometimes I fucking wish I was dead, but I don't glamorize death or people killing themselves.
            Markus Larsson and Lana Del Rey. Lana Del Ray excuses herself, gets up and starts fiddling with the espresso machine in her hotel suite.
    – Sorry, I can't do interviews without my coffee. Keep talking. I'm listening.
    I've always wondered, why did you create the persona Lana Del Ray?
    – Well, it's not a persona. It's a different name. I've always thought that the way you're kind of born into a name, a geographic location, a family makes it hard to choose for yourself who you want to be. By having a different name I felt more free to be exactly who I am. People seem to think sometimes that I am somebody on stage and then you get off and you're another person, but I have a more alternative way of thinking.
    I thought it was some kind of art project, like a Ziggy Stardust character?
    – Yeah, people think that but actually for me it was just a different name. It has made it easier for me to express a very clear aesthetic that I love.
    So what was the inspiration for your aesthetic?
    – All things dark and beautiful. Everything I love, everything I've been through, everything I've wanted to do. My history and my songs.
    You seem rather interested in the beauty of darkness and despair.
    – I've had despair and grief in my life. In the past four years journalists have always asked me about death, icons and my persona. My own depressions and experiences has gotten miscommunicated as this need to be dark. Actually it's not my preferred way of being. I love when things go really well. Anyone who knows me knows this.
    But what about the interview in The Guardian…
    – I'm not fucking happy about the interview, to start with.
    Well, I know that, and you've made that clear on Twitter. But what did you mean when you said ”I wish I was dead already”?
    – Well, first of all… the questions… Sometimes I do feel like I wish I was dead. I've been through a lot. And yes, sometimes I feel like I fucking wish I was dead. But The Guardian made it sound like I was obsessed with dying because it's glamourous. Me being depressed sometimes has nothing to do with other people wanting to kill themselves.
    It must have been surreal when the daughter of your idol Kurt Cobain, Frances Bean Cobain, critcised you on Twitter?
    – She was saying to me ”don't glamorize death” and I wrote back, and I never write to anyone, but I wrote back and said I didn't glamorize death. I don't even sing about death, except on the title track on ”Born to die”. I sing about relationships. The fact that the headline in The Guardian affected people that way feels unfair. That's the problem with the article.
    You're computer got hacked a couple of years ago and 211 songs got stolen among other things.
    – Yeah, someone remotely accessed my hard drive when I was staying in a hotel. The songs are one of a thousand things that was stolen.
    I would have been devastated.
    – Yeah, the fact that someone is watching you. Knowing that you never gonna have the luxury of discretion. These type of crimes won't ever stop.
    Isn't there some legal action you can take, sue someone?
    – Even if he people that started it got caught, they gave it to 40 other people, so the information is still out there.
    Your life is always turned into headlines Like the recent rumours about your recent relationship. It was said you had broken up, but now I heard that your boyfriend Barrien-James O'Neill told TMZ that it's complete bullshit.
    – I mean… I… I didn't use to talk publicly about my relationships. Because things change all the time. But after not seeing him for several months and people still asking me about him I just said no we're not together right now. And when he got to Los Angeles today and he ran into TMZ I don't think he knew what to say. Sometimes it's not real until you're faced with a camera and somebody asking you.
    Ok, it all seems a bit confused. Well, about the music…
    – It's ok. I get it.
    Back to the music. So… are you together?
    – Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha. (Lana basically rolls over laughing out loud)
    – Oh my god, that's so funny.
    I'm sorry, I'm just joking. Why do you mention The Crystal's controversial song ”He hit me (and it felt like a kiss)” in the title track on your new album?
    – I know that people have different opinions about that song. And they're entitled to. I always use autobiographical elements. Mixed with anything I can use as an innuendo instead of saying something super directly. For me the writing comes first. I never felt the need to edit myself.
    Hmm. What are you actually saying? That you have been in abusive relationships?
    – It's a good question. I have trouble talking about that song, I didn't think I would. I don't know what to say.
    Why did you choose to cover ”The other woman”?
    – Firstly it's a jazz song, covered by Nina Simone, she's my favourite. I feel like ”Ultraviolence” has a jazzy feel to it, shades of blue, shades of cool. I'm a huge jazz fan. Billie Holiday, Nina Simone, the singers, you know.
    What have you stolen from them, as a song writer?
    To start with I was just a fan. But I realized early on that I had an inclination to sing songs in a minor key with a touch of a blue note. They are my influences. Alongside The Eagles and The Beach Boys.
    Beautiful music with a dark heart.
    Yeah, ”Dark heart”. That's the follow up album. (Laughs).
     
  22. Wilde_child liked a post in a topic by FormerLanaFan in Lana and Barrie are no longer together   
    Lana in a recent interview http://www.aftonbladet.se/nojesbladet/musik/rockbjornen/article19123254.ab
    "Your life is always turned into headlines Like the recent rumours about your recent relationship. It was said you had broken up, but now I heard that your boyfriend Barrien-James O'Neill told TMZ that it's complete bullshit.
    – I mean… I… I didn't use to talk publicly about my relationships. Because things change all the time. But after not seeing him for several months and people still asking me about him I just said no we're not together right now. And when he got to Los Angeles today and he ran into TMZ I don't think he knew what to say. Sometimes it's not real until you're faced with a camera and somebody asking you." (Ouch)
  23. Wilde_child liked a post in a topic by FormerLanaFan in Lana and Barrie are no longer together   
    Now that would be something 
     
    Sources say Lana Del Rey left Barrie-James O'Neill for Italian photographer Francesco Carrrozzini  
    http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/gossip/confidential/lany-del-rey-clicking-photographer-article-1.1844247
  24. Miguel3Zero liked a post in a topic by FormerLanaFan in LDR: "I always want to experiment" (Interview with dpa)   
    This is the only explanation for the uncontrolled and incoherent messages that she utters constantly through her interviews that muddies her image forever.  I don't know if she was like that before fame but certainly the constant bullying in the past two years aggravated whatever problems she had mentally. I believe she's smart and spiritual but she's unbalanced emotionally and that will not change with Lana Del Rey but I hope that Lizzy Grant will find some peace in the future
  25. Chris Cuomo liked a post in a topic by FormerLanaFan in Ultraviolence - Post-Release Discussion Thread + Poll   
    Lazy bitch. She's starting to lose to that Sam Smith guy in the US. The boy is promoting like hell and he is no.1 on US itunes. Her no.1 debut on BB200 is in serious doubt now. 
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