An early sacrifice to the music-blog gods and a bloodthirsty thing called social media, the singer and songwriter born Elizabeth Grant could have been a footnote after loaded speculation about her artifice and upbringing collided with a shaky âSaturday Night Liveâ debut in early 2012.
Instead of self-immolating, Del Rey exploded into one of the most consistent album artists and world-builders of this decade, aesthetically presaging pop musicâs â and the worldâs â turn toward opiates and apocalypse.
âNorman ____ Rockwell!,â her fifth major-label album out Friday, is packed with fiery and profane lyrics (along with an obscene title) that again explore iconographic versions of masculinity and femininity â dismantling one and fortifying the other, beginning with the opening lyric, âGoddamn, man-child.â The aggressively midtempo music is a tribute to Laurel Canyon folk and rock.
Though the album was written and produced with the pop it-man Jack Antonoff, Del Rey, who has not had a Top 40 hit in the last five years, leans into languid ballads and a humorously straight-faced Sublime cover after flirting with contemporary sounds on âLust for Lifeâ in 2017.
Providing a good idea of where her head is at these days, Del Rey, in song, also references John Lennon, Led Zeppelin, the Beach Boys, David Bowie and Crosby, Stills & Nash, while maintaining flashes of Fiona Apple and Cat Power, a spiritual forebear and recent collaborator.
Over the phone from a friendâs house in California, where she finds it easier to get things done, Del Rey, 34, spoke easily, with sly humor and many giggles, about a range of subjects, from her creative process and Antonoff to Kanye West, Donald Trump and the dearth of protest music. These are edited excerpts from the conversation.
Q: Youâve become a pop star without interacting with or sounding much like your contemporaries, but on your last album, you worked with ASAP Rocky, the Weeknd and Max Martin. Did you consciously want to pull back again?
A: No, but honestly, inside the room, with Jack, heâs so much of a large presence that he took up as much of the space as I did. It was very collaborative. The only thing I really thought about, toward the end, was that Iâd like to have a woman from the â60s just to add a little good luck magic. But I didnât even ask.
Q: What did you get out of working with Jack that you havenât with others?
A: Itâs kind of like a romance in a way, where things work out best when you really are not looking for it. I was at a party and I met him and I didnât even really want to go down to the studio, because it was winter and I was chilling. But then we wrote a song in about 40 minutes â âLove Songâ â and I was like, âYou are so good, would you mind recording me live, to no track, singing this song that Iâve journaled called âHope Is a Dangerous Thingâ?â And I really liked how he captured my voice without instruments. I thought, [expletive] it, letâs make an album.
Q: Do you have a theory as to why so many female artists are drawn to working with him?
A: I think itâs his musicianship. I know a lot of producers who canât play. He plays the sitar on one of the last things we did! I feel like what I can do in terms of grabbing a melody out of the air, he can do with a very minor chord progression and just like, mmm, magical.
Q: Is there anything intimidating about putting out a Jack-produced album at the same time as Taylor Swift?
A: Oooh. Well, it certainly makes me think more about what the [expletive] Iâm doing with my life. [Laughs]
Q: In what way?
A: Iâm mostly at the beach! So, yeah, I was like, I better leave the house and go do something. I mean [long pause, followed by a sigh]. My plan is having no plan, pretty much all the time, which actually works out very well for me. But I do have to sometimes snap out of it and be like, oh, music changes, culture changes. Sometimes people want more from you than what you are giving, so let me step up to the plate a little bit and show up for my songs. I wasnât really thinking about the Taylor album and then it came out and then I was like, âOh wow.â I didnât really realize these were a week apart.
Q: You dabble in pop, but at the same time, arenât really a part of it. How do you decide when you want to dip in, like doing the âCharlieâs Angelsâ song with Miley Cyrus and Ariana Grande?
First of all, I really, really like Ariana. I had been listening to âDangerous Womanâ a lot. I got her number at some point and we would chat. And then âThank U, Nextâ came out and I freaking loved that record. Every song, I was like, how did she write that? So when she asked me to do the âCharlieâs Angelsâ feature, I was like, âAll right, if you really want me to!â
Q: How do you feel about the state of mainstream pop right now? Is that something you keep up with â the radio, Spotify, Billboard?
A: Yeah, I love it. I donât keep up with the charts, but do I have the radio on? Ehhh. Itâs more like on Instagram, Iâll see someone have a clip of a song and then Iâll go on YouTube.
I love Billie Eilish, and I feel like Iâve been waiting for this time in pop-music culture. I personally am very discerning. I can tell if a female pop singer, for instance, has a generosity of spirit or a playful fire in her heart. With Billie, sheâs prodigious. I needed to hear one line of one melody and I just know. And then Arianaâs choices of intonation, it might not be traditional, but itâs very good. I also really love hip-hop, so seeing such an influx of little mumble rappers coming out and being so sexy and authentic â one of the little dudes wants to wear a dress onstage and everyoneâs clapping their hands like, âBravo!â
Q: Do you see a generation of younger women making music who feel influenced by you?
