Retrieved November 24, 2021.Lee DeWyze - Brooklyn Bridge 制作 Things like this don't happen to me Everything used to be so ordinary From the day that I met you Everything's changed Feel like Im dreaming with my eyes open wide Baby you make me feel so good inside What you've done to me is kinda hard to explain Like standin' in Times Square on New Year's Eve And no one is around Like lookin up on a summer's day And seein' snowflakes fallin' down Like danicin' on the Brooklyn bridge by perfect candlelight That's how you make me feel every time you say you're mine. Recording Industry Association of America.
"Lana Del Rey Drops 'Brooklyn Baby' For All Of Us Hipsters". "Lana Del Rey: 'I wish I was dead already' ". "Lana Del Rey's 'Brooklyn Baby' Is An Ode To Hipsters". "Lana Del Rey Pokes Fun at New York Hipsters in 'Brooklyn Baby' ". ^ a b c Coleman, Miriam (June 8, 2014).
^ "iTunes - Music - Ultraviolence by Lana Del Rey"."Lana Del Rey Releases New 'Ultraviolence' Single 'Brooklyn Baby' ". Track listing Ĭredits adapted from the liner notes of Ultraviolence. The song was placed at number twenty two on Rolling Stone 's 50 Best Songs of 2014 list. Sharan Shetty of Slate complimented the melody of the song, however disliked the lack of "big, chewy vocal hooks". Duncan Cooper of The Fader stated that "Brooklyn Baby" is the standout track of Ultraviolence, pointing out the "uncharacteristically self-assured gem", "Yeah, my boyfriend's pretty cool/ But he's not as cool as me.". with a breathy vocals and a melody before moving into Del Rey's typically languid, dreamy soundscape". Miriam Coleman of Rolling Stone described it as a "dreamy song. He is referenced in the line "And my boyfriend's in a band/ He plays guitar while I sing Lou Reed". She was supposed to work with him and flew to New York City to meet him, but he died the day she arrived. Del Rey said that she wrote the song with Lou Reed in mind. In the song, Del Rey pokes fun at New York and celebrates hipster subculture, referencing several cliches about them, Brooklyn, and Millennials. Miriam Coleman of Rolling Stone described Del Rey's vocals as "breathy" and called the melody of the song "reminiscent of 1960s girl-group hits".