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Traveler

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  1. bluenailpolish liked a post in a topic by Traveler in Columbia, MD @ All Things Go Music Festival - October 1st, 2023   
    VB should have a permanent place on her setlist...
  2. Traveler liked a post in a topic by one time beauty queen in What Are You Listening To?   
    i dont know howwwww someone controlled you, they bought & sold you 
  3. Traveler liked a post in a topic by Embach in Instagram Updates   
    Mississippi
    https://www.instagram.com/p/Cx3pMd3OZnR/?igshid=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==
  4. Traveler liked a post in a topic by Embach in Instagram Updates   
    https://www.instagram.com/p/Cx53pJeusyP/?igshid=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==
  5. Traveler liked a post in a topic by Embach in Instagram Updates   
    https://www.instagram.com/reel/Cx54v4pOWQV/?igshid=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==
  6. Traveler liked a post in a topic by violettiaras in Columbia, MD @ All Things Go Music Festival - October 1st, 2023   
    found a quote from lana ive been seriously been looking for since she first did the hope choreo which i think really explains it! Its basically what everyone’s guesses just like a tad more specific. 
     
    https://www.billboard.com/music/pop/lana-del-rey-billboard-cover-story-2019-8527901/
    When discussing the song hope she says:
     
    “It was staggered with references from living in Hollywood and seeing so many things that didn’t look right to me, things that I never thought I’d have permission to talk about, because everyone knew and no one ever said anything. The culture only changed in the last two years as to whether people would believe you. And I’ve been in this business now for 15 years!”
     
    Earlier in the story she mentions women in the industry being considered crazy for not fitting into categories and expectations etc. 
    So I’ve always interpreted the cia segment of hope dance as women in the music industry (it also applies to the common woman) reporting sexual abuse or wanting to and being dismissed, belittled and ignored or even further abused in court like Kesha. The CIA guy would represent anyone in a position of power including law enforcement who helps to normalize and facilitate abuse. It’s about the silencing of women, and how those that speak up or “act out” are deemed crazy or hysteric, even though any “hysteria” they show usually stems from being treated as a crazy liar. Her being dragged off could either indicate being taken to a mental hospital because they’ve made her crazy or are still trying to paint her as such, or more broadly and maybe simultaneously the metaphoric killing of her hope and her spirit. 
    Off topic and re marilyn, a lot of hardcore devoted MM fans (or at least from what I’ve seen)  actually reject the CIA/murder conspiracy so I wonder if Lana does as well but it is clear I think to most people how outside forces like misogynist stigma and mistreatment played into her death so she definitely fits into this story in that sense. 
    I’m already rambling but I could go on and on forever so I’ll cut it off here.  
  7. Let the Light In liked a post in a topic by Traveler in Columbia, MD @ All Things Go Music Festival - October 1st, 2023   
    VB should have a permanent place on her setlist...
  8. honeymoon is alive liked a post in a topic by Traveler in Columbia, MD @ All Things Go Music Festival - October 1st, 2023   
    VB should have a permanent place on her setlist...
  9. fishtails liked a post in a topic by Traveler in Columbia, MD @ All Things Go Music Festival - October 1st, 2023   
    VB should have a permanent place on her setlist...
  10. ArtDecoDelRey liked a post in a topic by Traveler in Columbia, MD @ All Things Go Music Festival - October 1st, 2023   
    VB should have a permanent place on her setlist...
  11. Traveler liked a post in a topic by PARADIXO in 'Honeymoon' Turns 4: Achieving Mental Health Through Time-Travel   
    Lana Del Rey released her third major-label studio album Honeymoon on September 18, 2015.

     

    The spacey, soothing record finds Del Rey at her most introspective and lyrically and sonically artistic: she goes on a mysterious honeymoon with herself in order to re-invent her self-perspective, ambitions and wishes. The album has such a deep sense of thinking that it feels like she's time-traveling through her mind, re-evaluating her past experiences with love, drugs, alcohol, analyzing her very present (which is now her past) as a woman and celebrity and projecting her wishes for the future (now her present onwards). Perhaps the reason she decided to make such a self-examining, vain and almost psychological album is the 'post-Ultraviolence trauma': her dark, self-destructing 2014 release, which Lana herself admitted it "went too far". However, it was necessary for her growth and evolution as a depressed being: her broken state of mind was clearly expanded throughout Ultraviolence. The time-travel is also represented in the production: the smooth mix of jazz-influenced instrumentation, trap beats that go backwards and forwards endlessly, operatic and retro-filtered vocals, a balance between programming and live recordings and, of course, the non-existent space between the songs -- Honeymoon is a gapless project.

