Lana Del Rey denies claims she practiced witchcraft on tour

Lana Del Rey this week criticized an influencer who recently accused her of using “witchcraft” to put down a crowd of fans.

“B!tch I know Bible verse by verse better than you,” Del Rey commented on Christian Instagram influencer Traci Coston’s post about her, screenshots on social media showed. “PS: You radiate super gremlin energy. Not in a good way.”

In late August, Coston released a video in which she claimed that the “Summertime Sadness” singer-songwriter somehow caused the domino effect of people falling at her concert in Mexico City.

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“Lana Del Rey has been open about practicing witchcraft,” Coston said in a video she posted on Sept. 4.

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Lana Del Rey criticized an influencer who accused her of using witchcraft against her fans. (Kristy Sparow/Getty Images)

In 2017, the singer-songwriter told NME she tried to cast a spell on then-President Donald Trump.

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“Yes, I did it. Why not? Look, I do a lot of shit,” Del Rey said.

“I agree with Yoko [Ono] and John [Lennon] and the belief that the vibration of a thought has power,” she added at the time. “Your thoughts are very powerful things and they become words, and words become actions, and actions result in physical changes.”

Coston continued, “And look what happened at one of their concerts,” showing the video of the wave of people falling over at the show in August. “Whatever witchcraft Lana Del Rey practices, whatever magic she puts on her music to make it attractive, those demons are invited into the crowd and into you when you’re there.”

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She added: “These demons will destroy your life” and claimed people had previously come to her seeking “deliverance” from demons who had bonded to them by attending concerts.

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“There’s a reason the Bible tells us to stay away from witchcraft, and that’s because God loves you and is trying to protect you,” Coston said.

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After Del Rey commented on the post, Coston disabled the comments.

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Fox News Digital has reached out to both Coston and a representative for Del Rey for comment.

The “Say Yes to Heaven” singer-songwriter has previously stated that she believes in God.

Del Rey told the Quietus in 2011, “My understanding of God is based on my own personal experiences… because I was in trouble so many times in New York that if you were me you would believe in God too. When things come.” Bad enough, the only way out is to lie in bed and pray. I don’t know about gathering in a church once a week and so on, but when I heard that there was a divine power that you could call upon, I did it. Probably my approach The approach to religion is like my approach to music: I take what I want and leave the rest.

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Lana Del Rey said she believes in God. (Kristy Sparow/Getty Images)

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Del Rey also included a track on her new album, Did You Know That There’s a Tunnel Under Ocean Boulevard, called “Judah Smith Interlude,” in which she recorded herself listening to, and sometimes giggling at, a sermon by the titular preacher . Del Rey was associated with Smith’s Churchome chapter in Los Angeles.