Trash Magic 28,435 Posted September 25, 2015 This could have been on Born To Die 0 Quote "It's 2011, and we should all be aware of exactly how fast technology is developing" - Lana Del Rey Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
GodBlessMe 2,141 Posted October 6, 2015 It never was about the money or the troubles 0 Quote I AM MY ONLY GOD Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
May 13,312 Posted October 6, 2015 It never was about the money or the troubles it's definitely 'drugs' imo 5 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
whothrowsashoe 254 Posted October 13, 2015 OMG IS DEAD long live oh my lana! 0 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
slang 1,532 Posted November 20, 2015 Here's an alternative interpretation of Religion. Well this is just for fun, of course. So in this interview http://thequietus.com/articles/07106-lana-del-rey-interview <<<<<<<<<< thequietus quote>>>>>>>>>> Interviewer: You also told Pitchfork that God has saved your life a million times, which strikes me as in opposition to your music. Because, in films based in small town America, religion is frequently a patriarchal, repressive and evil presence, with the archetype you portray acting as a force in subverting it. LDR: I think there’s a division of organised religion similar to what you’ve described. But where I’m concerned, my understanding of God has come from my own personal experiences… because I was in trouble so many times in New York that if you were me, you would believe in God too. When things get bad enough, your only resort is to lie in bed and start praying. I dunno about congregating once a week in a church and all that, but when I heard there is a divine power you can call on, I did. I suppose my approach to religion is like my approach to music - I take what I want and leave the rest. Interviewer: What kind of ‘trouble’? LDR: Any and all. When I was in New York I had nowhere to live, and I was trying to find a way to be a musician… Just trying to survive, which is fucking hard by the way. So I got myself into a lot of situations I didn’t plan on. [Pauses] I think what I was going for was something beautiful, but I kinda got myself into trouble along the way. Sorry, that’s pretty vague. <<<<<<<< endQuote>>>>>>>>>>> So maybe 'Religion' really is just about her relationship to religion. (I'll call that interpretation B) and not her devotion to some guy (interpretation A). So when she sings: "It never was about the money or the drugs For you there's only love For you there's only love It never was about the party or the clubs For you there's only love Cause you're my religion You're how I'm living When all my friends say I should take some space Well I can't envision, that for a minute When I'm down on my knees, you're how I pray I need your love I need your love I need your love" She is singing about partaking in a dangerous lifestyle, which is, in fact, the thing her friends warn her to "take some space" from, but that she won't do that, and that multiple divine interventions have saved her ("You're how I'm living"). So when she sings "For you there's only love", 'you' is a reference to Jesus or God. Then there's that line about being "down on my knees". Provocative yes, but being down on ones knees is also the posture of begging (e.g., "save my ass, please"). BTW, Nicole Dollanganger has an earlier song called "700 Club", which is topically the same as Religion, under interpretation A. ND's song is certainly good enough to have influenced LDR (and Nicole also has a "knees" line too, and the contrast between hers and LDR's is interesting). Here are the lyrics from Nicole's bandcamp page: http://nicoledollanganger.bandcamp.com/album/ode-to-dawn-wiener-embarrassing-love-songs 700 Club virgin mary, jesus christ think i just found the light in your eyes think i just became as religious as they come i think i just found god dumb founded by the glow of your gold halo oh god i can't believe i'm staring at a living angel give me a bible, i'll put my hand on it give me a pen to join the 700 club baptisms baby, dip me in the lake pour the holy water i'll drink the whole cup cause i never believed there was a heaven til i found you and i never prayed [like] the church always told me to but now you can count on me to get on my knees for you virgin mary, jesus christ who would have thought all those church signs were right? the lord did come and he is my savior i'm a good girl now i'm a believer i don't have blind faith cause i've got proof i know angels are real now that i've found you For me, there is no Interpretation B for 700 Club; it's entirely unambiguous, imo. Yet 700 club has all sorts of references to religion in it: artifacts, organizations, ceremonies, major players. 'Religion', on the other hand, has virtually no such direct references, although (for me) 'Religion' has an intro verse reminiscent of the ideas of "total depravity" and "predestination", which I got from the wikipedia page on Calvinism, which is a form of Christian religious thought. I also get "paradise" references, in the later versus, in terms of being safe (invulnerable to storms) and happy (no need to survive, just play). 5 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
delreyfreak 5,342 Posted November 21, 2015 Posted this on the "Best LDR Musical Moment" thread, but thought I'd post it here too: The pre-chorus of Religion slays me every time. Overall, the song isn't as good as some of the others on Honeymoon, but that pre-chorus just hits me every time, it's emotional and moving and I feel like it's one of the first times where she's literally said that she doesn't care about the money, the partying & the good life in general, but more about the love she felt. Like it's a nice contrast after so many songs like National Anthem ("money is the anthem of success" among many other similar references), Money Power Glory (even if it was sarcastic), Bel Air (an affluent area), Cola ("I wear my diamonds on Skid Road - showing off her wealth to a poor neighbourhood), Million Dollar Man ("one for the money"), Off to the Races (all the casino references), etc. which all focus on how important money/wealth is to her. Idk, that part of Religion just always gets me. Such poignant lyricism and an emotional melody. 1 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
WaitForLife 5,241 Posted November 21, 2015 now my little bit of love for this song is gone 0 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Moon Driver 226 Posted November 21, 2015 i think that the lyrics of this song is ambiguous maybe for her religion is her lover and her lover is like god (who she follows always) or it's just god who knows... 1 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Lad 8,801 Posted November 22, 2015 I feel like she wanted to do something like Leonard Cohen's "Hallelujah" for this song. I've had this thought sitting around in my head for a while. 2 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Jazzmin 302 Posted May 4, 2016 BTW, Nicole Dollanganger has an earlier song called "700 Club", which is topically the same as Religion, under interpretation A. ND's song is certainly good enough to have influenced LDR (and Nicole also has a "knees" line too, and the contrast between hers and LDR's is interesting). Here are the lyrics from Nicole's bandcamp page: http://nicoledollanganger.bandcamp.com/album/ode-to-dawn-wiener-embarrassing-love-songs 700 Club [the lyrics] You beat me to it! (which comes as no surprise if I get myself to post several months after the release ; the fact that I respond to an old post may also seem to make no sense but it's such nutritional food for thought so...) I know the down-on-my-knees thing might seem a very plain double entendre which didn't necessarily need to have been written by a lyrical genius but in both songs the writers made great use of it IMHO. And yeah, it never ceases to amaze me how many phrases and motifs ND & LDR have in common. They both quote the very same song, the Americana imaginary, which Lana's so infatuated with, is also woven into Nicole's newest album. Although I highly doubt Nicole could've influenced Lana - maybe I just don't stay up-to-date with things... but well, as far as I know, Lana has never ever hinted that she'd stumbled upon the skeletal lullabies of a certain Stouffville angel. And she would have if it were the case. After all, that woman loves her "masters of every genre", hardly ever mentions anyone else (does she ever?), doesn't get tired of the first pages of "Lolita" despite having read them umpteen times (a fact mentioned roughly halfway through the broadcast) so I think she mostly plays the same records over and over again (can't find a proof but I guess you can see the logic of that, given her admiration for Kurt Cobain or Elvis), which in turn makes me suppose Lana won't be particularly keen on trawling the Internet on the lookout for as-yet-unknown singers. Or up-and-coming ones, for that matter. The other way round then? But Nicole sang "he hit me and it felt like a kiss" before Lana did! So I'd rather put it down to the purely coincidental affinity of their souls, pretentious as it sounds. Here's an alternative interpretation of Religion. Well this is just for fun, of course. So in this interview http://thequietus.com/articles/07106-lana-del-rey-interview <<<<<<<<<< thequietus quote>>>>>>>>>> Interviewer: You also told Pitchfork that God has saved your life a million times, which strikes me as in opposition to your music. Because, in films based in small town America, religion is frequently a patriarchal, repressive and evil presence, with the archetype you portray acting as a force in subverting it. LDR: I think there’s a division of organised religion similar to what you’ve described. But where I’m concerned, my understanding of God has come from my own personal experiences… because I was in trouble so many times in New York that if you were me, you would believe in God too. When things get bad enough, your only resort is to lie in bed and start praying. I dunno about congregating once a week in a church and all that, but when I heard there is a divine power you can call on, I did. I suppose my approach to religion is like my approach to music - I take what I want and leave the rest. Interviewer: What kind of ‘trouble’? LDR: Any and all. When I was in New York I had nowhere to live, and I was trying to find a way to be a musician… Just trying to survive, which is fucking hard by the way. So I got myself into a lot of situations I didn’t plan on. [Pauses] I think what I was going for was something beautiful, but I kinda got myself into trouble along the way. Sorry, that’s pretty vague. <<<<<<<< endQuote>>>>>>>>>>> So maybe 'Religion' really is just about her relationship to religion. (I'll call that interpretation B) and not her devotion to some guy (interpretation A). So when she sings: "It never was about the money or the drugs For you there's only love For you there's only love It never was about the party or the clubs For you there's only love Cause you're my religion You're how I'm living When all my friends say I should take some space Well I can't envision, that for a minute When I'm down on my knees, you're how I pray I need your love I need your love I need your love" She is singing about partaking in a dangerous lifestyle, which is, in fact, the thing her friends warn her to "take some space" from, but that she won't do that, and that multiple divine interventions have saved her ("You're how I'm living"). So when she sings "For you there's only love", 'you' is a reference to Jesus or God. Then there's that line about being "down on my knees". Provocative yes, but being down on ones knees is also the posture of begging (e.g., "save my ass, please"). Did you notice that she uses the very same concept in "Bad Disease"? "I got a bad disease / It's got me down on my knees" In that context her posture comes across as a scarcely erotic one. It's more, yeah, like you said, begging, I'd even risk - humiliation. Especially that a moment earlier she sings: "Oh my god", taking on a very desperate tone like in "The Blackest Day". In my view, this little common figure of speech perfectly reflects "the depths of utter desperation" she's going through in the song, when uttered by her emotional voice. 4 Quote And the wind I know it’s cold Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
13bitches 6,177 Posted August 3, 2018 A song! 0 Quote If by not 'up to par' you mean distilling the worst elements that only kind of work in songs, sure. I could put a dictionary audiobook on shuffle and put it to an instrumental of old money and some of y'all would still be saying it's 50/50 lmfao. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
clementines 9,901 Posted August 3, 2018 imagine what this demo sounds like, i imagine she sang it super high with basic and raw production 1 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
YourGirl666 13,252 Posted November 8, 2021 This song is so underrated. I love how it can be about blowjobs, God, a lover... we'll never know. The final chorus and post chorus part is an album highlight. I can totally see a STINT demo existing, with a similar sound to the God Knows one. I wish we had a live performance too 0 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
blackenedrussianpoetry 2,488 Posted December 30, 2023 The second pre chrous sounds like “with you” not “for you” repeated… after hearing it clear with earphones 1 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Embach 43,625 Posted December 30, 2023 Oh how I adore Religion. It's so sensual but so soft and warm. I love how honest she is in the lyrics and I love how the guitars blend with soft beats in the chorus too. And the beautiful siren-y noises in the background when she says "Hallelujah, I need your love", sounds so heavenly. One of her best songs for sure! 1 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites