RETRO ACTIVE / Shabby Chic / Lana Del Rey
director's cut of lead essay for Spin's relaunch issue NOW, March/April 2012
by Simon Reynolds
“Watch out Adele! There’s another soul lady
coming up behind you and her name is Lana Del Rey.” So said a Top 40 radio
deejay last month, transitioning between “Rolling In the Deep” and “Video
Games”.
The patter wasn’t just a canny way to introduce an unfamiliar song to
mainstream listeners, it was an astute bit of music criticism. Adele and Lana
Del Rey are both young women who’ve had their hearts broken, singing about it via
overtly non-contemporary musical idioms:
Etta James-style Sixties soul, in Adele’s case, and, with Del Rey, something
less tightly anchored to specific sources but equally old-timey in its
evocations of the Fifties and Sixties.
The question these two singers raise is: why do these otherwise
thoroughly modern women express first-hand feelings in such second-hand
imagery? Why coat something raw and real in this vintage veneer?
Lana
Del Rey arrived on the scene too recently for inclusion in my book Retromania, but—just like Adele—she’s an
absolute gift when it comes to talking it up: “look, see, that’s what I’m on about!” Yet they each represent different kinds
of retro-pop. Adele’s is unselfconscious,
an artist adopting an old-fashioned style as if it was the most natural thing
in the world, neither adding much to it nor drawing attention to its
out-of-time quality. Escort, the New York disco troupe featured in this special
issue of Spin, belong in this category. One hallmark of unselfconscious retro
is not dressing the part, not looking like you’ve time-travelled from the period
in question.
Lana
Del Rey is closer to the hyper-conscious retro that’s endemic in indie/underground
music, where clothes and artwork evoke a bygone era, and lyrics often teem with
allusions and references. Frankie Rose &
the Outs, also featured in this issue, are a prime example, from
their Sixties girl group sound to songs like “Thee Only One” (the “thee” nods
to various bands led by Sixties-revivalism-pioneer Billy Childish, but can be
traced further back to Sixties garage bands like Thee Midnighters) to the cover of the 7-inch single version of that
song, which Rose wanted to “look like a cross between a Blue Note album and an
old French pop 45.”
Retro
of this kind, where a band’s sound-and-visuals incorporate citations and
spotting them is integral to the fan’s enjoyment, is not a new thing, of course.
It’s been part of indie almost from the start (The Smiths’s iconographic
record-sleeves, Jesus and Mary Chain or Butthole Surfers “sampling” riffs or
backing vocal refrains from Sixties and Seventies legends). You can trace it
back further still, through glam’s Fifties rock’n’roll echoes all the way to
The Beatles’s 1968 Chuck Berry pastiche “Back In the U.S.S.R.”. Yet there’s no
doubt that this kind of conscious retro-activity has intensified in the 21st
Century. Partly that’s a result of just how extensive the archive of pop
history is at this point (five decades and growing!). And partly it’s because
the broadband era made accessing all that history so easy. YouTube, especially,
is a vast, ever-expanding repository of videos and music-on-TV clips. It’s also
an audio library that holds virtually every instance of pop (and unpop) music
extant. You can school yourself there, free of charge.
Which
brings us back to Lana Del Rey. Her rocket-like ascent through the buzzosphere was
propelled by videos she put on YouTube made out of footage she’d found on
Youtube. “Video Games” and “Blue Jeans”
put History in shuffle mode: a miasma of
Americana that drifts back and forth across the decades but is unified by its
sustained elegiac mood of not-now-ness.
Amid the appropriated home-movie-footage of swimming pools and
skateboarders and kids on mopeds,
specific allusions pop up: Chateau
Marmont, Lana in Lolita sunglasses from Kubrick’s movie, Lana in a racing
driver jacket that suggests Evil Knievel or 1970s road movie Two-Lane Blacktop, Lana in a white
leather fringe jacket that echoes Easy
Rider or Elvis-in-Vegas.
According
to Del Rey, though, the invocations of places like Las Vegas and LA in her
videos (and also her lyrics) aren’t really references so much as mood-tints. “The thing that fascinates me about all of
them is the colors of the places,”
she says on the phone, in transit to another mythic-Americana landscape she
adores, Coney Island. “The muted blues
and greens in California, the bright lights of Vegas... People ask me about what the Fifties imagery
from California represents to me, but actually I’m mainly just a visual
person. Sometimes when my producer and
I talk about songs, we talk about them in terms of colors. In a way the album
was visually driven. “
Part
of the nostalgia effect of the found footage in Del Rey’s videos derives from
the properties of the different kinds of film stock, including the specific way
that it ages and decays. The bleached
and blotchy textures trigger a poignant sense of time’s passage, an inkling
that even your most halcyon memories will fade to nothingness. “Blue Jeans” explicitly forefronts the idea
of “dead media” and antiquated formats with its opening footage of a hand grabbing
a pack of Eastman Ektrachrome Super 8 film.
