
Lana Del Rey has finally released her much-anticipated new song, ‘Henry, Come On’ – and fans are all saying the same thing.
The 39-year-old singer/songwriter, from New York, has been teasing the track for more than a year now. And Lana Del Rey fans have been ecstatic that they can finally listen to it.
Many took to X on its release to encourage others to stream it, so that the track becomes a success for Lana, real name Elizabeth Woolridge Grant.
After a link to the track was shared online, one fan wrote: “We will all be streaming.” While another added: “That’s wonderful… let’s all stream it fam.”
A third chimed in: “Can’t wait to listen 452 times in a row,” while someone else said they were “choking, crying, throwing up” after the track’s release as they ‘love her so much’.
Another fan also added: “Lana really knows how to pull you into a story without rushing a thing.”
‘Henry, Come On’ is thought to the first single from Del Rey’s promised new album, ‘The Right Person Will Stay’. It’s reported that her follow-up to ‘Did You Know That There’s a Tunnel Under Ocean Blvd’ is out on May 21.
The track’s release comes ahead of Del Rey’s performance at the Stagecoach Festival, which is held in California between April 25-27. She’ll follow the show with a string of summer concerts in the United Kingdom.
Lana announced her 10th studio album back in November last year as she wrote in an Instagram post at the time: “Happy for you to hear a few songs coming up before Stagecoach.” At the time of writing, the singer only referred to the song as ‘Henry’ rather than its official title ‘Henry, Come On.’
Back in February last year she also teased the country-inspired album, which was originally meant to be called Lasso. At a Billboard pre-Grammy event, Del Rey talked about the original album concept, saying: “If you can’t already tell by our award winners and our performers, the music business is going country… We’re going country. It’s happening. That’s why Jack has followed me to Muscle Shoals, Nashville, Mississippi, over the last four years.”
By August 2024, she clarified her vision for the album in an interview with Vogue, saying: “All my albums are somewhat rooted in Americana… so I don’t think it will be a heavy departure.
“If anything, it will just be a little lighter lyrically, and more pointed in a classic country, American, or Southern Gothic production — which again, so many of my songs already are.”
- Source: NEWHD MEDIA