"Summertime Sadness" is a song by Americansinger-songwriterLana Del Rey, released on June 22, 2012, as the fourth single from her major-label debut studio album, Born to Die.[1] The track, co-written by Del Rey and Rick Nowels and produced by Emile Haynie, is a melancholic pop ballad in the key of C♯ minor that explores themes of fleeting romance, loss, and summertime nostalgia.[2][3] Del Rey's vocals span two octaves, from C♯3 to C♯5, delivering lyrics about a passionate yet doomed relationship, including lines like "Kiss me hard before you go" that evoke a sense of inevitable goodbye.[2]The original version achieved moderate success in Europe, reaching the top 10 in countries such as Austria, France, Greece (airplay), Luxembourg, and Switzerland, but only number 13 in Germany.[4] However, a house remix by French DJ Cedric Gervais, released on July 11, 2013, transformed the song into a global hit, marking Del Rey's first top 10 entry on the US Billboard Hot 100 where it peaked at number six.[5][6] The remix also propelled the track to number four on the UK Singles Chart and top-five positions across various international markets, driven by its upbeat electronic production that contrasted the original's somber tone.[7] By November 2025, "Summertime Sadness" had amassed over 2.1 billion streams on Spotify, solidifying its status as one of Del Rey's signature songs.[4][8]The song's accompanying music video, directed by Kyle Newman and Spencer Susser and starring actress Jaime King, depicts a narrative of glamour, tragedy, and suicide on the California coast, enhancing its cinematic and emotional appeal.[2][9] Critically, it has been praised for blending Del Rey's signature "Hollywood sadcore" style with accessible pop elements, contributing to the album Born to Die's commercial dominance, which has sold over 10 million copies worldwide as of 2025.[2][10]
Development
Writing and recording
"Summertime Sadness" was co-written by Lana Del Rey and Rick Nowels during sessions for her second studio album, Born to Die, in 2011. Del Rey drew inspiration from a period of personal uninspiration, aiming to capture the bittersweet melancholy of summer despite its glamorous allure. [11]The song was recorded at Human Feel Studios in Los Angeles, California, as part of the broader album production that year. Del Rey handled lead vocals, with Nowels contributing to the arrangement alongside producer Emile Haynie. [12]Haynie served as the primary producer, with Nowels as co-producer, employing techniques such as multi-layered vocals to build the track's ethereal quality, especially in the chorus where Del Rey's voice achieves a haunting depth through overlapping harmonies. Orchestral elements, including strings arranged by Larry Gold, were integrated to enhance the cinematic atmosphere, reflecting Nowels and Del Rey's collaborative approach to blending intimate vocals with sweeping instrumentation. [13][14]
Initial release
"Summertime Sadness" served as the fourth single from Lana Del Rey's debut major-label album Born to Die, marking a key part of the record's promotional cycle following earlier releases like "Video Games," "Blue Jeans," and "Born to Die." The track received its initial commercial rollout on June 22, 2012, as a digital download in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland through Interscope Records, with broader international availability expanding into July 2012 across Europe and other markets.[1][15]The single launched in multiple formats to maximize accessibility and radio play, including digital downloads for immediate streaming and purchase, a physical CD single released on July 13, 2012, in the initial European territories featuring the album version and a radio mix edit, and various promotional remixes distributed to stations and media outlets.[15][16] Interscope emphasized a targeted marketing strategy in Europe, where the song quickly gained traction through a dedicated radio airplay campaign, including a shortened radio mix tailored for broadcast to build listener familiarity.[17]Early promotional integration extended to live performances, with "Summertime Sadness" incorporated into setlists for the ongoing Born to Die Tour as early as February 2012, allowing audiences to experience the track during album promotion dates.[18] Pre-release anticipation stemmed from the song's inclusion on Born to Die, which had garnered attention in album reviews; for instance, The Guardian noted "Summertime Sadness" alongside other tracks for reworking cinematic and nostalgic elements in January 2012 coverage.[19] This buzz contributed to the single's prompt chart entry, debuting on the Europe Official Top 100 at number 41 the week of July 12, 2012.[20]
