Lust for Life (Lana Del Rey song)

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"Lust for Life"
A single cover showing a man in black with a brunette woman sit under him in a floral field, she wears a red dress while stares at the main vision. They are backed by a place that appears to be a set of a photoshoot.
Single by Lana Del Rey featuring the Weeknd
from the album Lust for Life
A-side"Love"
ReleasedApril 19, 2017 (2017-04-19)
StudioThe Green Building (Los Angeles)
Genre
Length4:24
Label
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)
  • Lana Del Rey
  • Rick Nowels
  • Kieron Menzies
  • Dean Reid
Lana Del Rey singles chronology
"Love"
(2017)
"Lust for Life"
(2017)
"Summer Bummer"
(2017)
The Weeknd singles chronology
"Some Way"
(2017)
"Lust for Life"
(2017)
"Reminder" / "Rockin'"
(2017)
Music video
"Lust for Life" on
YouTube

"Lust for Life" is a song recorded by American singer-songwriter

girl groups like the Shangri-Las and the Angels; the latter's 1963 song "My Boyfriend's Back" is referenced in the lyrics. It also quotes the poem "Invictus" by the English poet William Ernest Henley
(1849–1903).

"Lust for Life" received mixed reviews from music critics: some acclaimed its sultry production that departs from the melancholic, sad themes present in Del Rey's previous works, while others criticized its lyrics as banal and the Weeknd's vocals as whiny. "Lust for Life" debuted in the top 100 of several countries, including the United States – where it peaked at 64 being the third collaboration between Del Rey and the Weeknd to enter the chart– the United Kingdom, Canada, Scotland, Portugal, Spain, Belgium and Ireland.

Its accompanying music video directed by Clark Jackson features Del Rey and the Weeknd singing on the top of the Hollywood Sign as referenced in the lyrics. Some critics pointed out a parallel between some of the lyrics and imagery accompanying the song and the 1932 suicide of actress Peg Entwistle who killed herself by jumping off the "H" of the sign. To promote "Lust for Life", the singer performed it for the first time at the 2017 KROQ Weenie Roast y Fiesta concert and later appeared at the 2017 BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend on May 27, 2017. The song was also included as the tenth track in the setlist of her fourth headlining concert tour called "LA to the Moon Tour" (2018).

Background and release

"Lust for Life" was the first song

Interscope's record executive John Janick suggested that she should consult producer Max Martin to see what could think of the record. She then flew to Martin's compound located in Sweden. He thought the first verse was the strongest part of what she had done, encouraging her to turn this verse into the song's chorus. She went back to Rick Nowels' place the following day where she reworked on the track addressing what Martin had suggested, she turned the verse into the chorus and for her, it sounded "perfect". That's when she felt she "really wanted" to hear Canadian singer the Weeknd sing the chorus, so he came down and "rewrote a little bit of it," but then she stated she felt like it was missing the "Shangri-Las element" that she wanted, so she went back for a fourth time and layered it up with harmonies.[1][2][3]

"Lust for Life" was first registered at ASCAP under Del Rey's name during March 2017, with the Weeknd credited as a co-writer under his real name Abel Tesfaye.[4] Later, Del Rey teased the collaboration on March 26, 2017, via Twitter, with Tesfaye's signature logo.[5] The logo, which is also the logo of his record label XO, was also included in the Lust for Life album trailer.[6] "Lust for Life" was released on April 19, 2017, following the preview on MistaJam's BBC Radio 1 show.[7][8] The official audio was released to iTunes and other streaming services a few hours later.[9] It is the fourth collaboration between Del Rey and The Weeknd, after she featured on "Prisoner" from his second studio album, Beauty Behind the Madness (2015), and then two collaborations on his follow-up record Starboy (2016): a feature on "Stargirl Interlude" and a co-writing credit and background vocals on "Party Monster".[1][3] This is her first song to feature another artist on any of her studio albums.[10] On August 25, 2017, an official remix by BloodPop was released, alongside a remix for Del Rey's other single "Summer Bummer".[11][12]

