At the End of the Day God Dammit Im Killin This Shit Art

2016 promotional unmarried past Kanye West

"No More Parties in LA"
No More Parties in LA official artwork.jpg
Promotional single past Kanye Due west
from the album The Life of Pablo
Released January 18, 2016
Recorded 2010–2016
Genre Hip hop
Length 6:14
Label
  • Skillful
  • Def Jam
Songwriter(s)
  • Kanye West
  • Otis Jackson, Jr.
  • Kendrick Duckworth
  • John Watson
  • Walter Morrison
  • Herbert Rooney
  • Ronald Bean
  • Highleigh Crizoe
  • Dennis Coles
  • Larry Graham
  • Tina Graham
  • Sam Dees
  • Malik Jones
Producer(s)
  • Kanye West
  • Madlib

"No More Parties in LA" (often stylized as "No More Parties in L.A.") is a song by American rapper Kanye Westward from his seventh studio anthology, The Life of Pablo (2016), featuring vocals from fellow rapper Kendrick Lamar. It was produced by Westward and Madlib, who began the recording in 2010. The beat was originally offered to Freddie Gibbs before being given to West and Lamar past Madlib. The song was released as the third promotional single from the album as part of West's Expert Fridays series on January 18, 2016.

A hip hop track, the song heavily samples Walter "Junie" Morrison'south "Suzie Thundertussy". It as well includes samples of Johnny "Guitar" Watson'due south "Requite Me My Love", Larry Graham's "Stand up Upward and Shout About Beloved", and Ghostface Killah'southward "Mighty Healthy". In the lyrics, West reflects on Hollywood culture and the experience of fame, while Lamar recounts the first of a relationship. "No More Parties in LA" received disquisitional acclaim from music critics, many of whom praised West'due south verse. They ofttimes appreciated his lyricism and others complimented Lamar's verse, though a few critics highlighted the song's sampling. Reappraisal towards it in reviews of The Life of Pablo was also positive; critics mostly praised the product.

"No More Parties in LA" was ranked every bit i of the best tracks of 2016 past multiple publications, including HipHopDX and Pitchfork. The vocal charted at number 3 and 39 on the US Billboard Bubbling Under R&B/Hip-Hop Singles chart and Uk R&B Chart, respectively. It was certified aureate in the The states by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) in August 2018. Yasiin Bey referenced the vocal with his freestyle "No More than Parties in SA" in January 2016. A remix of the song was shared by Freddie Gibbs that aforementioned calendar month, while Sporting Life later released his remix in February 2017.

Groundwork and development [edit]

Kendrick Lamar in 2016

From 2013 to 2014, Kendrick Lamar supported West on The Yeezus Bout.[1] He co-wrote Westward's unmarried "All Twenty-four hours", which was released in March 2015.[ii] "No More Parties in LA" marked the start ever collaboration between Lamar and West.[3] On February xvi, 2016, shortly after the release of The Life of Pablo, West revealed that they have 40 unreleased songs together. He continued, stating that him and fellow rapper Young Thug besides having 40 songs amounted to a "xl/twoscore club!!!"[4]

In 2010, W launched his weekly free music serial GOOD Fridays for his 5th studio anthology My Beautiful Nighttime Twisted Fantasy, which was released that aforementioned yr.[3] For the anthology's serial, 15 tracks were released.[3] "Real Friends" was released every bit a promotional single on Jan 8, 2016, launching the return of West'due south GOOD Fridays series for his then-upcoming album SWISH.[a] [6] At the terminate of the song, a snippet of "No More Parties in LA" was included.[1] The track was afterward released every bit function of the series.[3]

The song samples American bassist Larry Graham'due south "Stand Up and Shout Nearly Dearest", resulting in him, Tina Graham, and Sam Dees receiving writing credits on "No More Parties in LA".[7] Past using Larry Graham'southward recording, West had sampled the music of Canadian rapper Drake's uncle.[8] Drake responded past uploading a photo to his Instagram that showed a vinyl copy of the recording's parent anthology Ane in a Million Yous (1980).[eight] In reference to the track, the rapper captioned the photo: "FEW More than PARTIES IN LA."[8] "No More than Parties in LA" as well samples American rapper Ghostface Killah's "Mighty Healthy", for which the rapper, Herb Rooney, Mathematics, and Highleigh Crizoe received writing credits.[7] The sample marked the second time that Due west had sampled the recording, with the first being on his unmarried "New God Flow" in 2012.[1]

Recording [edit]

