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Norman Fucking Rockwell!

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Lmarmy (talk | contribs) at 12:17, 18 September 2019 (→‎Charts: Added. Last weeks publishing doesn’t seem to have the charts attached so I was unable to add positions then. This week it has worked like normal, so I’ve added the peak position based on the information from that.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Norman Fucking Rockwell!
Studio album by
ReleasedAugust 30, 2019
Recorded2016 – June 2019
Studio
Various
    • Conway (Los Angeles, CA)
    • House of Breaking Glass (Seattle, WA)
    • Westlake (Los Angeles, CA)
    • Henson (Los Angeles, CA)
    • Electric Lady (New York, NY)
    • Gold Tooth (Los Angeles, CA)
    • SARM (London, England)
    • Rough Customer (Brooklyn, NY)
    • Valentine (Los Angeles, CA)
    • Hampstead (London, England)
    • Sunset Banana Split (Los Angeles, CA)
Genre
Length67:38
Label
Producer
Lana Del Rey chronology
Lust for Life
(2017)
Norman Fucking Rockwell!
(2019)
White Hot Forever[1]
(2020)
Alternative cover
File:Norman Fucking Rockwell Vinyl Cover.jpg
Urban Outfitters exclusive vinyl cover
Singles from Norman Fucking Rockwell
  1. "Mariners Apartment Complex"
    Released: September 12, 2018
  2. "Venice Bitch"
    Released: September 18, 2018
  3. "Hope Is a Dangerous Thing for a Woman Like Me to Have – but I Have It"
    Released: January 9, 2019
  4. "Doin' Time"
    Released: May 17, 2019
  5. "The Greatest"
    Released: September 13, 2019

Norman Fucking Rockwell! is the sixth studio album and fifth major-label record by American singer Lana Del Rey. It was released on August 30, 2019, by Polydor and Interscope Records.[2][3] The album was primarily produced by Del Rey and Jack Antonoff, with additional contributions from Zach Dawes, Andrew Watt and longtime Del Rey collaborator Rick Nowels.[4][5] Musically, Norman Fucking Rockwell! features a soft rock sound consisting of psych-rock jams and piano ballads,[6] and features references to various classic rock artists.[7]

The first singles from the album, "Mariners Apartment Complex" and "Venice Bitch", were released in September 2018,[8] followed by "Hope Is a Dangerous Thing for a Woman Like Me to Have – but I Have It" and "Doin' Time" in 2019.[9]

Background

Del Rey announced she had begun working on a follow up material to 2017's Lust for Life in January 2018. Del Rey confirmed she had been working on songs including one titled 'Bartender', but did not know if it would be featured on an album.[10] In September 2018, Del Rey revealed that the album was nearly complete, and that she had recorded eleven tracks for it.[11] In a September 2019 livestream on Instagram, Del Rey announced that the album was almost named Bird World.[12]

Composition

FLOOD Magazine described the album's sound as "a mellow soft rock" and noted that Del Rey's improved lyrics tackle larger themes than her previous work.[13] According to critics, Norman Fucking Rockwell! features "psych-rock jams" and piano-based ballads.[6][14] Consequence of Sound described the record as featuring "psych-pop lullabies, tales of complicated, consuming romantic love, and overt odes to the tarnished dream of California."[15] It has been characterised as a "pop classic",[16] as well as embodying folk rock,[17][18] and existing somewhere between the desert rock and "minimalist" trip hop of Del Rey's previous efforts.[19]

The album features a strong influence from '70s classic rock.[7] Kitty Empire of The Observer noted that "strings and synth washes soundtrack multiple love songs", and also noted several classic rock references throughout the album, including Neil Young's "Cinnamon Girl", Crosby, Stills, & Nash, and Led Zeppelin's Houses of the Holy.[20] Rob Sheffield of Rolling Stone noted the album's "Laurel Canyon '70s soft-rock fantasies", including references to Joni Mitchell and the Eagles.[16]

Release and promotion

The album's cover art, release date, and track listing were announced by Del Rey on July 31, 2019.[21] The cover art features Del Rey and Duke Nicholson—actor Jack Nicholson's grandson—posing on a sailboat, with the album title and Del Rey's initials written in a comic-inspired style.[22] The photo was taken by Del Rey's sister, photographer Chuck Grant.[23] The following day, Del Rey released an album trailer.[24] On August 2, Urban Outfitters announced an exclusive vinyl of the album featuring an alternative album artwork.[25] The alternative cover was also shot by Chuck Grant.[26]

