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Lana Del Rey Covers FADER Magazine

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Well if the answer is so obvious then why all those mean comments? I know he was talking about Lana's stupid answer to the feminism question but he called her an idiot, my doubts were warranted. And if you're so tired of the conversation then just don't bring it up anymore.

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Just the fact that you quoted the idiot that is Shailene Woodley shows that you have absolutely no understanding of what feminism is… 

:um:  :wtf:

seriously.


Sweeping scents and blue hydrangea. Summer hail and summer stranger.

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Y'know Lana could've easily pulled the misogyny card wrt how she was treated, and clearly she doesn't want to make that the issue

I guess but misogyny is normally the term to describe hatred of women from men, a lot of the critics were female and their critiquing of Lana was based on her own misogyny of women; denigration of women, violence against women, and sexual objectification of women. So I guess you could argue that Lana is as much of a misogynist as her critics and she's already playing that card in her 'art' rather than misandry. You could also argue that is her problem that she brought on herself.

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“For me, the issue of feminism is just not an interesting concept,” she says. “I’m more interested in, you know, SpaceX and Tesla, what’s going to happen with our intergalactic possibilities. Whenever people bring up feminism, I’m like, god. I’m just not really that interested.”

Wrpdqg3.png

 

:troll:


tumblr_mhs73q4yRD1qll34mo1_500.gif


 


Stalking you has sorta become like my occupation.

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Don't know if it has been mentioned here already but I just found some kind of outtakes/ bonus questions from the interview with Fader: http://www.thefader.com/2014/06/17/love-death-and-jazz-seven-outtakes-from-our-lana-del-rey-intervie/

 

 


In an interview for the cover of our most recent issue (which, she told The FADER, was the longest interview she’d ever done), Lana Del Rey spoke on a number of important topics, including accusations against her of anti-feminism, a mystery illness that’s been afflicting her and the toll that career criticism has taken on her personal life. But, as with any story, not everything can fit and certain interesting bits had to be edited out. Now, on the day of the release of her new album Ultraviolence, here are seven lucky seven bonus cuts, which find Lana discussing her relationship with her boyfriend, the spirited recording process for her sophomore album and a hint at what might come next.

On making videos and DIY…
“When I was 18, I got a MacBook for the first time, which kind of changed things for me because I could record myself singing on GarageBand and start using mixed media and found footage in iMovie. I just started downloading other people’s clips from YouTube and incorporating it with my own performance. It was a time when everyone was experimenting, because the internet was still so new. But things get exposed, don’t they? Everything that’s good and fun and DIY gets blown out of the water. That’s what I’ve learned. Even recording at home, recording by yourself. You lose momentum, and people aren’t as interested in the basement tapes or the home recordings, and you move on to working with other producers, elaborating on what you started with a DIY foundation. For me, it’s like an interesting trajectory going from doing everything myself to finding people who are a lot like me and who understood that songs weren’t just traditional pop songs, but more like a psychological unraveling of a life story in song form. You have to pick people who really get it.”

On her early career…
“I did seek an indie career. I was a huge fan of Cat Power. I still have never listened to pop music. You could ask me anything, I wouldn’t know who you were talking about. It just would never happen for me, it’s just not my thing. I like older music. I really like early ’90s stuff; I really like classic rock and late ’70s. The people I liked were Father John Misty, I love Cat Power. I was more indie-inclined. I wasn’t trying to be like, an indie whatever, but I was a fan of Lou Reed. I came to New York because of Dylan. I was a real writer, you know. I was writing short stories, submitting them. Doing poetry for fun.”

On her boyfriend, Barrie-James O’Neill…
“I’m not engaged. I actually got a couple of phone calls, people saying ‘Oh, thanks for telling me.’ I was like, ‘You would know.’ But I got lucky with that one, because I had been very unlucky before. I met a person who was a much better person than I was, like had a lot of artistic integrity. He would really die before he sold out, you know. He was a lot like me, but even more strong. I would say, like, the way I would sum up his qualities at the time was he was very admirable. Even before things got bigger, I hadn’t met that many guys who understood or who were as passionate about the grunge era, or cult bands, cult movies, as I was. For me, it was a lifestyle and a way of life. Living off the grid was important to me, not having much to do with people I didn’t feel I had a lot in common with. He was exactly like that. He lived and made music in his own room for like, 10 years, and I totally related to him on that level.
“We’ve had a very tumultuous relationship. He’s a really dark character, and he has his own poetic process that’s way darker than mind, so as supportive as he has been, a lot of my energy has gone to making sure he’s in the right mindset, cause he’s really prone to long periods of quietness. He’ll go for a month being really quiet, and that’s just part of his process. I didn’t know that in the first year. But, you know, everyone’s kind of creative process is different and it changes, so, yeah. It’s been really up and down. He’ll tell you that too. Anyone who knows us, like, it’s really tumultuous. We have some different ideas about what we thing are like, credible and not credible. That can strain things. Like, he would never work with someone he thinks is an asshole, whereas if I think they’re talented but they are an asshole, I’ll probably still work with them.”

