Diet Mountain Dew Song Lyrics :
You’re no good for me Baby, you’re no good for me You’re no good for me But baby, I want you, I want Diet Mountain Dew, baby, New York City Never was there ever a girl so pretty Do you think we’ll be in love forever? Do you think we’ll be in love? Diet Mountain Dew, baby, New York City Can we hit it now.
Diet Mountain Dew Song Lyrics Watch Video :
Song Credits:
Lana Del Rey-Diet Mountain Dew (The Flight Demo-lyrics)
Diet Mountain Dew Song Lyrics:
[Intro]
You’re no good for me
Baby, you’re no good for me
You’re no good for me
But, baby, I want you, I want
[Chorus]
Diet Mountain Dew, baby, New York City
Never was there ever a girl so pretty
Do you think we’ll be in love forever?
Do you think we’ll be in love?
Diet Mountain Dew, baby, New York City
Can we hit it now, low-down and gritty?
Do you think we’ll be in love forever?
Do you think we’ll be in love?
[Verse 1]
Baby, put on heart-shaped sunglasses
‘Cause we gonna take a ride
I’m not gonna listen to what the past says
I been waitin’ up all night
Take another drag, turn me to ashes
Ready for another lie?
Says he’s gonna teach me just what fast is
Say it’s gonna be alright
[Chorus]
Diet Mountain Dew, baby, New York City
Never was there ever a girl so pretty
Do you think we’ll be in love forever?
Do you think we’ll be in love?
Diet Mountain Dew, baby, New York City
Can we hit it now, low-down and gritty?
Do you think we’ll be in love forever?
Do you think we’ll be in love?
[Verse 2]
Let’s take Jesus off the dashboard
Got enough on his mind
We both know just what we’re here for
Saved too many times
Maybe I like this roller coaster
Maybe it keeps me high
Maybe the speed, it brings me closer
I could sparkle up your eye
[Chorus]
Diet Mountain Dew, baby, New York City
Never was there ever a girl so pretty
Do you think we’ll be in love forever?
Do you think we’ll be in love?
Diet Mountain Dew, baby, New York City
Can we hit it now, low-down and gritty?
Do you think we’ll be in love forever?
Do you think we’ll be in love?
[Bridge]
You’re no good for me
Baby, you’re no good for me
You’re no good for me
But, baby, I want you, I want you
You’re no good for me
Baby, you’re no good for me
You’re no good for me
But, baby, I want you, I want you, I want you
[Chorus]
Diet Mountain Dew, baby, New York City
Never was there ever a girl so pretty
Do you think we’ll be in love forever?
Do you think we’ll be in love?
Baby stoppin’ at 7-Eleven
There in his white Pontiac Heaven
Do you think we’ll be in love forever?
Do you think we’ll be in love?
Diet Mountain Dew, baby, New York City
Never was there ever a girl so pretty
Do you think we’ll be in love forever?
Do you think we’ll be in love?
Diet Mountain Dew, baby, New York City (You’re no good for me)
Can we hit it now, low-down and gritty? (Baby, you’re no good for me)
Do you think we’ll be in love forever? (You’re no good for me)
Do you think we’ll be in love? (But, baby, I want you, I want)
[Outro]
You’re no good for me
Baby, you’re no good for me
You’re no good for me
But, baby, I want you, I want
You’re no good for me
Baby, you’re no good for me
You’re no good for me
But, baby, I want you, I want
You’re no good for me
Baby, you’re no good for me
You’re no good for me
But, baby, I want you, I want
Extra Inforamation:
About Lana Del Rey:
American singer-songwriter Elizabeth Woolridge Grant, better known by her stage name Lana Del Rey, was born on June 21, 1985. Her music, which frequently evokes pop culture and 1950s–1970s Americana, is renowned for its cinematic quality and exploration of tragic romance, glamour, and melancholy. Her music videos feature the glitz and glamour of old Hollywood. Along with being nominated for eleven Grammy Awards and a Golden Globe Award, she has received other honors,
including an MTV Video Music Award, three MTV Europe Music Awards, two Brit Awards, two Billboard Women in Music awards, and a Satellite Award. She was recognized as “one of the most influential singer-songwriters of the 21st century” by Variety at their Hitmakers Awards. Rolling Stone included Del Rey on its 2023 Among the “200 Greatest Singers of All Time” list, she was selected “The Greatest American Songwriter of the 21st century” by Rolling Stone UK, their sister newspaper.
