* AlternativeCharacterInterpretation:
** Critics talk about her as being either the incredible next big thing or an overhyped corporate sellout.
*** Or simply, manufactured pop star like Music/SelenaGomez vs. made up her own alternative identity Music/LadyGaga style.
** Does she really mean comments about wanting to die young or is she trying to play up the image of a tragic starlet?
** How literal are her songs? Is it all metaphors? Reality? She has becomes so distant from interviews and such it's hard to know anymore.
* ArchivePanic: While she has eight official albums and an EP, you don't have to look far to find an absolute ''torrent'' of previous albums released under other names, unreleased songs, b-sides, leaks and demos of hers to peruse. Most of it is up on Website/YouTube, so by all means, [[ArchiveBinge go nuts]].
** Defied by the singer herself, who revealed she has a clause in her will forbidding any demos from being released should she pass away.
* SugarWiki/AwesomeMusic:
** All of ''Born to Die''.
** From ''Paradise'', "Ride", Burning Desire" and "Gods And Monsters".
** From ''Ultraviolence'', "Ultraviolence", "West Coast", "Fucked My Way Up To The Top".
** Most of her unreleased material, but special mention goes to "Prom Song (Gone Wrong)".
** The chorus of "Blue Jeans" is especially beautiful.
** "Venice Bitch" in all its 10 minute glory.
** "Arcadia"
** ''Honeymoon''. Just... the whole album is beautiful.
** The titular "Chemtrails Over the Country Club", as well as the album's other tracks "Let Me Love You Like a Woman" and especially "White Dress".
* BrokenBase: While ''Ultraviolence'' got rather good reviews and appealed to most of her fans, it caused a more mixed reaction with people who liked her popish side from the ''Born to Die'' singles like the title track, "Video Games", and "Summertime Sadness".
* CriticalDissonance: Most critics were dismissive of ''Born to Die'' when it came out and saw it as a mediocre pop album, and they didn't particularly like ''Paradise'' either compare to her later albums (An up to eleven example being Pitchfork which gave ''Norman Fucking Rockwell!'' a 9.4 compared to ''Born to Die'''s 5.5. Her other albums received scores around the 7). Meanwhile, most of her fans like all of her albums and think they're all good in their own way. [[FirstInstallmentWins Some think ''Born to Die'' is her best album.]]
* EnsembleDarkhorse: She is by far the most memorable and well-received part of the song "Don't Call Me Angel" (the promotional single released for ''Film/CharliesAngels2019''), despite only singing a bridge.
* EpicRiff: The counterpoint piano in "Diet Mountain Dew" and "Lolita". The guitar riff in "Brooklyn Baby" could definitely also qualify.
** The guitar strumming in "White Dress" too.
* EvenBetterSequel / SurprisinglyImprovedSequel: ''Norman Fucking Rockwell!'' is considered her most critically acclaimed album in Lana's entire discography. Averted with fans, who like it equally to her other albums.
** And some fans feel Chemtrails Over the Country Club" is this to the above, being similar in having soft ballads but more sonically cohesive, more Lana and less Jack Antonoff.
* FandomRivalry: Lana fans and Music/LadyGaga fans seem to have split due to the diss track "So Legit" surfacing. [[FriendlyFandoms However it wasn't always that way...]]
** Lorde fans and Lana fans do not always get along, perhaps mainly because of the former's criticism towards Lana's ([[AlternativeCharacterInterpretation supposed]]) shallow love of opulence, regardless of how obvious the dark side of the American Dream is made in her work. The fact that some fans speculate how "FMWTTT" may be about Lorde doesn't help.
** Lana herself triggered another rivalry in 2018 with Music/AzealiaBanks after the latter criticised a comment by the former condemning Music/KanyeWest's pro-Trump views. This led to all-out Twitter war.
* FanNickname: ''Sirens'' was altogether unlabeled when it first leaked, so all of the songs on that album have at least one of these.
* FriendlyFandoms: On tumblr fans of Music/LadyGaga also really liked Lana before "So Legit". While there are tons of fans who still like both of them there is a definite divide.
** She appeals to the same spirit which makes Lorde popular. The same dystopia, exhaustion, darkness.
** Website/TheOtherWiki mentions her music as Chamber Pop, like Florence and The Machine, and there is cross support there.
** She also had a fan base of both current and ex Music/BritneySpears fans, as her voice is soft and emotionally tuned like Brit and Lana has openly cited Britney as one of her biggest influences.
** By far one of the bigger examples is the fanbase with Music/MarinaDiamandis. Both women appeal greatly to the indie crowd. It helps that the artists are friends and fans of each other's work.
** With Swifties too, since [[Music/TaylorSwift Taylor]] and Lana are mutual fans of each other and have recorded music together.