Composition
Musical style
"Summertime Sadness" is classified as a baroque pop song incorporating elements of trip hop.[21] The track features lush orchestral production typical of the genre, blending dramatic string arrangements with subtle electronic undertones.[22]The song is composed in the key of C-sharp minor, with a moderate tempo of 112 beats per minute and a 4/4 time signature.[23][24] Its instrumentation centers on synthesizers providing atmospheric layers, sweeping strings for emotional depth, and piano accents that underscore the melody's melancholic contour.[22] Lana Del Rey's breathy vocals, treated with reverb to evoke a sense of ethereal distance, serve as the focal point, enhancing the track's introspective mood.[22]Structurally, "Summertime Sadness" follows a verse-chorus form, beginning with an introductory verse that builds tension through repetitive motifs before transitioning into the expansive chorus.[25] A bridge introduces heightened dynamics with layered harmonies, leading to an anthemic outro where the instrumentation swells to a climactic resolution.[25] This progression creates a narrative arc that mirrors the song's emotional intensity.[25]
Lyrics and themes
"Summertime Sadness" delves into themes of fleeting romance, nostalgia, and existential sadness amid the vibrancy of summer, portraying a relationship marked by intense passion and inevitable loss. The narrator reflects on a love that brings electric highs but is overshadowed by the awareness of its transience, capturing the bittersweet essence of youth and desire. According to music publication American Songwriter, Del Rey penned the track during a phase of creative stagnation, inspired by the sensory details of a trip to California that reignited her muse and infused the lyrics with a sense of wistful escapism.[11]Central to the song's lyrical content are motifs of parting and surrender, exemplified in lines like "Kiss me hard before you go / Summertime sadness / I just wanted you to know / That baby, you're the best I've ever known." These words evoke the urgency of a final embrace, symbolizing the end of a summer fling and the emotional void it leaves behind. The recurring reference to "lights out" further illustrates loss and escapism, suggesting a deliberate dimming of reality—possibly through substance use or emotional retreat—as a coping mechanism for heartbreak.[13]Del Rey embodies a tragic, glamorous persona in the lyrics, channeling personal vulnerabilities alongside cinematic archetypes of doomed lovers from classic Hollywood films. This character navigates the allure of reckless abandon while confronting inner turmoil, blending autobiographical elements with broader cultural nostalgia for an idealized American past. Her breathy vocal delivery subtly reinforces this vulnerability, tying the words to a sense of intimate confession.[21][26]Poetic devices enhance the song's emotional depth, with repetition of the chorus phrase "Summertime sadness" creating a hypnotic emphasis on melancholy amid euphoria. Vivid imagery, such as "dancing in the pale moonlight" and "the sun going down," juxtaposes fleeting beauty against inevitable decay, underscoring themes of youth's ephemerality and the passage of time. These elements craft a layered narrative that resonates as both personal lament and universal meditation on love's impermanence.[13]
Critical reception
Reviews
Upon its release as the fourth single from Lana Del Rey's debut album Born to Die in June 2012, "Summertime Sadness" garnered generally positive attention from critics for its evocative blend of melancholy and pop sensibility, though opinions on its dramatic flair varied.Rolling Stone highlighted the track's atmospheric production in a 2013 retrospective, calling it one of the album's stronger cuts where Del Rey's voice "meshes beautifully with the Angelo Badalamenti-recalling strings and the hip-hop beats," evoking a wistful cinematic quality.[27]NME, in its February 2012 album review, praised the song's emotional resonance, noting how it "underlines the self-fulfilling prophecy of her own doom" through its pop-infused lyrics and orchestral swells.[28]Some critiques were more tempered, pointing to the song's theatrical elements as occasionally overwrought. Pitchfork's January 2012 review of Born to Die critiqued the album's overall lack of spark and depth, though the outlet later acknowledged the track's inherent catchiness in discussions of Del Rey's early work.[22] Similarly, a Today.com review from January 2012 described the hook as "a little dramatic" yet "very addictive, and all-around amazing," capturing its polarizing blend of excess and allure.[29]The song's reception contributed to the mixed aggregate score for Born to Die, which earned 62 out of 100 on Metacritic based on 37 critic reviews (as of 2025), reflecting praise for Del Rey's thematic depth amid debates over its stylistic indulgence.[30] In 2012-2013 coverage, outlets like The Guardian emphasized how tracks like "Summertime Sadness" exemplified Del Rey's "knowing sadness" and hypnotic delivery, positioning it as a key piece in her emerging oeuvre of doomed romance and nostalgia.[19]
