Buy new:
£6.50£6.50
FREE delivery:
March 27 - 28
Dispatches from: Global_DealsUK Sold by: Global_DealsUK
Save with Used - Good
£1.60£1.60
£2.15
delivery:
March 27 - 30
Dispatches from: WeBuyGames Sold by: WeBuyGames
Other Sellers on Amazon
& FREE Delivery
98% positive over last 12 months
+ £1.26 delivery
97% positive over last 12 months
Image Unavailable
Colour:
-
-
-
- Sorry, this item is not available in
- Image not available
- To view this video download Flash Player
Born to Die
Learn more
| Listen Now with Amazon Music |
|
Born To Die [Explicit]
"Please retry" | Amazon Music Unlimited |
| Amazon Price | New from | Used from |
|
MP3 Download, 27 Jan 2012
"Please retry" | £3.99 | — |
|
Vinyl, Import, 30 Jan. 2012
"Please retry" |
—
| £32.99 | — |
With the purchase of a CD or Vinyl record dispatched from and sold by Amazon, you get 90 days free access to the Amazon Music Unlimited Individual plan. After your purchase, you will receive an email with further information. Terms and Conditions apply. Learn more.
Frequently bought together

Customers who viewed this item also viewed
Track Listings
| 1 | Born to Die |
| 2 | Off to the Races |
| 3 | Blue Jeans |
| 4 | Video Games |
| 5 | Diet Mountain Dew |
| 6 | National Anthem |
| 7 | Dark Paradise |
| 8 | Radio |
| 9 | Carmen |
| 10 | Million Dollar Man |
| 11 | Summertime Sadness |
| 12 | This Is What Makes Us Girls |
Product description
Product Description
Debut album from 'Video Games' singer Lana Del Rey.
Review
If you want an explanation for the unlikely rise of Lana Del Rey, it isn’t that hard to find. Ignore accusations of cynical marketing and inauthenticity, or speculation about surgery and Daddy’s money – that’s not important. And don’t get distracted by the YouTube statistics or the online hyperbole, this isn’t about new media. It’s about something older and more mysterious than that; the extraordinary, resilient power of the pop song. For all of her trashy Americana and startling beauty, if Del Rey hadn’t arrived last summer with a song as luminously beautiful as Video Games, none of this would be happening.
So the only truly important question about Born to Die is whether there’s more where that came from. Cynics look away: the answer is an emphatic yes. Nothing else quite matches Video Games’ eerie perfection of form and melody – after all, 99% of singers go an entire career without finding one song that good – but several run it perilously close, while revealing there’s more to her than the love-stunned torch singer of Video Games.
What makes Born to Die so richly fascinating – and what marks Del Rey out from the standard issue "I’m hot, you’re hot" pop starlet – is her preoccupation with Hollywood archetypes of American femininity, and her ability to shape-shift between them. So, on the stately, bloodstained title-track, Del Rey plays femme fatale, deliciously stoned and doomed, with an imperious vocal to match. On the addictive, sugar-rushing Off to the Races she’s trailer trash living the high life, her vocal veering deftly between husky cynicism and hiccupping glee; while on the tender This Is What Makes Us Girls she’s the poor little rich girl looking melancholically back on youthful hedonism.
It all reaches its apotheosis on National Anthem where Del Rey, dissatisfied with merely being an all-American girl, becomes America itself, offering up deadpan slogans like "money is the reason we exist" before demanding utter patriotic devotion on the swaggering chorus. If that sounds knowing that’s because it is, not to mention intelligent, ambitious, and more interesting than anything Adele is likely to write even by the time her inevitable 72 collection hits the shelves of the future. It’s also brilliantly realised, thanks to Del Rey’s extraordinary delivery, her ability to slip from deep-toned haughtiness to breathless ecstasy to velvety vamping – often in the same gorgeous melody.
Born to Die isn’t perfect: it slumps slightly towards the end, and the glossy trip-hop production grows wearying on lesser gothic melodramas like Dark Paradise. But it’s the most distinctive and assured debut since Glasvegas’ eponymous disc in 2008, and makes you desperate to see where she goes from here. Del Rey’s defenders can take a break: Born to Die does their job better than they could hope to.
--Lana Del Rey
Find more music at the BBC This link will take you off Amazon in a new window
Product details
- Is discontinued by manufacturer : No
- Product Dimensions : 15.49 x 14.71 x 0.99 cm; 100.07 Grams
- Manufacturer : Polydor
- Item model number : 24170039
- SPARS Code : DDD
- Label : Polydor
- ASIN : B005QJZ5FA
- Number of discs : 1
- Best Sellers Rank: 3,379 in CDs & Vinyl (See Top 100 in CDs & Vinyl)
- 83 in Indie & Lo-Fi
- 1,535 in Pop
- Customer reviews:
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings, help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyses reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonReviews with images
-
Top reviews
Top reviews from United Kingdom
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
Born To Die is a strong opener and, in similar tones to Video Games, meshes haunting melody and lyrics with a gritty, torch song quality, oddly verging between dirge and pop. Off To The Races continues the haunting theme with an offbeat love song that may at first seem like a celebration of being shallow but very quickly reveals maturity and depth, and once listened to is difficult to forget. Blue Jeans is a beautiful pop song slowed down to a pace where it almost feels like a ballad. Video Games is simply the most beautiful song of the last year. Diet Mountain Dew is a breezy almost nonchalant pop song.
National Anthem is a playful song that on the surface has some lines that might make you think it's a clumsy way of celebrating the money and fame worship you hear in some other singers' songs, but the OTT way it's done and some of the lyrics, once closely listened to, clearly show it's a send up. Dark Paradise, a beautiful ballad about loss, is like an Evanescence song without the operatics. Radio is one of those guilty pleasure songs - a laid back pop song with a chorus that, if played on radio, would require much editing, and yet still manages to remain sounding innocent and beautiful. Carmen is a warning tale of the sad effects of Hollywood. Million Dollar Man is an old time dirge ballad with an undercurrent of sadness, and is extremely classy. Now comes one of my favourite new pop songs - Summertime Sadness. At this point you may think there is a theme of depression sinking into the songs, but this song is hard to describe because it somehow manages to be downbeat and uplifting at the same time. Ending the main album is This Is What Makes Us Girls, which is another one of those songs that could appear to be glamorising shallowness, yet at the same time has very knowing lyrics and manages to hook you into the story it's telling.
The three extra tracks don't stray too far from the winning formula of the main album. Without You is a heartfelt ballad that it is hard to believe was left off the main album. Lolita is a playful song that perhaps is a bit too much Avril Lavigne in her unconvincing bratty stage to fit too well with the other songs, yet isn't what you'd call bad. Lucky Ones is definitely the song that should end the album, a gentle ballad that slips comfortably into the silence at the end of the CD.
My favourites include “video games”, “radio” and “summertime sadness”
This vinyl is presented nice and is a great piece in my collection.
Top reviews from other countries
Reviewed in the United States on 10 March 2024
Open Web Player


![Ultraviolence [VINYL]](https://images-eu.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/61nGz3JRU8L._AC_UL160_SR160,160_.jpg)
















