We’ve ranked all nine of the singer’s albums, including her latest, Did You Know That There’s a Tunnel Under Ocean Blvd.
The album feels more like a placeholder in the singer’s discography than an audacious new chapter.
Blue Banisters further fleshes out Lana Del Rey’s increasingly colorful personal world.
The album is a compelling, if minor, chapter in the artist’s ongoing saga of fatalistic romanticism.
The album doesn’t so much subvert an idealistic notion of the American dream as perform a postmortem of it.
Lust for Life is a sprawling contemplation of Del Rey’s aesthetic and its various dissonances.
The singer releases two more songs from her upcoming album Lust for Life.
The title track from Lana Del Rey’s new album is a refreshing about-face.
Like the song itself, the single’s dreamy music video benefits from repeat visits.
The films at this year’s festival offered plenty examples of legacies lived up to and not—neglected and obsessed over.
The singer’s “Freak” video is a hazy, drug-dosed trip back to 1960s California.
For a while, Honeymoon’s lack of pretense translates as a banner strength.
As promised, the song skews more toward the slick trip-hop of Born to Die than the rootsy rock of last year’s Ultraviolence.
Lana Del Rey has unveiled the music video for the standout title track from her latest album.
The album’s earthier sound complements the Americana imagery Del Rey’s been peddling for years.
Lana Del Rey has unveiled yet another track from her new album, Ultraviolence.
It’s hard not to be seduced by both Del Rey’s hazy, misguided bliss and producer Dan Auerbach’s woozy atmospherics.
The video takes a page from Chris Isaak’s iconic, oft-emulated “Wicked Game.”
Lizzie Grant needs a vacation.
From Bowie to Madonna to Gaga, pop music has always been as much a visual medium as an aural one.