Lana Del Ray Aka Lizzy Grant



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  1. Songs By Lana Del Rey
  2. Lana Del Ray Aka Lizzy Grant Vinyl
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  4. Lana Del Ray Aka Lizzy Grant Download

With her 'debut single' Video Games, Lizzy Grant (aka Lana Del Rey) served notice that the world of soulful pop had a new queen, and she was going to be huge. That song is one of my favourites from the last few years and it sent me on a mission to track down anything else I could from this artist. #lana del rey #ldr #lizzy grant #lana del ray a.k.a. Lizzy grant #lana del ray aka lizzy grant #this album is underrated #i love it just as much as born to die tbh #.ldr #mine 67 notes lyingfigure. Lizzy Grant - Amazon.com Music. 4.7 out of 5 stars 782. Special offers and product promotions. Check Out Our Turntable. Lizzy Grant is a former stage name of Lana Del Rey. Under the Lizzy Grant name, she uploaded multiple original songs to her social media accounts on platforms such as Myspace and YouTube. In 2007, 5 Points Records talent scout Van Wilson found Lizzy performing at a songwriting conference in Brooklyn and introduced her to David Nichtern. Lizzy Grant is now known as Lana Del Rey. She released her EP 'Kill Kill' (consisting of Kill Kill, Yayo and Gramma (Blue Ribbon Sparkler Trailer Heaven)) in 2008, followed.

Lana Del Ray
Studio album by
ReleasedJanuary 4, 2010
Recorded2008
Length47:38
Label5 Points
ProducerDavid Kahne
Lana Del Rey chronology
Kill Kill
(2008)
Lana Del Ray
(2010)
Lana Del Rey
(2012)

Lana Del Ray[1] (alternatively written as Lana Del Ray A.K.A. Lizzy Grant)[2] is the debut studio album by American singer and songwriter Lana Del Rey.[2] The album was released digitally in the United States via the iTunes Store and Amazon by 5 Points Records on January 4, 2010 when she was known as Lana Del Ray. The record was eventually pulled from retailers soon afterwards because, according to Del Rey, the label was unable to fund it.[2] Del Rey ultimately bought back the rights to the album. After releasing Born to Die (2012) under her stage name Lana Del Rey, she expressed her wish to re-release the album.[2]

Recording and history[edit]

A brief sample of 'Kill Kill'. which combines electronica and blues rock elements.[3]
Problems playing this file? See media help.
Aka

Del Rey released a three-track extended play (EP) titled Kill Kill through 5 Points Records in October 2008, during which time she was known as Lizzy Grant.[4]David Kahne recorded the album with Del Rey over a period of three months in 2008.[5] 'Yayo' would later be re-recorded, released again, on the 'Paradise Edition' of Born to Die.[6][2] Del Rey stated that Kahne 'is known as a producer with a lot of integrity and who had an interest in making music that wasn't just pop.'[7] Her father, Robert Grant, helped with the marketing of the album,[2][8] which was available for purchase on iTunes for a brief period before being withdrawn. According to David Kahne, who produced Grant and Label owner David Nichtern, Grant bought the rights back from her label, 5 Points, as she wanted it out of circulation. In an interview, Nichtern stated: 'Her and her new manager came in and said, 'We want to get this off the market. We’re going for a completely new deal. We’ll buy you out of the deal'. So we made a separation agreement'.[9][10] In January 2012, upon the release of her major-label album, Born to Die, Del Rey stated to the BBC that she recently bought back the rights of the album and was planning on re-releasing it in the Summer of 2012.[11][12] In May 2012, she announced that the album would not be re-released that summer.[13] Del Rey did however re-record and re-release 'Yayo' on her Paradise EP.[3][11][14]

On his official website, David Kahne wrote about the recording process and the story behind the song 'Gramma' stating: 'Lizzy's Gramma is so important in her life. While we were recording, Lizzy had a picture of her Gramma holding her on her lap.[2] Lizzy was crying and her Gramma has such a sweet smile on her face, in the sun at the beach.[2] 'I don't want to think I'm bad, Gramma, just for feelin' pretty..'.[15]

Release[edit]

Del Rey and producer David Kahne recorded 13 tracks for the album in 2008.[16] Instead of releasing the material, her label put out the EP Kill Kill on October 21, 2008 under the name Lizzy Grant.[17] The standard album was digitally released on January 24, 2010 but pulled three months after. A small number of promo CDs were pressed but the album never saw a physical release.[9]

Track listing[edit]

All tracks are written by Elizabeth Grant, except where noted. All tracks produced by David Kahne.