* FauxSymbolism: The video for "West Coast" features scenes of Lana superimposed in flames and it's rather reminiscent of Anima Sola or the Lonely Soul which is a soul trapped in Purgatory.
* GeniusBonus: Lana's music is ripe with references to philosophy and literature, if you know where to look. She's especially fond of Creator/VladimirNabokov and Creator/WaltWhitman on the literature side of things, and her [[SmarterThanYouLook degree in metaphysics]] lends itself to more than a few [[AnAesop aesops]] on youth, death and love -- [[LostAesop most of which lose themselves]] in the midst of all her angsting about [[LivingEmotionalCrutch bad men]] and the SentientCosmicForce[=s=] keeping her away from them.
* GrowingTheBeard: Once the below HypeBacklash blew over, her subsequent albums started receiving more positive critical attention, which has so far peaked with ''Norman Fucking Rockwell'' (which is currently Allmusic's album pick and her highest rated album on Sputnikmusic).
* HypeBacklash: After receiving so much critical praise for her first single, Del Rey was viciously attacked by many critics after her performance on the ''Series/SaturdayNightLive'' episode hosted by Daniel Radcliffe. Three weeks later, on the episode hosted by Channing Tatum, Kristen Wiig appeared as Lana Del Rey on Weekend Update to speak out against her critics who trashed her performance (and think of her as a manufactured pop star with no musical talent, experience, or credibility) and herself.
** The Creator/{{PBS}} Idea Channel series [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=r3c8STXjQ20 compares the backlash against her manufactured nature]] to [[Music/{{Vocaloid}} Miku Hatsune's]] growing popularity, despite being a literally manufactured pop singer.
* MemeticMutation:
** [[http://www.buzzfeed.com/peggy/the-best-of-lana-del-rey-dancing Dancing Lana Del Rey]].
** "My pussy tastes like Pepsi cola."
** For music nerds, the infamous moment where a [=RateYourMusic=] user's review of ''Norman Fucking Rockwell'' (which they described as a [[EveryoneIsSatanInHell "Bourgeois, fascist ideology"]] for a [[ViewersAreMorons "a new generation of American consumers"]]) resulted in the page's usual shoutbox to be ''[[WhyFandomCantHaveNiceThings removed due to people arguing about on the validity of the statement.]]''
* MisaimedFandom: A few culture critics have interpreted her Vladimir Nabokov obsession and subsequent references to ''Lolita'' as glamorising the 'nymphet' image to extent that Nabokov himself would be very uncomfortable with. [[https://www.popmatters.com/lana-del-rey-dolores-haze-2495787697.html This article goes into further detail.]]
* QuestionableCasting: Her collaboration with Music/MileyCyrus and Music/ArianaGrande in the song and video for "Don't Call Me Angel" got this reaction from some of the fanbase, although it is generally agreed that her bridge is considered to be the best part of the song.
* SequelDisplacement: Not many people are aware that Lana Del Rey did an album prior to ''Born to Die''.
* SignatureSong: “Video Games” is far and away her best known song.
** “Young and Beautiful” is also pretty well known and is usually counted as a favourite among fans.
* StoicWoobie: Goes hand-in-hand with her Lana persona being kind of a BrokenBird—but this overlaps with JerkassWoobie rather often as her Lana persona is portrayed in many songs as either in deep denial, evil or also contributing to the toxic relationship.
* SuspiciouslySimilarSong: The piano riff in “Diet Mountain Dew” sounds very similar to the piano riff in Nas’ “If I Ruled The World”.
** “Methamphetamines” sounds identical to Music/NinoRota's theme for the 1968 cinematic adaptation of ''Film/{{Romeo and Juliet|1968}}'', in terms of chord progression.
** Rota is credited in part, however, with the production of “Old Money”—the successor to “Methamphetamines” that was put on ''Ultraviolence''. Lana was supposedly unaware of the instrumental’s origin before wanting to put the song out, which is what prevents this example from being a good ol’ case of {{Sampling}}.
* VindicatedByHistory: [[https://www.vox.com/culture/2019/10/30/20853231/lana-del-rey-authenticity-career-norman-fucking-rockwell This Vox article goes into more detail about it.]] Lana Del Rey's obviously manufactured public image didn't win over a lot of critics at the time, and "Video Games" seemed opportunistic coming on the heels of Music/{{Adele}} doing a similar stripped-back sound to more notoriety. And yet, as standards of pop music have mutated over the course of the 2010s in a post-Music/{{Lorde}}, post-"poptimism" landscape, the backlash is now a distant memory as Lana now has a diehard fanbase and critical respect ''for'' all this calculation. On a more musical basis, it could easily be argued that Lana may have, at least in part, paved the way for Lorde (not to mention Music/BillieEilish). In 2021, Pitchfork revealed that if given hindsight ''Born To Die'' would have scored a 7.8 instead of the official 5.5 rating.