Lana
Del Rey may be about to become the first Hipstamatic pop star. (If she can get past the negative bump of her
stilted Saturday Night Live
performance, widely and somewhat unfairly deemed disastrous). Photo apps like
Hipstamatic and Instagram, or Fuuvi’s
new faux-Super8 device the Bee, offer a digital simulation of an analogue past.
Something similar is going on with Del Rey’s music : old-timey instruments like
mandolins, strings, harps and twangy surf guitar make up much of its texture,
but there’s also unidentifiable sounds
that are clearly sampled and processed, while the beats on Born To Die ‘s more uptempo tunes are boombastic, hip hop in impact if not feel.
The result: the RZA meets Lee
Hazelwood. Factor in Del Rey’s choices
in clothes, hair, and make-up, and it’s clear she’s the perfect pop singer for
the era of vintage chic.
Not that she’s the only artist around offering a
pre-faded sound-and-vision. Perfume
Genius, also featured in Spin this month, has a similar “warm”, softened-by-age sound, and a video, for
“Lookout, Lookout”, set in a quaint motel, complete with rotary phone.
It’s
not just the stylized form of Lana Del Ray’s songs that harks back to olden days, it’s the
emotional content too: a language of romantic
excess redolent of Roy Orbison’s most over-the-top ballads or Skeeter Davis’s
“The End of the World”. Love as malady and madness, delirium, delusion... and
death. From its title on down, Born To Die is full of it: “I’m not
afraid to say that I’d die without him,” “I wish I was dead”...
“I
don’t really condone relying on another person to the point where you’re going
to die without them,” says Del Rey. “Something
I never really expected was to have gotten into a relationship that ended up
being very tumultuous. But I had met
someone who was so magnetic and made me feel differently from the way that I
felt for so long, which was sort of confused and bored... and because in the end we couldn’t be
together, it ended up having a do-or-die element to it. I kept on falling back to that place in terms
of inspiration for the songs.”
Born To Die goes beyond
retro-romance, though, to retro-sexuality, retro-gender. All those yielding, doe-eyed ballads of
abject devotion look back in languor to a time when men were men and women were
thankful. A pre-feminist world, or more precisely, America before Betty
Friedman’s The Feminine Mystique was
published (1963). “This Is What Makes Us
Girls” seems to define femininity as being a fool for love: “We all look for heaven and we put love first/Don’t
you know we’d die for it?/It’s a curse.” At the other extreme, there are songs about
women who uses wiles to get what they want. “Off to The Races” recalls Ginger,
the Casino character played by Sharon
Stone, except if she was as docile and adoring as DeNiro’s Sam Rothstein hoped. She’s a moll, wasting a rich man’s money
(“give me them coins”), breaking into a Betty Boo squeak for the lines “I’m
your little harlot, starlet” and purring “Tell me you own me”.
“I’m an interesting mix of person,” says Del
Rey defensively, with just a hint of annoyance. “I am a modern day woman. I’m self-supporting. I went to college. I
studied philosophy. I write my own music. But I also very appreciate being in
the arms of a man and finding support that way. That feeling influences the kind of melodies I
choose and how romantic I make the song. Maybe it ends up giving it a slightly
unbalanced feeling.” Asked about the
references in other songs to
good-girls-gone-bad (“degenerate beauty
queens” is one memorable lyric), she points to David Lynch’s movie Wild At Heart as not so much an
inspiration as a parallel with phases
in her life. “The way I ended up having relationships and living life, it
sometimes mimics those more wild relationships.”
The
Lynch connection highlights a curious quality of Del Rey’s whole shtick: not
only does it hark back to the Fifties and Sixties, it also recalls the
Eighties’s own invocations of that time. Movies like Blue Velvet, Jim Jarmusch’s Strangers
in Paradise and Mystery Train,
the S.E. Hinton adaptations Rumblefish and
The Outsiders. Musicians as various
as Tom Waits, Alan Vega, Chris Isaak, Mazzy Star. This syndrome isn’t unique to Del Rey, though. The scene that Frankie Rose belongs to—Dum Dum
Girls, Vivian Girls—reaches Spector’s wall of sound and the Sixties girl
group’s via Eighties British indiepop, specifically Jesus and Mary Chain and the
“C86” movement of bands like The Shop Assistants. Then there’s The Men, also in
this issue, who draw from the harder side of Eighties U.K. psych-revivalism. On
their song “( )” they filch not just the riff from Spacemen 3’s “Revolution”
but a chunk of its lyric (“And I suggest to you/That it takes/Just five seconds”)
along with lines from “Take Me To the Other Side”.
