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daisychainz

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  1. daisychainz liked a post in a topic by CHATEAU MARMONT in Lana Del Rey for the SKIMS Valentine’s Day Collection (Nadia Lee Cohen)   
    Lana Del Rey x Skims (BTS) - YouTube
     
    the honeymoon audio
  2. daisychainz liked a post in a topic by venicebitch in Lana Del Rey for the SKIMS Valentine’s Day Collection (Nadia Lee Cohen)   
    The way they gave Lana an actual magazine-worthy photoshoot and not just plain nude background underwear photos like with other celebrities (even some huge ones like SZA, Rosalia or Cardi B)… 
     
    Lana specifically referenced other Nadia Lee photoshoot and she got exactly what she wanted! It looks like absolutely something on her terms and not just a money grab opportunity (although I bet the cheque was FAT)
  3. daisychainz liked a post in a topic by jimmyjimmycocoapuff in Lana Del Rey for the SKIMS Valentine’s Day Collection (Nadia Lee Cohen)   
    could taylor serve like that in a shoot, joey? don't think so <3
    it's giving jealousy
  4. daisychainz liked a post in a topic by MamaDelGhey in Lana Del Rey for the SKIMS Valentine’s Day Collection (Nadia Lee Cohen)   
    These photos breathed so much life into me today. I’ve been on the struggle bus for a few days. 
     
    So thankful that this woman exists and shares herself with the world. We’re truly blessed to be alive at the same time as her.
  5. daisychainz liked a post in a topic by Olympia in Lana interviewed for Vogue: Lana Del Rey Talks Headlining Coachella, Her Grammys Noms, and Why She Loves Valentine’s Day   
    Yes please. I had it for a minute before the subscribe block started 😒
     
    Lana Del Rey Talks Headlining Coachella, Her Grammys Noms, and Why She Loves Valentine’s Day
    BY CHRISTIAN ALLAIRE
    January 18, 2024  
    Photo: Nadia Lee Cohen   SAVE There are few people worthy of an 11 p.m. phone call on a school night, but Lana Del Rey is certainly one of those folks. After all, less than a month into 2024, it’s already shaping up to be the year of Lana: The singer is set to headline Coachella in April, and she’s also nominated for five Grammy Awards this year, including an Album of the Year nod for the masterful Did You Know That There's a Tunnel Under Ocean Blvd. “It’s fun because I executively produced it, like I did my last two albums,” Del Rey tells Vogue of her nominations. But there's more… 
    Today, Del Rey becomes the newest face of Skims, fronting a Valentine’s Day collection out January 23rd. Modeling for fashion brands is nothing new for Del Rey, who has also been tapped as a Gucci muse in the past. The collaboration with Kim Kardashian (and her multi-billion dollar shapewear brand), she says, is especially personal. “I love Kim, and I love her family,” Del Rey says. “Me and my sister are huge fans of them, and have been watching them forever.” (The pair also have history: Back in 2014, Del Rey performed at Kardashian and ex husband Kanye West’s pre-wedding festivities.)
        In honor of the new campaign, Vogue caught up with Del Rey to talk why she loves Skims, what she thinks about Valentine’s Day—“I'm sentimental, so of course I'm going to love Valentine's Day!”—as well as creating one of the most celebrated albums of the year. Plus, a bit on what fans can expect from her upcoming Coachella set, too. 
  6. daisychainz liked a post in a topic by fishtails in Lana interviewed for Vogue: Lana Del Rey Talks Headlining Coachella, Her Grammys Noms, and Why She Loves Valentine’s Day   
    Lana Del Rey Talks Headlining Coachella, Her Grammys Noms, and Why She Loves Valentine’s Day
    https://www.vogue.com/article/lana-del-rey-skims-campaign-grammys-coachella
  7. daisychainz liked a post in a topic by Three White Butterflies in Lana Del Rey for the SKIMS Valentine’s Day Collection (Nadia Lee Cohen)   
    this is one of her greatest serves of all time oh my god…..
  8. daisychainz liked a post in a topic by Elle in Lana to release new song "Henry, Come On" with Luke Laird   
    Lana Del Rey has posted a snippet of a new song possibly titled "Henry, Come On" to her instagram. She tagged musician Luke Laird in the caption, suggesting he will be involved.
    Lyrics
  9. daisychainz liked a post in a topic by Stoned Mary in the Garden in Instagram Updates   
    Chuck is SO beautiful 
  10. daisychainz liked a post in a topic by honeyslow in Instagram Updates   
    this one is my favourite I want so squeeze her cheeks so bad

