The Life of Pablo
Untitled | |
---|---|
The Life of Pablo is the seventh studio album by American rapper Kanye West. It was initially released on February 14, 2016, by GOOD Music and Def Jam Recordings. The album features a wide array of guest vocalists, including Chance the Rapper, Frank Ocean, The-Dream, Rihanna, The Weeknd, Ty Dolla $ign, Kendrick Lamar, and Chris Brown. The album's production was handled by a variety of contributors led by West, including Mike Dean, Rick Rubin, Metro Boomin, Hudson Mohawke, Madlib, and Swizz Beatz. Recording sessions for the album took place in various locations; including various cities in Italy, Mexico, Canada, and the United States.
The Life of Pablo was supported by a series of promotional singles released in conjunction with West's GOOD Fridays giveaways, including "Real Friends" and "No More Parties in LA," and was premiered at Madison Square Garden as part of West's Yeezy Season 3 fashion collaboration with Adidas. The album was launched exclusively through the streaming service Tidal after a lengthy series of delays in its recording and finalization, including multiple changes to its track sequencing and title in the previous weeks. Even following the album's release on Tidal, West continued to tinker with final mixes of several tracks and suggested that the work might never be made available for purchase outside the streaming service, depicting it as a "a living breathing changing creative expression."
Upon its release, The Life of Pablo received generally positive reviews from music critics, with particular attention drawn to its kaleidoscopic musical range and messy, unfinished composition. As Tidal refused to disclose streaming data to Nielsen Music, the album did not chart on the US Billboard 200, making the album the first release by Kanye West not to feature on the chart, though the release of the album resulted in a large increase in Tidal subscribers and broke piracy records within the first three days of its release.
Background
In November 2013, Kanye West began working on his seventh album,[2][3] under the title So Help Me God, which was initially setting for the release date in 2014.[4] This early version of the album included these several tracks that were released as stand-alone singles or were given to other artists such as "God Level" (which was released as part of the promotion for the Adidas' World Cup), "All Day", "Only One", "FourFiveSeconds", "Tell Your Friends" (by The Weeknd) and "3500" (by Travis Scott).[5][6] Some of the earlier tracks to make the final cut for The Life of Pablo were "Famous" (formerly titled "Nina Chop") and "Wolves", the latter of which West performed on Saturday Night Live's 40th anniversary episode with fellow recording artists Sia and Vic Mensa.[7] However, this version of "Wolves" appearing on the album have removed the Sia and Vic Mensa parts, replacing them with a sole verse by Frank Ocean.[8][9]
In May 2015, West changed the title to the album, called SWISH, but then clarifies that this could still be the subject to change.[11] On January 26, 2016, West posted a supposed finalized tracklisting on his Twitter account,[12] along with a new tentative name to the album, called Waves, which led to a brief dispute between him and a fellow rapper Wiz Khalifa.[13] On February 4, 2016, West would called upon the Big Boy's Neighborhood radio station, to confirmed that he still hadn't settled on the final title for the album.[14] On February 9, West revealed the official album title, which is just a acronym for T.L.O.P.. He then offered free tickets for his Yeezy fashion show at Madison Square Garden, along with some pairs of the latest Yeezy sneakers to anyone who could decode the acronym. On the following day, West unveiled the full title on Twitter: The Life of Pablo.[15] On February 11, West tweeted the album cover,[16] and then debuted only a portion from the album during his Yeezy fashion show later that day, which was intended to be the album's official release day.[17]
West revised the tracklisting on multiple occasions, ultimately modifying it on February 12, from ten tracks to seventeen.[18] West had initially planned to release The Life of Pablo on February 12, announcing it in a tweet that read "The album is being mastered and will be out today… added on a couple of tracks…".[18] However, the release was delayed in order to include one final track, titled "Waves", which had been removed from the original tracklist. On February 15, Chance the Rapper, who fought and convinced West to keep "Waves" on the album, annotated his lyrics from "Ultralight Beam" on Genius,[19] explaining that this track was initially to be the album's outro, rather than the opener included on the version made available on Tidal.[20]
Recording