Due west and American musician Madlib began product on the vocal in 2010, starting to record information technology during the sessions for My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy.[ix] [10] That same year, Madlib told LA Weekly he had given v beats to West.[9] As part of a special featurette included on the DVD version of 2014 Stones Throw Records documentary Our Vinyl Weighs a Ton, West rapped lyrics that were later on used for "No More Parties in LA". He originally performed the lyrics when working with Madlib, whom W spoke about collaborating with during the featurette.[10] He recalled: "I could paint the scene of how I felt sitting there with Madlib, working on these tracks, and merely hearing the textures." After West recounted collaborating with him, he said that he "might have to get some more Madlib beats for the next projects".[ten]

Explaining the contributions to the song's production with a tweet, West confirmed he put together the intro while Madlib crafted the master backdrop.[ix] W's wife Kim Kardashian revealed via Twitter that he had arrived at the studio in Italian republic and finished recording the rails one day prior to its release, admitting her hubby wrote ninety of the lines on the plane in that location.[11] [12] He worked on the final mix with record producer Noah Goldstein in the studio, who engineered the rails.[7] [12] During an interview with the Red Bull Music Academy on May 23, 2016, Madlib revealed that he made the beat to the song on an iPad.[13] Madlib besides mentioned that when sampling a recording by a musician, he will wait through the entirety of its parent anthology to find samples.[xiii] He as well admitted West "waited likewise long" due to diverse samples being ultimately used for Madlib and rapper Freddie Gibbs' 2nd collaborative studio album Bandana (2019).[thirteen] Even so, Freddie Gibbs told Peter Rosenberg in July 2019 that the song's beat was originally intended for him only West and Lamar "just got on it before I did", after Madlib sent them the beat. Madlib explained to him that he gave effectually 100 beats to the two of them and they "rapped over a bunch of stuff", though the vocal was the simply i West and Lamar decided to release.[14]

Composition and lyrics [edit]

Musically, "No More than Parties in LA" is a hip hop runway, with soul elements.[fifteen] [xvi] [17] Information technology was described every bit reminiscent of Due west's before works by numerous music journalists.[18] [19] [xx] Co-ordinate to Mojo 's Bauer Xcel, the song features an abstract trounce.[21] The vocal is heavily based around samples of "Suzie Thundertussy", written and performed by Walter "Junie" Morrison.[7] [18] [22] As well as beingness sampled in the vocal'southward production, the recording is utilized for vocal samples.[23] The recording is combined with samples of the lyrics "Shake that torso / Party that body" from an a capella version of "Mighty Salubrious", written by Rooney, Mathematics, Crizoe, and its performer Ghostface Killah.[7] [18] [24] For the song'southward intro, samples are used of "la-dee-da-das" from "Give Me My Love" (1977), written and performed past Johnny "Guitar" Watson.[7] [eighteen] [24] Samples of vocals from "Stand Up and Shout Near Love", written past Larry and Tina Graham alongside Dees and performed by Larry Graham,[7] [24] are used for the vocal'due south bridge, interrupting Westward's rapping at the five:32 marking.[xviii] [25] [26] West briefly raps alongside Lamar at the start of the song, who performs the first verse and adds to the properties.[18] [nineteen] [25] [27] Layers of production drop out afterwards the verse, being followed by West performing the chorus.[28] [29] West raps for the song'southward residual, with him contributing a ninety-bar poetry.[30] [31] The song closes with sound effects of crowd cheers from the basketball video game NBA Jam (2010).[24]

Throughout "No More Parties in LA", W reflects on a variety of aspects of Hollywood culture and experiencing fame.[32] Lamar chronicles the beginning of a relationship; he references American vocaliser-songwriter Erykah Badu in ane line, using her for a sexual verb.[25] [33] Meanwhile, Due west name-drops fellow artists Lauryn Hill, Cam'ron, and André 3000.[30] [34] West mentions a Pablo character in certain lyrics of the song that he claims to "feel like", though does not explicitly state who the character is.[23] With the references to it, Due west offers an introduction of the Pablo grapheme of The Life of Pablo.[23] Prior to the song'south bridge, he calls out his cousin for stealing his laptop, continuing the subject of his theft that the rapper previously mentioned on "Real Friends".[18] [25] [30]

Release and artwork [edit]

"No More Parties in LA" missed its original scheduled Friday release date of January fifteen, 2016.[nineteen] Kardashian apologized on W's behalf and explained that this was due to him not finishing the vocal in fourth dimension because of a Yeezy Season three fitting in Italy.[19] [30] After her explanation, West subsequently appear that the song was to exist released "very very extremely before long".[35] "No More than Parties in LA" was released via SoundCloud as the second promotional unmarried for SWISH 'due south GOOD Fridays series on Monday Jan 18, 2016.[a] [1] [ii] [eighteen] The song'due south title was ofttimes stylized as "No More Parties in L.A.".[ii] [19] [28] West'south seventh studio anthology The Life of Pablo was released on February fourteen, 2016, including "No More than Parties in LA" equally the seventeenth runway.[17]

