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The Life of Pablo
Studio album by
ReleasedFebruary 14, 2016
Recorded
  • November 2013 – February 2016
Studio
  • Windmark, Santa Monica
  • No Name, Punta Mita
  • Florence
  • Home, Calabasas
  • Germano and Jungle City, New York City
  • Mike Dean's List House of Hits, SoHo
  • Larrabee and Ameraycan, North Hollywood
  • Nobel Street
  • Abel's Crib, Trump Tower
  • Jungle City, California
Genre
Length66:01
Label
Producer
  • Kanye West (also exec.)
  • Noah Goldstein (also co-exec.)
  • Rick Rubin (also co-exec.)
  • Charlie Handsome
  • Menace
  • Mitus
  • Trevor Gureckis
Kanye West chronology
Yeezus
(2013)
The Life of Pablo
(2016)
Ye
(2018)
Singles from The Life of Pablo
  1. 'Famous'
    Released: April 1, 2016
  2. 'Father Stretch My Hands'
    Released: June 7, 2016
  3. 'Fade'
    Released: September 20, 2016

The Life of Pablo is the seventh studio album by American rapper and recording artist Kanye West, released on February 14, 2016 by GOOD Music and Def Jam Recordings. Recording sessions took place from 2013 to 2016 in Italy, Mexico, Canada, and the United States. Production on the album was handled by West and a variety of producers, including co-executive producers Rick Rubin and Noah Goldstein, Mike Dean, Metro Boomin, Hudson Mohawke, Plain Pat, and Madlib. He also enlisted a wide array of guest vocalists, including Chris Brown, Ty Dolla Sign, The Weeknd, Desiigner, Kid Cudi, The-Dream, Max B, French Montana, El DeBarge, Kelly Price, Kirk Franklin, Chance the Rapper, Rihanna, Sia, Frank Ocean, Swizz Beatz, Sampha, Vic Mensa, Post Malone, Kendrick Lamar, Young Thug, and Caroline Shaw.

The album was preceded by several promotional singles as part of West's GOOD Fridays giveaways, including the tracks 'Real Friends' and 'No More Parties in LA'. In the months before its release, the album's title and tracklist went through several publicized changes, and West's erratic activity on social media became the source of several controversies. An early version of the album was premiered by West at Madison Square Garden on February 11, 2016, as part of his Yeezy Season 3 fashion show in collaboration with Adidas.[1] After several additional sessions and alterations, the album was launched exclusively through the streaming service Tidal three days later.

Following its official streaming debut, West continued to make changes to The Life of Pablo, describing it as 'a living, breathing, changing, creative expression' and declaring the end of the album as a dominant release form;[2] Def Jam confirmed his intention to continue working on the album over the subsequent months.[3][4] A largely updated version of the album, including alternate mixes and other changes was made available on other streaming services and for digital purchase on his website on April 1, 2016; no official CD release is planned. The album was supported by the singles 'Famous', 'FatheStretch My Hands', and 'Fade'.

The Life of Pablo received critical acclaim from critics, with particular attention drawn to the fragmented, unfinished nature of its composition and release. Following Tidal's disclosure of its streaming data and the album's release to competing streaming services, the album debuted at number one on the US Billboard 200, becoming West's seventh consecutive number-one album on the chart and the first to reach the summit primarily through streaming. In April 2017, The Life of Pablo became the first streaming-only album to go platinum, becoming West's eighth platinum-certified release.[5] It was named among the best albums of 2016 by multiple publications, and was nominated for Best Rap Album at the 59th Annual Grammy Awards, while 'Ultralight Beam' and 'Famous' were nominated for Best Rap/Sung Performance and Best Rap Song.

  • 2Recording
  • 5Promotion and release
  • 6Critical reception
  • 10Charts

Background[edit]

In November 2013, West began working on his seventh album,[6][7] under the working title So Help Me God for a 2014 release date.[8] The album was initially to include production work by Rick Rubin and Q-Tip.[9] Early recording sessions resulted in several tracks that were released as standalone singles or were given to other artists, including his Paul McCartney collaborations 'All Day', 'Only One', and the McCartney and Rihanna collaboration 'FourFiveSeconds'.[10][11] 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 Australian recording artist Sia and fellow rapper Vic Mensa.[12] In 2015, West announced the new album title SWISH, though he clarified that this could still be subject to change.[13] West announced in January 2016 that SWISH would be released on February 11, and that month released new songs 'Real Friends' and a snippet of 'No More Parties in L.A.' with Kendrick Lamar. This also revived the GOOD Fridays initiative in which West releases new singles every Friday. On January 26, 2016, West revealed he had renamed the album from SWISH to Waves.[14]

Download
Chance the Rapper contributed to several tracks, including 'Ultralight Beam' and 'Waves.'