No.TitleLength
1.'Kill Kill'3:59
2.'Queen of the Gas Station' (writers: Grant, David Kahne)3:06
3.'Oh Say Can You See'3:42
4.'Gramma (Blue Ribbon Sparkler Trailer Heaven)' (writers: Grant, Kahne)3:50
5.'For K, Pt. 2'3:26
6.'Jump'2:53
7.'Mermaid Motel'4:01
8.'Raise Me Up (Mississippi South)'4:24
9.'Pawn Shop Blues' (writers: Grant, Kahne)3:29
10.'Brite Lites'3:00
11.'Put Me in a Movie'3:15
12.'Smarty' (writers: Grant, Kahne)2:51
13.'Yayo'5:42
Total length:47:38

References[edit]

  1. ^'Lana Del Ray by Lana Del Ray – iTunes'. iTunes Store (US). Archived from the original on April 17, 2010.
  2. ^ abcdefgh'Lana Del Rey to Re-Release First Album'. Rolling Stone. January 27, 2012. Retrieved November 13, 2014.
  3. ^ abTremblay, Brea (2008). 'Lizzy Grant Interview'. Index Magazine. Retrieved April 18, 2012.
  4. ^'Kill Kill: Lizzy Grant: MP3 Downloads'. Amazon.com. Archived from the original on February 10, 2012.
  5. ^Collier, Jessica (January 28, 2010). 'Lizzy Grant aka. Lana Del Rey releases album'. Adirondack Daily Enterprise. Archived from the original on June 5, 2012. Retrieved April 18, 2012.
  6. ^'Born To Die - The Paradise Edition'. Retrieved September 24, 2012.
  7. ^Calvert, John (October 4, 2011). 'Original Sin: An Interview With Lana Del Rey'. The Quietus. Retrieved December 3, 2011.
  8. ^'Jessica Collier,: Interview: Lizzy Grant aka. Lana Del Rey releases EP'. adirondack daily enterprise.com. January 28, 2010. Archived from the original on June 5, 2012. Retrieved September 27, 2011.
  9. ^ ab'Why Lana Del Rey's First Album Disappeared'. MTV. Viacom. January 30, 2012. Archived from the original on February 2, 2012. Retrieved January 25, 2012.
  10. ^'lana del rey cover story'. Billboard. Prometheus Global Media. January 13, 2012. Retrieved May 17, 2012.
  11. ^ abYoung, Alex (January 27, 2012). 'Lana Del Rey to release 'lost album''. Consequences of Sound. Retrieved April 18, 2012.
  12. ^'love, the law, lana del rey cover story'. BBC. January 27, 2012. Retrieved May 17, 2012.
  13. ^'Lana Del Rey on World Cafe'. NPR. Retrieved October 12, 2012.
  14. ^Sturges, Fiona (January 20, 2012). 'Lana Del Rey: A beguiling beauty who's more than a one-hit wonder'. The Independent. Retrieved April 18, 2012.
  15. ^'Vincristin'.[permanent dead link]
  16. ^'Lana Del Ray* - Lana Del Ray A.K.A. Lizzy Grant'. Discogs. Retrieved 2015-12-06.
  17. ^'Lizzy Grant - Kill Kill'. Discogs. Retrieved 2015-12-06.


Songs By Lana Del Rey

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Lana_Del_Ray_(album)&oldid=981387179'

2009: young Garden State dancing queen begins making herself into This Year’s Model. “One
time I dyed my hair brown, but I got in some trouble for that.”

BY THE EDITORS, w/SARAH GRANT

This week Lana Del Rey’s “official” long-playing debut was
issued by Interscope. Titled Born to Die and
preemptively buoyed by the success
of 2011 single “Video Games” b/w “Blue Jeans,” it’s already being greeted by a
deafening, though wildly contradictory, chorus of cheers and jeers signifying
the songbird’s rapid blog-fueled ascent and the accompanying backlash.