A: Yeah.
Q: Does that make you feel good?
A: Yeah. I mean ...
Q: Or do you feel like you started something and people are biting you?
A: I feel more good than the other way. Uh [long pause]. I just notice it and I like it. Because I like my own music. [Laughs]
Q: On âThe Greatest,â you sing about missing rock ânâ roll. Do you think rock is dead or dying?
A: Itâs more about the concept of actually just chilling and listening to music for no reason. I was thinking of when I was 19, 20, 21 and had my first real boyfriends in this [expletive] apartment and just listening to Kings of Leon, that song âMilk,â or like White Stripes and the Strokes. We were trying to get into this secret bar they had on the East Side and no one would ever let us in. It was so fun. Maybe I shouldâve said indie rock.
Q: You have the line âKanye West is blond and gone,â which is tinged with a similar nostalgia. You performed at his wedding and also called him out for his support of President Trump on Twitter. Have you heard anything in response?
A: No. Gratefully, no. Hereâs the thing: I donât want to elicit a response. You never feel better for having written something like that. But Kanye just means so much to us. And by the way, Iâm grateful to be in a country where everyone can have their own political views. Iâm really not more of a liberal than I am a Republican â Iâm in the middle. But it was more like the mood and the vibe around, Yo, this man is the greatest! Really? The greatest? It hurt me. Did I have to say anything? No. But itâs more just a line that represents a lot of things.
Q: You also recorded and released the song âLooking for Americaâ in response to a recent spate of mass shootings. What felt so urgent about it?
A: The back-to-back shootings, within 24 hours of each other. Iâm always upset when I hear about anything remotely violent. But I was extremely upset. Every now and then, like for instance with the Amazon burning, people wake up and theyâre like, wow, this is not just a passing phase. Thereâs something extremely wrong. I like to stay on the periphery, but when you have back-to-back shootings like that â should I say thatâs when itâs time to say something? It certainly was for me.
Q: Do you think weâre missing protest music from this moment?
A: I do now. I think there was a great period of not being sure what was going on. I was there when Obama got elected in Union Square. Under that administration, it felt like a dream had come true-ish and we could focus on the arts and it was a time of reprieve and we didnât have to talk about certain things. But of course there was a lot going on.
One portion of the dots that people are connecting is: âIs it possible that this presidency is engendering this idea that itâs OK to be more violent?â And a lot of people are saying yes. Someone who says âgrab âem by the pussy,â that does make someone else feel a little bit more entitled to bring his rifle to school. If there wasnât a time for protest music, there absolutely is now.
Q: At a few points on the album, you seem to be alluding to #MeToo. Do you think it hit the music industry like the rest of culture?
A: Well if it hasnât, it certainly applies to it. It hit it equally as far as people being able to evaluate where they stood, in terms of being neglected or abused in that way. It doesnât matter if youâre a doctor or a janitor, you know where you fall on the spectrum of âHave people totally [expletive] me over?â
Q: Did you read the chapter in Mobyâs memoir about taking you on a date? He says you told him that he was in line for the guillotine because of his ridiculous penthouse apartment.
A: [Laughs] Yeah, I read that.
Q: Did it ring true to you?
A: Pretty much! I donât know how he [expletive] remembers ⊠He must have a mind like a steel trap. I donât even remember what was going on. I think I was a backup singer and I was opening for people and yeah, we went on a date. [Laughs]
Q: Do you allow yourself to think about the dark days of 2012, when you were something of an internet punching bag? Do you ever let yourself feel smug about what youâve accomplished?
A: I rarely feel feelings like smugness. But of course itâs very fresh in my mind because it was so unusual and unexpected. Mostly with stuff like that I look back on it and think, âWell, that was weird!â Iâm just glad itâs better than it was.
I always thought that if you were going to become successful, it would be because things were going very well. I didnât have a point of reference for things being really, really big, but not necessarily having an overtone of it being good. Itâs certainly soul-strengthening because you have to really turn inward and ask, âDo I like what I do?â And itâs like, yeah, very much.
Q: This album comes out right at the Grammys deadline. Do you care about the Grammys?
A: Uhhh ... yes, I care. But Iâm better staying in the process of things. What day is the Grammys deadline?
Q: The day after your album comes out.
A: Hm! Yeah, I mean ... Well ... Yeah, I care. [Laughs]
Q: You said in December that your New Yearâs resolution was to live âmore like an Instagram baddie/YouTube vlogger.â Howâs that going?
A: It is going swimmingly. For as much time as Iâm able to spend on my craft of songwriting, Iâve also been having fun and being a little badass. Motorcycling, surfing, wearing more neon. Whatâs funny is that post was a complete joke. But actually I have been having a lot of fun. So I guess there really is a true magic to the written word.
This article originally appeared in
.