The Day

Who is Lana Del Rey, really?

- By CHRIS RICHARDS

Here’s a wild idea: What if Lana Del Rey is exactly who she says she is?

Her music keeps making us think otherwise. It’s still too elegant, too plush, too slippery to be real. Maybe that’s why, in concert, she likes to talk about a song after she sings it, as if to confirm that it wasn’t just a puff of Chanel No. 5 in our collective imaginatio­n.

At the Hollywood Bowl on Oct. 10, she performed “Wicked Game” with Chris Isaak. “We can’t be in the middle of Hollywood and not hear the sexiest song of all time,” Del Rey explained as Isaak exited the stage. She wasn’t thanking her guest so much as expressing her gratitude to sexiness as a sound.

Has everyone heard “Norman (Expletive) Rockwell!” by now? It’s the greatest Lana Del Rey album, dizzying and precise, unknowable and lucid, unpreceden­ted while still feeling like more of the same, genius all the way. She’s still blowing thought bubbles from the privacy of her mind into the slipstream of the American Dream, but this time around, she’s pared down the studio production and cranked up the paradox. The more beautiful her music becomes, the stranger it feels. It’s a triumph.

For years, the easiest way to reconcile the strangenes­s of Lana

Del Rey was to tell ourselves that we were listening to a persona. Here was a remote pop star dream-journaling from a perspectiv­e too fabulous to belong to an actual human being.

Del Rey has rejected that idea from the jump. When NPR published a deep, diligent, largely flattering review of her new album last month, Del Rey took issue with its mention of personae and blasted back on social media: “Never had a persona. Never needed one. Never will.” Gawkers are still gawking at that retort, but why not take her at her word? Back in 2011, at the dawn of her fame, she told Pitchfork, “I’m not trying to create an image or a persona. I’m just singing because that’s what I know how to do.”

Now she has made an album where she’s patrolling the margins of her psyche and relaying her findings, whispering hyper-intimate lullabies that can feel as exquisite and disorienti­ng as reality. She’s not a mirage. Her music isn’t a magic trick. She believes in songcraft as truth-telling. Why not believe her?

Two days after the Hollywood Bowl, Del Rey is in Santa Barbara to catch a Bob Dylan concert — partially to bask in mythologic­al music alongside family and friends, partially because “it’s good to learn from everyone who’s been doing it for so long.” But before the Pacific Ocean can pull down the sun, the 34-year-old will spend an hour inside a conference room at the Four Seasons answering questions about the creative impulse in a tone of voice that’s bright, casual, searching and sincere.

She doesn’t sound embattled. “I, maybe at one point, thought of it as being on the firing line,” she says of the skepticism she has faced over the years. “But once you’re on the line, you’re like, ‘Oh, it’s not all bad.’ ... There is kindness, and it’s not all speculatio­n.”

That’s one way to explain the flood of hot and cold unleashed upon “Born to Die,” Del Rey’s polarizing 2012 album. As pop albums go, it was difficult to hear clearly at the time. The singer’s rise out of the New York open-mic circuit and up through the industry machinery, while not atypical, had been spun into a bogus media narrative about how she wasn’t operating on her own creative volition, as if her songs had been focus-grouped into existence. On top of that, “Born to Die” landed at a time when a pop hit was expected to double as a melodic affirmatio­n, a self-esteem vitamin, a danceable pep-talk, Gaga-rahrah-rah. Del Rey was different, and so was her music. “I have a more delicate sensibilit­y,” she says. “It’s just my nature, the way I’m not fast or on fire.”

Instead, she wrote ballads about surrenderi­ng to romantic oblivion — songs that made many listeners bristle on principle, even if Del Rey was telling her truth. “It’s you, it’s you, it’s all for you,” she gushed on her breakout single “Video Games,” a self-erasing love song about a distant lover who’s more concerned with the pixels on his computer screen.

“I remember when ‘Video Games’ came out, people were like, ‘Oh my God, it’s so anti-feminist!’” Del Rey says. “‘You’re sitting and watching him play video games?’ I was like, ‘Well, I would play, too, now and then.’ And I had other stuff I was doing. I wrote a hit album! Can’t I take an hour to watch him play ‘World of Warcraft’?”

She continued to grow into her ideas while listeners demanded to know what her music meant, who it spoke for, what it stood for. Del Rey may not have answered directly, but she was listening.

“What it taught me is that they saw more,” she says. “They thought there should have been more there. Like, a different path than maybe what I was laying down.”

 ?? PHOTO BY JAY L. CLENDENIN ?? “She’s a little weird,” said Rock Hall of Famer Stevie Nicks of pal Lana Del Rey, above in Los Angeles, “and she likes being a little weird. She’s a real artist.”
PHOTO BY JAY L. CLENDENIN “She’s a little weird,” said Rock Hall of Famer Stevie Nicks of pal Lana Del Rey, above in Los Angeles, “and she likes being a little weird. She’s a real artist.”

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