Accolades
"Summertime Sadness" garnered notable recognition for its lyrical depth and atmospheric production, cementing its place as a landmark in contemporary pop music.In 2021, the song was ranked number 456 on Rolling Stone's updated list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time, lauded for its haunting evocation of transient love and seasonal melancholy that resonated widely in the 2010s, though it was removed in the 2024 update.[31]It has also appeared in curated "best of" compilations, including uDiscoverMusic's 100 Best Songs About Summer at position 42, where it was highlighted as a defining example of bittersweet summer anthems blending nostalgia with emotional introspection.[32]While the track did not secure major award nominations during its peak years from 2012 to 2015, its songwriting by Lana Del Rey and Rick Nowels contributed to broader accolades for Del Rey's catalog, including multiple BMI Pop Awards for high-performance songs in subsequent years.
Music video
Production
The music video for "Summertime Sadness" was directed by Kyle Newman and Spencer Susser, with principal photography taking place in Santa Clarita, California, during April 2012.[33][9] The project was produced by Tova Dann, who oversaw the collaboration between the directors and the creative team.[34]Cinematography was led by Morgan Susser, whose work contributed to the video's intimate and atmospheric capture of the performers against urban and natural backdrops.[35] The core crew included editor Spencer Susser, who also handled post-production to refine the pacing and emotional flow.[35]The visual style drew on contemporary digital aesthetics, employing sepia-toned color grading and slow-motion sequences to create a faded, vintage ambiance reminiscent of early social media filters.[33][21] This approach amplified the song's nostalgic undertones, blending modern filming techniques with a deliberate sense of temporal displacement.[33]
Synopsis
The music video for "Summertime Sadness," directed by Kyle Newman and Spencer Susser, opens with sepia-toned footage of Lana Del Rey and actress Jaime King driving in a convertible along a coastal road on a sunny day, smiling and embracing the carefree summer atmosphere as the song's intro plays.[33] As the first verse begins, the narrative shifts to intimate and joyful moments between the two women, including lounging by a pool, applying makeup together in preparation for a night out, kissing passionately in a bathroom mirror, and getting matching tattoos on their arms, highlighting their deep romantic bond.[33][36]During the chorus, surreal elements emerge, intercutting these happy recollections with darker imagery of inner turmoil, such as close-ups of pills scattered on a surface and a handgun held in a trembling hand, symbolizing emotional despair and self-destructive impulses.[21] The second verse features hospital scenes where King lies in a sterile bed, appearing frail and isolated, while Del Rey visits, their interaction conveying grief and helplessness amid the building melody.[37]As the song reaches its bridge, the tone intensifies with dreamlike sequences of Del Rey wandering alone, her expressions shifting from seductive poise to profound sadness, accompanied by motifs of resurrection like ethereal light filtering through clouds, suggesting fleeting hope amid loss.[36] In the final chorus and outro, the women reunite on the Colorado Street Bridge in Pasadena, California, overlooking a ravine, holding hands before jumping off in slow motion, their bodies falling toward the water in a surreal cascade of smoke and light, aligning with the song's runtime of approximately 4 minutes and 24 seconds to culminate in a poignant depiction of shared suicide.[33][38] The video closes with Del Rey rising and walking solemnly across the empty bridge as the screen fades to black, tying back visually to the lyrical themes of enduring summertime melancholy.[36]
Reception
