Ultraviolence received a positive critical response following its release. According to review aggregator
Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album has an average score of 74 out of 100 based on 35 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".
The Guardian writer
Alexis Petridis wrote that "Every chorus clicks, the
melodies are uniformly beautiful, and they soar and swoop, the better to demonstrate Del Rey's increased confidence in her voice. It's all so well done that the fact that the whole album proceeds at the same, somnambulant pace scarcely matters." Mike Diver for
Clash commented, "For all its lows-inspired highs,
Ultraviolence is not quite the complete picture. It goes so far as to reflect, albeit perhaps coincidentally, this era: black and white, the colour has to come from the performance, not the film it's captured on." The critic deemed the album "A bruised beauty, just short of classic status...".
Pitchfork's Mark Richardson said that
Ultraviolence was a
concept album "from a Concept Human", referring to Del Rey's assumed persona. He felt that the album was "gorgeous and rich", and much more cohesive than the earlier
Born to Die. At
The Independent the album scored 3 out of 5 and critic Hugh Montgomery felt, "
Ultraviolence is more of the same, but less. There is quasi-
transgressive mixture of hopeless passivity and coquettish sexuality running through songs." Kyle Anderson of
Entertainment Weekly wrote about Del Rey's musical aesthetic on the album, stating, "
Kubrick would have loved Del Rey—a highly stylized vixen who romanticizes
fatalism to near-
pornographic levels, creating fantastically decadent moments of
film-noir melodrama. It's an aesthetic that demands total commitment from both artist and listener, and it would be difficult to buy into if she didn't deliver such fully realized cinema". He also added, "
Ultraviolence masterfully melds those elements, and completes the redemption narrative of a singer whose breakout-to-backlash arc on 2012's
Born to Die made her a cautionary tale of music-industry hype". Caryn Ganz for
Rolling Stone gave a positive review, commenting the album "is a melancholy crawl through doomed romance, incorrigible addictions, blown
American dreams," although she also wrote " [it] wraps desire, violence and sadness into a tight bundle that Del Rey doesn't always seem sure how to unpack". Alexandra Molotkow, writing in
The Globe and Mail, praised the album as "more vivid, nuanced and ripe than [her debut],
Born to Die."
Year-end lists According to Metacritic,
Ultraviolence was the 13th-most frequently mentioned album in critics' "year-end" lists in 2014.
Decade-end lists == Commercial performance ==