In the weeks leading up to the album's release, West released several changing iterations of the track list for the new album while becoming embroiled in several Twitter controversies.[15][16] In February, West posted a tweet seemingly asserting Bill Cosby's innocence in the wake of over 50 women making allegations of sexual assault directed at Cosby[17] and became involved in a short-lived social media altercation with rapper Wiz Khalifa on Twitter that eventually involved their mutual ex-partner, Amber Rose, who protested to West's mention of her and Khalifa's child.[18] The feud involved allegations by Rose concerning her sexual relationship with West, and received significant media attention. The track 'Famous' was met with scrutiny on social media for a controversial lyrical reference to American singer Taylor Swift, partially in relation to West's interruption of her 2009 VMA acceptance speech.[19][20][21][22][23]

Several days ahead of its release, West again changed the title, this time to The Life of Pablo.[24] On February 11, West premiered the album at Madison Square Garden as part of the presentation of his Yeezy Season 3 clothing line.[25] Following the preview, West announced that he would be modifying the track list once more before its release to the public,[26] and further delayed its release to finalize the recording of the track 'Waves' at the behest of co-writer Chance the Rapper. He released the album exclusively on Tidal on February 14, 2016 following a performance on SNL.[27][1] Following its official streaming release, West continued to tinker with mixes of several tracks, describing the work as 'a living breathing changing creative expression'[28] and proclaiming the end of the album as a dominant release form.[2] Although a statement by West around Life of Pablo's initial release indicated that the album would be a permanent exclusive to Tidal, the album was released through several other competing services starting in April.[29]

Recording[edit]

Initial sessions[edit]

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.[30][31] 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. The production in Mexico occurred with Paul McCartney and frequent collaborator Rihanna.[32] American rappers Pusha T and Consequence confirmed that they had ended their feud in order to work with West on his eighth album, with Consequence saying in an interview: 'Pusha and I deaded everything and we creatively vibed with Kanye for this new LP.'[33]

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 said that West'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.'[34] 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.' 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.'[35]

Ty Dolla Sign is featured on the third single 'Fade' and promotional single 'Real Friends'.

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.'[36] 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.[37]

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, The-Dream, Tyler, the Creator, The World Famous Tony Williams, Diddy, Danny!,[38]ASAP Rocky, Kid Cudi, Lil Uzi Vert, Drake, Teyana Taylor, Zoe Kravitz, Bibi Bourelly, Doug E. Fresh, How to Dress Well, and French Montana, as well as a return of his frequent production collaborators, such as Mike Dean, Hudson Mohawke, Plain Pat, Vicious, Anthony Kilhoffer, A-Trak, and Noah Goldstein. [39][40][41] Following his album's premiere at Madison Square Garden, it was revealed that Brooklyn-based rapper Desiigner contributed vocals to 'Pt. 2' and 'Freestyle 4'.[42]

Post-release updates[edit]

Following the album's initial Tidal release, West declared his intentions to continue altering the music, declaring it a 'living breathing changing creative expression.'[4] On March 13, 2016, over a month after the album's release, West uploaded an updated version of 'Famous', swapping out the lyric 'She be Puerto Rican day parade wavin' for 'She in school to be a real estate agent,' as well as making slight tweaks to the overall mix.[43] Three days later, West updated the album's Tidal track list with a reworked version of 'Wolves', which included previously removed guest vocals from Vic Mensa and Sia, and separated the ending portion sung by Frank Ocean into a separate track called 'Frank's Track'.[44] On March 30, the album received a major update, with at least 12 tracks appearing in altered forms.[4] Updates included prominent vocal additions, new lyrics, and altered mixes.[4] Def Jam confirmed this incarnation to be 'a newly updated, remixed and remastered version', and clarified the album would continue to appear with 'new updates, new versions and new iterations' in the following months, calling it 'a continuous process'.[3] On April 2, a corrected version of '30 Hours' was quietly released, fixing the off-time vocals that plagued the March 30 reissue. Finally, on June 14, The Life of Pablo was updated to include an additional track titled 'Saint Pablo' featuring Sampha, with other miscellaneous alterations throughout the album.[45]

