Lana Del — Rey Ultraviolence -japan Edition- -itu...

Japanese editions of Western albums have long been revered for two reasons:

The Ultraviolence Japan Edition is no exception. While the standard album gives you 11 tracks (or 14 on the deluxe), the Japan Edition offers the complete Ultraviolence experience. It includes the original album plus the full Flipside EP and an acoustic gem.

Tracklist Highlights exclusive to this edition:

In the M4A format, these tracks are not compressed down to 128kbps MP3s. They retain the "Mastered for iTunes" (now Apple Digital Master) stamp.

Since the mid-2010s, the Japan Edition has become the version to hunt down. Flipside remained region-locked to Japanese digital stores for nearly five years, forcing fans to rip low-quality YouTube audio or pay premium import prices ($30–50 for the SHM-CD). When Lana finally released Flipside on Western streaming services as part of Ultraviolence (Deluxe) in the late 2010s, the mystique slightly faded—but owning the original iTunes metadata (with the correct 2014 release date and Japanese retailer tags) remains a point of pride for digital archivists. Lana Del Rey Ultraviolence -Japan Edition- -iTu...

Final Verdict: If you find a download or an old iPod with the Japan iTunes Edition of Ultraviolence, keep it. It captures a specific, fleeting moment in Lana’s career: post-Great Gatsby, pre-Honeymoon, where every exclusive B-side felt like discovering a secret diary entry. Flipside alone justifies the hunt.


Essential for: Ultraviolence completists, B-side hunters, and fans of "sad-core" collector culture.

It seems your message got cut off, but I can infer you're looking for a guide on Lana Del Rey's Ultraviolence (Japan Edition) — likely focusing on its iTunes/digital release, exclusive tracks, and why it's collectible.

Below is a comprehensive guide based on the known official release. Japanese editions of Western albums have long been


The standard album is presented intact—Cruel World, Shades of Cool, Brooklyn Baby, the heartbreaking The Other Woman—all dripping with Dan Auerbach’s (The Black Keys) trademark compression and reverb. However, the Japan Edition adds two critical bonus tracks, often unavailable on other digital streaming services for years.

While the standard international tracklist ended with the melancholic "Flipside" (on Target exclusive versions) or "Is This Happiness" (on iTunes US pre-orders), the Japan Edition consolidated the wealth.

The iTunes Japan tracklist looks like this:

For US fans in 2014, "Black Beauty," "Guns and Roses," and "Florida Kilos" were not on the standard album. They were spread across Target exclusives, Zine pack CDs, and various digital pre-order windows. Japan was the only territory that gathered all the outtakes onto a single, cohesive disc—and by extension, a single iTunes playlist. The Ultraviolence Japan Edition is no exception


The main reason to seek out this specific edition is the inclusion of bonus tracks that were oddly left off the standard international versions.

The iTunes Japan edition is famous for housing "Is This Happiness" and "Flipside" on the same digital footprint. Let’s analyze these two tracks specifically, as they are the reason many fans seek out this version.

Often maligned by critics as the weakest track on the album, “Guns and Roses” functions differently in the Japan Edition. Stripped of context, it’s a lethargic ode to a tattooed rockstar. But placed at the end of the sequence, it acts as a comedown. The lyric, “He used to call me DN… That stood for Deadly Nightshade,” encapsulates the album’s thesis: beauty as poison. On iTunes, the crisp digital master actually highlights the backing vocals and the subtle organ swells that get lost in the vinyl’s noise floor.

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Samakalika Malayalam - The New Indian Express
www.samakalikamalayalam.com