The album was recorded between 2013 and 2016, with recording for the track "No More Parties in LA" starting in 2010, during the sessions for West's fifth studio album My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy.[21][22] Reports stated that the album was written and recorded in several locations; including Los Angeles, Mexico, the Isle of Wight and Florence, Italy. West's recording in Los Angeles was rumored to be at Shangri-La Studios, which is the home base of Yeezus executive producer Rick Rubin. American singer Ty Dolla Sign reported his recording experience with West and Paul McCartney, saying they were
"...in Mexico, at this big house. The back of the house had no walls and no doors; it was just open [and facing] the ocean. You would think he would want the mic enclosed and all that but we just had the doors open, and it came out perfect."[23]
The production in Mexico, occurred with McCartney and frequent collaborator Rihanna.[24] American rappers Pusha T and Consequence confirmed that they had ended their feud, in order to work with West on his seventh album, with Consequence saying in an interview: "Pusha and I deaded everything and we creatively vibed with Kanye for this new LP."[25] In February 2015, while West was continuing to work on the album, he confirmed that the album is at about 80% completion. He went on to say that:
I'm trying to get it finished. I'm trying to get it to the people… Release dates is played out. So the surprise is going to be a surprise. There go the surprise... [It's] cookout music that just feels good. My last album was protest music. I was like, 'I'm going to take my ball and go home.'[26]
In April 2014, in an interview with Self-Titled, GOOD Music's producer Evian Christ explained that while West wasn’t always musically clear, he seemed "...interested in pushing aesthetic boundaries as far into the Avant as possible. Kanye is the one dude who's like, 'This is not experimental enough. This is too poppy. Make something else.' The other guys are like, 'We don’t get it.'" Christ, admitted that Kanye's "a dream to work with", adding that "...no one else gives you that level of creative freedom. When he wants you to work to a blueprint, the blueprint is: 'Don't make a rap beat. Anything but a rap beat.'"[27] In May 2014, in an interview with Billboard, James Fauntleroy of Cocaine 80s spoke of his recording sessions with West and said, "I went in there and did some stuff on that shit. I sang shit on there and left. We'll see how it turns out, when I went in it was early, [during] the early stages. I know there will be a lot more other people, a lot of interjections." Also in May 2014, Atlanta-based producer Mike Will Made It, has been quoted as saying "Kanye has been trying new ideas and has been reaching out to me for new ideas, Whether or not it's the "Black Skinhead Remix", we don't know, but it's definitely dope what we have so far, [We’re] just working, period. It depends on where the music is lands, but hopefully we do something on his next album."[28]
In March 2015, in an interview with MTV, Big Sean spoke about the multiple recording locations involved this album, whilst promoting his own third studio album, Dark Sky Paradise: "...We done did a couple, to like Mexico, like how we did Hawaii before and stuff like that. We work as unit for sure, that’s all I’m gonna say I’m not gonna drop nothing else."[29] In an October 2015 interview with The Fader, Post Malone, who (along with Ty Dolla Sign) is featured on the track "Fade", discussed his experiences with West:
I met Kanye at Kylie Jenner's party and Kanye was like, 'Let's make something.' So I went over to Ye's and we just started working and then we just started talking. And we just kept on going. I went in the studio with Kanye and we just recorded the scratch vocals and then I wrote over it… He was just a normal guy, like me, and super cool. He was wearing all camo, just all camo. He was very quiet and he was very, very humble.[30]
On January 27, 2016, West revealed the update of the final track-listing on his official Twitter account. This updated track-listing also revealed a number of the unannounced potential collaborators, which included Earl Sweatshirt, brandUn DeShay, The-Dream, Tyler, The Creator, The World Famous Tony Williams, Diddy, A$AP Rocky, Kid Cudi and French Montana, as well as a return of his frequent production collaborators, such as Mike Dean, Hudson Mohawke and Noah Goldstein, as well as new production collaborators with Plain Pat and Vicious.[31][32][33] Following his album's premier at Madison Square Garden, it was revealed that Brooklyn-based rapper Desiigner contributed vocals to "Pt. 2" and "Freestyle 4".[34]
Following the album's release in February 2016, West made note of his intentions to continue working on the mix of "Wolves"; the version of released as part of the album was notable for featuring new guest vocals from Frank Ocean and Caroline Shaw and excising the vocals previously featured by both Vic Mensa and Sia Furler. In the following month, West clarified that he was still altering the album and finalizing the mixes on various tracks, including "Famous" and "Wolves". He described Pablo as "a living breathing changing creative expression."[35] On March 13, an altered version of "Famous" appeared on Tidal.
