Brooklyn Baby

Lana Del Rey · Ultraviolence [Deluxe] [2014]

They say I'm too young to love you

I don't know what I need

They think I don't understand

The freedom land of the seventies

I think I'm too cool to know ya

You say I'm like the ice, I freeze

I'm churning out novels like

Beat poetry on Amphetamines

I say

I say



Well, my boyfriend's in a band

He plays guitar while I sing Lou Reed

I've got feathers in my hair

I get down to Beat poetry

And my jazz collection's rare

I can play 'most anything

I'm a Brooklyn baby

I'm a Brooklyn baby



They say I'm too young to love you

They say I'm too dumb to see

They judge me like a picture book

By the colors, like they forgot to read

I think we're like fire and water

I think we're like the wind and sea

You're burning up, I'm cooling down

You're up, I'm down

You're blind, I see

But I'm free

I'm free



Well, my boyfriend's in a band

He plays guitar while I sing Lou Reed

I've got feathers in my hair

I get down to Beat poetry

And my jazz collection's rare

I can play 'most anything

I'm a Brooklyn baby

I'm a Brooklyn baby



I'm talkin' about my generation

Talkin' about that newer nation

And if you don't like it, you can beat it

Beat it, baby

You never liked the way I said it

If you don't get it, then forget it

So I don't have to fucking explain it



And my boyfriend's in a band

He plays guitar while I sing Lou Reed

I've got feathers in my hair

I get high on hydroponic weed

And my jazz collection's rare

I get down to Beat poetry

I'm a Brooklyn baby

I'm a Brooklyn baby



Yeah, my boyfriend's pretty cool

But he's not as cool as me

'Cause I'm a Brooklyn baby

I'm a Brooklyn baby

Brooklyn Baby

Lana Del Rey's 'Brooklyn Baby' serves as a haunting centerpiece on her 2014 album *Ultraviolence*, blending her signature lo-fi aesthetic with themes of lost youth and urban nostalgia. The track exemplifies her ability to weave together pop sensibilities with a melancholic, cinematic atmosphere that has become a defining characteristic of her discography. Released during a pivotal era in her career, the song reflects her ongoing exploration of American mythology and the bittersweet nature of growing up in New York City. Its enduring appeal lies in its atmospheric production and Del Rey's emotive delivery, which captures the essence of a bygone era while maintaining a timeless quality that resonates across generations of listeners.