All Mine (Kanye West song)

"All Mine" is a song by American rapper and producer Kanye West from his eighth studio album, Ye (2018). The song features vocals from American singers Ty Dolla Sign and Ant Clemons. The song's production relies on a simplistic drum-led style and was primarily handled by West, while co-produced by Mike Dean with additional production from Francis and the Lights, and Scott Carter. It was written by West and 13 others, with the information being revealed what lyrics co-writer Consequence was responsible for.

"All Mine"
Thumbnail of the lyric video
Single by Kanye West
from the album Ye
ReleasedJuly 24, 2018
Format
Recorded2018
StudioWest's ranch in Jackson Hole, Wyoming
GenreHip hop
Length2:25
Label
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)
Kanye West singles chronology
"Yikes"
(2018)
"All Mine"
(2018)
"XTCY"
(2018)
Lyric video
"All Mine" on YouTube

On July 20, 2018, West picked "All Mine" to be the second single from the album, after lead single "Yikes" didn't perform well on record charts. The former was the top-performing track from Ye on Spotify when West made this decision. Four days later, the song was released as a single to US rhythmic contemporary radio stations by GOOD Music and Def Jam. Throughout the song, West defends his dating preferences alongside taking a look at various dating choices and responding to criticism. Controversial lyrics are included within it in reference to Khloé Kardashian's relationship with Tristan Thompson.

"All Mine" received generally positive reviews from music critics. While most commented on its sexual nature, some critics praised the production and the song's position in West's career. It was commercial successfully, charting in numerous countries in 2018, including New Zealand and Australia. The song was ultimately certified platinum and silver in the US and the UK by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) and British Phonographic Industry (BPI), respectively. A lyric video for the song was released on June 19, 2018.

Background

Naomi Campbell, pictured in 2015, is among the multiple celebrities mentioned by West in the track.

"All Mine" originated as a demo by American singer Jeremih, who's credited as a songwriter on the track. Jeremih collaborator Bongo ByTheWay introduced him to the relatively-unknown Ant Clemons, who then recorded the hook. Jeremih was invited to Wyoming and played the demo for West, who then incorporated it into Ye.[1] Ant Clemons saw an increase in fame after working with West.[2]

Along with "All Mine", Ty Dolla Sign contributed vocals on Ye tracks "Violent Crimes" and "Wouldn't Leave".[3] On June 4, 2018, three days after the album's release, a collaborative album with West was teased by Ty Dolla Sign.[4] He recalled "going off on the backgrounds, no Auto-Tune" when working with West in a phone conversation with Rolling Stone on August 30.[5] Francis and the Lights had previously released a cover version of West's hit single "Can't Tell Me Nothing", which West shared a link to via his blog on February 7, 2009.[6] The two subsequently collaborated on the 2016 single "Friends" alongside Bon Iver and the track's music video includes an appearance from West.[7][6] Outside of "All Mine", Francis and the Lights has production credits on Ye tracks "I Thought About Killing You" and "Ghost Town".[3]

The possessive pronoun "Mine" being included in the title of the song is linked to the subject matter.[8] West had been criticized for dating options in the past, specifically when he dated American model and actress Amber Rose.[8] "All Mine" doesn't stand as the only song linked to West's perspective of women on the album, as he raps about protecting them on "Violent Crimes".[8]

Composition

Organ music heard in a church is juxtaposed with references to celebrity icons in the song, including Naomi Campbell and Stormy Daniels.[9][10] The intro consists of Ant Clemons singing and Ty Dolla Sign providing various ad-libs.[11][12] Ant Clemons sings the song's chorus, with the "genie in a bottle" metaphor in the lines "Get to rubbin' on my lamp/Get the genie out the bottle" doubling as a sexual innuendo.[13][9] West defends his dating preferences whilst taking a look at various dating choices within his two verses on the song, as well as responding to critics.[9][8] In West's second verse, crashes of sound are heard every time he raps "Ay".[14]

Writing and production

Francis and the Lights, pictured in 2010, helped write and produce the track.

