Dan Wolfson, Motherfucker

Hey people I'm Dan. I currently live in the Bronx while dorming at Fordham University. I'm from Long Island but I don't like to talk about that. I hate that place except for the friends I made and my beautiful girlfriend. I'm pretty emotional (see my posts) and love to express it. I follow back, promote people, and answer any questions or messages.

January 27, 2012 12:32 pm
newyorker:

Screen Shot; Lana Del Rey’s fixed image

In the fifteen songs on “Born to Die,” Del Rey is  both theatrical and noncommittal. But the new album does not make “Lana  Del Rey aka Lizzy Grant” seem like an error that needed redacting. The  earlier work had a variety of tempos, styles, and moods, which may be  exactly why Del Rey ditched it; its song titles hinted at a notion of  going retro (“Put Me in a Movie,” “Mermaid Motel”), but the ungainly  album title revealed ambivalence about Grant’s identity. “Born to Die,”  by contrast, is a model of consistent branding. The string section  thrums in permanent lassitude, the number of beats per minute hovers in  the eighties, and Del Rey’s pliable, smoky voice suggests that nothing  is a problem, including the narrative contradictions that she plants  throughout the album.
Several demos were leaked before the album’s  release, and they played with faster tempos and guitars and more  aggressive sounds. All of that is gone. The lack of active rhythms was a  wise correction by somebody: Del Rey is often at a loss when mobile—she  won’t be challenging Beyoncé to a dance-off anytime soon—but she’s  fairly compelling when simply looking into a camera and declaiming.  Anyone crouching on the Internet, ready to tag Del Rey’s mistakes, will  be frustrated by “Born to Die,” which is too expert to register as a  failure.

- In next week’s issue, Sasha Frere-Jones writes about (online now) Lana Del Rey and her new album, “Born to Die”: http://nyr.kr/wVJBFW

newyorker:

Screen Shot; Lana Del Rey’s fixed image

In the fifteen songs on “Born to Die,” Del Rey is both theatrical and noncommittal. But the new album does not make “Lana Del Rey aka Lizzy Grant” seem like an error that needed redacting. The earlier work had a variety of tempos, styles, and moods, which may be exactly why Del Rey ditched it; its song titles hinted at a notion of going retro (“Put Me in a Movie,” “Mermaid Motel”), but the ungainly album title revealed ambivalence about Grant’s identity. “Born to Die,” by contrast, is a model of consistent branding. The string section thrums in permanent lassitude, the number of beats per minute hovers in the eighties, and Del Rey’s pliable, smoky voice suggests that nothing is a problem, including the narrative contradictions that she plants throughout the album.

Several demos were leaked before the album’s release, and they played with faster tempos and guitars and more aggressive sounds. All of that is gone. The lack of active rhythms was a wise correction by somebody: Del Rey is often at a loss when mobile—she won’t be challenging Beyoncé to a dance-off anytime soon—but she’s fairly compelling when simply looking into a camera and declaiming. Anyone crouching on the Internet, ready to tag Del Rey’s mistakes, will be frustrated by “Born to Die,” which is too expert to register as a failure.

- In next week’s issue, Sasha Frere-Jones writes about (online now) Lana Del Rey and her new album, “Born to Die”: http://nyr.kr/wVJBFW
12:24 pm January 24, 2012 12:06 am 12:04 am January 23, 2012 11:38 pm 11:36 pm
riverside-motherfuckers:

biggie biggie biggie, cant you see, sometimes your words just hypnotize me.

riverside-motherfuckers:

biggie biggie biggie, cant you see, sometimes your words just hypnotize me.

(Source: li-on, via toabreathless0blivion)

11:36 pm 11:35 pm

(Source: stonerparty, via arb0k)

11:31 pm 11:31 pm