mermaid12 125 Posted May 25, 2014 Thanks so much for the translation!! I love this interview 0 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
TrailerParkDarling 5,691 Posted May 25, 2014 I'm so confused by some of those responses lol... and those pictures w/ the plastic surgery question.. lmao 0 Quote *** People call me crazy but I'm in demand *** Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
lanasgirl 3,800 Posted May 25, 2014 Thanks so much for the translation!! I love this interview Ah thanks it's nice that someone appreciates it I liked it a lot too, she was very open. 0 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
DeadAgainst 1,515 Posted May 25, 2014 Whoever has their 15 minutes of glory has won the game of life.Do people expect that stars are perfect? I’m often depressed because I am differently. To me it’s about words that create magic or that my familiy is fine though we are all very different from eachother. I had to distance myself from some people in the last few years because I understood that they have other goals than me. I want to anchor myself with available things, it’s about real relationships. But I can understand envy of other people. I am very jealous of other women when I think that they’ve challenge my place in the music genre. . . . 1 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Sitar 22,210 Posted May 25, 2014 Dan Auerbach influenced the finish of the album? Yes. We met in a club, looked at each other and knew immediately: “Hey, we should do an album together.” This is totally uncommon for me. I’ve been working with the same people for three years and I didn’t plan to involve somebody else. But Dan has this special spontaneity. He is a very positive guy. Only one week after our meeting at the club I flew to Nashville. He invited his friends from Brooklyn and together we got to work on the 13 demos that I had produced at the Electric Lady Studios. I was in the same room as the band. This time I didn’t want to sing in a golden Neumann-microphone like Sinatra used it. Instead I wanted a micro on which I could hold on, preferably with a wire. We bought a blues-like Shure SM-58 and recorded the album in six weeks. Thirteen demos. And then she must have written Florida Kilos (the 14th) with Dan So I think we can assume Dan didn't touch the outtakes (like AFFA) 0 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Youandme 28 Posted May 25, 2014 Thirteen demos. And then she must have written Florida Kilos (the 14th) with Dan So I think we can assume Dan didn't touch the outtakes (like AFFA) ??? Kill Kill was written years ago???? 0 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
HONEYMOON 431 Posted May 25, 2014 . . . I was going to say Oh Lana bby, no 16 year old girl can take your crown 2 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
DeadAgainst 1,515 Posted May 25, 2014 I think that extraordinary artists are more accepted in Europe Humble Queen will always be the Other Woman 0 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
BENTLEY 3,495 Posted May 25, 2014 ??? Kill Kill was written years ago???? Yeah. But Florida Kilos is not Kill Kill. 0 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Youandme 28 Posted May 25, 2014 Yeah. But Florida Kilos is not Kill Kill. Yes, it is. 0 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
brokenfaith 227 Posted May 25, 2014 Yes, it is. Don't be so stubborn. You have absolutely no way of knowing, so don't be so ignorant as to pretend you do. It doesn't look like it is--it could be--but probably isn't. Jeese 2 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
DeadAgainst 1,515 Posted May 25, 2014 I was going to say Oh Lana bby, no 16 year old girl can take your crown Only seventeen, but she walks the streets so mean 3 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
markeyvee 221 Posted May 25, 2014 I feel so special living in Delray Beach lol 0 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
rdp 1,241 Posted May 25, 2014 It's weird that she mentions only getting in the studio with Rick before working with Dan. What happened to these instagram pics of her in the studio with Emile Haynie late 2013? 1 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
tiffanydale 193 Posted May 25, 2014 I liked the soft "a" sounds in Lana, like "Allah" or "Paradise" Lana is god 1 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
urbannoize 1,596 Posted May 25, 2014 @@lanasgirl Oh if you already did it, I guess my translation is not needed anymore. But I already did a part of it and I don't want it to be completely in vain so I'll share it here. LANA DEL REY I want to be myself With hits like “Summertime Sadness” Lana Del Rey came out of nowhere and seems 2012 like an icon of Hollywood’s golden ages. As illustrator of her own fictional character the formerly unknown Elizabeth Grant did not only win praise with her new name. Criticism of her change of image arose. Now her second album “Ultraviolence” is finished, the artist is at peace with the process of self-fulfilment. In Hollywood Emanuel Bergmann met a relaxed Lana Del Rey who talked openly about her collaboration with Dan Auerbach, her love to Marilyn Monroe, the fear of sharks and the sensitive issue of plastic surgery. Lana Del Rey is sitting on the balcony of her bungalows at the Sunset Marquis Hotel, West Hollywood. Pensively she takes a pull on a cigarette, enjoying April’s sun