Tuesday, January 15, 2019
Lana Del Rey - hope is a dangerous thing for a woman like me to have - but i have it - Single [Review]
Lana Del Rey has released a third single from her yet to be released album Norman Fucking Rockwell, and while the second single ("Venice Bitch") might have been unconventionally long, this one's title is unconventionally long, as the title is "hope is a dangerous thing for a woman like me to have - but i have it" (the title being in all lowercase letters is not an error on my part; it's actually registered as such). "hope is a dangerous thing for a woman like me to have it - but i have it" is not my favorite song released from the new album so far (as that honor goes to the aforementioned "Venice Bitch"), but it's definitely a great song nonetheless. Like "Mariners Apartment Complex" (the first single released from Norman Fucking Rockwell), the song is driven by soft piano, and Lana sings in her usual soft and slightly echoed voice. The lyrics remind me a bit of "Ride" in that they are very confessional and introspective, especially when she sings in the second verse, "...except for the stage, which I also call home." I am also reminded of "Young and Beautiful" in that both songs present a rather bleak problem but then offer a hopeful solution; such is stated directly in the title of this song, and in "Young and Beautiful," Lana sings, "Will you still love me when I'm no longer young and beautiful? I know you will." Lana refers to confessional poet Sylvia Plath in the first chorus when she sings that she has "been tearing around in my fucking nightgown, 24/7 Sylvia Plath." It's unclear what she means here - is she comparing herself to Sylvia Plath in the way that she is "tearing around" 24/7, or is she saying that she is reading Sylvia Plath 24/7? Either way, I am happy to hear a comparison to Plath as she is easily one of my favorite poets of all time, and given Plath's admitted Electra Complex (as evidenced in poems like "Daddy"), it makes a lot of sense that Lana would relate to Plath, as Lana seems to have a bit of an Electra Complex herself (as evidenced in lyrics from songs such as "Daddy Issues," "Ride," "Cola," "You Can Be the Boss," and countless others). The melody of the chorus is beautiful, and it is, as aforementioned, a great song, but I do have one potential problem with it. In the second chorus, Lana sings, "Shaking my ass is the only thing that's got this black narcissist off my back; she couldn't care less, and I never cared more, so there's no more to say about that." A few months ago, Lana and rapper Azealia Banks (with whom she had previously collaborated on a remix of "Blue Jeans") feuded over Twitter, so this part of the song could be a reference to that, although it's probably not because it would seem as if she would have written this song prior to that happening, and I wouldn't think that Lana would write such lyrics that could easily be construed as racist. At any rate, here is to hoping that news regarding Norman Fucking Rockwell - such as the album cover and/or the release date - is on the way soon!
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