At the height of their popularity, the original "Fab Five" bad boys of Rock n Roll had their finest hour at The Ritz in New York City on February 2, 1988. It was here that Guns N' Roses, at their musical peak, performed their best songs from the now legendary classic album Appetite for Destruction.
For the most part, Lana Del Rey’s fifth album is quintessentially her: gloomy, glamorous, and smitten with California. But a newfound lightness might surprise longtime fans. Each song on <i>Lust</i> feels like a postcard from a dream: She fantasizes about 1969 (“Coachella - Woodstock In My Mind”), outruns paparazzi on the Pacific Coast Highway (“13 Beaches”), and dances on the H of the Hollywood sign (“Lust for Life” feat. The Weeknd). She even duets with Stevie Nicks, the queen of bittersweet rock. On “Get Free,” she makes a vow to shift her mindset: "Now I do, I want to move/Out of the black, into the blue.”