The New York Times,
for example, last week dismissed the record as “an anticlimax” full of underwhelming
and slow-to-the-point-of-plodding tunes; the newspaper ultimately concluded, “Ms.
Del Rey has an idea about her presentation, which counts for something – to
some it counts for everything – but her singing still sounds like a road test.”
Then on Monday, erstwhile indie rock blog-turned-hipster-tastemaker Pitchforkawarded a miserly 5.5 (out of
10) rating and a rambling, navel-gazing review that focused on the record’s
inherent femininity (or lack thereof), writing that Born to Die “never allows tension or complexity into the mix, and
its take on female sexuality ends up feeling thoroughly tame. For all of its
coos about love and devotion, it’s the album equivalent of a faked orgasm – a
collection of torch songs with no fire.” Spin,
likewise, see-sawed between jargon-laden j’accuse (for not living up to the very hype that media outlets such as Spin fueled) and lyric-analysis
incoherence (the review quoted extensively from the songs, tossing around snarky
terms like “Miley Cyrus noir” while conveniently avoiding the fact that in pop
music, lyrics almost always take a back seat to the beats and the hooks – and
if you don’t believe that, try this one on for size from a few seasons ago: “She loves you yeah, yeah, yeah/ She loves
you yeah, yeah, yeah…”

“Anticlimax.” “Faked orgasm.” Wow. Why not just call the gal
a hooker and be done with it, folks.

(Aside: To
be totally fair to Spin, the review
did open up promisingly enough, with a contextual point well-worth restating.
Offered their writer, “‘Bob Dylan’ is
not his real name. The ‘Ramones’ were not related. ‘Sun Ra’ was from Alabama,
not Saturn…. Yes, Internet, and God bless you for devoting most of the past
half-year exclusively to pointing this out, Lana Del Rey is a pose, a persona,
a version 2.0, at least, the contrivance of a messy, wayward, unformed,
aspiring pop star rummaging through closets and clutching at borrowed pearls.” Keep
all that in mind, and read on.)

***

Over in Britain – where last year bloggers and critics alike
embraced Del Rey as if she were the Second Coming of Morrissey; at one point CDR
promotional copies of the aforementioned single were trading hands on eBay in
England for upwards of $125 – The
Guardian
was considerably more generous and even expressed sympathy for the
Internet barbecue Del Rey had been subjected to. Awarding the album 4 out of 5
stars, they lauded its “magnificent melodies” and hooks that “sink deep into
the listener’s skin… What it is, is beautifully turned pop music, which is more
than enough.”

Meanwhile, back in the State our very own Contributing
Editor A.D. Amorosi weighed in on Born To
Die
a couple of days ago, and he was also more forgiving with his 7-out-of-10
star review in which he first chastised the media for mounting impossible
expectations of Del Rey, then – while noting that it’s a far from perfect
record – it’s “produced with weirdly atmospheric hip hop warmth by Emile Haynie
[and] has more hits than misses and more solidly strange fabulously femme
fatale interludes than naff ones.”

Ray

Far be it from BLURT, then, to not jump on the media bandwagon as we troll for eyeballs. Mindful
that “Lana Del Rey” is an intermittent trending topic and a hot search engine
term this week, we decided to dig up an early story about Del Rey that we
published in the fall of 2009, in issue #7, as part of a series of short,
fashion-forward profiles of then-up-and-coming female musicians. At the time
Del Rey was still performing under the name Lizzy Grant and had released one
EP, Kill Kill, in 2008. Yet as the
title of the full length – Lana del Rey
aka Lizzy Grant
(Five Points Records) – that was subsequently released on
iTunes in 2009 suggests – she was already in the process of remaking herself. Interviewed
by contributor Sarah Grant (no relation), she already knew what she wanted, but
didn’t seem 100% sure of how to achieve it.

***

Lana Del Rey/Lizzy Grant
2009 Interview:

“I’m in the process of a name change,” Lizzy Grant whispers.
The transformation from New York City bar star to glamour girl “Lana Del Rey”
has not been easy for the New Jersey native, who grew up looping around The
Cyclone and idolizing Elvis like a teenager in the 1950s.