Music
The Life of Pablo was noted for its "raw, occasionally even intentionally messy, composition" in distinction to West's previous albums.[36] Rolling Stone wrote that "this is a messy album that feels like it was made that way on purpose, after the laser-sharp intensity of Yeezus," stating that "It's designed to sound like a work in progress." Carl Wilson of Slate suggested that "the point is that in the context of all this sonic landscaping, in West’s kamikaze, mood-swinging way, Pablo now seems undeniably (not half-assedly, as I’d been about to conclude) like an album of struggle," adding that the album included the use of auto-tune, a cappella, as well as bass and percussion lines "that are only the tail-end decay of some lost starting place, some vanished rhythmic Eden."[37] The NME described Pablo as "an album on which, at a moment’s notice, Kanye veers from futuristic beats on the likes of 'Feedback' to bog-standard modern trap – as when Atlanta rapper Young Thug turns up on ‘Father Stretch My Hands, Pt. 2' – to vintage soul on ‘Ultra Light Beam’.[38] The song "Famous" features a segue from "braggadocious, bell-ringing hip-hop" into samples of Sister Nancy's dancehall song "Bam Bam" chopped up over the chord progression featured in Nina Simone's "Do What You Gotta Do."[39]
Prior to the album's release, West tweeted out that the album was a hip hop album, as well as a gospel album.[40] Additionally, in an interview on Big Boy Radio, West stated "When I was sitting in the studio with Kirk, Kirk Franklin, and we're just going through it, I said this is a gospel album, with a whole lot of cursing on it, but it's still a gospel album," adding "The gospel according to Ye. It's not exactly what happened in the Bible, but it's this story idea of Mary Magdalene becoming Mary."[41] "Ultralight Beam", particularly, is noted to feature several gospel elements, from "the sound of a 4-year-old preaching gospel, some organ," as well as a church choir singing the refrain of "This is a God dream."[42] Chance the Rapper and his instrumental collaborator, Donnie Trumpet bring elements of soul revivalism into the track during Chance's guest verse.[8] Greg Kot of the Chicago Tribune wrote in his review of The Life of Pablo, "West's version of gospel touches on some of those sonic cues — heavy organ, soaring choirs — but seems more preoccupied with gospel text and the notion of redemption."[9]
Lyrics
GQ wrote that the two-part Father Stretch My Hands "begins as a gospel song about fucking models, transitions halfway into a soul-baring confessional dance track, then drops in two entire verses of an entirely different song about drug-dealing and cars by an 18-year-old Brooklyn rapper, before resolving into a meditative piece for vocoder by a contemporary classical composer and ending with a snippet of the sampled gospel song that the whole thing started from, just to remind you how far we've traveled from there in the span of four minutes."[39] The second part of the song includes confessional lyrics that delve into familial and introspective themes, such as his mother's death and his father's struggles with money, as well as his own near-fatal car crash.[43]
The song "Famous" included the controversial lyric "I feel like me and Taylor might still have sex/Why? I made that bitch famous/Goddamn, I made that bitch famous."[44] The lyric refers to country/pop singer Taylor Swift, when West interrupted her acceptance speech at the 2009 MTV Video Music Awards, with West claiming "he made her famous" from the incident. The lyric was heavily publicized and criticized by media outlets and listeners.[9][42][39][44] Kot called the song "an example of just how brilliant and infuriating West can be at the same time," going on to praise the production and Rihanna's guest vocals, but proclaiming "it's all undone by one of the most ridiculous and distasteful lines in the West songbook."[9] Jayson Greene of Pitchfork wrote in his review of the album that the lyric "feels like a piece of bathroom graffiti made to purposefully reignite the most racially-charged rivalry in 21st-century pop."[45] The interlude "I Love Kanye" features tongue-in-cheek[9] and self-aware lyrics, "What if Kanye made a song about Kanye / Called "I miss the old Kanye" / Man that would be so Kanye, that’s all it was Kanye / We still love Kanye and I love you like / Kanye loves Kanye."[8] Continuing with gospel themes, the song "Wolves" features the lyrics, "Cover Nori in lamb's wool/ We surrounded by/ The fuckin wolves," among other Biblical allusions, offering a comparison between him and his wife to Mary and Joseph.[42]