     

    The ambitious album opens with the cinematic, orchestral title track: it functions excellently as the opening song as it describes the absence of this troubled man Del Rey is longing for. She calls him "elusive" and at last embarks on this honeymoon with herself. Her trip included no other than the most Lana Del Rey destinations: Beverly Hills, Santa Monica, Malibu, Hollywood (location that would later be the stage of the following record, Lust for Life) and also New York and Florida. "Music to Watch Boys To" is a sensual, playful number in which we find Lana taking, for the first time, a more dominating, empowered role: she's hypnotizing men with her echoed "I like you a lot so I do what you want", though it is "all a game to [her] anyway". She's watching them fade, fall one by one as she plays some Caribbean-influenced music and drinking lemonade lazily. However, this character is not strong consistently: the slow process to inner peace, happiness and independence has its highs and lows, and that is exposed in the vulnerable "Terrence Loves You". Now all the bad men are gone, but there is one that still haunts her: "I lost myself when I lost you", she sings in a jazzy tone. All the lines indicate she's describing her breakup with Barrie-James O'Neill, who Ultraviolence was mostly about, making these two projects sister albums: two chapters of the same story. 

     

    After being stuck in the past for a few minutes, we fly gently to the present: in "God Knows I Tried" she expresses that fame was not as she expected. The lyrics suggest she has her breakdowns alone in her room, lamenting everything she's going through; however. "I feel free when I see no one and nobody knows my name".

     



     

    At this point, it is clear that Honeymoon is not like Del Rey's previous works, where production shined for its grandness and claustrophobic nature: this time, she is inspired, alongside producers Rick Nowels and Kieron Menzies, by ambient music and minimalism. There is so much space to breathe, to think, to stay silent, to sing as high and low as she can, to penetrate the words into your mind, to let the instruments and sound effects melt with each other.

     

    The following track introduces an entire section of the album: we are in the present, as we noticed with "God Knows I Tried", but now the background music accompanies the travel: Lana Del Rey says welcome to trap music for the first time in her discography. Something must have happened when they were sent, though, because there's slightly different from what we know as trap: they're muffled and distorted or, how she calls it, muddy. The pioneer, forward-looking "High By the Beach" shares the same concept as the previous track, but instead of being reflecting alone in her house, now she's outside, ready to fight whoever obstructs her path, especially those who wish to attack her privacy. There is a feeling of danger and assertiveness -- she dreamily expresses her mundane wish to smoke weed in the shore, an activity most humans would enjoy without any problem, but she as a celebrity has to carry an enormous gun to shot down an helicopter full of paparazzi. Of course, this is a metaphor (though I am sure Lana, more than once, wanted to actually do this) to people wanting to know everything about her and questioning her so-talked-about authenticity and how she's using her ever-growing music to fight them. In this time and space she has found a new interest, a man of "leather black and eyes of blue" she begs him to "come to California" to be a freak with her and escape. She is aware of time even in the way they listen to whatever 70s band is playing: "We could slow dance to rock music". "If time stood still," she says, "I'd take this moment and make it last forever". The experimental "Art Deco" is perhaps the song that defines the sonical world of Honeymoon the best: back and forth beats, soft orchestra, layered vocals, timid yet epic saxophone and subtle electronic effects that sound like psychedelic drops of water.

     

    The record is separated in two by a trippy, on-loop-like interlude: Lana is reading a part of "Burnt Norton", a poem by T.S. Eliot. The work explains that one individual, in order to grow and achieve peace, must momentarily leave the metaphorical space and forget the limits of time they're in and start to look into themself, a dimension where is always present. "Time present and time past," she reads, "are both perhaps present in time future / And time future contained in time past." The poem is part of Eliot's Four Quartets, a collection that "symbolically represented the completion of his former poems and his moving onto later works," very much like Honeymoon. In the following second half of the album, the present is set and there's no more traveling to the past -- we are, however, thinking and reflecting of it (which is different than dwell in it). The concept of escapism is the protagonist here; perhaps as a way to avoid the future or, oppositely, to actually travel to it -- to escape from this present of pain and uncertainty.