Del Rey, who was raised in upstate New York, relocated to New York City in 2005 in order to further his musical career. Del Rey’s breakthrough came in 2011 after a string of projects, including her self-titled debut studio album (2010). She then got a recording contract with Polydor and Interscope after her track “Video Games” went viral. The sleeper hit “Summertime Sadness” from her second album, Born to Die (2012), brought her both critical and commercial acclaim. Born To Die topped numerous national charts worldwide and earned her first of six number-one albums in the UK. Del Ultraviolence (2014), Rey’s third album, arrived at the top of the U.S. Billboard 200 and made more use of guitar-driven instrumentation.
Her critically acclaimed sixth album, Norman Fucking Rockwell! (2019), explored soft rock, was nominated for Album of the Year at the 62nd Annual Grammy Awards, and was listed as one of the “500 Greatest Albums of All Time” by Rolling Stone. Her fourth and fifth albums, Honeymoon (2015) and Lust for Life (2017), returned to the stylistic traditions of her previous releases. Americana was addressed in her subsequent studio albums, Blue Banisters and Chemtrails over the Country Club, both in 2021.
Taylor Swift’s eleventh studio album, Midnights (2022), had a collaboration with Del Rey called “Snow on the Beach”, which debuted at number four on the Billboard Hot 100 in the United States, which was Del Rey’s highest ranking on the list. Its title track and the highly praised song “A&W”—which Rolling Stone named one of the “500 Greatest Songs of All Time”—helped propel Del Rey’s ninth studio album, Did You Know That There’s a Tunnel Under Ocean Blvd., to release in 2023. She released the Billboard Global 200 top-20 hit “Say Yes to Heaven” later that year.
In 2013, Del Rey wrote and starred in the critically acclaimed musical short Tropico and released “Young and Beautiful” for the romantic drama The Great Gatsby, which was praised by critics and nominated for both a Grammy and a Critics’ Choice Award. Del Rey has also worked on soundtracks for visual media.
She recorded the title track for the Golden Globe-nominated biography Big Eyes and “Once Upon a Dream” for the dark fantasy adventure movie Maleficent in 2014. The collaboration “Don’t Call Me Angel” was also sung by Del Rey for the 2019 action comedy Charlie’s Angels. In 2020, Del Rey released Violet Bent Backwards over the Grass, a collection of poetry and photographs.
Childhood and schooling
Robert England Grant Jr., a copywriter at Grey Group, and Patricia Ann “Pat” Grant (née Hill), an account executive at the same company, welcomed Elizabeth Grant into the world on June 21, 1985, in Manhattan, New York City, Charlie Grant is her younger brother, and Caroline “Chuck” Grant is her younger sister .She was brought up as a Catholic and is of English and Scottish ancestry.
The family relocated to Lake Placid, New York, when she was one year old. Her mother was a schoolteacher in Lake Placid, and her father was a furniture manufacturer before turning to investing in the entrepreneurial domain . She started singing in her church choir, where she served as the cantor, while she was an elementary school student at St. Agnes School .
She spent a year at the high school where her mother taught , but in order to overcome her alcoholism, her parents moved her to Kent School, an Episcopal boarding school in Connecticut, when she was 14 or 15 . Drug abuse and alcoholism had been issues since she was a teenager, and they had gotten so bad that her whole family, included Grant was concerned.
“That’s really why I got sent to boarding school at the age of 14—to get sober,” Grant revealed in an interview.[29] She received financial aid to attend the school thanks to her uncle, who works as an admissions officer. Grant claims that she struggled to make friends for a large portion of her adolescence and early adulthood. She has claimed that her early obsession with death contributed to her sense of fear and alienation:
The idea that my mother, father, and everyone else I knew would all die at some point as well as myself sort of shocked me when I was very little. I experienced a kind of epiphany. The fact that we were mortal shocked me. Somehow, My experience was somewhat eclipsed by that understanding. I was not happy for a while. I had a lot of problems. I was a heavy drinker once. That period of my life was difficult.
Later, Grant left school to get treatment; she has been clean since 2003. She lived with her aunt and uncle on Long Island for a year while working as a waitress. Grant “realized [that she] could probably write a million songs with those six chords” while learning to play the guitar from her uncle. She soon started creating songs and singing in nightclubs all around the city under several identities including “Lizzy Grant and the Phenomena” and “Sparkle Jump Rope Queen.” “I was singing all the while, but had no intention of taking it seriously,” she stated:
I started playing in clubs in Brooklyn when I moved to New York City at the age of eighteen. I had loyal followers and excellent friends in the underground scene, but at that time, we were just performing for each other, and that was all.
Grant enrolled at Fordham University in The Bronx, New York City, in the fall of 2004 at the age of 19, majoring in philosophy with a focus on metaphysics. She claims that the reason she decided to study the topic was because it “bridged the gap between God and science… I was interested in God and how technology could bring us closer to finding out where we came from and why.”