Release and promotion
"Only One" was released on December 31, 2014. The single features Sir Paul McCartney, also credited with producing it alongside Mike Dean. The music video was released on January 21, 2015, and it was directed by Spike Jonze and featured West with his daughter (North West).[46] In January 2015, West released the other-Paul McCartney collaborated track, titled "FourFiveSeconds", along with Barbadian singer Rihanna. West, McCartney and Mike Dean also produced this track alongside with Dave Longstreth, Noah Goldstein and Kuk Harrell.[47][48] In March 2015, West officially released a single, titled "All Day", after it was leaked online in un-mastered form in August 2014. West also produced this track alongside Velous, French Montana, Puff Daddy and Charlie Heat.[49] The song was later remixed, featuring a new guest verse from a fellow rapper Kendrick Lamar.[50] In February 2016, the music video was released for the track "All Day".[51] On February 12, 2015, during his first season of Adidas Yeezy's fashion show event held in New York City, West premiered a new track, titled "Wolves". The track features guest vocals from American rapper Vic Mensa and Australian singer-songwriter Sia, while its was produced by Cashmere Cat and Sinjin Hawke.[52] On February 15, West performed a medley of "Jesus Walks", "Only One" and "Wolves", on the Saturday Night Live 40th Anniversary Special.[53] On February 25, West performed a live rendition of the previously-leaked song "All Day" at the 2015's Brit Awards.[54] On September 16, 2015, during his second season of Adidas Yeezy's fashion show event, West premiered a song, titled "Fade". The song features guest vocals from American recording artists Post Malone and Ty Dolla $ign.[55]
On January 8, 2016, West's wife Kim Kardashian announced via Twitter the release of "Real Friends", which initiated the return of West's GOOD Fridays.[56] West had previously done a weekly free music giveaway leading up to the release of My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy. "Real Friends" was released the day and it was announced via SoundCloud, simultaneously along with the album's release date and a snippet of the forthcoming GOOD Friday release, titled "No More Parties in LA", which features guest vocals from Kendrick Lamar.[57][58] "No More Parties in L.A." had its proper release on the following week, also via West's Soundcloud account. The song was produced by Madlib and West, which contains a sample of "Suzie Thundertussy" performed by Walter Morrison.[59] On February 12, 2016, after premiering The Life of Pablo during his third season of Adidas Yeezy's fashion show event, West released a new track, titled "30 Hours", as part of his GOOD Fridays series.[60] On February 14, West performed "Highlights" and "Ultralight Beam" on Saturday Night Live.[61] The Life of Pablo was later released exclusively through the streaming service Tidal on the same day.[62] It was available for purchase for a few hours but reverted to streaming-only after that.[63] West announced that the album would be available outside of Tidal a week later,[64] however, on the following day, West claimed that he would never release the album outside of Tidal, encouraging his fans to sign up for the service.[65] On the same day, Pigeons & Planes detailed that the version of the album, which was made available for streaming on Tidal was not its final version.[66] After an active weekend, during which he was finishing his album, he stated that he was $53,000,000 in personal debt and called for Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg to invest $1 billion in West's ideas. He also called on other tech billionaires to help him.[67]
In March 2016, over a month after the album's release, West updated the album's Tidal track list with a reworked version of "Wolves", which includes previously removed vocals from Vic Mensa and Sia, and separated the ending portion sung by Frank Ocean into a separate track called "Frank's Track".[68]
Commercial performance
After its Tidal release, West urged the public to download the application to hear the album, which resulted in it temporarily reaching the number one spot on the US App Store.[69] Only a few days following its release, the album had already been illegally downloaded over 500,000 times.[70] It was reported that West had lost $10 million in album sales due to the infringement.[71] The album did not chart on the US Billboard 200, as Tidal did not report the streams to the Nielsen Music, marking West's first album to not chart in the United States. The Life of Pablo has only charted in Denmark, where it peaked at 13, making it his lowest charting album in the country. West later tweeted that he "was thinking about not making CDs ever again."[72]