     

    In "Religion", this time lapse is depicted just like that -- yes, her past is gone and "everything is fine now" but it's still the present and it's haunted. "You're my religion," she sings layered endlessly, "all my friends say I should take some space / But I can't envision that for a minute". In the song, Lana has fallen on the philosophical question of what to do when things are fine -- when the tangible horror is gone, what is next? Post-trauma feels like that. It's a void; you're not there anymore but the experience is now within you. In the bridge, the instruments go back and forth, as an effort to time-travel again, but it fails and we continue the story in the epic "Salvatore". What's around her is described, just like in "Religion", as fine -- gleaming lights in Miami, beatboxers and rappers by the beach, jazz and blues. However, the hypnotizing, empowered chanteuse from "Music to Watch Boys To" is back: she half-lies, borrowing the melody of the romantic "Careless Whisper" by George Michael, "The summer is wild and I've been waiting for you," only to play with her lover's mind again -- "Catch me if you can."

     

    And we're back to the lows. Exquisitely positioned towards the end of the album, the spectacular centerpiece "The Blackest Day" is the result of so much thinking, lamenting, healing, speculation, delusion, time-travel and mind-playing: the ultimate breakdown. "Carry me home," she demands with her blue nail polish on as a tense pad plays in the background. "I don't really want to break up / We got it going on / It's what you gathered from our talk but you were wrong," again lost in the past. Like in "Religion", the present is such an empty concept for her now that there's nothing left to do other than go on. She finds no words to explain her state, this feeling of her life being one long dark day ever since that happened. So much soul searching has made her fall "deeper and deeper" and now she finds herself "looking for love in all the wrong places," making every word more dismal with a dramatic "oh my God!". Now the music is enormous; the sonic landscape of Honeymoon has so much empty space that it let "The Blackest Day" fill it all with its progressive music structure, ethereal, FKA twigs-like synthesizers and sawers and gentle, post-rock drums, beats and overall production. She is in denial with the future and what it takes to get there: "There's nothing for us to talk about / There's nothing for me to think about." At the end of the song, she has no other option than to accept her reality, because that's exactly what she needed: she already embraced her past, and now it was time for the present to receive the same treatment. "I'm on my own," she sings in a tone of isolation.

     

    In the cinematic "24" she depicts her lover as a liar and a dog with fleas, only to slowly find peace with herself in "Swan Song", an ode to escapism and isolation. The fact that this process felt like one long day is strong as she sings "The world can change in a day if you go away". "Let's leave the world for those who change everything," she says apocalyptically, "Let's just get lost if that's what we want." It is also a reference to the 'white tennis shoes syndrome': the feeling that makes it seem as though there's always something interrupting us from doing our most important (and also most difficult) task. In her case, getting to a better place mentally and emotionally -- the worst of procrastinations. "Why work so hard when you could just be free?". Entelechy at its finest.

     

    The album closes with a cover of the classic "Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood", where she sings "No one alive can always be an angel", justifying her ever-changing and postponing behavior throughout the project. She is trying, and her intentions are always good: she only needed space and, of course, time, for no one to interfere with her thoughts and, what she fears the most, misunderstand her. However, she must know (as she does on Lust for Life), total isolation does not do, especially when the relationship with oneself has been broken and tortured.

     