The music video for "Summertime Sadness" garnered acclaim for its distinctive visual aesthetics and narrative depth. Billboard highlighted its use of sepia tones and melodramatic elements to explore a deteriorating relationship, emphasizing the artistic portrayal of grief and intimacy between the leads.[33]The video's depiction of the protagonists committing suicide by jumping from a bridge provoked debate over its representation of tragedy and potential glorification of self-harm, with some observers questioning the sensitivity of such imagery in popular media upon its 2012 release.[39]By November 2025, the official music video had accumulated over 765 million views on YouTube, underscoring its enduring popularity and cultural resonance.[40]Fans and analysts have extensively interpreted the video's symbolism, viewing the slow-motion falls, recurring motifs of smoke and water, and the central lesbian romance as metaphors for irreversible loss and the fleeting nature of summer love, often linking it thematically to the song's exploration of heartbreak.[11]
Performances
Live performances
"Summertime Sadness" made its live debut on December 5, 2011, at the Bowery Ballroom in New York City, prior to the official release of the Born to Die album.[41] The track quickly became a staple of Del Rey's performances during the Born to Die Tour (2012–2013), appearing in nearly every show across North America, Europe, and Asia, often positioned mid-set alongside other album highlights like "Blue Jeans" and "Video Games."[42] Notable early appearances included the BBC Radio 1's Hackney Weekend festival on June 24, 2012, in London, where it was performed before a large outdoor crowd as part of a set drawing from her debut album.[43]As the song's popularity surged following its 2012 single release, it remained prominent in subsequent tours, including the Paradise Tour (2013–2014) and the Endless Summer Tour (2017–2018). Del Rey delivered it at major festivals such as Lollapalooza Chicago on August 2, 2013, during the Paradise Tour, integrating it into a cinematic stage production with orchestral elements and dramatic lighting.[44] Variations emerged over time, with acoustic renditions emphasizing the ballad's melancholic vocals and piano accompaniment, as heard at the New Pop Festival in Baden-Baden, Germany, on September 29, 2012.[45]In later years, "Summertime Sadness" was adapted into medleys for dynamic live sets, such as a seamless transition into "Doin' Time" during the Norman Fucking Rockwell Tour at the Hollywood Bowl on October 10, 2019.[46] The track continued to feature in Del Rey's repertoire through the 2020s, including an acoustic version at the Stagecoach Festival on April 25, 2025, and full-band performances on the UK and Ireland Tour 2025, like at Principality Stadium in Cardiff on June 23, 2025.[47][48] Its enduring appeal has ensured consistent inclusion across over 290 documented live renditions up to 2025.[41]
Covers and samples
"Summertime Sadness" has inspired a wide array of covers by artists spanning multiple genres, often reinterpreting its melancholic pop essence through alternative lenses. Dutch symphonic metal band Within Temptation released a prominent cover in 2013 as part of their EP The Q-Music Sessions, incorporating orchestral strings and heavier instrumentation to amplify the song's dramatic undertones.[49]Miley Cyrus delivered a raw, guitar-driven live rendition during her 2013 BBC Radio 1Live Lounge session, showcasing her vocal range in a pop-rock style that resonated with fans.[50] Acoustic interpretations have also proliferated, including Madilyn Bailey's stripped-down version from 2013, which emphasizes the lyrics' emotional intimacy with piano accompaniment, and Shawn Mendes' youthful take in 2014, performed during his early covers series.[51][52]The track has been sampled in various hip-hop and electronic productions, requiring standard copyright clearances from publishers and rights holders to avoid infringement.[53] Lana Del Rey incorporated elements of her own song into "Body Electric" from the 2012 Paradise EP, looping the chorus melody to create a haunting, self-referential extension of the theme.[54] German rapper Kontra K sampled the instrumental hook in his 2023 track "Summertime," crediting Del Rey and blending it with trap beats for a crossover hit that peaked on European charts.[54] Other examples include producer AraabMuzik's 2013 instrumental "Summer Time," which repurposes the synth riff for a beat-driven electronic vibe, and DJ i61's 2013 "Way1," integrating vocal snippets into a house framework.[55]Beyond professional adaptations, the song has fueled viral user-generated content on platforms like TikTok since 2020, where short, unauthorized covers often skirt fair use boundaries but gain massive traction through algorithmic promotion. Singer Gabi's 2025 acoustic "beauty queen style" cover amassed significant likes, evoking the original's nostalgic glamour with minimal production. Similarly, Anthony Vincent's 2025 Type O Negative-inspired gothic rock rendition exceeded 99,000 likes, transforming the pop ballad into a brooding metal dirge. These informal takes highlight the song's enduring cultural adaptability, though full commercial uses necessitate legal endorsements from Del Rey's label, Interscope Records.[56]