Composition and lyrics

"Lust for Life" is reminiscent of 1960s music, with backing harmonies vocalizing around Del Rey's vocals with sung

synths, "Take off all your clothes".[1] For Chris White of MusicOMH, they sound simultaneously "alluring and desperate."[20] He is then heard singing his lines using his characteristic falsetto tone.[21]

Roisin O'Connor of

Genius commented that Lana seems to reference the infamous suicide of Peg Entwistle, who killed herself by jumping off the "H" of the Hollywood sign in September 1932, at the age of 24.[25] The A.V. Club's writer Annie Zaleski noted that the song captures the sensation of having "dizzying sexual chemistry" with someone,[26] while The Line of Best Fit's Erik Thompson perceived "Lust for Life" fluidly blends "the sensual with the inspirational", going from the liberating assertion of being "masters of our own fate" and "captains of our own souls" to taking off all clothes in a "hot, breathless second."[27]

Critical reception

"Lust for Life" was met with a mixed reception from music critics. Libby Cudmore of Paste called "Lust for life" one of the album's "low points," emphasizing that the "vintage vibe" which the singer projected for this song "did not work so well." The editor was not enthusiastic over The Weekend's presence, saying that his "whiny-toy drone" drags the "whole Hollywood shenanigan into the tar pits."[28] Mike Was from Idolator criticized the lyrical content by deeming it a typical and "quintessentially Lana Del Rey."[17] Leonie Cooper of NME said that Del Rey's vocals in "Lust for Life" nearly made her a "parody of herself" and called the chorus "a bit silly, but also utterly fabulous."[21]

Similar to Del Rey's previously released single "Love", "Lust for Life" called attention from critics who considered it as a departure from the melancholic, dark production present in her previous works. Prefix magazine's Jon O' Brian noted "Lust for Life" as one of the moments that in which Del Rey indeed a much more "optimistic and accessible" sound than her previous album Honeymoon (2015).[29] Echoing the same sentiments as O'Brian, Andrew Dorsett from PopMatters named "Lust for Life" and "Love" as the "poppiest" moments of the album, adding that these tracks shimmer with Del Rey's "newfound optimism", but even these can ring somewhat "hollow" compared with the "smoky menace" of her past work, or the "incisive pathos of the album's deep cuts."[30]

The Independent's Roisin O'Connor wrote that "Lust for Life" proves a "masterful pairing," and expressed a positive thought about Del Rey's collaboration with the Weeknd, stating they stand out among their peers as two artists who "have succeeded at crafting their own myth."[22] Rolling Stone listed "Lust for Life" as the 9th-best song of 2017 in their annual ranking.[31]

Commercial performance

In the United States, "Lust for Life" debuted at spot of number 36 on

UK Singles Charts—Canada, Sweden, Scotland and Poland.[35][36][37][38]

Accolades

Year Organization Award Result Ref.
2018 GAFFA Awards (Sweden) Best Foreign Song Won [39]

Music video

Development and release

An official audio video was released on Del Rey's Vevo channel on the same day the song was released. It features Tesfaye and Del Rey sitting on the edge of the Hollywood Sign while holding hands.[40] The official music video was released on May 22, 2017. It was directed by Clark Jackson, who also directed the Lust for Life album trailer and produced the "Love" music video. He used similar visuals and interpolates shots from the trailer. To brings to life the same vintage aesthetic present in the song, the video bursts of a VHS-quality visual distortion.[41] The director wanted to the video incorporate the same imagery of the 50s and 60s Hollywood. For the sign creation, Jackson wanted a night shot of it exactly as it looked in the 1950s. As the sign is not lit up anymore, he and some friends had to construct an illustration of the sign and the mountain out of papier-mâché, foam, chicken wire, and old school Hollywood-style model-making in his garage. In interview with Pitchfork he revealed that during the process, "the neighbors thought I had lost my mind when they saw me knee deep in papier-mâché. Blink and you will miss it, but all of that from the tower to the sign to the bushes and trees were all made by hand." He used the illustration which he developed as a support to recreate the sign through 3D effects for the original music video.[42]

Synopsis and reception

The video's storyline was compared to the suicide of Peg Entwistle (pictured).

