Chemtrails Over The Country Club Lana Del Rey
Album info
Album-Release:
2021
HRA-Release:
19.03.2021
Album including Album cover
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- 1 White Dress 05:33
- 2 Chemtrails Over The Country Club 04:31
- 3 Tulsa Jesus Freak 03:35
- 4 Let Me Love You Like A Woman 03:21
- 5 Wild At Heart 04:06
- 6 Dark But Just A Game 03:55
- 7 Not All Who Wander Are Lost 04:07
- 8 Yosemite 05:04
- 9 Breaking Up Slowly 02:57
- 10 Dance Till We Die 04:01
- 11 For Free 04:11
Info for Chemtrails Over The Country Club
Following the success of her 2019 GRAMMY®-nominated album Norman Fucking Rockwell, Lana has announced that March 19th, 2021 is the official release date for her highly anticipated seventh studio album Chemtrails Over the Country Club.
"Chemtrails Over the Country Club" is the seventh studio album by American singer-songwriter Lana Del Rey. The album was produced by Del Rey and Jack Antonoff,[6][7] with additional producers Rick Nowels[6] and Nikki Lane. A cover of Joni Mitchell's 1970 song "For Free", featuring American singer-songwriters Zella Day and Weyes Blood, is included in the album.
In a September 2020 interview with Interview magazine, Del Rey stated that the lyrics of the album pertain to her "stunning girlfriends" and "beautiful siblings" ("who so much of the album is about"), and mentioned "wanting so much to be normal and realizing that when you have an overactive, eccentric mind, a record like Chemtrails is just what you're going to get." A February 2021 interview with Del Rey, for the April 2021 issue of music magazine Mojo, stated "In 2021, [Chemtrails over the Country Club] opens a sunnier chapter in [Del Rey's] controversial roman-à-clef, and folk legend Joan Baez advocates her acceptance in the pantheon", adding that the album "appears to reveal a more vulnerable Del Rey" who is "lighter on the LA menace" and "more innocently emotional" than in her previous work.
Lana Del Rey
Lana Del Rey
makes atmospheric, orchestral, retro-'60s-sounding pop that showcases her torchy image and sensuous singing style. A native of Lake Placid, New York, Del Rey released both the "Kill Kill" single and a 2010 debut album under her given name, Lizzy Grant, tagging the album "a.k.a. Lana Del Rey." It would be a few years before Grant would undergo a complete transformation into her alter ego, modeling the Lana Del Rey persona into a Hollywood pop femme fatale character. A video for the single "Video Games" appeared online in August of 2011 and drew considerable buzz, as did a secret show she performed at Brooklyn's Glasslands Gallery that September. Del Rey's EP, featuring the songs "Video Games" and "Blue Jeans," was released in fall 2011.
Amidst a heavy dose of hype, her debut album Born to Die was announced by Interscope for release early the following year. Del Rey cemented the anticipation around the album with an appearance on Saturday Night Live, becoming the first artist since Natalie Imbruglia in 1998 to perform on the show before the release of her debut album. Born to Die hit number one in several European countries, reached number two on the U.S. charts, and eventually sold several million copies worldwide. By the end of 2012, Del Rey had released her next work, a mini-album titled Paradise, with a trailer single called "Ride." Songs from Paradise also found their way into the soundtrack of Tropico, a short film Del Rey worked on in collaboration with director Anthony Mandler. The strangely psychedelic take on biblical themes premiered at the Cinerama Dome in Hollywood in early December before being released online. The year 2014 saw the release of a much-anticipated Born to Die follow-up in the form of Ultraviolence, a somewhat darker and more mature look into Del Rey's sound produced by the Black Keys' Dan Auerbach.
This album contains no booklet.