On recording Ultraviolence
“I did everything alone with people I knew this time. Lee [Foster, the general manager of New York’s Electric Lady Studios], he’s been one of my good friends for the last 10 years. I came here for Christmas and he was just like, ‘You should come down.’ He let me stay in the studio alone for four weeks. I just hired a session guitarist and a session drummer. I produced it myself. I thought I was done, but then I met Dan Auerbach at a club. It was weird, because I wouldn’t normally work with someone I didn’t know, I’m just not in that place. He was really spontaneous. He was just like, ‘We should fly to Nashville and see if we can do it.’ So I flew there with him and we just took six additional weeks and kind of redid it with his best friends. And I loved it. It was the same songs, I just redid them.”

On the album’s more rock-oriented sound…
“I love rock & roll. But I love a lot of different genres. I like country, and I’m a big jazz aficionado. Hopefully my next foray will be into jazz. I feel like I’m getting there with songs like ‘Shades of Cool’ and ‘Cruel World’ and a cover of ‘The Other Woman’ by Nina Simone. I’m inching towards what I really love, which is kind of a Chet Baker, Nina Simone-inspired sound. It’s hard to get that sound because you need great jazz musicians. I really love Dan Auerbach. I really love him. He’s been an inspiration. The way he made me feel was really different than I’ve felt in a long time, just because he made me feel like I was just a regular girl that he wanted to work with, and that was refreshing. It wasn’t like I was a big artist and he was a big artist. Sometimes he was hot, sometimes he was cold, I was just like another chick to him. He was just gonna do this thing with his friends from Brooklyn down at his house in Nashville. It was a very grounding, but also very free experience.”

On mortality…
“I was always looking for a certain group of people who really, you know, had this looming concept of mortality that was always with them, who wanted to know where we came from and why we were here. That’s why I got into metaphysics and let that infuse my art, whether I was painting or singing or just writing for fun. I think if you’re not wondering why you’re here, then, you know, we would have nothing in common. Because I wonder. Like, we’re in Brooklyn and I love the houses, I love the people, but that’s not all there is to my daily experience. I have an inner questioning about what’s it all about. The big, big picture. I’m surprised whenever I don’t get that from people. I don’t know. Maybe because the world isn’t new anymore, you know, everything has sort of been done, and there’s not that many things to experiment with, there’s not that many outlets to try because they’ve all been tried. I think it’s just 2014, it’s a time to sit back and wonder what it’s all about. It’s not a novel question, you know, but it’s just one that I wonder about.”

On finding mainstream success…
“I mean, [success] hasn’t made me satisfied, obviously. Probably could have gone a different way, then I would have felt satisfied. I definitely don’t now. I don’t think anyone really would. It’s kind of the opposite of satisfied. Writing is satisfying. Writing the record, working with Dan. That’s where the satisfaction begins and ends. That problem is really beautiful and electric and exciting. But the stuff that comes with it is not that great, right?”

 

 


lana_takeitoff_notxb4uwe.gif

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Don't know if it has been mentioned here already but I just found some kind of outtakes/ bonus questions from the interview with Fader: http://www.thefader.com/2014/06/17/love-death-and-jazz-seven-outtakes-from-our-lana-del-rey-intervie/

 

 

 

In an interview for the cover of our most recent issue (which, she told The FADER, was the longest interview she’d ever done), Lana Del Rey spoke on a number of important topics, including accusations against her of anti-feminism, a mystery illness that’s been afflicting her and the toll that career criticism has taken on her personal life. But, as with any story, not everything can fit and certain interesting bits had to be edited out. Now, on the day of the release of her new album Ultraviolence, here are seven lucky seven bonus cuts, which find Lana discussing her relationship with her boyfriend, the spirited recording process for her sophomore album and a hint at what might come next.