Critical reception
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [73] |
The A.V. Club | A[8] |
The Daily Telegraph | [74] |
Entertainment Weekly | B+[75] |
The Guardian | [76] |
Pitchfork Media | 9.0/10[42] |
PopMatters | 5/10[77] |
Rolling Stone | [78] |
Slant Magazine | [79] |
Spin | 8/10[80] |
The Life of Pablo received generally positive reviews from critics. Rolling Stone's Rob Sheffield dubbed it both a mess and masterpiece: "This is a messy album that feels like it was made that way on purpose [...] West just drops broken pieces of his psyche all over the album and challenges you to fit them together."[78] The A.V. Club’s Corbin Reiff opined that "it feels far different from any of the tightly constructed, singular works of West’s past," asserting instead that "as a beautiful, messy, mixed-up collection of 18 songs, it's a brilliant document."[8] Writing for The New York Times, Jon Caramanica stated, "West [...] has perfected the art of aesthetic and intellectual bricolage, shape-shifting in real time and counting on listeners to keep up," concluding that "this is Tumblr-as-album, the piecing together of divergent fragments to make a cohesive whole."[81] In a positive review, Jayson Greene of Pitchfork Media wrote that "a madcap sense of humor animates all [West's] best work, and The Life of Pablo has a freewheeling energy that is infectious and unique to his discography," finding that "somehow, it comes off as both his most labored-over and unfinished album, full of asterisks and corrections and footnotes."[42]
Ray Rahman of Entertainment Weekly deemed it "an ambitious album that finds the rapper struggling to compact his many identities into one weird, uncomfortable, glorious whole [...] Like the man himself, the album is emotional, explosive, unpredictable, and undeniably thrilling."[75] In a mixed review for The Guardian, Alexis Petridis described the album as "at turns, rambling, chaotic, deeply underwhelming, impressively audacious, and completely infuriating," suggesting that "[i]t appears to have had ideas thrown at it until it feels messy and incoherent" despite concluding that "when The Life of Pablo is good, it's very good indeed."[76] The Daily Telegraph's Neil McCormick wrote, "The Life of Pablo is certainly rich in musical scope, chock a block with inspired ideas," but also felt the work to be "so self-involved it crosses over into self-delusion, marked by such a tangible absence of perspective and objectivity it is as if [West] has actually lost sight of the elemental basics of his art."[74] Writing for the Chicago Tribune, Greg Kot felt that "The Life of Pablo sounds like a work in progress rather than a finished album."[9] In another mixed review, PopMatters's Evan Sawdey wore that "The Life of Pablo's obscurities and eccentricities make it ripe for endless dissection by West’s fans and followers, but make no mistake: this album is flawed, it’s problematic, and most of all, it’s no masterpiece."[77]
Track listing
Credits adapted from West's official website[82] and Tidal.[83]
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Producer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | "Ultralight Beam" |
|
| 5:20 |
2. | "Father Stretch My Hands Pt. 1" |
|
| 2:15 |
3. | "Pt. 2" |
| 2:09 | |
4. | "Famous" |
|
| 3:14 |
5. | "Feedback" |
| 2:35 | |
6. | "Low Lights" |
|
| 2:11 |
7. | "Highlights" |
| 3:19 | |
8. | "Freestyle 4" |
| 2:02 | |
9. | "I Love Kanye" |
|
| 0:44 |
10. | "Waves" |
| 3:01 | |
11. | "FML" |
| 3:56 | |
12. | "Real Friends" |
| 4:11 | |
13. | "Wolves" |
|
| 5:01 |
14. | "Frank's Track" | 0:38 | ||
15. | "Siiiiiiiiilver Surffffeeeeer Intermission" |
| 0:56 | |
16. | "30 Hours" |
| 5:25 | |
17. | "No More Parties in LA" |
|
| 6:14 |
18. | "Facts (Charlie Heat Version)" |
|
| 3:19 |
19. | "Fade" |
| 3:14 | |
Total length: | 59:41 |
Notes
- ^[a] signifies a co-producer.
- ^[b] signifies an additional producer.
- ^[c] signifies a vocal producer.
- "Ultralight Beam" features vocals by Chance the Rapper, Kirk Franklin, The-Dream, and Kelly Price, and additional vocals by Natalie Green and Samoria Green.
- "Father Stretch My Hands Pt. 1" features vocals by Kid Cudi and uncredited vocals by Future.
- "Pt. 2" features vocals by Desiigner and additional vocals by Caroline Shaw.
- "Famous" features vocals by Rihanna and additional vocals by Swizz Beatz.