The video starts off with a galaxy which turns into Del Rey's green eyes. Chelsea Stone of

W Magazine noted it as reminiscent of her previous released video for "Love" in which Del Rey is seen floating through different galaxies.[43] The singer then appears in a TV set wearing a red dress and a headband while performing a simple dance routine and sings among her two dancers Alexandra Kaye and Ashley Rodriguez in the background.[44][45] As the song runs, Del Rey leaves the set and goes through a brighten, illuminated city and up a set of stairs that lead to the top of the "H" on the Hollywood sign referenced in the lyrics.[46] In the top, she meets the Weeknd who helps her to complete her scale to the top of the letter. During the second verse, they appear sitting at the letter while appreciating the brilliant city in front of them underneath the stars. The Weeknd removes the headband from Del Rey's head and throws it away, transforming it in a caravel in the air. At the end of the video, she slides off the "D" of the Hollywood sign and lands in a field of orange flowers with the Weeknd lying by her side, the camera zooms out, showing the Earth, with lights forming a peace sign, in space.[47]

Upon the release of the video, some critics pointed out again a parallel between some of the lyrics and imagery accompanying the song and the album Lust for Life and the 1932 suicide of actress Peg Entwistle. Alan Hanson of

Live performances

Del Rey performed the song for the first time at the 2017 KROQ Weenie Roast y Fiesta concert on May 20, 2017. During the show, she also debuted the track "Cherry" from her album Lust for Life.[51] She later appeared at the 2017 BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend on May 27, 2017, where she performed "Lust for Life" along with other songs including "Love".[52] "Lust for Life" was also included as the tenth track of the set list for her fourth headlining concert tour called LA to the Moon Tour which began in January 2018.[53]

Track listing

Digital download[54]
No.TitleLength
1."Lust for Life" (featuring the Weeknd)4:24
Digital download – BloodPop® Remix[55]
No.TitleLength
1."Lust for Life" (featuring the Weeknd) (BloodPop® Remix)3:22
Digital download – The Avener Rework[56]
No.TitleLength
1."Lust for Life" (featuring the Weeknd) (The Avener Rework)4:12
10" vinyl – "Love" / "Lust for Life" LP[57]
No.TitleLength
1."Love"4:32
2."Lust for Life" (featuring the Weeknd)4:24

Credits and personnel

Credits adapted from the liner notes of Lust for Life.[58]

Recording and management

  • Recorded at The Green Building Studios (Los Angeles, California)
  • Mastered at Bernie Grundman Mastering (Los Angeles, California)
  • Published by MXM (administered by Kobalt) (ASCAP) / R-Rated Music administered by EMI April Music Publishing Inc (Global Music Rights) / Songs Music Publishing LLC, o/b/o Songs of SMP (ASCAP) / Sony/ATV Music Publishing (ASCAP)
  • The Weeknd appears courtesy of The Weeknd XO, Inc.

Personnel

  • Lana Del Rey – vocals, songwriting, production
  • The Weeknd – vocals, songwriting
  • Rick Nowels – production, songwriting, piano, keyboard, mellotron
  • Max Martin – songwriting, additional production, bass programming
  • Dean Reid – production, engineering, mixing, drums, bass guitar, percussion, synthesizer programmer, vocoder, sound effects
  • Kieron Menzies – production, engineering, mixing, drums
  • David Levita – electric guitar
  • Zac Rae – synthesizer
  • Ali Payami – drums
  • Mighty Mike – bongo
  • Jordan Stilwell – engineering
  • Trevor Yasuda – engineering
  • Adam Ayan – mastering engineer

Charts and certifications

Certifications

Region Certification Certified units/sales
Australia (ARIA)[82] Platinum 70,000
Brazil (Pro-Música Brasil)[83] 2× Platinum 120,000
Poland (ZPAV)[84] Gold 25,000
United Kingdom (BPI)[85] Silver 200,000
United States (RIAA)[86] Platinum 1,000,000

Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

Release history

Region Date Format Version Label Ref.
United States April 19, 2017 Original Interscope [54]
Italy April 28, 2017 Contemporary hit radio Polydor [87]
United Kingdom [88]
Various August 25, 2017
  • Digital download
  • streaming
BloodPop® Remix
  • Polydor
  • Interscope
[55] [89]
The Avener Rework [56]

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