While still a college student in the spring of 2005, Del Rey registered a seven-track extended play with the US Copyright Office under the title Rock Me Stable. Young Like Me was also included. Del Rey’s stage name at the time, May Jailer, was also used to record a second extended play, From the End. As part of the May Jailer project, she recorded the acoustic album Sirens between 2005 and 2006; it was leaked online in the middle of 2012.
I desired to be a member of a prestigious musical community. It was partially motivated by my lack of friends and my desire to meet people, fall in love, and create a community around me, much like they did in the 1960s. —Del Rey on her motivation for entering the music business. Van Wilson, an A&R representative for David Nichtern’s small company 5 Points Records, encountered Del Rey during her first public performance in 2006 at the Williamsburg Live Songwriting Competition. She sent a demo tape of acoustic songs, “No Kung Fu,” to 5 Points in 2007 while she was a senior at Fordham, and they offered her a recording contract for $10,000.
She started working with producer David Kahne after using the funds to move to Manhattan Mobile Home Park, a trailer park in North Bergen, New Jersey, “Our goal was to organize everything, have a record ready, and have her start touring as soon as she graduated from college,” Nichtern recounted. Similar to a Many artists, she changed. She was a very attractive young woman with straight blonde hair and a plunky little acoustic guitar when she first came to us. Very intelligent, yet a touch gloomy. That’s what we heard. However, she continued to change quite rapidly.
In 2008, Del Rey received a Bachelor of Arts in philosophy from Fordham [further citation(s) needed Following this, she released the three-track EP Kill Kill, which was produced by Kahne and featured Lizzy Grant. She clarified: “Just one day after receiving my sample, David offered to collaborate with me. He is renowned for being an honest producer who was interested in creating music beyond pop. Del Rey was working on community engagement in the interim for homeless people and drug addicts; she “took a road trip across the country to paint and rebuild houses on a Native American reservation” while in college, which sparked her interest in community service.
“I wanted a name I could shape the music towards,” she stated when asked about the stage name she chose for her feature debut album. At the time, I was visiting Miami frequently and conversing in Spanish with my Cuban friends—Lana Del Rey reminded us of the glitz and splendor of the beach. Off the tip of the tongue, it sounded stunning. The Ford Del Rey sedan, which was manufactured and marketed in Brazil in the 1980s, and actress Lana Turner both served as inspiration for the name. At first, she employed the alternative
Her self-titled debut album, which was released in January 2010, was spelled Lana Del Ray. Her father assisted in the promotion of the record, which was briefly offered for sale on iTunes before being taken down in April 2010. According to Kahne and Nichtern, Del Rey purchased the rights back from 5 Points because she wished to “stifle future opportunities to distribute it—an echo of rumors the action was part of a calculated strategy” by removing it from circulation.
Three months after Lana Del Ray’s release, Del Rey met her managers, Ed Millett and Ben Mawson, who assisted her in terminating her contract with 5 Points Records, where she felt “nothing was happening.” Not long after, she relocated to London, where they lived “for a few years” with Mawson. Mando Diao included Del Rey in its MTV Unplugged performance at Union Film-Studios in Berlin on September 1, 2010. She co-produced Poolside, a short film, with a number of pals that same year.
2011–2013: Born to Die and Paradise marked a breakthrough
The music videos for Del Rey’s songs “Video Games” and “Blue Jeans” were self-made and posted to YouTube in 2011. They included old movie clips and webcam footage of her performing. After the “Video Games” music video became viral online, Del Rey was signed by Stranger Records to release the song It was her first single. She told The Observer: “That song was my favorite, so I just posted it online a few months ago. It wasn’t going to be the single, to be honest, but people have responded to it very well.
” She won an Ivor Novello for “Best Contemporary Song” in 2012 and a Q award for “Next Big Thing” in October 2011 for the song. She inked a joint release agreement with Polydor and Interscope Records for her second studio album, Born to Die, that same month. In the same year, she began dating Barrie-James O’Neill, a Scottish singer. After three years of dating, the pair called it quits in 2014. On January 14, 2012, Del Rey played two tracks from the album on Saturday Night Live. It was released by Polydor and Interscope Records in the summer of 2012.
In contrast to Del Rey’s press release, both her former record label and producer David Kahne have claimed that she purchased the album’s rights when she and the label split up in April 2010 in response to the offer of a new contract. Born to Die was the fifth-best-selling album of 2012, with 3.4 million copies sold. Born to Die spent 36 weeks on the Billboard 200 chart in the United States, where it remained at number 76 for much of 2012. Born to Die has been on the Billboard 200 for 520 weeks (10 years) as of February 3, 2024, making Del Rey the second woman to accomplish this feat.