- "Highlights" features vocals by Young Thug and additional vocals by The-Dream, El DeBarge, and Kelly Price.
- "Freestyle 4" features vocals from Desiigner.
- "Waves" features vocals by Chris Brown and background vocals by Kid Cudi & Thelenious London.
- "FML" features vocals by The Weeknd.
- "Real Friends" features vocals by Ty Dolla Sign.
- "Wolves" features vocals by Caroline Shaw and uncredited vocals by Vic Mensa and Sia.
- "Frank's Track" features uncredited vocals by Frank Ocean.
- "Siiiiiiiiilver Surffffeeeeer Intermission" features vocals by Max B and French Montana.
- "30 Hours" features vocals by André Benjamin and background vocals by Mike Dean.
- "No More Parties in LA" features vocals by Kendrick Lamar.
- "Fade" features vocals by Post Malone and Ty Dolla Sign.
Sample credits
Credits adapted from West's official website.[82]
- "Father Stretch My Hands Pt. 1" contains an uncredited interpolation of "Right Now" written by Leland T. Wayne, Leonard Grant, and Nayvadius Wilburn, produced by Metro Boomin, and performed by Uncle Murda featuring Future and contains samples of "Father Stretch My Hands", written and performed by Pastor T.L. Barrett featuring Youth for Christ.
- "Pt. 2" contains an interpolation of the song "Panda", written by Sidney Selby III and Adnan Khan, produced by Menace, and performed by Desiigner, sound effects from the video game Street Fighter II: The World Warrior by Isao Abe and Yoko Shimomura and contains samples of "Father Stretch My Hands", written and performed by Pastor T.L. Barrett featuring Youth for Christ.
- "Famous" contains samples of "Do What You Gotta Do", written by Jimmy Webb and performed by Nina Simone; samples of "Bam Bam", written by Winston Riley and performed by Sister Nancy and contains samples of "Mi Sono Svegliato E... Ho Chiuso Gli Occhi", written by Luis Bacalov, Sergio Bardotti, Giampiero Scalamogna, and Enzo Vita, and performed by Il Rovescio della Medaglia.
- "Feedback" contains samples of "Talagh", written by Ardalan Sarfaraz and Manouchehr Cheshmazar, and performed by Googoosh.
- "Low Lights" contains samples of "So Alive (Acapella)", written by Sandy Rivera and performed by Kings of Tomorrow.
- "Freestyle 4" contains samples of "Human", written by Alison Goldfrapp, William Gregory, Robert Locke, and Timothy Norfolk, and performed by Goldfrapp.
- "Waves" contains samples of "Fantastic Freaks at the Dixie", written by Fred Bratwaithe, Robin Diggs, Kevin Ferguson, Theodore Livingston, Darryl Mason, and James Whipper II, and performed by Fantastic Freaks.
- "FML" contains interpolations of "Hit", written by Lawrence Cassidy, Vincent Cassidy, and Paul Wiggin, and performed by Section 25.
- "Real Friends" contains interpolations of "Friends", written by Jalil Hutchins and Lawrence Smith, and performed by Whodini.
- "Wolves" contains samples of "Walking Dub", written and performed by Sugar Minott.
- "30 Hours" contains samples of "Answers Me", written and performed by Arthur Russell; interpolations of "E.I.", written by Cornell Haynes and Jason Epperson, and performed by Nelly; and interpolations of "Hot in Herre", written by Cornell Haynes, Pharrell Williams, and Charles Brown, and performed by Nelly.
- "No More Parties in LA" contains samples of "Give Me My Love", written and performed by Johnny "Guitar" Watson; samples of "Suzie Thundertussy", written and performed by Walter "Junie" Morrison; samples of "Mighty Healthy", written by Herbert Rooney, Ronald Bean, Highleigh Crizoe, and Dennis Coles, and performed by Ghostface Killah; and samples of "Stand Up and Shout About Love", written by Larry Graham Jr., Tina Graham, and Sam Dees, and performed by Larry Graham.
- "Facts (Charlie Heat Version)" contains samples of "Dirt and Grime", written by Nicholas Smith and performed by Father's Children, interpolations of "Jumpman", written by Aubrey Graham, Leland T. Wayne and Nayvadius D. Wilburn, produced by Metro Boomin, and performed by Drake and Future and sound effects from the video game Street Fighter II: The World Warrior by Isao Abe and Yoko Shimomura.