Commercial performance
Original version charts
The original version of "Summertime Sadness" was released as a single in Europe on June 22, 2012, and quickly gained traction on continental charts, entering several national top 40s during the summer months. It demonstrated sustained performance through 2012 and into 2013, with extended chart runs in multiple markets before the Cedric Gervais remix further propelled its global visibility. The song's trajectory highlighted its appeal in German-speaking and Francophone countries, where it achieved top-10 peaks and notable year-end placements.[1]In Germany, the track debuted on the Official German Charts at number 15 on July 6, 2012, climbing to its peak of number 4 the following week and spending a total of 43 weeks on the listing. It ranked number 21 on the 2012 year-end German singles chart, reflecting its commercial endurance amid competition from dance and pop hits. The song re-entered the chart in 2013, contributing to its decade-end recognition as one of the standout tracks of the 2010s in European airplay and sales metrics.[57]The song also performed strongly in other European territories, entering charts in mid-2012 and maintaining presence into 2013. Representative examples include:
These runs underscore the original version's organic growth via radio airplay and digital downloads, with the music video release providing a brief boost to streaming and sales in late 2012. By the end of the 2010s, "Summertime Sadness" had amassed over 500 weeks across combined European charts, cementing its status as a enduring alt-pop staple.[58][1]
Original version certifications
The original version of "Summertime Sadness" earned its initial certification in the United States, where the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) awarded it Platinum status on October 18, 2013, for 1,000,000 units of sales and on-demand audio and video streams.[59] This milestone was driven primarily by digital downloads, as the single saw limited physical release beyond promotional vinyl and CD singles bundled with the album Born to Die, contributing less than 10% of the total units at the time.[60]Due to sustained popularity and the inclusion of streaming equivalents since 2016, the certification was updated multiple times, reaching 8× Platinum on November 29, 2023, for 8,000,000 units, with no further updates as of November 2025.[61] By mid-2025, streaming accounted for the majority of these units, with the song surpassing 2 billion streams on Spotify alone, reflecting a resurgence fueled by viralsocial media usage and playlist placements.[4] Digital sales totaled approximately 5.6 million pure downloads and ringtones globally up to that point, underscoring the track's transition from modest initial sales to long-term digital and streaming dominance.[60]Internationally, the original version received Gold certification in Australia from the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) for 35,000 units in 2013, later updated to 8× Platinum (560,000 units) as of October 2024 through streaming adjustments. In Italy, the Federazione Industria Musicale Italiana (FIMI) certified it 2× Platinum for 100,000 units in 2013, with subsequent updates to 3× Platinum (300,000 units) as of 2022 incorporating streams to reflect ongoing consumption. In the United Kingdom, the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) awarded Platinum certification for 600,000 units in 2013, based largely on digital sales, though physical formats like 7-inch vinyl contributed marginally to early figures; updated to 5× Platinum (3,000,000 units) as of 2023.
Region
Certification Body
Certification Level
Units Equivalent
Initial Date
Latest Update
Notes on Breakdown
United States
RIAA
8× Platinum
8,000,000
October 18, 2013 (Platinum)
November 29, 2023
Primarily digital downloads initially (over 90%); streaming dominant post-2016 resurgence, exceeding 2 billion Spotify streams by 2025.