     
  11. daisychainz liked a post in a topic by Black to Blue in Instagram Updates   
    Idk if I missed this or my eyes are deceiving me but does she have a new hand tattoo? It looks like it says “l.a.”
  12. daisychainz liked a post in a topic by Elle in Instagram Updates   
    This pic she just posted cured me x
  13. daisychainz liked a post in a topic by Elle in Lana Del Rey interviewed for The Times   
    Pop’s greatest enigma opens up about God, Glastonbury, her private life — and answers her ‘jerk-off’ critics by Jonathan Dean
    Lana Del Rey’s great-uncle Dick was so dazed the night before he died that he accidentally grabbed the singer’s wrist and coughed into her hand. “I just cried,” she recalls in her soft, airy American twang.
    She was at his home at a vigil alongside 30 members of her extended family. “I shouldn’t have been the one crying,” she says. “The people around me were his children — I’m just this star who walked in.”
    Then suddenly everyone started singing the old folk song Froggy Went a-Courtin’ — once covered by Bob Dylan — in a 13-part harmony. “It was a pivotal moment because I realised that they could sing as well as I do, but I just happen to be the one who made it. That was the missing piece I needed. I felt part of a very wide network, a grain of sand on the beach.”
    So did the experience bring this star back to earth? “Yes!” she says. She laughs loudly, before slipping into the third person. “And for Lana Del Rey to be levelled out is a f***ing miracle!”
    It is evening when I arrive at a sweet suburban house on the outskirts of Nashville, Tennessee. This is where Del Rey comes to “decompress” after touring, instead of at home in Los Angeles. The singer, whose ninth album, Did You Know That There’s a Tunnel Under Ocean Blvd, is our album of the year, welcomes me with an explanation of the overpowering scent inside: “I have burnt a heavy sage!” She really has. This quiet sanctuary, filled with guitars, vintage chess sets and magazines about Jackie Kennedy, smells strongly of the herb that people use for good energy and relaxation. Her sitting room is certainly full of the latter.
    Darkness falls beyond the candlelight as Del Rey, 38, settles back on the sofa, wearing a white cardigan, crucifix necklace, tight jeans and cowboy boots, smoking a vape. It all feels very intimate as our conversation meanders. She talks about her ancestors in the American Civil War — “It didn’t go well for them” — and a close relative who died just before Del Rey had to sing privately for the Prince of Monaco. “I invite his spirit every night to come sit next to me,” she says. “I think that’s real …”
    I leave more than two hours later, after a revealing, sometimes odd and frequently funny conversation with the 27th most-listened-to pop star on Spotify. Singing aside, what is she best at? Talking — “I’m rambling! — about life, death and fame. What is she scared of? “God, I see a spider!” What is she not great at? Ordering coffees on her app. One order is cancelled; another sits on the porch after she misses the notification. “Am I an idiot?” She opens the door to two cold coffees.
    Del Rey is an anomaly. Those Spotify numbers mean she’s now more popular than Harry Styles and Beyoncé. Yet most of her songs are ballads hailing from a different era — Hollywood in the 1950s, say, or Mad Men 1960s. Her music is better suited for a sad journey home than a big night out. Just check out the video Elders Read Lana Del Rey’s Hit Songs on YouTube and watch pensioners enraptured by her songs — one old man says in awe: “Younger people are listening to that?”
    What is more baffling is that her songs on Did You Know … are even further removed from the present crop of algorithm-led factory pop. Her latest tracks are complex, personal (Great-Uncle Dick pops up on one) and, frankly, incredibly long, often stretching well over five minutes. “It’s weird,” she admits of her ever-increasing popularity. “It’s not necessarily what I saw coming!”
    Last month Did You Know … secured five Grammy nominations, while Del Rey was announced as the headliner for the 2024 Reading Festival, after the success of big gigs in London and Glastonbury over the summer, where the age of her devoted crowd ranged from teenaged up to, yes, a surprising number of seventysomethings.
    To find out how Del Rey got here, let us go back to the start. Not to the open-mike nights in her early twenties — “awkward when nobody listens” — but to when Del Rey was 26 and her game-changing single Video Games was released. It was a song that drivers would pull over to listen to — a classic of love and longing.
    Other hits followed quickly, but some people had an issue. Del Rey was born Elizabeth Grant and released music as Lizzy Grant before having the gall to change her name and adopt a new, sultry femme fatale persona steeped in the iconography of American pin-ups and the silver screen.
    Many pop stars — Bowie! Elton! Eminem! — reinvent themselves, but purists fell over each to denounce the new-look Del Rey as a fraud, an industry construct and fake feminist. This criticism got to her. “I will never sing again,” she laments in Swan Song, released four years after the giddy heights of Video Games.
    “When I hear Swan Song now I think, ‘Oh girl, they brought you to that point. That sucks for you,’” Del Rey says with a sigh. “I get dressed up for my shows while some folks don’t. For some reason that was a problem. I had books thrown at me in San Francisco by liberal female groups. I’ve been punched in the face in Brooklyn. Ten years ago, mentally I badly needed some beauty to come out of the chaos. For something to make sense.” She sighs again. “I’ve been on guard for so long.”
    On guard from whom? “Jerk-offs!” she yells. “F***ing narcissists! Take that cotton out of your ears and stuff it in your mouth.” Naysayers insisted Del Rey did not mean a word she sang. “Listen,” she says angrily. “You can hear I mean it. You might not know what I am getting at, but wouldn’t you be curious to know? Maybe you could learn something? Or just listen to someone else.”