  12. Traveler liked a post in a topic by Elle in Lana to be featured on upcoming Bleachers album on song ‘Alma Mater’ - song out November 15th, 2023   
    “Alma, a new song featuring longtime collaborator Lana Del Rey – they’ve made three albums together since 2019 – slips between free-associative pop culture references and a joyride around a dreamworld version of New Jersey.”
    source: The Face
  13. Traveler liked a post in a topic by Cordon Gole in Festivals & Tour 2023   
    some are going to a concert, others are going to church
  14. Rico25 liked a post in a topic by Traveler in Tampa, FL @ MIDFLORIDA Credit Union Amphitheatre at the FL State Fairgrounds - 25th Sept 2023   
    So she sang Florida Kilos at this show, just wondering if any new videos emerged that might help with lyrics? You snort it like a champ, Let the....
  15. Traveler liked a post in a topic by Rivers in Festivals & Tour 2023   
    The performance on Jimmy Fallon...Man...She stole my heart...I couldn't believe it. I was not intricately following her music then, like I am now, and when I heard and saw that... It felt surreal. Lacrimose. Sublime. 
  16. Traveler liked a post in a topic by Rivers in Festivals & Tour 2023   
    I would love if Lana did an MTV unplugged session. It could totally bring back MTV unplugged and make it cool again. I really loved them back in the day and feel she could do such an amazing performance that she could then also sell as an album. I think I like nirvanas unplugged more than any of their albums. Bring in the candles, the flowers and the trees. It would be magical. 
  17. fishtails liked a post in a topic by Traveler in Festivals & Tour 2023   
    I went to the Arkansas and Dallas shows and I thought the audience for the most part were great at both. I was in the Pit at both shows, I do not get into the crowd anymore, I just hangout towards the back and enjoy the show. Experience might be different in seats or at barricade, but I had a great time at both events, with no issues at all.
  18. Traveler liked a post in a topic by jealous girl in Festivals & Tour 2023   
    Totally unrealistic because of locations/distances but I wish there was a Lanaboards exclusive show so that there's only people there who really appreciate it
    Then again that might be total chaos too lol
  19. Traveler liked a post in a topic by Quincy in Festivals & Tour 2023   
    Really mixed. It depends on the venue, section and your perspective. 
     
    I’ve been to three shows and had three different experiences. The two smaller venues generally had better crowds, but that’s just my opinion. 
     
    Arkansas: The crowd was very tame and wasn’t overly loud. Of the three venues, it probably had the most polite crowd. It’s a small venue and I think the demographic (rural South) may have played a role.
     
    Dallas: The crowd was out of control, at times. When the gates opened, people ran, screamed and pushed everyone out of the way. Security had zero control. Once in the seated sections, many (not all) were very rude, loud and disrespectful. Several of the songs felt like screaming kareoke. It was my least favorite of the three crowds. Keep in mind it was a larger venue, in a larger city, and stormy weather may have played a role in riling people up. 
     
    Mississippi: The crowd was fairly well behaved, but the security was also very strict. A few people were sneaking into other sections, standing in aisles and vaping, but got kicked out really quick. I posted on Reddit that the crowd seemed polite and respectful, but someone in the pit said it was total chaos in there. I didn’t see that, but then again I’ve never been in the pit because I have low tolerance for pushing and shoving, and I like my personal space. 
     
    Other things I noticed at all three shows:
    1. Many attendees don’t seem to know a lot of her songs. I’m not sure if it’s age or what (large percentage of the crowds were teenagers) but it’s a little sad when people don’t know the songs. 
    2. People show up late, but many people also leave early. I get it, traffic is bad, but last night even Lana made a comment about having to try extra hard because people were leaving early.
    3. Going back to #1, a lot of people at these shows seem to be TikTok teens who may not have the incentive to be as attentive or respectful, simply because they may not have listened to her for long and/or they’re just there for a concert experience   As opposed to a Lana experience. 
     
    In summary, it depends on venue size/location, personal preference and where you’re sitting. 
  20. Traveler liked a post in a topic by mermaidmotelxo in Festivals & Tour 2023   
    thank you, this is helpful!!  
  21. Pedriko liked a post in a topic by Traveler in Festivals & Tour 2023   
    I went to the Arkansas and Dallas shows and I thought the audience for the most part were great at both. I was in the Pit at both shows, I do not get into the crowd anymore, I just hangout towards the back and enjoy the show. Experience might be different in seats or at barricade, but I had a great time at both events, with no issues at all.
  22. mermaidmotelxo liked a post in a topic by Traveler in Festivals & Tour 2023   
    I went to the Arkansas and Dallas shows and I thought the audience for the most part were great at both. I was in the Pit at both shows, I do not get into the crowd anymore, I just hangout towards the back and enjoy the show. Experience might be different in seats or at barricade, but I had a great time at both events, with no issues at all.
  23. Traveler liked a post in a topic by Rivers in Brandon, MS @ Brandon Amphitheater - 27th Sept 2023   
    I wonder what inspired her to wear black? Goodness graciousness. Shes looking so good. Sheesh. 
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