United Kingdom
BPI
5× Platinum
3,000,000
2013 (Platinum)
2023
Digital sales main contributor; minimal physical (e.g., limited vinyl); updated for streams.
In early 2013, Universal Germany commissioned French DJ and producer Cedric Gervais to create a dance remix of Lana Del Rey's "Summertime Sadness" specifically for club play, aiming to adapt the original ballad's melancholic themes into an energetic electronic track suitable for EDM audiences.[62]Gervais, riding the momentum from his successful 2012 single "Molly," was drawn to the project out of admiration for Del Rey's artistry rather than financial incentives, completing the remix in just one day.[21]Despite the commission, the remix was initially rejected by Interscope Records (Del Rey's U.S. label) and Polydor (her U.K. label), who questioned its fit with the song's original aesthetic. Gervais and the team proceeded independently, securing release through Spinnin' Records, with the track debuting digitally on platforms like Beatport in February 2013, primarily in Europe.[62] This rollout emphasized club and digital promotion to build grassroots buzz in the dance scene before broader adoption.Following its early traction in European clubs and on dance radio, Interscope reconsidered and approved the remix for U.S. promotion, involving Del Rey in the final endorsement process to align it with her vision, though it diverged from the subdued, cinematic intent of the 2012 original. The marketing strategy focused on digital singles and targeted radio airplay on dance formats, positioning the remix as a standalone hit rather than a mere album cut extension.[5]
Composition and production
The Cedric Gervaisremix transforms "Summertime Sadness" into a progressive house track within the EDM genre, incorporating driving beats, layered synths, and a pulsating bassline to restructure the song for dance floors while amplifying its emotional depth.[63] Operating at 126 BPM, the remix introduces synth drops and builds that create a club-oriented energy, diverging from the original's more subdued arrangement by replacing some orchestral elements with electronic production.[64][65]Gervais handled the production in his Miami studio during late 2012, layering Lana Del Rey's original vocals over newly crafted basslines and tension-building sections to craft an extended mix suited for DJ transitions, with a length of 6:56 compared to the radio edit's 3:36.[66][67] The remix retains the song's core lyrics while extending the intro and outro for seamless mixing in live sets.[68]Mixing and mastering were overseen by Gervais, with no additional vocal tweaks reported from Del Rey, ensuring the production emphasized the interplay between the preserved vocal performance and the added electronic elements.[69]
Music video
The music video for the Cedric Gervais remix of "Summertime Sadness" is a re-edited version of the original 2012 color footage, with post-production adjustments to sync the visuals to the remix's tempo and energy while maintaining the vibrant aesthetic. No new filming took place. The video maintains the core narrative of two women grappling with loss and hedonism. It runs 4 minutes and features Lana Del Rey and Jaime King as the leads.[9]Released on July 17, 2013, the video was created exclusively by Spinnin' Records to promote the remix single and premiered on their official YouTube channel, garnering over 180 million views.[70][71]
Commercial performance
The Cedric Gervais remix of "Summertime Sadness" marked a major commercial breakthrough, achieving global digital sales and equivalent units surpassing 5.6 million by 2025, propelled by its explosive popularity in European dance clubs following its release on Spinnin' Records. As of November 2025, the remix has over 810 million streams on Spotify.[60][72][73]The track demonstrated strong radio airplay and streaming performance, topping the Billboard Dance Club Songs chart in August 2013 and underscoring its enduring appeal in electronic music circles.[63]Unlike the original version, which had modest U.S. radio traction, the remix catalyzed Lana Del Rey's transition to mainstream stardom, boosting her visibility through crossover dance formats and marking her highest-charting single at the time.[66]In the 2020s, the remix fueled a notable resurgence via social media virality, driving renewed streaming milestones—including contributions to the song's overall 2 billion Spotify streams—and prompting a re-entry on the Billboard Global 200 in 2025, reaching No. 130.[4][74]
Charts
The Cedric Gervais remix of "Summertime Sadness" entered charts in 2013, achieving notable peaks in major markets and sustaining long runs on European singles charts, with over 20 weeks in the top 10 across several countries.[75][5]