If
retro culture has reached the point where we’re seeing revivals of revivals,
citations of citations (Spacemen 3’s “Revolution” was itself an already-somewhat-hokey
homage to MC5), what are the implication for music going forward? As time goes by,
signs become steadily more detached from their historical referents, hollowed
out. All these sounds, gestures,
time-honored phrases, are entering into a freefloating half-life, or afterlife,
where all they represent is pure style: a dated-yet-timeless beauty.
This
appears to be the ghosty place where Lana Del Rey comes from. In “Without You”, she sings “but burned into
my brain/all these stolen images” and I can’t help thinking of Blade Runner and the androids who are
given transplanted memories. Her lyrics teem
with sampled clichés (“walk on the wild side”, “white lightning”) and iconic
brand-names (“white Pontiac heaven”).
But she says that the Pontiac allusion isn’t for its pop-cultural
associations (Two Lane Blacktop and
other 70s movies, songs by Tom Waits and Jan & Dean) so much as “just the
sound” of the word. “Lana Del Rey” itself
was chosen for its lilting loveliness rather than its rippling resonances (a
platinum-blonde Hollywood idol with a turbulent and tragic private life, a
1950s Chevrolet, a California beach-town). “My music was always beautiful and I
wanted a name that was beautiful too.”
“Beautiful”
crops up repeatedly in Del Rey’s conversation, as it does in her lyrics. She
seems to be intensely susceptible to the splendor of appearances, to the point
of vulnerability. “You look like a million dollar man/so why is my heart
broke?” she beseeches plaintively in “Million Dollar Man”. The gap between image and reality, between
“real and the fake”, is an obsession. So is fame, portrayed as the dangerous
desire to lose oneself by merging into a glamorous facade. “I even think I
found god in the flashbulbs of your pretty cameras,” she sings in “Without
You”, while the words “Movie Star Without a Cause” flash up in the video for
“Blue Jeans”.
Then
there’s “Carmen”, seemingly a song about a 17-year-old starlet who’s dying
inside and only comes alive when “the camera’s on”, but actually a perturbing
self-portrait. “‘Carmen’ is probably the song closest to my heart,” says Del
Rey. “’Famous and dumb in an early age’—that’s fame in a different way, in
different circles, for different reasons. Not really for being a pop star. It’s
sort of like, my life”. Born To Die
is at once the result of—yet also somehow about--an
imagination so colonized by old movies and old songs that real life can only be
expressed, or maybe even experienced,
through this “cinematic” prism. Is this
an artist’s distancing mechanism, a buffer to manage the emotion? Or was the
actual love affair itself contaminated by fantasy and role-play?
^^^^^^
What
we have with Lana Del Rey is the problem of the undeniable talent who is also a
throwback, and thus sets back the cause of musical modernism. (See also: The
White Stripes). She’s not a straightforward
revivalist: the music and the presentation are diversely sourced and the end
result is a sophisticated and often seductive concoction. But it still falls, ultimately, within the
domain of pastiche, memorably defined as “speech in a dead language”. Given her passive persona, it’s tempting to
say that the ghosts of pop culture’s collective unconscious are speaking
through her.
Born To Die, haunted by
lost lovers (“there’s no remedy for memory”), the spectre of Spector stalking
indie-land... it’s all somewhat gloomy and morbidly retrospective. Are there upsides to the contemporary
condition that some call “atemporality”, where past, present and future blur
indistinguishably and the entire history of music is at your clicking
fingertips? Definitely. You can travel
to time-zones that no one else has, as Destroyer did with Kaputt, a tour through regions of 1980s pop that neither synthpoppers
like La Roux nor chillwavers like Neon Indian cared to visit. You can create
“superhybrids” that draw on disparate sources from far-flung eras and
locations, as artists as wildly dissimilar and energetically inventive as
Vampire Weekend, Grimes, and Rustie have done.
You can become mesmerized by “lost futures” of 70s
synth music and attempt to start again where they left off, as with Emeralds
and its members’s solo careers (such as Steve Hauchildt’s recent, brilliant Tragedy & Geometry), not forgetting
all the Emeralds proteges who record for the label Spectrum Spools. Similar neo-futurist moves are made off the
back of 80s electro-funk and electronic space music by Oneohtrix Point Never,
Ford & Lopatin, and their protégés Napolian and The Renaissance. The
archive can be a radical resource, if its
immense array of musical precedents are used as launching pads into the unknown,
rather than touchstones to recreate. The challenge is daunting but far from
impossible: to make music that doesn’t remind
you of X or Y, but prominds you of
something yet to come.
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