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Revision as of 15:26, 18 September 2021

Donda
Studio album by
ReleasedAugust 29, 2021 (2021-08-29)
Recorded
  • September 2018 – August 2021
Studio
Genre
Length108:49
Label
Producer
Kanye West chronology
Jesus Is King
(2019)
Donda
(2021)
Singles from Donda
  1. "Hurricane"
    Released: September 14, 2021

Donda is the tenth studio album by American rapper and producer Kanye West. It was released on August 29, 2021, by GOOD Music and Def Jam Recordings. The album was initially set for release on July 24, 2020, but was delayed multiple times. In July 2021, West set up a provisional recording studio at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, where listening events were held on July 22 and August 5. On August 26, a third listening event was held at Soldier Field in Chicago; after the events, West continued to make alterations to the tracklist.

Donda is primarily a hip hop and gospel album, drawing upon elements of West's previous work, including pop, progressive rap and trap, as well as influences from boom bap, drill, electropop, hip house and industrial hip hop. It has been described as both minimalist and maximalist, with a reduced presence of drums in the production, which was handled by an array of producers including West himself, Boi-1da, E.Vax, DJ Khalil, Gesaffelstein, Mike Dean, Ronny J, and Swizz Beatz, among others. The album features vocal contributions from multiple artists and is darker in tone and lyrical content than West's prior efforts, exploring religion, addiction, ego, West's mental instability and relationships with his family, his separation from Kim Kardashian, and his late mother Donda West, after whom the album is named.

Donda faced controversy upon release, with West claiming the album had been released without his approval, which Universal Music Group denied. The album was met with mixed reviews; while more favorable appraisals deemed it superior to West's most recent work up to that point, many critics felt the album was overlong and lacking in coherence, with some lamenting the appearances of DaBaby and Marilyn Manson. Donda debuted at number one on several charts, including the U.S. Billboard 200, where it became West's tenth consecutive number-one album. It also marked one of the biggest opening-day streaming tallies in the history of Spotify and Apple Music. "Hurricane" was released as the album's lead single on September 14, 2021.

Background and recording

On November 18, 2019, West announced on Twitter that he was working with Dr. Dre on a project entitled Jesus Is King Part II.[2] On November 27, 2019, American producer Ronny J, confirmed that he had recently been in Wyoming to work on the album.[3] During a Sunday service performance in Lynwood, California in December 2019, West stated that he had always wished he could collaborate with Dr. Dre and added, "Who knew all I had to do was do an album for God and then Dr. Dre would start mixing my beats? Spend your time on God, and he'll handle the rest."[4][5] That same month, rapper Consequence confirmed that he was in Wyoming when asked about recording for Jesus Is King Part II.[6] In February 2020, American producer and Dr. Dre associate Dawaun Parker alluded to his involvement on the album.[7]

In March 2020, West recorded new music in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, before returning to Wyoming with his family due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[8] That same month, Pusha T stated in a Discord interview that he had been recording with West recently.[9] Pusha T was planning to meet with West on March 16, 2020, to finish up a project, but cited "flights slowing down" due to COVID travel restrictions as the reason for a delay.[9] On March 12, 2020, Westside Gunn and Conway the Machine were spotted in Wyoming recording for West's album.[10][11] Westside Gunn would later confirm the collaboration in an interview with Elliot Wilson on Tidal.[12]

On May 25, 2020, cinematographer Arthur Jafa revealed that he was working on video material with West for a single from a "forthcoming album" titled God's Country during a conversation with fashion designer Michèle Lamy in an Instagram Live stream.[13] On June 26, 2020, following the announcement of a collaboration between West's fashion company Yeezy and clothing retailer Gap, West launched the #WestDayEver promotional campaign on Twitter to announce different projects throughout the day. One of the projects was a music video for "Wash Us in the Blood" with rapper Travis Scott, directed by Jafa, which was released four days later following a teaser on Twitter in which West officially announced the album, at that point still titled God's Country.[14] The song was set to be included on Donda, but did not appear on the final track listing.[15] On July 13, West shared a snippet on Twitter of a song from the album, titled "Donda", which featured a spoken word introduction by his late mother and was accompanied by a short video featuring assorted clips of West, among others.[16]

Initial cover art, shared by West in July 2020, artist and year of creation unspecified
Second proposed cover, depicting an adaptation of a Louise Bourgeois drawing from her series Les têtes bleues et les femmes rouges

On July 18, along with a preliminary track list, West announced the title had been changed to Donda in honor of his late mother, Donda West.[17][18] West announced a July 24 release date, which he eventually missed. On July 25, 2020, West tweeted an image of the album cover,[19] which was later replaced in favor of an adaptation of a red Louise Bourgeois drawing from her series Les têtes bleues et les femmes rouges.[20][21]