Throughout 2018, Del Rey shared snippets via social media of several songs intended for the album, including "Happiness Is a Butterfly",[27] "How to Disappear",[28] and "Cinnamon Girl".[29] She performed "How to Disappear" on October 29 at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, debuting the full song for the first time.[30] A trailer for the album was released on August 1, 2019. It features three of the album's singles—"Doin' Time", "Mariners Apartment Complex", and "Venice Bitch"—as well as the title track.[31] On August 22, 2019, "Fuck It, I Love You" and "The Greatest" were released as promotional singles along with a double music video. The music video runs at 9:19 minutes long, with the same shoot as the album trailer.

Singles

"Mariners Apartment Complex" was released as the album's first single on September 12, 2018.[32] The following week, on September 18, Del Rey released the second single "Venice Bitch" and revealed the album title.[33] "Hope Is a Dangerous Thing for a Woman Like Me to Have – but I Have It" followed as the third single on January 9, 2019.[34] Del Rey released a cover of Sublime's "Doin' Time" on May 17, 2019, for a documentary about the band.[35] It also served as the fourth single from the album.

Tour

On August 1, 2019, Del Rey announced two legs of a tour in promotion of Norman Fucking Rockwell!. The first leg is set to take place in North America in the fall of 2019,[36] and the second in Europe in early 2020.[37]

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
AnyDecentMusic?8.5/10[38]
Metacritic87/100[39]
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[7]
Consequence of SoundA−[15]
Entertainment WeeklyB[40]
The Guardian[41]
The Observer[20]
The Independent[19]
NME[42]
Pitchfork9.4/10[18]
Rolling Stone[16]
Slant Magazine[14]

Norman Fucking Rockwell! was met with widespread critical acclaim upon release. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, the album received an average score of 87 based on 25 reviews, indicating "universal acclaim",[43] making this Del Rey's best-reviewed album to date.

Jenn Pelly of Pitchfork wrote that the album "establishes [Del Rey] as one of America’s greatest living songwriters".[18] In his review for Rolling Stone, Rob Sheffield wrote that "the long-awaited Norman Fucking Rockwell is even more massive and majestic than everyone hoped it would be. Lana turns her fifth and finest album into a tour of sordid American dreams, going deep cover in all our nation's most twisted fantasies of glamour and danger."[16] He concluded that Del Rey "has finally made her pop classic."[16] In a five-star review for NME, Rhian Daly called the album "nothing short of stunning."[42] Kristel Jax of Now wrote that "Del Rey has shifted her kitschy patriotic fixation, dropping her flag-draped persona and making peace with a more complex, dystopian reality", also giving the album five stars.[44] For Slant Magazine, Sal Cinquemani described the album as being "a heady collection of psych-rock and piano dirges that pour into each other and rarely shift tempo from track to track" as well as "frank assessments of the psychic effects of a world spiraling into chaos."[14] Also writing positively, Alexandra Pollard of The Independent wrote that "The album is sultry and soporific, sitting somewhere between the minimalist trip-hop of Del Rey’s early days, and the scuzzy desert rock she has toyed with over the years," and concluded that "This is Del Rey at her most assertive."[19] In his 'premature evaluation' for Stereogum, Tom Breihan wrote that the album is "a beautiful opus for a new dark age — a fond look back at the world we just wrecked", calling it "yoga music for the apocalypse."[45]

In a more mixed review, Alex Petridis of The Guardian described the album as "an alternately beguiling and frustrating experience", concluding that despite Del Rey's evident talent, "it’s hard not to wish that she would broaden her perspective, adopt a different persona, shake things up a little."[41] Neil McCormick of The Daily Telegraph similarly wrote that the album "reveals Del Rey to be something of a one trick pony, but what a beautiful trick it is."[46]

Commercial performance

In the United States, Norman Fucking Rockwell! debuted at number three on the Billboard 200 with 104,000 album-equivalent units, of which 66,000 were pure album sales, making it Del Rey's sixth US top five album.[47] In its second week, the album dropped to number nine with 35,000 units.[48]