Discussing the album's continued alterations, Jayson Greene of Pitchfork wrote 'at what point is a record 'over', and who gets to make the call? Kanye West is seeing how far he can stretch the point right now, in a way no pop star has ever quite tried', describing West as 'testing the shifting state of the 'album cycle' to see if he can break it entirely, making his album like another piece of software on your phone that sends you push updates.'[46] Winston Cook-WIlson of Inverse described the album as 'a fluid construct', writing that 'as a way of holding the public's attention span, Kanye's choice to continue to tweak The Life is Pablo indefinitely is genius [...] It encourages people spend time processing an album that deserves it: a bewildering, sprawling, and controversy-courting piece of art.[47] The album's unconventional updates post release inspired other artists to do the same, with Future and Young Thug making similar alterations after the release of their albums.[48][49]

Music and composition[edit]

The Life of Pablo was noted for its 'raw, occasionally even intentionally messy, composition' in distinction to West's previous albums.[50]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 created 'strange links between Kanye's many iterations—soul-sample enthusiast, heartbroken Auto-Tune crooner, hedonistic avant-pop composer, industrial-rap shit-talker' while making use of bass and percussion lines 'that are only the tail-end decay of some lost starting place, some vanished rhythmic Eden.'[51]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 up coming rapper Desiigner turns up on 'Father Stretch My Hands, Pt. 2' – to vintage soul on 'Ultra Light Beam'.[52] 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.'[53]

Prior to the album's release, West tweeted out that the album was a hip hop album, as well as a gospel album.[54] 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.'[55] '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.'[56]Chance the Rapper and his instrumental collaborator, Donnie Trumpet bring elements of soul revivalism into the track during Chance's guest verse.[57]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.'[58]

Lyrics and themes[edit]

Entertainment Weekly noted the album's frequent meditations on matters of faith, family, and West's own role as a cultural figure while observing that 'Pablo frequently (some might say abruptly) toggles between Sad Kanye and the bombastic and celebratory Kanye.'[59]The Daily Telegraph described West as 'constantly veering between swaggering bravado and insecurity bordering on paranoia, smashing the sacred against the profane and disrupting his own flowing grooves with interjections that sound like they are spilling over from another studio altogether.'[60]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.'[61]

The song 'Famous' included the controversial lyric 'I feel like me and Taylor might still have sex/Why? I made that bitch famous.' The lyric refers to country/pop singer Taylor Swift, whose acceptance speech West interrupted at the 2009 MTV Video Music Awards, and was heavily publicized and criticized by media outlets and listeners.[62] Kot called the song 'an example of just how brilliant and infuriating West can be at the same time.'[58] Jayson Greene of Pitchfork wrote that the lyric 'feels like a piece of bathroom graffiti made to purposefully reignite the most racially-charged rivalry in 21st-century pop.'[56] 'Feedback' features West's riposte to his critics: 'Name one genius that ain’t crazy.'[59] The interlude 'I Love Kanye' features self-aware a cappella lyrics referencing West's image in the public.[57] Tracks such as 'FML', 'Real Friends', and 'Freestyle 4' feature 'gloomy, doomy' discussions of trust issues, antidepressants, and familial problems.[59] 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 West and his wife Kim Kardashian to Mary and Joseph.[56]

Promotion and release[edit]

West performing during the Saint Pablo Tour in 2016.