Alongside West's annunciation of the song's release, he tweeted the song's cover art.[35] Similarly to that of "Real Friends", the artwork displays a younger version of West than him in 2016.[35] On it, West is shown at a social gathering with his family unit.[36] The artwork was described past Capital Xtra as a "throwback moving-picture show".[36]

Critical reception [edit]

"No More than Parties in LA" was met with most-universal critical acclaim from music critics, who mostly complimented West's verse. Matthew Ramirez of Pitchfork directed praise towards West'south lyrical content, remarking that his "ability to connect to listeners" makes "the bug and lifestyles of the very, very rich" feel relatable.[20] Ramirez continued, analyzing how the vocal passes "in the blink of an middle" with Lamar'due south "monster" poesy and Madlib's "painterly" beat "reinforces how revitalized Kanye is later a spotty 2015", concluding by noting "an air of the unfiltered rawness of 'old Kanye'".[20] NME author Leonie Cooper expressed a similar sentiment, lauding the song for being "doused with an former school soul vibe" and "vintage class", attributing both to Madlib'due south product while highlighting the sampling of "Stand Up and Shout About Love".[25] Cooper preferred Westward's performance to Lamar's, albeit that despite the latter's "stiff opening" in which he "eloquently airs some impressively mucky musings", West "shines" and she was not surprised by this due to the vocal existence "his runway first and foremost".[25] She specifically appreciated West'due south smoothen delivery and his lyricism, complimenting his storytelling.[25]

David Drake from Rolling Stone commented that in comparison to Westward'due south output from the time menstruation of his sixth studio anthology Yeezus (2013), the vocal "suggests a return to the more tasteful and on-brand Kanye" of his 2010 GOOD Friday releases, analyzing information technology as doing so "with its autobiographical narrative and comfort-food soul sample".[18] Comparing West and Lamar's verses, he said "Kanye is the more effective and affecting: Kendrick is abstract" while elaborating past opining that Lamar's performance "could as easily be symbolic as personal" but West'south verse "meanwhile, is packed with the kind of simultaneous relatable, everyday arrogance and self-effacement that made his primeval work resonate".[18] Reviewing "No More Parties in LA" for DIY, Tom Connick appreciated the sampling of "Stand up Up and Shout Almost Dearest", and he observed that as Lamar is "out in that location taking the boastful crown", West takes happiness in remaining existent.[37] In Digital Spy, Lewis Corner stated the vocal features Due west and Lamar "spitting lyrical over difficult beats and a soulful, hazy backdrop", praising the sampling of "Suzie Thundertussy" in particular.[15] Writing for Billboard, Mitchell Peters viewed the song as demonstrating West's "effortless rap skills over a smooth beat".[38] Spin 's Kyle McGovern referenced the delayed release by labeling the song "worth the expect", with him branding it as "stunning" and complimenting Lamar's "masterful" verse.[28]

In reviews of The Life of Pablo, disquisitional commentary towards "No More Parties in LA" was similarly positive. For The Line of Best Fit, Tom Thorogood wrote that the song's beat having the allowance "to ride out" makes for an impressive result.[16] David Edwards from Under the Radar commented that the song "swings and spins effectually" the "Suzie Thundertussy" sample, describing it as "cracking the lid open on the dark, sordid underbelly of the urban center".[22] AllMusic writer David Jeffries viewed the combination of Lamar's vocals, Madlib's production, and the samples of Morrison and Graham as being supportive of "a smooth, rolling soul vocal they never could've imagined".[17] Xcel felt that Madlib's "suitably abstract crush" enables Due west and Lamar to trade verses on the song.[21] At The Guardian, Alexis Petridis noted the "funny, smart" runway for being among "wh[er]e in that location are not bad lines and verses" on the anthology.[39] Reviewing The Life of Pablo for Spin, Greg Tate voiced strongly positive feelings towards West's functioning on the song by calling it "the only duet-cut" on which he "displays enough oomph" for another artist not to exist needed.[40]

Accolades [edit]