"All Mine" was written by West, Mike Dean, Francis Starlite, Cydel Young, Dexter Mills, Jeremy Felton, Danielle Balbuena, Anthony Clemons, Uforo Ebong, Tyrone Griffin, Jr., Malik Jones, Kenneth Pershon, Terrence Boykin and Jordan Thorpe.[3] It was revealed by West in an interview with The New York Times on June 25, 2018 that co-writer Consequence, credited under his real name of Dexter Mills, was the one who came up with the lyrics "I could have Naomi Campbell/And still might want me a Stormy Daniels."[15] A screenshot of an Instagram photo about West revealing Consequence to have wrote such content was shared to Consequence's Instagram on July 19.[16] Alongside the screenshotted image, Consequence included text about how he only writes for multi-millionaires and/or his loved ones.[16]

West, Dean, Francis and the Lights, and Scott Carter produced the track.[3] Francis and the Lights contributed to both the production and writing of it.[17] The track's production relies on a simplistic drum-led style, with it being where the harmonic progression of the album momentarily stops.[18][8]

Release and promotion

On June 1, 2018, "All Mine" was released as the third track on West's eighth studio album Ye.[19] West subsequently selected the song as the second single from the album on July 20, after lead single "Yikes"; it was set to be serviced to radio stations across the United States in the next week.[20] After "Yikes" didn't perform well on record charts, West's labels GOOD Music and Def Jam tried their best to make sure that Ye didn't lose momentum by readying a second single to be pushed.[20] The song was the album's top performing track on Spotify in the US at the time of being picked by West for release as a single, sitting at approximately 600,000 streams a day.[20] Four days after being selected as a single by West, it was serviced to US rhythmic contemporary radio stations through his labels.[21]

A lyric video was officially released for the song on June 19, 2018, along with one for fellow album track "Violent Crimes".[22] The lyric video features a panning view of Jackson Hole with lyrics written over it, visually resembling the official cover art for Ye and the lyrics are written in the same font that appears on the album's cover.[22][13] The thumbnail image for the visual was provided by Jewel Samad of Agence France-Presse (AFP).[22] Though the lyric videos were released by West, he hadn't released any music videos for the album nor his joint album Kids See Ghosts with Kid Cudi, as Kids See Ghosts; West's last released music video was for 2016 single "Fade".[22][23]

Critical reception

"All Mine" was met with generally positive reviews from music critics, who often noted its sexual nature. Spencer Kornhaber of The Atlantic put forward the idea of the track as being what continues West's "career-long meltdown about monogamy."[24] In reference to the track's position on Ye, Lucy Jones from The Daily Telegraph described it as where West "moves into more explicit territory" and viewed the beat as being "dirty and mechanical," while also writing that it "feels like Life Of Pablo or Yeezus-era Kanye."[25] Sam Moore of Metro pointed out that the song shows West indulging "in one of his favourite pastimes: name-checking celebrities" and noted the sexual nature of West's lyricism.[10] Consequence of Sound writer Wren Graves listed it as one of the album's essential tracks.[26] The Independent's Christopher Hooton claimed that the song "has an irresistible bounce to it" and is where "Kanye stamps well-trodden lyrical ground."[14] The song's lyrics "I could have Naomi Campbell/And still might want me a Stormy Daniels" were viewed by Hooton as "just an alternate" to West's lyrics "See I could have me a good girl/And still be addicted to them hood rats" from his 2010 Pusha T-featuring single "Runaway".[14] Clayton Purdom from The A.V. Club labeled the song as a minimal collage "of organ drones, a rotating cast of sinuous hook-men, and what are apparently the best jokes about ejaculate and breast implants Kanye came up with in the past couple years."[27] In Tiny Mix Tapes, Adam Rothbarth praised the way West "uses space and silence" in the song and also complemented its production.[28]

However, not all reviews were positive. Andrew Barker gave the song a negative review for Variety, branding it as being an "embarrassing sex track" and Barker compared the song to West's Yeezus track "I'm In It".[29] The Guardian's Alexis Petridis opined that the "scampering, falsetto vocals" on the song "quickly grate."[30] For Billboard, Michael Saponara ranked it as the worst track on Ye and commented that the "sultry vocals" set the tone for the song before West's sexualized rapping.[31]

Accolades

The track ranked as the 85th most streamed song of 2018 worldwide on Apple Music and the year's 67th most streamed in the United States.[32] It was voted by listeners of Australian radio station Triple J as the 158th most popular song of 2018.[33] On Run The Trap's list of the Top 25 Hip-Hop Songs Of 2018, the track ranked at number 15, with Aaron Root of the site calling it where "Kanye talks about the topic of infidelity" and claiming that he "goes as far to call out many celebrities for their infidelity."[34]

Controversy

Khloé Kardashian, pictured in 2011, seemed to insult West via Snapchat after he dissed her in the song.