    “I don’t need positive feedback,” she continues. “But you cannot just make things up.” She mentions wealth. An early column in The Guardian called her father a millionaire — something she refutes. “It’s crazy if you say something that’s tabloid-psycho untrue about me but I can’t get a word in? Congratulations! You’re going to ruin how people listen to my music.”
    There is a lot of talk today about pop stars and their mental health. How did she cope when it wasn’t much discussed ? “Well, you really have to take care of yourself,” she says, somewhat sadly. “Because putting your faith in the public is like building your house in the sand. They’ll turn and turn. I’ve experienced that in all parts of my life. People reveal sides of themselves years after you meet, so you have to ground yourself all the way down to your knees …
    “But, back then, it is no wonder I felt I did not have a voice in a particular movement — they quieted me.”
    Does she still think she would not be taken seriously if she wanted to speak out or get political? “That was then,” Del Rey says firmly. “I couldn’t do anything. Singing about a boyfriend, playing a video game and chilling out? That’s a joke, dude. I’d have looked stupid. Now I would feel pretty confident, and I do feel passionately about Black Lives Matter and women’s issues. Now I’m not afraid. But I was. I read what they said about me: ‘Do not step forward. Do not pass Go.’ ”
    She shrugs. “But I’ve been trying and trying,” she says about writing more political songs. Four years ago she wrote a one-off single, Looking for America, with her regular producer Jack Antonoff, in response to a spate of mass shootings in the US. The impact of the shootings “just hit us”, she says with a nod. “We all sat at the back of cinemas for a while so we could be by the exit.
    “And there were seven political songs on one album and nobody cared,” she adds, referring to 2017’s Lust for Life. “For instance, When the World Was at War We Kept Dancing. I talked about Trump and the worry of him having his finger on the red button. But the problem, right now, is there is just such a lot going on.”
    Did You Know … largely skips politics, and writing it made her nervous. The lyrics deal with death, ageing and when she might become a mother. (The singer’s relationship status remains something of a rumour.) Throughout you can hear her early detractors, who wondered how “real” she was, being forced to scoff humble pie. It plays like autobiography. The singer is remembering people, while wondering if she will be remembered.
    Del Rey was born in Manhattan and raised in Lake Placid in upstate New York. Her father, Rob, worked in various businesses before finding his success with domain names. Her mother, Patricia, was a teacher. It was a Roman Catholic family and Del Rey, one of three siblings, was a worried child. Indeed she was so concerned about the meaning of life and death that she studied philosophy at university. “I was trying to help myself,” she says of her degree. “I was constantly reading and applying what I learnt to figure out how we got here. That has been in me since I was three!”
    “There were things that bothered me at a young age,” she continues. “Like what does it mean if people come into the world as quadriplegics while people say that everything plays out the way it should? Or when you meet people who are severely sociopathic and think, ‘How’s God fitting into all this?’ I’m still trying to figure out the bigger questions.”
    It is fast approaching midnight. “I’m not saying I’m going to answer,” she begins, mischievously, as we start wrapping up, “but did you have a horrible question you were going to ask me?” Not really, I say; we’ve covered enough. “You could’ve said, ‘Are you married?’ Why didn’t you?!” Do you want me to ask? “No!” She takes a beat. “But no, I’m not!” She bursts out laughing.
    I ask about Glastonbury. Booked to headline the Other Stage this year, Del Rey turned up late and was cut off before she could even play Video Games. On stage the singer said her hair took a while to perfect, while the crowd were left stunned and disappointed.
    “I’ve heard of curfews before,” she explains. “But I didn’t know they actually turned the lights off! I didn’t feel great about it, but I was a little confused because I don’t think I was ever in a position where somebody said, ‘If you do not finish by this time, everything will go out.’ I was only 15 minutes late.”
    She will simply have to come back another year to headline the Pyramid Stage, because, for someone obsessed with her own legacy, it feels as if she is edging closer to her idols, who now talk of her as a peer. Stevie Nicks adores her. Joan Baez invites her to dance parties on Zoom. “She just creates a world of her own and invites you in,” Bruce Springsteen gushes.
    Did You Know … is a beautiful but intense album — like having a therapy session on a Californian beach. But what comes next for her? “I’m tired now,” Del Rey admits. “So keeping it simple is probably the way that it’s going to go. I dug around a lot writing this [album] and don’t think I have to go there again.”
    As such, she has plans to write an album of standards — classic, simple songs that could reach even more people than she does now. A bit like the gorgeous, piano-led cover of Take Me Home, Country Roads by John Denver that she released on Friday, or the Elvis Presley version of Unchained Melody that she recorded at Graceland for a Christmas TV show. She is a star who not only finally feels understood, but also finally understands.
    “That’s why God didn’t give me children yet,” she says tenderly about what may or may not come next. “Because there is more to explore. I know people who’ve tested every water. It’s burnt them, like Icarus. But I’m willing to go there. I see it coming for me. We’ll see.” She is speaking quickly now, excitedly. “We’ll see what melts the wings.”
  14. daisychainz liked a post in a topic by Elle in Take Me Home, Country Roads (John Denver Cover) [SINGLE] - December 1st, 2023   
    Lana Del Rey will be releasing a single for her cover of John Denver's "Take Me Home, Country Roads" tonight at midnight local time.
     