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.[63] 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.[64][65] 'No More Parties in LA' had its proper release on the following week, also via West's Soundcloud account. The song was produced by Madlib and West, and contains a sample of 'Suzie Thundertussy' performed by Walter Morrison.[66] West premiered The Life of Pablo at Madison Square Garden during his Adidas Yeezy Season 3 fashion show event. On February 12, West released a new track, titled '30 Hours', as part of his GOOD Fridays series.[67]

On February 14, West performed 'Highlights' and 'Ultralight Beam' on Saturday Night Live.[68]The Life of Pablo was later released exclusively through the streaming service Tidal on the same day.[69] It was available for purchase for a few hours but reverted to streaming-only after that.[70] West announced that the album would be available outside of Tidal a week later,[71] 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.[72] 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.[73] 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.[74]

Streaming and commercial release[edit]

The album initially received an exclusive Tidal release on February 14, 2016. 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.[75] West later tweeted that he 'was thinking about not making CDs ever again', and stated that he would never release the album outside of Tidal.[76] Following its Tidal exclusive release, it was announced that 'Famous' would be the lead single from The Life of Pablo.[77] Its initial exclusive release on Tidal resulted in a large increase in subscribers to the service, 250 million streams in the first 10 days, and 400 million streams in the first six weeks before its release to other streaming platforms.[78]

On April 1, 2016, West released an updated version of the album for streaming on Spotify, Apple Music, and Google Play. He also made the album available for purchase on his official website.[77][79] 'I Love Kanye' was the next song from the album to be released on streaming services other than Tidal.[80] 'Father Stretch My Hands Pt. 1 & Pt. 2' and 'Fade' would be released as singles in the following month.[81][82]

Lawsuit[edit]

The release on to other streaming platforms and West's website, along with his claims that the album would be a Tidal exclusive forever, caused a lawsuit to be filed on April 18, 2016 against West, Tidal, and Jay-Z (whose company, 'Project Panther Ltd.' owned Tidal) by law firm Edelson PC, on behalf of California resident Justin Baker-Rhett, for false advertising. The lawsuit, which was seeking class-action status, claimed that Tidal and West never intended to have the album as a Tidal exclusive forever, but decided to say so in an attempt to boost Tidal's struggling subscriber growth.[83][84]

Tour[edit]

In August 2016, West embarked on the Saint Pablo Tour in support of The Life of Pablo.[85] The performances featured a mobile stage suspended from the ceiling.[85] West postponed several dates in October following the Paris robbery of his wife Kim Kardashian.[86] The remainder of the tour was later canceled on November 21, 2016, following controversy over comments made by West that week regarding his support of president-elect Donald Trump and public criticism of other artists.[87] West was later admitted for psychiatric observation at UCLA Medical Center.[88][89]

Critical reception[edit]

The Life Of Pablo Download Itunes Zip

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
AnyDecentMusic?7.4/10[90]
Metacritic75/100[91]
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[92]
The Daily Telegraph[60]
Entertainment WeeklyB+[59]
The Guardian[93]
NME4/5[52]
Pitchfork9.0/10[56]
Q[94]
Rolling Stone[95]
Spin8/10[96]
Vice (Expert Witness)A−[97]

The Life of Pablo received widespread acclaim from critics upon release. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, the album received an average score of 75, based on 35 reviews.[91]Rolling Stone'sRob 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.'[95]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.'[57] 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.'[98] In a positive review, Jayson Greene of Pitchfork 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.'[56]Robert Christgau for Vice found the record 'wittingly casual and easy on the ears', writing that, 'unlike Yeezus, it won't top many 2016 lists—it's too blatantly imperfect, too flagrantly unfocused. But that's also its charm, and I prefer it.'[99]

Ray Rahman of Entertainment Weekly was somewhat less enthusiastic, calling The Life of Pablo '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.'[59]Alexis Petridis was more critical in The Guardian, finding it '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.'[93]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.'[60] Writing for the Chicago Tribune, Greg Kot felt that 'The Life of Pablo sounds like a work in progress rather than a finished album.'[58] In another mixed review, PopMatters's Evan Sawdey wrote 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.'[100]

Year-end lists[edit]

The Life Of Pablo Update Download Zip

The Life of Pablo was named among the best albums of 2016 by multiple publications. Dummy Mag, The New York Times and Time Out London ranked it as the best album of the year.[101][102][103]

PublicationAccoladeRankRef.
BillboardBillboard's 50 Best Albums of 2016
2
ComplexThe 50 Best Albums of 2016
4
DazedThe 20 Best Albums of 2016
5
Digital Spy20 Best Albums of 2016
7
Dummy MagThe 25 Best Albums of 2016
1
EsquireThe 30 Best Albums of 2016
5
FLOOD MagazineThe Best Records of 2016
8
The GuardianBest Albums of 2016
4
HotNewHipHopHottest 20 Albums of 2016
2
IdolatorThe 10 Best Albums of 2016
3
Laut.deThe Hip-Hop Albums of the Year
2
The IndependentBest Albums of 2016
10
The Irish TimesTop 10 Albums of 2016
7
Les InrockuptiblesLes 50 Meilleurs Albums de 2016
6
New York (Vulture)The 15 Best Albums of 2016
5
The New York TimesThe Best Albums of 2016 (Jon Caramanica's list)
1
The New Zealand HeraldThe 20 Best Albums of 2016
4
NMENME's Albums of the Year 2016
2
PitchforkThe 50 Best Albums of 2016
5
Rap-UpRap-Up's Best Albums of 2016
2
The RingerThe Best Albums of 2016
4
Rolling Stone50 Best Albums of 2016
8
Slant MagazineThe 25 Best Albums of 2016
2
Splice TodayTop 10 Records of 2016
2
StereogumThe 50 Best Albums of 2016
9
Time Out LondonThe Best Albums of 2016
1
UproxxThe 20 Best Albums of 2016
10
Us WeeklyBest Albums of 2016
5
USA TodayThe 50 Best Albums of 2016
9
The Village VoicePazz & Jop Critics Poll of 2016
10

Commercial performance[edit]

The album debuted on the US Billboard 200 at number-one for the chart dated April 12, 2016 with 94,000 album-equivalent units, with 28,000 of those coming from pure album sales.[131] On April 9, 2016, it was reported by Billboard that the album was set to debut atop the Billboard 200, making it the first album to reach the summit with over 50% from streaming.[132] However, when official numbers were distributed for album sales for the first half of 2016, The Life of Pablo was revealed to have sold only around 30,000 CDs and physical downloads and that added streaming brought the album's sales totals to 339,000.[133] As of March 27, 2017, the album has been certified Platinum (1,000,000 equivalent album units) by the Recording Industry Association of America.[134] Also, it went Gold in the UK based solely on streams alone on March 3, 2017, becoming the first album to ever do so in that country.[135]

It was reported that West had lost $10 million in album sales due to the infringement, as Tidal did not report the streams to the Nielsen Music.[136] These details were later alleged to be deformed reports from news outlets, as Tidal had not yet revealed the number of streams or in the increase of subscribers following the album's release. It was later claimed by Tidal that subscribers more than doubled to 3 million users after the album was released, with the album gaining an estimated 250 million streams within the first 10 days.[137]

The Life of Pablo was ranked as the 27th most popular album of 2016 on the Billboard 200. [138] The following year, it was ranked as the 64th most popular album of 2017.[139] Two year after its release, The Life of Pablo was ranked as the 143rd most popular album of 2018.[140]

Track listing[edit]

This track listing reflects the final June 14 version. Credits adapted from West's website.[141]

No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1.'Ultralight Beam'
  • Noah Goldstein
  • West
  • Mike Dean
  • Rick Rubin[a]
  • Watkins[a]
  • Plain Pat[b]
  • DJDS[b]
  • Goldstein[b]
5:20
2.'Father Stretch My Hands, Pt. 1'
  • West
  • Rubin
  • M. Dean
  • Goldstein
  • Young
  • Potter
  • Griesemer
  • Bennett
  • T. L. Barrett[c]
  • West
  • M. Dean
  • Metro Boomin[a]
  • DJDS[b]
  • Ritter[b]
  • Goldstein[b]
2:15
3.'Pt. 2'
  • West
  • Rubin
  • Young
  • Sidney Selby III[d]
  • Adnan Khan[d]
  • Barrett[d]
2:10
4.'Famous'
  • West
  • Young
  • Goldstein
  • M. Dean
  • Bennett
  • K. Dean
  • Reynolds
  • Jimmy Webb[e]
  • Winston Riley[e]
  • Luis Enriquez Bacalov[e]
  • Enzo Vita[e]
  • Sergio Bardotti[e]
  • Giampiero Scalamogna[e]
  • West
  • Goldstein[a]
  • Charlie Heat[a]
  • Dawson[a]
  • Hudson Mohawke[b]
  • M. Dean[b]
  • Plain Pat[b]
3:16
5.'Feedback'
  • West
  • Brown
  • Goldstein
  • Young
  • Darius Jenkins
  • K. Rachel Mills
  • Marcus Byrd
  • Bennett
  • Ardalan Sarfaraz[f]
  • Manouchehr Cheshmazar[f]
2:27
6.'Low Lights'
  • West
  • M. Dean
  • Potter
  • Griesemer
  • Sandy Rivera[g]
2:11
7.'Highlights'
  • West
  • Nash
  • Goldstein
  • Young
  • M. Dean
  • Reynolds
  • Jamichael Hall
  • West
  • M. Dean
  • Velous[a]
  • Southside[a]
  • Plain Pat[b]
  • Goldstein[b]
3:19
8.'Freestyle 4'
  • West
  • M. Dean
  • Young
  • Selby III
  • Birchard
  • Potter
  • Griesemer
  • Goldstein
  • Shaw
  • Trevor Gureckis
  • Alison Goldfrapp[h]
  • Robert Locke[h]
  • Timothy Norfolk[h]
  • William Gregory[h]
  • West
  • Hudson Mohawke[a]
  • Goldstein[a]
  • M. Dean[a]
  • DJDS[b]
  • Shaw[b]
  • Gureckis[b]
2:03
9.'I Love Kanye'WestWest0:44
10.'Waves'
  • West
  • Mescudi
  • Young
  • Elon Rutberg
  • Birchard
  • Watkins
  • M. Dean
  • Bennett
  • Wayne
  • Brown
  • Fred Brathwaithe[i]
  • Robin Diggs[i]
  • Kevin Ferguson[i]
  • Theodore Livingston[i]
  • Darryl Mason[i]
  • James Whipper[i]
  • West
  • Charlie Heat
  • Hudson Mohawke[a]
  • Metro Boomin[a]
  • M. Dean[a]
  • Anthony Kilhoffer[b]
3:01
11.'FML'
  • West
  • Young
  • M. Dean
  • Dawson
  • Goldstein
  • Wayne
  • Brown
  • Christian Boggs
  • Jenkins
  • Mills
  • Byrd
  • Birchard
  • Lawrence Cassidy[j]
  • Vincent Cassidy[j]
  • Paul Wiggin[j]
  • West
  • Mitus
  • Metro Boomin[a]
  • Goldstein[a]
  • M. Dean[a]
  • Hudson Mohawke[b]
  • Dawson[b]
3:56
12.'Real Friends'
  • West
  • Muchita
  • Young
  • Glenda Proby
  • M. Dean
  • Goldstein
  • Rupert Thomas
  • Jalil Hutchins[k]
  • Lawrence Smith[k]
  • West
  • Frank Dukes[a]
  • Havoc[b]
  • King[b]
  • M. Dean[b]
  • Goldstein
  • Sevn Thomas[b]
4:11
13.'Wolves'
  • West
  • Goldstein
  • Rutberg
  • Young
  • Ryan McDermott
  • M. Dean
  • Kirby Lauryen
  • Reynolds
  • Shaw
  • West
  • M. Dean
  • Goldstein[b]
  • Shaw[b]
5:01
14.'Frank's Track'
  • West
  • Cashmere Cat
  • Sinjin Hawke
0:38
15.'Siiiiiiiiilver Surffffeeeeer Intermission'West0:56
16.'30 Hours'
  • West
  • M. Dean
  • Charles Arthur Russell[l]
  • Cornell Haynes[l]
  • Jason Epperson[l]
  • Pharrell Williams[l]
  • Charles L. Brown[l]
  • Isaac Hayes[l]
5:23
17.'No More Parties in LA'
  • West
  • John Watson[m]
  • Walter Morrison[m]
  • Herbert Rooney[m]
  • Ronald Bean[m]
  • Highleigh Crizoe[m]
  • Dennis Coles[m]
  • Larry Graham[m]
  • Tina Graham[m]
  • Sam Dees[m]
6:14
18.'Facts (Charlie Heat Version)'
  • West
  • Young
  • Brown
  • Goldstein
  • Luellen
  • Nicholas Smith[n]
  • A. Graham[n]
  • Wayne[n]
  • Nayvadius Wilburn[n]
3:20
19.'Fade'
  • West
  • Griffin, Jr.
  • Kilhoffer
  • M. Dean
  • Ryan Vojtesak
  • Goldstein
  • Potter
  • Griesemer
  • Norman Whitfield[o]
  • Eddie Holland[o]
  • Cornelius Grant[o]
  • Larry Heard[o]
  • Robert Owens[o]
  • Louie Vega[o]
  • Ronald Carroll[o]
  • Barbara Tucker[o]
  • Harold Matthews[o]
  • Stephen Garrett[o]
  • Rapture Stewart[o]
  • Eric Seats[o]
  • West
  • Kilhoffer[a]
  • Benji B[a]
  • M. Dean[a]
  • Charlie Handsome[a]
  • DJDS[b]
  • Goldstein[b]
3:13
20.'Saint Pablo'
  • West
  • M. Dean
  • Ritter
  • Shawn Carter[p]
  • Deric Angelettie[p]
  • Ronald Lawrence[p]
  • Whitfield[p]
6:12
Total length:66:39

Notes

  • ^[a] signifies a co-producer
  • ^[b] signifies an additional 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 Kelly Price
  • 'Pt. 2' features vocals by Desiigner and Caroline Shaw
  • 'Famous' features vocals by Rihanna and Swizz Beatz
  • 'Highlights' features vocals by Young Thug, and additional vocals by The-Dream, El DeBarge and Kelly Price
  • 'Freestyle 4' features vocals by Desiigner
  • 'Waves' features vocals by Chris Brown and Kid Cudi
  • 'FML' features vocals by The Weeknd and additional vocals by Caroline Shaw
  • 'Real Friends' features vocals by Ty Dolla Sign
  • 'Wolves' features vocals by Caroline Shaw, 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 background vocals by André Benjamin
  • 'No More Parties in LA' features vocals by Kendrick Lamar
  • 'Fade' features vocals by Post Malone and Ty Dolla Sign
  • 'Saint Pablo' features vocals by Sampha

Sample credits[141]

Download The Life Of Pablo

  • 'Ultralight Beam' contains uncredited elements of the video game Counter-Strike.[142]
  • ^[c] 'Father Stretch My Hands Pt. 1' contains samples of 'Father I Stretch My Hands', written and performed by Pastor T.L. Barrett featuring Youth for Christ.
  • ^[d] 'Pt. 2' contains samples of the song 'Panda', written by Sidney Selby III and Adnan Khan and performed by Desiigner; samples of 'Father I Stretch My Hands', written and performed by Pastor T.L. Barrett featuring Youth for Christ and contains elements of the video game Street Fighter II: The World Warrior.
  • ^[e] '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.
  • ^[f] 'Feedback' contains samples of 'Talagh', written by Ardalan Sarfaraz and Manouchehr Cheshmazar, and performed by Googoosh.
  • ^[g] 'Low Lights' contains samples of 'So Alive (Acapella)', written by Sandy Rivera and performed by Kings of Tomorrow.
  • ^[h] 'Freestyle 4' contains samples of 'Human', written by Alison Goldfrapp, William Gregory, Robert Locke, and Timothy Norfolk, and performed by Goldfrapp.
  • ^[i] 'Waves' contains samples and elements of 'Fantastic Freaks at the Dixie', written by Fred Bratwaithe, Robin Diggs, Kevin Ferguson, Theodore Livingston, Darryl Mason, and James Whipper, and performed by Fantastic Freaks.
  • ^[j] 'FML' contains interpolations of 'Hit', written by Lawrence Cassidy, Vincent Cassidy, and Paul Wiggin, and performed by Section 25.
  • ^[k] '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.
  • ^[l] '30 Hours' contains samples of 'Answers Me', written and performed by Arthur Russell; interpolations of 'Hot in Herre', written by Cornell Haynes, Pharrell Williams, and Charles Brown, and performed by Nelly; interpolations of 'EI', written by Cornell Haynes and Jason Epperson, and performed by Nelly; and samples of 'Joy', written and performed by Isaac Hayes.
  • ^[m] '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.
  • ^[n] '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, and performed by Drake and Future and contains elements of the video game Street Fighter II: The World Warrior.
  • ^[o] '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; 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; and contains an interpolation of 'Rock the Boat', written by Stephen Garrett, Rapture Stewart, and Eric Seats, and performed by Aaliyah.
  • ^[p] 'Saint Pablo' contains samples of 'Where I'm From', written by Shawn Carter, Marek Manning, Deric Angelettie, Ronald Lawrence and Norman Whitfield, and performed by Jay-Z.