On making videos and DIY…

“When I was 18, I got a MacBook for the first time, which kind of changed things for me because I could record myself singing on GarageBand and start using mixed media and found footage in iMovie. I just started downloading other people’s clips from YouTube and incorporating it with my own performance. It was a time when everyone was experimenting, because the internet was still so new. But things get exposed, don’t they? Everything that’s good and fun and DIY gets blown out of the water. That’s what I’ve learned. Even recording at home, recording by yourself. You lose momentum, and people aren’t as interested in the basement tapes or the home recordings, and you move on to working with other producers, elaborating on what you started with a DIY foundation. For me, it’s like an interesting trajectory going from doing everything myself to finding people who are a lot like me and who understood that songs weren’t just traditional pop songs, but more like a psychological unraveling of a life story in song form. You have to pick people who really get it.”

On her early career…

“I did seek an indie career. I was a huge fan of Cat Power. I still have never listened to pop music. You could ask me anything, I wouldn’t know who you were talking about. It just would never happen for me, it’s just not my thing. I like older music. I really like early ’90s stuff; I really like classic rock and late ’70s. The people I liked were Father John Misty, I love Cat Power. I was more indie-inclined. I wasn’t trying to be like, an indie whatever, but I was a fan of Lou Reed. I came to New York because of Dylan. I was a real writer, you know. I was writing short stories, submitting them. Doing poetry for fun.”

On her boyfriend, Barrie-James O’Neill…

“I’m not engaged. I actually got a couple of phone calls, people saying ‘Oh, thanks for telling me.’ I was like, ‘You would know.’ But I got lucky with that one, because I had been very unlucky before. I met a person who was a much better person than I was, like had a lot of artistic integrity. He would really die before he sold out, you know. He was a lot like me, but even more strong. I would say, like, the way I would sum up his qualities at the time was he was very admirable. Even before things got bigger, I hadn’t met that many guys who understood or who were as passionate about the grunge era, or cult bands, cult movies, as I was. For me, it was a lifestyle and a way of life. Living off the grid was important to me, not having much to do with people I didn’t feel I had a lot in common with. He was exactly like that. He lived and made music in his own room for like, 10 years, and I totally related to him on that level.

“We’ve had a very tumultuous relationship. He’s a really dark character, and he has his own poetic process that’s way darker than mind, so as supportive as he has been, a lot of my energy has gone to making sure he’s in the right mindset, cause he’s really prone to long periods of quietness. He’ll go for a month being really quiet, and that’s just part of his process. I didn’t know that in the first year. But, you know, everyone’s kind of creative process is different and it changes, so, yeah. It’s been really up and down. He’ll tell you that too. Anyone who knows us, like, it’s really tumultuous. We have some different ideas about what we thing are like, credible and not credible. That can strain things. Like, he would never work with someone he thinks is an asshole, whereas if I think they’re talented but they are an asshole, I’ll probably still work with them.”

On recording Ultraviolence

“I did everything alone with people I knew this time. Lee [Foster, the general manager of New York’s Electric Lady Studios], he’s been one of my good friends for the last 10 years. I came here for Christmas and he was just like, ‘You should come down.’ He let me stay in the studio alone for four weeks. I just hired a session guitarist and a session drummer. I produced it myself. I thought I was done, but then I met Dan Auerbach at a club. It was weird, because I wouldn’t normally work with someone I didn’t know, I’m just not in that place. He was really spontaneous. He was just like, ‘We should fly to Nashville and see if we can do it.’ So I flew there with him and we just took six additional weeks and kind of redid it with his best friends. And I loved it. It was the same songs, I just redid them.”

On the album’s more rock-oriented sound…

“I love rock & roll. But I love a lot of different genres. I like country, and I’m a big jazz aficionado. Hopefully my next foray will be into jazz. I feel like I’m getting there with songs like ‘Shades of Cool’ and ‘Cruel World’ and a cover of ‘The Other Woman’ by Nina Simone. I’m inching towards what I really love, which is kind of a Chet Baker, Nina Simone-inspired sound. It’s hard to get that sound because you need great jazz musicians. I really love Dan Auerbach. I really love him. He’s been an inspiration. The way he made me feel was really different than I’ve felt in a long time, just because he made me feel like I was just a regular girl that he wanted to work with, and that was refreshing. It wasn’t like I was a big artist and he was a big artist. Sometimes he was hot, sometimes he was cold, I was just like another chick to him. He was just gonna do this thing with his friends from Brooklyn down at his house in Nashville. It was a very grounding, but also very free experience.”