     
  15. daisychainz liked a post in a topic by Aeryx in Lana performing live at NBC Christmas at Graceland - November 29th, 2023   
    Now that I think about it Unchained Melody would’ve been so good on Paradise with Blue Velvet or Yayo style production 
  16. daisychainz liked a post in a topic by Veinsineon in Lana performing live at NBC Christmas at Graceland - November 29th, 2023   
    The interview part I missed- so cute! She threw on her little regional accent, busted out the lower register, under eyeliner, bronzer, hair extensions…. She really seems to have her confidence back  I hope this means more TV performances / cameos in 2024 
  17. daisychainz liked a post in a topic by how the light shines in in Lana performing live at NBC Christmas at Graceland - November 29th, 2023   
    the way none of us guessed the song and it was the most perfect choice ever. Favourite TV performance hands down 
  18. daisychainz liked a post in a topic by Elle in Lana performing live at NBC Christmas at Graceland - November 29th, 2023   
    The cute lil interview bit with Riley - 
     
  19. daisychainz liked a post in a topic by brandon in Lana performing live at NBC Christmas at Graceland - November 29th, 2023   
    one day we will get a christmas album and if we don’t i’m going to have some massive issues with miss del rey
  20. daisychainz liked a post in a topic by Elle in Lana performing live at NBC Christmas at Graceland - November 29th, 2023   
    The quality isn't the best, but here's a recording for those who missed - 
     
  21. daisychainz liked a post in a topic by AllHisCandyNecklaces in Lana performing live at NBC Christmas at Graceland - November 29th, 2023   
    Does this link work for y'all? : https://thetvapp.to/tv/wnbc-new-york-nbc-east-live-stream/ 
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