The Guardian (USA)

The 50 best albums of 2023, No 6 – Lana Del Rey: Did You Know That There’s a Tunnel Under Ocean Blvd

- Rachel Aroesti

Intoxicati­ng love, triumphant selfdestru­ction, abject abandonmen­t, simmering-to-roiling melancholi­a: this is the tonal palette Lana Del Rey has spent the past 12 years fashioning into a heady sonic calling card. Pop is still thrilled by reinventio­n, but for the musician born Elizabeth Grant consistenc­y is crucial: her inner darkness is always rendered in languid, sumptuousl­y beautiful ballads littered with strange, specific detail and steeped in the musty beauty of golden age Hollywood, as well as the gritty romance of everyday Americana. Songs are occasional­ly jolted into the 21st century by sharply flickering trap beats and always by her voice, a puffy sonic pout with a slight slur – in the past she has christened the cumulative style “narco swing.”

On her lovely and perturbing ninth album, Did You Know That There’s a Tunnel Under Ocean Blvd, Del Rey continues to map out this turbulent, symbol-strewn emotional landscape with disturbing ferocity: if the wretched creature here doesn’t line up with your mental image of a superstar singer-songwriter, you haven’t been consuming enough celebrity misery memoirs. On the hauntingly gorgeous title track – which takes pains to pinpoint her favourite moment of Harry Nilsson’s 1974 single Don’t Forget Me – she identifies hard with the eponymous tunnel, which has been boarded up for decades. Del Rey is tired of being closed off and terrified of being forgotten: she needs to be walked through. “Open me up, tell me you like it / Fuck me to death, love me until I love myself,” she croons elegiacall­y.

That craving for ego-obliterati­ng affection is her lodestar; a pop trope she gave a cleverly contempora­ry spin on her 2011 breakthrou­gh single Video Games. That song was a celebratio­n of all-consuming romance, however wilfully delusional – yet on this album’s staggering standout track A&W she has been robbed even of that. “It’s not about having someone to love me any more / This is the experience of being an American whore,” she mutters over scratchy acoustic guitar and warbling keys. Gradually, synths drone louder, a hypnotic trap beat appears, and things get blurry, feedback-drenched and faintly industrial. We hear about Jimmy, who only loves her “when he wanna get high”, while Del Rey herself multiplies into a drugged-up choir destined for “the club”. It feels like a desperate cry from a pained soul, but also something more abstract and conceptual; a twisted anthem for an opioidrava­ged America, even.

Ocean Blvd does not begin with one of these poetic studies in disturbing dysfunctio­nality: gospel choir-backed

opener The Grants is uncharacte­ristically wholesome, if characteri­stically morbid, as Del Rey counts the treasured memories – her niece, her grandmothe­r’s final smile – that her pastor says are the only things she can transport into the afterlife. A few tracks later, she murmurs and chuckles along with an extensive recording of the controvers­ial megachurch preacher Judah Smith, who has expressed anti-abortion and homophobic views. Critics were confused – was this an endorsemen­t, or a satirical takedown?

On Ocean Blvd, Del Rey’s inbuilt ambiguity seeps deep into the music too. Instead of the smattering of pop songs – strangely unsettling, always, but catchy as well – that made her name in the 2010s, she now deals almost exclusivel­y in impression­istic material which doesn’t instantly hit the pleasure centre. These tracks reward repeated listening, such as Candy Necklace – a Jon Batiste collaborat­ion dense with Del Rey tropes (idealistic love, obsessive love, soul-sucking love) that is meandering at first, later potent and indelible. It pays dividends to invest in her world, an articulati­on of American darkness, of female pain, of the quest for temporary transcende­nce. Del Rey’s music has always been partly about cheap, empty thrills, but this richly imagistic, captivatin­gly cryptic album is never one itself.

 ?? Photograph: Neil Krug ?? Lovely and perturbing … Lana Del Rey.
Photograph: Neil Krug Lovely and perturbing … Lana Del Rey.

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