at this glamorous place. The Sunset Marquis is – like the nearby Chateau Marmont – a Rock’n’Roll hotel. [sidenote: Chateau Marmont: The hotel at the Sunset Boulevard served as scenery in Sofia Coppolas film “Somewhere”. Many myths weave around the building which was built 1929 after the model of a French castle. The band Led Zeppelin is alleged to have driven through the hotel’s lobby with their motorcycles in the 1970ties. The Sunset Marquis is three minutes away by car.] This is the place where some of the greatest stars of music business loved and quarrelled, when they did not record some new songs. The Sunset Marquis has an underground recording studio. This kind of hotel is fairly new luxury for her, with the underground Lana Del Rey is rather familiar. She wrote her first songs in a trailer park and got used to the lack of success. The album “Born To Die” surprisingly catapulted her into the charts, especially in Europe she became a star. The meanwhile 27 years old is a native New Yorker but her heart beats for the wide open space of the West Coast. Just as well as she is fascinated with the silver screen icons that only California can bring forth. Lana Del Rey like the great gestures, in the Songs of her new album “Ultraviolence” she breathes like a real Hollywood diva. Her main themes still are love and death. Anyway it is questionable if the American audience will ever love her as much as her European fans do. During the following talk on the balcony Lana Del Rey does not seem like an unapproachable star but relaxed and down-to-earth, kind and pensive. Shortly before the Interview she performed the first time at Coachella. She seemed a bit like she still could not believe her own success there. How was your performance at Coachella? Really insane. I hadn’t expected anymore that Coachella would ever invite us. And then there are more than 50.000 people standing in front of the stage. It was a smashing moment, our biggest performance in America. I’ve also watched some concerts myself. I really like Matt Bellamy from Muse so I went to their gig on Saturday. And I saw Lemmy and Motörhead from the edge of the stage. Slash was a guest on stage there. Really cool! Have you been especially curious how the new songs from your album “Ultraviolence” would be received? Of course. It took me a while to write them. In the past two years I’ve been frequently asked: “What are you going to do next?” My standard response was: “I don’t know yet.” But in last year’s November a few melodies finally solidified for which I seemed to find the right words. So I lodged myself at the Electric Lady Studios at the Lower East Side of New York. The owner Lee Foster has been a friend of mine for years. I asked him if I could play around a bit and he just said: “Of course.” I had the studio for myself for whole three weeks. Every now and then Rick Nowels came by. I thought I was finished when I met Dan Auerbach from the Black Keys. Dan Auerbach influenced the finish of the album? Yes. We met in a club, looked at each other and knew immediately: “Hey, we should do an album together.” This is totally uncommon for me. I’ve been working with the same people for three years and I didn’t plan to involve somebody else. But Dan has this special spontaneity. He is a very positive guy. Only one week after our meeting at the club I flew to Nashville. He invited his friends from Brooklyn and together we got to work on the 13 demos that I had produced at the Electric Lady Studios. I was in the same room as the band. This time I didn’t want to sing in a golden Neumann-microphone like Sinatra used it. Instead I wanted a micro on which I could hold on, preferably with a wire. We bought a blues-like Shure SM-58 and recorded the album in six weeks. no guarantee that everything is correct Thank you for the translation. I really appreciated it 0 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
urbannoize 1,596 Posted May 25, 2014 http://lanasdaily.tumblr.com/post/86807175923/lana-del-rey-interviewed-for-intro-magazine-june-2014 So since Lanaboards didn't publish my translation, I posted it on my Lana blog. I will edit and correct it tomorrow, but I'm way too tired right now. Enjoy! Thank you for your translation work on the interview. You did a great job 1 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
PinUpCartoonBaby 1,017 Posted May 25, 2014 Thank you for the translation. I really appreciated it I thank you too. I mean it's only the beginning of the interview but I'm glad you appreciate it though. The real work was done by lanasgirl and she did a really good job 2 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
lanasgirl 3,800 Posted May 25, 2014 Thank you for your translation work on the interview. You did a great job I thank you too. I mean it's only the beginning of the interview but I'm glad you appreciate it though. The real work was done by lanasgirl and she did a really good job Ah you guys, thank you so so much! You make me smile! Kisses. 1 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
urbannoize 1,596 Posted May 25, 2014 I thank you too. I mean it's only the beginning of the interview but I'm glad you appreciate it though. The real work was done by lanasgirl and she did a really good jobYup, she really did do a great job. & You're welcome also. I appreciate your work too. Got to yours before i read hers 0 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites