


And though the lyrics vary, being infatuated emotionally and physically with her unnamed bad boys, and only being tolerated in return. Discussion in Pop & Justice started by michaelrose, May 20, 2017. “golden grill,” “full time daddy” and “gangsta” are just some of the phrases that resurface in her work. Lana Del Rey/Lizzy Grant Unreleased Material. Listening to the unreleased songs, it is also fun to pick up on her phrases that come up in her mainstream albums, and other unreleased tracks. “Queen of Disaster” doesn’t make me happy listening to it, it makes me excited! It is a track that pumps you up into the exciting state of the early stages of a crush. What I love about her music is that she can highlight such starkly different emotions clearly about the same subject matter. It is more upbeat about the highs of loving the bad boy she “always dreamed of”. “Queen of Disaster” is also highlight of her unreleased collection. This one in particular is as powerful as it is gut-wrenching as she compares her love to an addiction of her own. It exemplifies not only her themes of addiction and unhealthy relationships, but how with only one or two listens, it is easy to sing along, and anticipate the lyrics that appear to flow naturally. “Velvet Crowbar” is among my favorites from her hundreds of unreleased songs. She is often made fun of for her cries for Daddy. She sings of destructive love with addicts, where her discography goes through the manic highs and lows of unstable and dangerous lovers. Her themes and sound are reminiscent of the 1950s-60s Americana. It is in Lana’s earlier work that you can truly appreciate her range, going from high pitched “Lolita lost in the hood” to deep sultry cries.
LANA DEL REY UNRELEASED LIZZY GFRANT ARCHIVE
While Lana Del Rey has been mainstream since her song and video for “Video Games” became a YouTube sensation in 2011, it is her unreleased and leaked songs from before she was discovered which exemplify her talent more so than her albums Born To Die and Ultraviolence. Her sound archive goes back as far as 2005 when she was Lizzy Grant, before fully adopting her current persona.
