The cream of the Del Rey crop, ranked in order of brilliance
Alexandra Pollard
17:41 24th August 2015
  • From her very first, breakout single 'Video Games' to last week's 'High By The Beach', here's every Lana Del Rey single ranked from worst to best.

  • 16. 'Burning Desire': Channeling sultry lounge singer vibes, 'Burning Desire' layers two versions of the same melody over each other, slightly staggered, and the result is disorienting and not entirely effective. It's also all on pretty much one note, but Del Rey's vocal charisma means you just about forgive her.

  • 15. 'Ride': We'll put aside the problematic Native American headdress she wears in the video, and the three and a half minute spoken word introduction (though some of the lyrics in that are truly beautiful). After a sultry, gravelly verse and bridge, 'Ride' trips itself up by resorting to a pleasant, but ultimately generic and forgettable chorus.

  • 14. 'Dark Paradise': This is one of Del Rey's most upbeat, major key singles, and it's slightly jarring as a result. There's something unconvincing about its melody, and borderline comic about the refrain, "ah-ah-ah-ah-ah-ah, that's how you sang it." Its saving grace, though, is an infectious bridge that pops up partway through.

  • 13. 'Blue Velvet': Though its heavy use in a prominent advertising campaign threatened to dull the effect somewhat, this cover of the 1950s "doleful prom anthem" is Del Rey at her dolorous best. Bonus points for not pulling a "no homo" and changing the gender pronouns for no reason.

  • 12. 'National Anthem': Stepping Del Rey's faux-submissive persona up a notch with a sly wink to camera, 'National Anthem' begins as a fawning love song, before gleefully exposing its narrator's muddied motives: "He said to be cool but I'm already coolest / I said to get real, 'Don't you know who you're dealing with? Um, do you think you'll buy me lots of diamonds?'"

  • 11. 'Once Upon A Dream': Written for the soundtrack for Maleficent - the dark, live-action reimagining of Disney's Sleeping Beauty, which portrays the story from the perspective of the antagonist, Maleficient - Del Rey has taken her brief and run with it, creating a woozy, sinister lullaby.

  • 10. 'Ultraviolence': Borrowing a term from Anthony Burgess' A Clockwork Orange, as well a lyric from a 1963 Crystals song ("He hit me and it felt like a kiss") the album's title track manages to rhyme "violins" with "violence" and get away with it.

  • 9. 'High By The Beach': It's hard to talk about this without going off on a tangent about the incredible music video. Just when you think you've settled into the format - Del Rey writhing around on the bed and sprawling herself across the walls while a paparrazzi helicopter photographs her - she grabs a huge great rifle out of a guitar case and shoots it down in a ball of flames. All she wanted to do was get high by the beach.

  • 8. 'Video Games': From its eery, off-kilter harp introduction, it's not difficult to tell why 'Video Games' launched Lana Del Rey, with very little warning, into the world's consciousness. It's Del Rey at her languid, minimalist best, with a killer pop hook tying everything together. Although we have to say, the song's subject sounds like a scrub of the highest order.

  • 7. 'Shades Of Cool': She might be oft-praised for her low-pitched, sultry vocals, but Del Rey's never been particularly known for her range. In 'Shades Of Cool' though, her voice soars up and down the scale with an ease and purity we've never quite seen for her before.

  • 6. 'Born To Die': After a few breaths of orchestral cinematics, the song swerves instead towards hip hop samples and a glitchy drum beat, as Del Rey croons about the juxtapositions of love: "Let me kiss you hard in the pouring rain / You like your girls insane /Choose your last words / This is the last time /Cause you and I, we were born to die."

  • 5. 'Summertime Sadness': One of Del Rey's richest, both musically and thematically, singles. Her voice has a little more heft behind it, and oozes and catches like syrup laced with cyanide. Its Cedric Gervais remix - Del Rey's highest charting release to date - manages to make the song club-appropriate without sacrificing its melody or essence.

  • 4. 'West Coast': As the first song revealed from Del Rey's second album, Ultraviolence, 'West Coast' revelled in taking fans by surprise. It's dreamy, beach pop, with the first outing of the scuzzy guitars that dominate the album, and the tempo suddenly drops just as you think it's going to speed up. It's as if the song itself has just taken a massive hit from a bong as it languishes by the beach.

  • 3. 'Young and Beautiful': Del Rey's contribution to Baz Luhrmann's 2013 Great Gatsby, this song manages to be both boldly dramatic and cinematic whilst still dripping with vulnerability. She doesn't pause for a breath between "Will you still love me when I'm no longer young and beautiful?" and "I know you will, I know that you will" - as if to hesitate will betray her own uncertainty. It's an absolute triumph of a song.

When Lana Del Rey emerged, in many ways a fully-formed pop star, into the public's consciousness with 'Video Games', her arrival was met with a degree of cynicism. The general opinion, cemented by a visibly nervy appearance on SNL, was that Del Rey was not here for the long haul.

How wrong they were. Three albums, and sixteen singles later, and Del Rey is now one of the most revered pop stars on the planet. To celebrate the imminent release of Honeymoon, we've ranked every single one of her singles, from worst to best.

 


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