On mortality…

“I was always looking for a certain group of people who really, you know, had this looming concept of mortality that was always with them, who wanted to know where we came from and why we were here. That’s why I got into metaphysics and let that infuse my art, whether I was painting or singing or just writing for fun. I think if you’re not wondering why you’re here, then, you know, we would have nothing in common. Because I wonder. Like, we’re in Brooklyn and I love the houses, I love the people, but that’s not all there is to my daily experience. I have an inner questioning about what’s it all about. The big, big picture. I’m surprised whenever I don’t get that from people. I don’t know. Maybe because the world isn’t new anymore, you know, everything has sort of been done, and there’s not that many things to experiment with, there’s not that many outlets to try because they’ve all been tried. I think it’s just 2014, it’s a time to sit back and wonder what it’s all about. It’s not a novel question, you know, but it’s just one that I wonder about.”

On finding mainstream success…

“I mean, [success] hasn’t made me satisfied, obviously. Probably could have gone a different way, then I would have felt satisfied. I definitely don’t now. I don’t think anyone really would. It’s kind of the opposite of satisfied. Writing is satisfying. Writing the record, working with Dan. That’s where the satisfaction begins and ends. That problem is really beautiful and electric and exciting. But the stuff that comes with it is not that great, right?”

 

 

 

 

 

So it looks like we're getting more music with Dan... Yaaas :godlaugh:


I AM MY ONLY GOD

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Contributors: Geordie Wood on Lana Del Rey The FADER's photo director shares how the enigmatic mega-pop star ending up rolling around in his bed in his letterman jacket.
photographer Maia Stern, Maia Stern

 

"Fuck it. Let's do it at my house."

From the magazine: ISSUE 92, June/July 2014

For The FADER’s new issue, photo editor Geordie Wood shot Lana Del Rey. Here, he shares how the enigmatic mega-pop star ended up rolling around his bed in his vintage letterman jacket. Check out the final photos right here.

Geordie Wood: We didn’t have much time to put this shoot together, so I just said “Fuck it. Let’s do it at my house.” But the whole time, I’m thinking about how huge of a pop star Lana is, and how when you have 150 million YouTube views, everything has to be tight. One of our editors, Alex Frank, got on the phone with Lana’s stylist, Johnny Blueeyes, and told him we were thinking about possibly shooting at the photographer’s house. Johnny, who has known Lana forever, immediately jumped on the idea and was like, “Hell yes! What you think about Lana is not who she is. She likes to keep things super low-key.” I spent all day Saturday cleaning the house—I vacuumed, took the rug up and threw it in the basement. I scrubbed my bathtub upstairs. The morning of the shoot, I got up and drank way too much coffee and tried to arrange my bedroom in a way that she could set up her glam squad there.

Right at 1PM, on the dot, she showed up dressed in her first look, a white T-shirt and a leather jacket. We greeted her outside and she was as chill as could be. We were able to hang out and talk for a bit. Lana and her crew were ecstatic to have the shoot in the kind of plwhere she could just get comfortable. I showed all of them around my place, which feels like a country house in the middle of Williamsburg.

We went into my office, which also serves as my closet, and I showed her where she could set up. Immediately, Lana was like, “Oh my god, look at all this stuff, I love it!” Johnny comes in, like, “Oh my god! Lana, look at this!” They start trying stuff on. They totally thought that we pulled all these racks for her to use, but it just happened to be my personal wardrobe. I’m standing there like, “Holy shit. Lana Del Rey is trying on all my clothes—this is pretty bizarre.” She really liked this jacket that I got from my grand- father in Maine and a vintage letterman jacket that I bought from a Goodwill store. Lana ended up wearing my clothes for the majority of the shoot. Somehow, through a confluence of events, I was photographing Lana Del Rey in my house, dressed in my clothes. Like, how did I get here? How did I get to this point in my life, where Lana Del Ray is sitting on my bed, wearing my jacket?

 

Just putting this here for archival purposes. Shows how down to earth Lana is.


Bury me to Bel Air.

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