- "Fade" contains samples of "(I Know) I'm Losing You", written by Eddie Holland, Norman Whitfield, and Cornelius Grant, and performed by Rare Earth; samples of "(I Know) I'm Losing You", written by Eddie Holland, Norman Whitfield, and Cornelius Grant, and performed by The Undisputed Truth; samples of "Mystery of Love", written by Larry Heard and Robert Owens, and performed by Mr. Fingers; samples of "Deep Inside", written by Louie Vega and performed by Hardrive; and samples of "I Get Lifted (The Underground Network Mix)", written by Louie Vega, Ronald Carroll, Barbara Tucker, and Harold Matthews, and performed by Barbara Tucker.
Charts
Chart (2016) | Peak position |
---|---|
Danish Albums (Hitlisten)[84] | 13 |
Release history
Date | Format | Label | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|
February 14, 2016 | Streaming (Tidal exclusive) | [62] |
Citations
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- ^ Hernandez 2015.
- ^ Young 2015.
- ^ a b c d e Reiff 2016.
- ^ a b c d e f Kot 2016.
- ^ Terry 2016.
- ^ West 2015.
- ^ West 2016a.
- ^ West 2016b.
- ^ nightsinoctober 2016.
- ^ Statt 2016.
- ^ Camp 2016.
- ^ Phillips 2016.
- ^ a b West 2016d.
- ^ Chance the Rapper 2016.
- ^ Rossignol 2016.
- ^ Eric 2016.
- ^ Ortiz 2016.
- ^ McKenna 2015.
- ^ Beauchemin 2015.
- ^ Kennedy 2015.
- ^ McCown 2015.
- ^ Young 2014.
- ^ Ramirez 2014.
- ^ Markman 2015.
- ^ Gase 2015.
- ^ Gibsone 2016.
- ^ Platon 2016.
- ^ DeVille 2016.
- ^ [ http://www.hotnewhiphop.com/brooklyn-rapper-desiigner-signs-to-good-music-news.20126.html Hot New Hip Hop]
- ^ Dandridge-Lemco, Ben. "Kanye West Is Updating "Wolves"". The Fader. Retrieved March 15, 2016.
- ^ Vain 2016.
- ^ Wilson 2016.
- ^ Haynes 2016.
- ^ a b c Raymer 2016.
- ^ West 2016c.
- ^ Thomasos 2016.
- ^ a b c d e Greene 2016.
- ^ Wickman 2016.
- ^ a b Harris 2016.
- ^ Green 2016.
- ^ Camp 2015.
- ^ White 2015.
- ^ "FourFiveSeconds — Single by Rihanna, Kanye West and Paul McCartney". iTunes Store (US). Retrieved January 25, 2015.
- ^ Minsker 2014b.
- ^ Smith 2015.
- ^ "Kanye West Finally Drops 'All Day / I Feel Like That' Video Following 'TLOP' [WATCH]". Music Times. February 22, 2016. Retrieved February 23, 2016.
- ^ Gordon & Phillips 2015a.
- ^ Newman 2015.
- ^ Phillips 2015.
- ^ Gordon & Phillips 2015b.
- ^ Monroe 2016a.
- ^ Feeney 2016.
- ^ Minsker & Strauss 2016.
- ^ Robertson 2016.
- ^ Lilah 2016.
- ^ Truong 2016.
- ^ a b Monroe 2016b.
- ^ Blum, Sam; Dionne, Zach (February 14, 2016). "You Can Stream Kanye West's 'The Life of Pablo' Album Now, Finally". Fuse. Retrieved March 27, 2016.
- ^ West 2016f.
- ^ Stutz 2016.
- ^ Price 2016.
- ^ "Kanye West claims to be" 2016.
- ^ Brandle, Lars (March 16, 2016). "Kanye West Shares Reworked Version of 'Wolves' on Tidal". Billboard. Retrieved March 16, 2016.
- ^ Newcomb 2016.
- ^ Blumenfeld 2016.
- ^ "Kanye West loses $10MILLION in sales after Life of Pablo's disastrous roll-out". Mail Online. February 18, 2016.
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External links
- ^ Rainis, James (February 19, 2016). "Kanye West: The Life of Pablo". Slant Magazine. Retrieved February 19, 2016.
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