Reactor 105.7 FM ranked "No More Parties in LA" as the 78th best song of 2016.[41] The track was voted in at number 66 on The Village Vocalism 's Pazz & Jop poll for that yr with 8 mentions, existence tied for the position with ix other songs.[42] Pitchfork named the track as the 32nd best song of 2016, with Raymond Cummings noting its potential to be "Kanye W's most urgently scatterbrained banger" while praising the performances of West and Lamar.[43] On the Reader's Poll for the Top 50 Songs of 2016 that was conducted by the publication, "No More Parties in LA" was placed at number 16 from the readers' votes.[44] The track was listed past HipHopDX every bit the 13th best song of the year.[45] Its highest positioning was given past Treblezine, who ranked "No More than Parties in LA" the 7th best vocal of 2016.[46] W's verse was listed among the 20 best verses of 2016 by Complex, with Ross Scarano describing his operation as "a long poesy that unwinds with the energy of Forrest Gump realizing he doesn't need those leg braces" and likewise noting the poesy as showing him being "spiteful, funny, aboveboard, paternal, drugged out and [...] lusty".[47] Jack O'Keeffe from Hurry wrote in a 2016 article that if W wants to win Best Rap Performance at the 59th Annual Grammy Awards, and so the song may be "his best shot" at winning the award.[48] It was ultimately nominated in no categories whatsoever at the ceremony in 2017, which Sam Rullo of the publication viewed every bit a snub.[49]

Commercial operation [edit]

Post-obit the release of The Life of Pablo, "No More Parties in LA" debuted at number iii on the U.s. Billboard Bubbling Under R&B/Hip-Hop Singles nautical chart.[50] The song lasted for three weeks on the chart.[fifty] On August 15, 2018, "No More Parties in LA" was certified aureate past the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) for sales of 500,000 certified units in the U.s..[51] Prior to the album's release, the song reached number 45 on the Mexico Ingles Airplay nautical chart.[52] It only spent one week on the nautical chart.[53] In the United Kingdom, the vocal peaked at number 133 on the United kingdom of great britain and northern ireland Singles Chart.[54] The song further reached number 39 on the United kingdom R&B Chart.[55]

In popular culture [edit]

Yasiin Bey performing at the 2012 Ilosaarirock festival

Yasiin Bey referenced the song with "No More Parties in SA", which was recorded in Southward Africa.

Under his real name of Yasiin Bey, fellow rapper Mos Def posted a freestyle to West's website entitled "No More than Parties in SA" in reference to "No More Parties in LA" on January twenty, 2016.[56] On the freestyle, Bey raps multiple claims of innocence.[56] The freestyle was recorded as part of a voice message, afterwards Bey was detained at Cape Boondocks International Airport for allegedly trying to leave South Africa with an unofficial "world passport".[56] [57] Bey posted the full message to West's Twitter folio, calling him "a real friend".[57] On Jan 27, 2016, Freddie Gibbs shared his remix of the song, titled "Cocaine Parties in 50.A".[58] Speaking of using the song's trounce for the remix, Freddie Gibbs commented that he "had to show [West and Lamar] how to practice it".[14] Lyrically, the remix focuses on the drug trade.[58]

In March 2016, W'south sister-in-law Kendall Jenner named the runway every bit her favorite song from the album.[59] West released a sweatshirt inspired by The Life of Pablo in May 2016 that reads "LOS ANGELES" in a triangular pyramid-shaped graphic on the front, while information technology features "NO More than PARTIES IN LA" in blood-red script on the back.[threescore] Erykah Badu responded to Lamar's name–driblet of her in it in July 2016, tweeting a photograph of the two of them at the 2013 BET Awards and writing, "[he] ain't called me since y'all made up some south[hello]t about us being in the trailer makin' out then he missed his honor."[61] American record producer Sporting Life shared his "Golf Master" remix of the song on February xvi, 2017.[62] Morrison's sampled vocals are looped up for the remix while West's vocals are filtered down to a whisper, and information technology adds dreamy keys.[62] On October 5, 2017, young man rapper Asher Roth freestyled over the song.[63]

Credits and personnel [edit]

Credits adjusted from West's official website.[7]

Recording

  • Mixed at Larrabee Studios, North Hollywood, CA

Personnel

  • Kanye West – songwriter, production
  • Madlib – songwriter, production
  • Kendrick Lamar – songwriter, vocals
  • John Watson – songwriter
  • Walter Morrison – songwriter
  • Herbert Rooney – songwriter
  • Ronald Bean – songwriter
  • Highleigh Crizoe – songwriter
  • Ghostface Killah – songwriter
  • Larry Graham – songwriter
  • Tina Graham – songwriter
  • Sam Dees – songwriter
  • Malik Yusef – songwriter
  • Noah Goldstein – engineer
  • Andrew Dawson – engineer
  • MixedByAli – engineer
  • Manny Marroquin – mixer
  • Chris Galland – assistant mixer
  • Ike Schultz – assistant mixer
  • Jeff Jackson – banana mixer

Charts [edit]

Certifications [edit]

Notes [edit]

  1. ^ a b SWISH was eventually retitled to The Life of Pablo.[five]

References [edit]

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/No_More_Parties_in_LA

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