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All Falls Down
2004 single by Kanye West featuring Syleena Johnson From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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"All Falls Down" is a song by American rapper Kanye West. It was released as the third single from his debut studio album, The College Dropout (2004). The song was written and produced by West and features American R&B and soul singer Syleena Johnson. The song is a hip-hop and conscious hip-hop track, and contains an interpolation of "Mystery of Iniquity" by Lauryn Hill from her live album MTV Unplugged No. 2.0; Hill is credited as a composer. The song was recorded in Sony Music Studios in New York City, New York and Larrabee Sound North in Los Angeles, California.
Released on the 8th of March, 2004, almost a month after the release of The College Dropout, the "All Falls Down" single (backed with fellow album track "Get 'Em High") entered the UK Singles Chart at number ten and peaked at number seven on the US Billboard Hot 100 on the 11th of May, his first solo Top 10 hit in the US. The song would also chart in the top 10 on six other charts, the song's highest position being a peak at number 2 on the US Hot Rap Tracks chart, just behind "Tipsy" by fellow American rapper J-Kwon.
The song was nominated for Best Rap/Sung Collaboration at the 47th Grammy Awards, Viewer's Choice at the 2004 BET Awards and received nominations for a total of four awards at the 2004 MTV Video Music Awards, the latter award show featuring a performance of the song, although it did not win in these categories, losing three of them to "Yeah!" by Usher. The original version of the song, featuring Lauryn Hill's vocals sampled from "Mystery of Iniquity" on the chorus, was featured in the Netflix documentary Jeen-Yuhs: A Kanye Trilogy.[2] West would later collaborate with Johnson on Cam'ron's "Down and Out" and West's own "Donda Chant".
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Background
The song contains an interpolation of "Mystery of Iniquity" by Lauryn Hill from her live album MTV Unplugged No. 2.0. West originally attempted to acquire legal clearance to sample the recording but due to various complications, the permission was withheld.[3] West then called upon Syleena Johnson to re-sing the relevant vocal portions of "Mystery of Iniquity" which ended up in the final track.[4] The version of the song with the original sample can be heard on the unofficial Freshman Adjustment mixtape, released before The College Dropout. However, the earliest version of the song can be found on West's 2001 mixtape The Prerequisite, on which it was called "Dream Come True". Lyrically, "All Falls Down" examines the self-consciousness and insecurity within society, particularly the black community, and how these characteristics pertain to economic materialism.[5]
In a 2013 interview with The New York Times, West revealed American hip-hop duo Dead Prez's impact on the song;
"It wasn't until I hung out with Dead Prez and understood how to make, you know, raps with a message sound cool that I was able to just write "All Falls Down" in 15 minutes."[6]
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Lyrical analysis
Summarize
Perspective
"All Falls Down" is placed as the fourth song of Kanye West's debut studio album, The College Dropout. The album's lyrical content is notable for containing complex societal issues, which West strives to advertently cover in ways relating to the Black American community. These thematic concepts, prevalent through the entirety of the album, are omnipresent within this specific song.[7]
"All Falls Down" features West reflecting upon his own imperfections.[8] The lyrics chronicle his insecurities surrounding his appearances, which he translates as an extension of problems shared with the broader population. Exploring the concept of insecurity and doubt, West tackles matters of excessive materialism and the surface-level aesthetics of affluence. West confesses to his own participation in materialistic pursuits, and the seemingly contradictory mindset thereof.[9][10]
West also ties this thematic idea to an even deeper meaning. The reason this lifestyle is adopted is in an attempt to recompense for what the Black American community might have taken from people in their past. However, West scrutinizes this apparent subjugation and excessive materialism, ending with a claim that he recognizes his and others collective submission to such a lifestyle.[9][10] Hip hop journalist Davey D wrote about the lyrics in his 2015 book, The Cultural Impact of Kanye West: "A number of Black pathologies including self-hate, drug abuse, and the worship of white wealth. [West] philosophically concludes that White men are the financial benefactors of all Black pathologies."[11]
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Music video
The music video for "All Falls Down" was directed by Chris Milk and shot at Ontario International Airport in Ontario, California.[12] It follows West as he accompanies his girlfriend, played by Stacey Dash, to the airport to catch her flight.[13] The video is shot in first-person perspective, displaying the journey from their car to the airport terminal through West's eyes.[14] The music video also features cameos by GLC, Consequence, Common, Kel Mitchell, and Syleena Johnson, who features on the song, as the lady who checks Dash in at the airport reception.[15][16] Complex named it the 18th best music video of the 2000s decade.[17]
The music video on YouTube has received over 80 million views as of August 2024.[18]
Live performances
West performed portions of the song live on Def Poetry Jam in 2003 as a poem titled "Self Conscious".[19] A performance of "All Falls Down" was included on West's 2006 live album Late Orchestration, which was recorded in 2005 at Abbey Road Studios in London.[20] It was performed live by West in 2015 as the closer to his headlining set at Glastonbury.[21]
The song was performed by West as part of a medley at the 2004 MTV Video Music Awards, as well on numerous television shows, including; Late Show with David Letterman, Total Request Live, The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, and Later... with Jools Holland.
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Accolades
Spin named "All Falls Down" the third best song of 2004.[22]
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Track listings
12" vinyl #1
A-Side
- "All Falls Down" (Clean)
- "All Falls Down" (Dirty)
- "All Falls Down" (A cappella)
B-Side
- "Get 'Em High" (Clean)
- "Get 'Em High" (Extended Dirty)
- "Get 'Em High" (A cappella)
12" vinyl #2
A-Side
- "All Falls Down" (Explicit)
- "All Falls Down" (Edited)
B-Side
- "Heavy Hitters" (Dirty)
- "Heavy Hitters" (A cappella)
CD single #1
- "All Falls Down" (Album Version Explicit)
- "Heavy Hitters" (Dirty)
CD single #2
- "All Falls Down"
- "Get 'Em High"
- "Heavy Hitters"
- "Through the Wire"
CD single #3
- "All Falls Down - Explicit"
- "All Falls Down" - Edited"
- "Heavy Hitters (Feat. GLC)"
- "Get 'Em High (Feat. Talib Kweli & Common)"
- "All Falls Down - Video"
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Personnel
Information taken from The College Dropout liner notes.[33]
- Songwriters: Kanye West, Lauryn Hill
- Producer: Kanye West
- Record engineer: Tatsuya Sato, Rabeka Tunei
- Mix engineer: Manny Marroquin
- Guitar: Eric "E-Bass" Johnson
- Acoustic guitar: Ken Lewis
Charts
Weekly charts
Year-end charts
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Certifications
Release history
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References
External links
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