Del Rey’s October-bound album has been in the works for over
a year and a half, which has given her a chance to experiment with the sound
Hennessy name. that works for her voice. On “Yayo” she drags her airy vocals up and down the
minor scale, while slinking around in bed sheets, looking remarkably like one
of her fashion icons, the doe-eyed Tuesday Weld. A more recent recording,
“Hundred Dollar Bill,” has her sounding like a retro Gwen Stefani, singing
deadpan against a thick hip-hop beat.

When the saucy Lana Del Rey reverts back to 24-year old
Lizzy Grant, she admits to owning an embarrassing amount of self-help books:
“It’s gotten to the point where I can’t hide it anymore!” she giggles. She is
also hesitant to call herself a “blonde bombshell,” despite all her
Harlow-esque come ons. “One time I dyed my hair brown,” she says, “but I got in
some trouble for that.”

New gana songs download

***

Such prophetic words. Just the same, the David
Kahne-produced record failed to make an impact, and as every current Del Rey
profile now takes pains to point out, it was unceremoniously yanked from the
market after a couple of months. (Scroll to the bottom of this article to view
a list of early Del Rey/Grant tracks and links to downloads, courtesy the “Lana
Del Rey aka Lizzy Grant” Tumblr blog. Note that according to the BBC, Lana del Rey aka Lizzy Grant will
probably resurface officially soon, as Del Rey has recently purchased the
rights to the master tapes. “I’m re-releasing it, maybe in late summer,” she
told the BBC.)

Del Rey/Grant next basically disappeared from view, busied
herself writing new material and creating a series of quirky/charming home
music videos. After the “Video Games” song and video went viral, the rest is
history – including, it should be noted, all manner of piling on by members of
the media and blogosphere who questioned the woman’s “authenticity” and groused
about her “overnight success.” This despite the fact that Del Rey had been
performing since she was 18, had both and EP and an LP under her belt, and
evidently decided to learn from the failure of the latter and bear down on
becoming a stronger artist.

It will be awhile, of course, before she attains genuine pop
diva status (if at all), and there’s no doubt that her artistic credibility has
taken a considerable hit. The backlash already feels like overkill; even
mainstream outlets like Time and USA Today set their best assassins on Del
Rey, hot on the trail for the pungent odor of faked orgasms. The young lady may
or may not be stunned by the level of attention; she may or may not have
colluded with her handlers in shaping her current image to result in some of
the most brazen manipulation of the entertainment media we’ve witnessed in
recent years. But if she’s smart, and there’s a strong likelihood she is,
she’ll figure out a way to leverage all the attention for the long haul.

Born to Die is everywhere this week. You won’t have
any trouble locating it. Let’s rewind to Del Rey’s pre-Lana period and decide
for yourself how all that fits into the contemporary picture.

(Below image is the
actual page from issue #7 of BLURT. Note how the singer’s first name is
spelled, per her publicist at the time. By early 2010 most profiles were using
the alternate “Lizzy” spelling.)

DISCOGRAPHY & DOWNLOADS
(source: Tumblr)

Demos as Lizzy
Grant (2007-2008)

Disco (originally
billed as “Lizzy Grant and the Phenomena”)
For K Part 2 (ditto; later
featured on Lana Del Rey aka Lizzy Grant)
Elvis
Axl Rose Husband

Kill Kill (EP as Lizzy Grant, 2008 – these songs are
also on the LP)

Kill Kill
Yayo
Gramma (Blue Ribbon Sparkler
Trailer Heaven)

Lana Del Rey aka Lizzy Grant (LP, 2009)
Queen of the Gas Station
Oh Say Can You See
Jump
Mermaid Motel
Raise Me Up (Mississippi
South)
Pawn Shop Blues
Brite Lites
Put Me In A Movie
Smarty

Lana Del Ray Aka Lizzy Grant Vinyl

Born To Die (upcoming LP, 2012)
Video Games
Blue Jeans
Born To Die

Aka Lizzy Grant Download

Miscellaneous Demos and B-Sides
Lolyta
Hundred Dollar Bill
What Makes Us Girls
Driving in Cars With Boys
On Our Way
National Anthem
Kinda Outta Luck
Kinda Outta Luck (Video
Version)
You Can Be The Boss
Video Games (Video Version)
Diet Mtn. Dew
Daddy Issues (feat. Aaron
LaCrate)
Trash (Live)
End of the World (Live)

Lana Del Ray Aka Lizzy Grant Download

Photo credit (top) Edward
Smith