Personnel[edit]

Technical

  • Noah Goldstein – engineering (tracks 1–13, 16–20), mixing (tracks 9, 14, 15)
  • Andrew Dawson – engineering (tracks 1–8, 10, 11, 13, 16–20)
  • Anthony Kilhoffer – engineering (tracks 1–8, 10, 11, 13, 16, 18–20)
  • Mike Dean – engineering (tracks 1–8, 10, 11, 13, 16, 18–20), mastering
  • Mike Malchicoff – engineering (tracks 1, 7)
  • Nathaniel Alford – engineering (track 7)
  • Alex Tumay – engineering (track 7)
  • Dee Brown – engineering (track 7)
  • Tom Kahre – engineering (tracks 8, 10)
  • Ty Dolla Sign – engineering (track 12)
  • French Montana – engineering (track 15)
  • Mixed by Ali – engineering (track 17)
  • Marcos Tovar – vocals recording (Rihanna; track 4)
  • Joe Balaguer – vocals assistance (Rihanna; track 4)
  • Kuk Harrell – vocal production (Rihanna; track 4)
  • Zeke Mishanec – vocals recording (Swizz; track 4)
  • Shin Kamiyama – vocals recording (The Weeknd; track 11)
  • Manny Marroquin – mixing (tracks 1–8, 10–13, 16–20)
  • Kez Khou – mix assistance (tracks 7, 13)
  • Chris Galland – mix assistance (tracks 12, 17, 20)
  • Jeff Jackson – mix assistance (tracks 12, 17, 20)
  • Ike Schultz – mix assistance (tracks 12, 17, 20)

Musicians

  • Donnie Trumpet – trumpets (track 1)
  • Mike Dean – keyboards (tracks 1, 2, 7, 11, 12), bass guitar (track 1), Moog modular(track 2), vocoder(track 16)
  • Anthony Evans – choir contracting (track 1)
  • Aaron Encinas – choir (track 1)
  • Shanika Bereal – choir (track 1)
  • Crystal Lewis Ray – choir (track 1)
  • Kenyon Dixon – choir (track 1)
  • Rachel Whitlow – choir (track 1)
  • George Young – choir (track 1)
  • LaKesha Shantell – choir (track 1)
  • Tiffany Stevenson – choir (track 1)
  • Chavonne Stewart – choir (track 1)
  • Greg Phillinganes – keyboards (track 7)

Design

  • Kanye West – creative direction
  • Virgil Abloh – assistant creative direction
  • DONDA – art direction
    • Joe Perez
    • Mark Seekings
    • Justin Saunders
  • Peter De Potter – album artwork design
  • Ryan Dwyer – photography
  • Sheniz H – photo model

Charts[edit]

Weekly charts[edit]

Chart (2016)Peak
position
Canadian Albums (Billboard)[143]6
Danish Albums (Hitlisten)[144]2
Dutch Albums (Album Top 100)[145]8
Finnish Albums (Suomen virallinen lista)[146]5
Irish Albums (IRMA)[147]8
Norwegian Albums (VG-lista)[148]1
Swedish Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[149]2
UK Albums (OCC)[150]30
US Billboard 200[151]1
US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums (Billboard)[152]2

Year-end charts[edit]

Chart (2016)Position
Danish Albums (Hitlisten)[153]12
Dutch Albums (MegaCharts)[154]72
US Billboard 200[138]27
US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums (Billboard)[155]88
Chart (2017)Position
Danish Albums (Hitlisten)[156]39
US Billboard 200[139]64
US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums (Billboard)[157]48
Chart (2018)Position
Danish Albums (Hitlisten)[158]89
US Billboard 200[140]143

Certifications[edit]

RegionCertificationCertified units/Sales
Denmark (IFPI Denmark)[159]2× Platinum40,000^
United Kingdom (BPI)[161]Gold100,316[160]
United States (RIAA)[162]Platinum1,000,000

^shipments figures based on certification alone
sales+streaming figures based on certification alone

Release history[edit]

List of release dates, formats, and label
RegionDateFormatLabelRef(s)
VariousFebruary 14, 2016Streaming(Tidal exclusive)[69]
April 1, 2016
  • Streaming
[163]

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