Lana Del Rey Honeymoon Work Full Album Info

A devastating confession of burnout. "I got nothing much to live for / Ever since I found my fame." It sounds like a hymn sung in a Hollywood church. The production swells with organ chords and static noise.

The 5-minute title track opens with a sample of "Swan Lake" and Lana’s layered vocals. It is a slow, creeping declaration of artistic independence. The strings are suffocatingly lush. It is the thesis statement. lana del rey honeymoon work full album

An unexpected spoken word interlude reading T.S. Eliot’s poem Burnt Norton . ("Time present and time past / Are both perhaps present in time future"). This confirms that Honeymoon is not a pop album; it is a poetry collection set to music. A devastating confession of burnout

The emotional climax. A six-minute breakup saga. The beat drops halfway through like a heart breaking in slow motion. "It's not easy for me to talk about / I have a heavy mind." This is the sound of the honeymoon ending. The 5-minute title track opens with a sample

One of the most underrated tracks. Lana compares her toxic love to a religious devotion. "You're my religion / You're how I'm living." The gospel-tinged backing vocals contrast with the industrial beat.

A Bond-theme reject (in the best way). Co-written by Rick Nowels. It is cinematic, urgent, and paranoid. "You're hard to reach / You're cold to touch." It feels like a femme fatale’s internal monologue in a spy thriller.