In the United Kingdom, the album debuted at number one with 31,539 copies, becoming her best first week sales in the country since Ultraviolence.[49][50] Norman Fucking Rockwell! became Lana Del Rey's fourth number one album in the UK tying Taylor Swift as the female artist with the most solo number one albums in the UK during the 2010s.[51] In France, the album sold 8,000 copies in its first week, 800 more than Lust For Life's first week.[52]

Track listing

No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."Norman Fucking Rockwell"
  • Antonoff
  • Del Rey
4:08
2."Mariners Apartment Complex"
  • Del Rey
  • Antonoff
  • Antonoff
  • Del Rey
4:06
3."Venice Bitch"
  • Del Rey
  • Antonoff
  • Antonoff
  • Del Rey
9:38
4."Fuck It, I Love You"
  • Del Rey
  • Antonoff[b]
  • Antonoff
  • Del Rey[b]
3:38
5."Doin' Time"
3:17
6."Love Song"
  • Del Rey
  • Antonoff
  • Antonoff
  • Del Rey
3:49
7."Cinnamon Girl"
  • Del Rey
  • Antonoff
  • Antonoff
  • Del Rey
5:00
8."How to Disappear"
  • Del Rey
  • Antonoff
  • Antonoff
  • Del Rey
3:48
9."California"
  • Dawes
  • Antonoff
  • Del Rey
5:05
10."The Next Best American Record"
  • Nowels
  • Kieron Menzies
  • Dean Reid
  • Mighty Mike[a]
5:49
11."The Greatest"
  • Del Rey
  • Antonoff
  • Antonoff
  • Del Rey
5:00
12."Bartender"
  • Del Rey
  • Nowels
  • Del Rey
  • Nowels
4:23
13."Happiness Is a Butterfly"
  • Del Rey
  • Antonoff
  • Nowels
  • Antonoff
  • Del Rey
  • Nowels[a]
4:32
14."Hope Is a Dangerous Thing for a Woman Like Me to Have – but I Have It"
  • Del Rey
  • Antonoff
  • Antonoff
  • Del Rey
5:24[c]
Total length:67:38

Notes

  • ^[a] signifies an additional producer
  • ^[b] On digital versions of the album, "Fuck It, I Love You" is credited as written by Del Rey, Antonoff, Louis Bell and Andrew Wotman; and produced by Antonoff, Watt and Bell.[53]
  • ^[c] On physical versions of the album, "Hope Is a Dangerous Thing for a Woman Like Me to Have – but I Have It" includes an outro and is 5:58 in length.
  • All track titles are stylized in sentence case, except "Cinnamon Girl" and "The Next Best American Record" which are stylized in title case, and "Hope Is a Dangerous Thing for a Woman Like Me to Have – but I Have It" in all lowercase.[54]

Credits and personnel

Charts

Chart (2019) Peak
position
Argentine Albums (CAPIF)[55] 1
Australian Albums (ARIA)[56] 4
Austrian Albums (Ö3 Austria)[57] 7
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Flanders)[58] 2
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Wallonia)[59] 3
Canadian Albums (Billboard)[60] 3
Czech Albums (ČNS IFPI)[61] 4
Danish Albums (Hitlisten)[62] 3
Dutch Albums (Album Top 100)[63] 4
Estonian Albums (Eesti Ekspress)[64] 1
Finnish Albums (Suomen virallinen lista)[65] 6
French Albums (SNEP)[66] 4
German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[67] 5
Hungarian Albums (MAHASZ)[68] 15
Irish Albums (IRMA)[69] 2
Italian Albums (FIMI)[70] 5
New Zealand Albums (RMNZ)[71] 5
Norwegian Albums (VG-lista)[72] 2
Polish Albums (ZPAV)[73] 4
Scottish Albums (OCC)[74] 1
South Korean Albums (Gaon)[75] 83
Spanish Albums (PROMUSICAE)[76] 2
Swedish Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[77] 2
Swiss Albums (Schweizer Hitparade)[78] 1
UK Albums (OCC)[79] 1
US Billboard 200[47] 3
US Top Alternative Albums (Billboard)[80] 1

References

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External links