West raps a diss to his sister-in-law Khloé Kardashian over her decision to date Canadian basketball player Tristan Thompson in "All Mine" with the lyrics "All these thots on Christian Mingle/That's what almost got Tristan single/If you don't ball like him or Kobe/Guarantee that bitch gon' leave you."[35] Thompson was effectively excluded from family affairs by the Kardashian family, while West's wife Kim Kardashian had previously called the couple's cheating scandal "so fucked up."[35][36]

One day after the release of Ye, Khloé Kardashian seemingly insulted West by sharing a Snapchat post of her working out to the track "Delicate" by his rival Taylor Swift, whom West dissed most recently in his 2016 single "Famous" by calling her "that bitch."[36] Despite this, Kardashian had praise for the album overall, tweeting out fire emojis next to its title.[37] Her younger half-sister Kylie Jenner rapped along with the diss to Thompson in a video posted to Jenner's Snapchat at a later date with Anastasia Karanikolaou and the video clip gathered more attention after it surfaced on Instagram.[38]

Commercial performance

Following its release as a single, "All Mine" was a commercial success, charting in a total of 20 countries worldwide in 2018. The song made its debut at number 11 on the US Billboard Hot 100 upon the release of Ye, despite not being released as a single initially, becoming the most streamed song of the week.[39] By topping the US Streaming Songs chart, the song surpassed the entry of West's track "Gone" at number four in 2013 for the title of his highest debut on the chart, while giving West his first number one by exceeding his previous peak position of number two attained by "Bound 2" that same year.[40] The streams were counted at 36.3 million, while 6,000 digital sales were logged.[41] That same week, the song entered at number 9 on the US Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart and marked West's 26th entry in the top ten; "All Mine" and "Yikes" became West's first top ten singles on the chart since "All Day" in 2015.[42] It remained on the Hot 100 for a total of nine weeks, outperforming West's previous single "Yikes" which only stayed on the chart for five weeks.[43][44] The track ranked at number 96 on the year-end US Billboard Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart for 2018.[45] On September 21, 2018, the track was certified platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) for selling 1,000,000 certified units in the US, around two months after having been released as a single.[46] This made it the first track from Ye to achieve the certification and the song became West's first platinum single in the US since the 2016 GOOD Music collaborative single "Champions".[47] On the NZ Singles Chart and Slovakian Singles Digitál Top 100, the song performed best by peaking at number five on both of the charts, respectively.[48][49] On the UK Singles Chart, the song reached number 11 and was ultimately certified silver by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) for sales of 200,000 units in the United Kingdom on March 6, 2020.[50][51] The song also entered the top 20 of the charts in Portugal, Ireland, Greece, Estonia, Canada and Australia.[52][53][54][55][56][57] Its lowest top 20 position was number 19 on the Portuguese Singles Chart.[52]

However, the song experienced a lesser degree of success on charts in other countries. "All Mine" charted at number 23 on the Norwegian Singles Chart.[58] It reached similar positions of numbers 25 and 26 on the Czech Republic Singles Digitál Top 100 and Danish Tracklisten chart respectively.[59][60] The song also reached the top 40 of the Swedish Sverigetopplistan chart, Icelandic Singles Chart and Ö3 Austria Top 40.[61][62][63] On the Schweizer Hitparade chart, it peaked at number 43 and charted at a similar position of number 46 on the Netherlands Single Top 100.[64][65] "All Mine" reached number 75 on both the Official German Chart and French SNEP chart.[66][67] The track experienced its worst performance on the FIMI Singles Chart, peaking at number 96.[68]

Personnel

Credits adapted from Tidal.[3]

  • Kanye West – production, vocals
  • Mike Dean – co-production, engineering, mixing
  • Francis and the Lights – additional production
  • Scott Carter – additional production
  • Andrew Dawson – engineering, programming
  • Mike Malchicoff – engineering
  • Zack Djurich – engineering
  • Sean Solymar – assistant recording engineering
  • Jess Jackson – mixing
  • Ty Dolla Sign – vocals
  • Ant Clemons – vocals

Charts

Certifications

Region CertificationCertified units/sales
United Kingdom (BPI)[51] Silver 200,000
United States (RIAA)[46] Platinum 1,000,000

sales+streaming figures based on certification alone

Release history

Region Date Format Label Ref.
United States July 24, 2018 Rhythmic contemporary radio [21]

See also

References

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