Often referred to by fans as the "Purple Panties" era or simply "The Vault," Lana’s collection of unreleased music is arguably the most legendary body of work in modern digital fandom. Numbering well over , this archive spans genres from trip-hop and folk to surf rock and spoken word. To ask for "all unreleased songs" is to ask for a map of a buried city.
"All unreleased songs" are not available on DSPs (Spotify/Apple Music). They live on YouTube, SoundCloud (though frequently taken down), and dedicated Lana forums (like Lanaboards or Reddit’s r/lanadelrey). Because these are intellectual property, this guide is for informational purposes only—seek them out via fan archives at your own discretion. The Final Verdict To compile "Lana Del Rey all unreleased songs" is to try to catch smoke with your bare hands.
Want a downloadable checklist of all 200+ known tracks? Join the r/LanaDelRay subreddit and search for "The Ultimate Leak Spreadsheet" – updated weekly.
Whether you are looking for the trip-hop of "You Can Be the Boss" or the haunting piano of "For K Part 2" – the journey through the vault is the definitive Lana Del Rey experience. There is no end. There is no "complete" collection. There is only the click of a YouTube upload, a grainy thumbnail, and the discovery of another masterpiece she left in the drawer.
For the casual radio listener, Lana Del Rey is the queen of cinematic, sad-core anthems like Summertime Sadness and Video Games . But for the "stan" who has fallen down the rabbit hole, they know the truth: Lana Del Rey’s true masterpiece isn't an album—it's the vault.
Why does this matter? Because for many fans, the Lana of the vault is the real Lana. She is messier, more dangerous, more experimental, and less filtered than the polished woman accepting awards at the Grammys.
The list continues to grow. In 2024 alone, tracks like "Starry Eyed" and "I Talk to Jesus" re-emerged in higher quality. Every time Lana records a new album (like Lasso ), older ghosts from 2014 suddenly appear online.