The remix also reached the top 10 in multiple other European countries, including Germany and Switzerland, contributing to its sustained presence on regional charts.[21]
The track performed strongly on year-end lists in Europe, placing in the top 5 on several national singles charts, such as the UK Official Year-End Singles Chart. In the US, it ranked #45 on the Billboard Hot 100 year-end chart.[75]
Decade-End Charts (2010s)
On Billboard's staff-curated list of the 60 Greatest Dance Songs of the 2010s, the remix ranked #4, highlighting its enduring impact in the dance genre. It also placed #28 on the Billboard Hot Dance/Electronic Songs decade-end chart (2013–2019).[63]
Certifications
The Cedric Gervaisremix of "Summertime Sadness" has received numerous certifications worldwide, reflecting its commercial success driven by both physical and digital sales as well as streaming equivalents in the years following its 2013 release. Certifications were initially awarded based on sales thresholds but have been updated in subsequent years to account for streaming data from platforms like Spotify and YouTube, contributing to higher multipliers in several markets.[76]By 2025, the remix has surpassed 10 million equivalent units globally, incorporating over 810 million streams on Spotify alone, alongside download and physical sales. This total underscores the track's enduring popularity and the impact of digital consumption on its longevity.[60]
Engineers – Kieron Menzies (mixing), Jordan McGinley (assistant), Scott Smith (assistant), Nicolas Essig (assistant), Andrew Wetherall (assistant)[78]
Remix version
Credits for the Cedric Gervais remix include those from the original version, with the following additions and modifications:
Remix, additional production – Cedric Gervais[69]
Drums, keyboards – Emile Haynie[78]
Guitar – Rick Nowels[78]
Track listings
Original single
The original single release of "Summertime Sadness" was issued primarily as a two-track configuration across physical and digital formats, featuring the radio mix and the album version from Lana Del Rey's Born to Die.[15]
CD single
The CD single was released in Europe, specifically in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland, on July 13, 2012, by Vertigo Records (catalog number 06025 3710263 1). It served as the primary physical format for the original single. Track listing
"Summertime Sadness" (Radio Mix) – 4:12
"Summertime Sadness" – 4:25[15][79]
Digital EP
The digital EP was made available for download on platforms such as iTunes starting June 22, 2012, through Interscope Records, mirroring the CD single's tracks without additional content in the core original release. Regional digital availability followed similar configurations, with no distinct extended mix variations documented for the original version in Europe. Track listing
The Cedric Gervaisremix of "Summertime Sadness" was issued as a digital single featuring the radio edit.[80]EP versions of the remix incorporated additional mixes for radio and club play, including on promotional releases. For example, a promotional CDr included:
This configuration emphasized the remix as the primary focus while providing supplementary versions for broader consumption.[67]
Release history
Original version
The original version of "Summertime Sadness" served as the fourth single from Lana Del Rey's debut major-label album Born to Die, marking an initial European rollout before broader international availability.The song was first commercially released as a digital download in Germany on June 22, 2012, under Interscope Records.[1] Broader digital availability followed in other markets, with physical CD formats issued in select markets during 2012.[16] Label variations included Polydor Records for the United Kingdom release.[5]
The Cedric Gervais remix of "Summertime Sadness" was initially released as a digital download on February 1, 2013, through Spinnin' Records, available on DJ platforms such as Beatport.[82][83]The remix saw international rollouts in summer 2013, including a digital release in the United Kingdom on July 23, 2013, via Polydor, and worldwide on July 11, 2013, through Interscope Records, propelling it to mainstream success.[84] In Australia, it was released via Universal Music Australia around the same time.
In the 2020s, the remix has been re-released and bundled on streaming platforms, including appearances in dance compilation albums like "Now 100 Hits Dance" in 2020 and various Universal Music playlists, ensuring its ongoing availability and over 800 million streams on Spotify as of November 2025.[85][86] This served as a sequel to the original song's 2012 releases, significantly extending its commercial lifespan.