On July 28, West flew out Lil Baby to Wyoming to work with him on Donda, after stating "Lil baby my favorite rapper but won't do a song with me".[22][23][24] Lil Baby ended up recording his verse for "Hurricane" after KayCyy suggested he should record on it.[25] The original version of "Hurricane" was leaked online as an original song recorded in 2018 for the scrapped project Yandhi, with different verses from Young Thug, Ty Dolla $ign, Big Sean, 6ix9ine, KayCyy, and Ant Clemons; however, none of their verses made it to the final cut and were replaced by Lil Baby and the Weeknd.[26] West sent out a series of tweets about his relationship with Universal Music Group in September 2020, mostly addressing his desire to buy his master recordings back from them. The rapper asserted that these efforts were obstructed by his signed contracts, suceeding this by tweeting multiple images that supposedly showed the contracts.[27]

On September 26, West released a 39-second snippet of a track titled "Believe What I Say" on his Twitter account.[28] In October, Westside Gunn recorded his verse for "Keep My Spirit Alive", during the sessions for Who Made the Sunshine.[29] On October 16, West released a song titled "Nah Nah Nah", calling it his presidential campaign's theme song.[30] On November 13, West released a remix of "Nah Nah Nah" featuring rappers DaBaby and 2 Chainz.[31] Both the original song and its remix feature various references to his presidential run.[30] On November 23, Consequence expressed enthusiasm about the album, describing it as "fire".[32]

On March 7, 2021, Cyhi the Prynce stated in an interview with VladTV that West had once again begun working on the album amid his divorce from Kim Kardashian.[33] On May 30, West was in the studio with Playboi Carti.[34] On June 14, court filings revealed that West was recording an album in Honolulu, Hawaii, after reportedly "freaking out" during his deposition in an on going lawsuit with tech company MyChannel.[35][36] On July 15, Syleena Johnson recorded music with West in San Francisco.[37][38] On Cocktails with Queens on Fox Soul, Johnson said she recorded "Donda Chant" as well as vocals for another song that didn't make it onto the album in that session.[39]

On July 17, Consequence posted a video of West in the studio with Tyler, the Creator on Instagram. The caption of the post suggested a late 2021 album release.[40] On July 19, American rapper and friend of West Pusha T announced on Instagram that West would be holding a listening event for the album on July 22 at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta.[41] Beats Electronics then premiered a commercial during game six of the 2021 NBA Finals with athlete Sha'Carri Richardson, scored by West's track "No Child Left Behind".[42] The commercial also showed the release date for Donda as July 23, 2021, and marked the first preview of music from it.[42][43] French producer Gesaffelstein later revealed that he produced the song, marking his second time working with West after having previously contributed to the rapper's sixth studio album Yeezus (2013).[44] Immediately following the commercial's debut, Def Jam Recordings reaffirmed the album's release date and revealed that the Atlanta listening event would be globally livestreamed on Apple Music.[45][46]

On July 22, West held a listening event at Mercedes Benz Stadium for Donda. Following the listening event, West had taken up temporary residence in one of the stadium's locker rooms, converting it into a recording studio to finish the recording and mixing with Mike Dean.[47][48][49] Videos and photos posted to social media also showed featured artists Playboi Carti and 2 Chainz recording vocals in the locker room a day before the listening event.[50][51][52][53] Jay-Z allegedly recorded his verse mere hours before the listening event began.[54] After failing to meet its promised release date of July 23, West continued recording sessions and was living in the stadium up until the second listening party held at Mercedes Benz Stadium on August 6.[55][56] 24 hours before the second listening event, West put up a pre-show Apple Music livestream of him recording music, lifting weights, and sleeping in the stadium locker room he had posted to his Instagram weeks prior.[57][58]

The song "New Again", featuring R&B singer Chris Brown, originally included a verse performed by the singer, which was later leaked by Brown himself, after publicly calling West a "whole hoe".[59][60][61] Rapper Soulja Boy originally recorded a verse for the track "Remote Control" featuring Young Thug, although he was ultimately not included on the final version of the song. Following the album's release, Soulja Boy shared a snippet of his verse on Instagram, with the caption of the post saying "Fuck Kanye".[62][63] Fellow rapper André 3000 also recorded a verse for an unreleased track entitled "Life of the Party", which had been previewed at a listening event for Donda in Las Vegas.[64][65] Amidst a feud between West and Canadian musician Drake , the song was leaked by the latter, whom West disses in the song, which André 3000 lamented.[64][65] On September 7, 2021, DJ Akademiks shared a screenshot of a conversation between West and an unnamed engineer that worked on the album, showing West firing the engineer after no response to his morning message to start work.[66] The engineer texted back that he was sorry and had no excuse for having not awoken on time, to which West replied: "Stop texting. Go find God."[66] On September 14, 2021, American multi-instrumentalist Todd Rundgren revealed he had recorded heavily for Donda and was tolerant of West delving into different subjects, but became frustrated with the rapper after a lack of feedback about his material. Rundgren also assumed it should be made clear if he can contribute or not and saw "a possiblity" he is "actually in there somewhere" among the album's "junk", concluding by branding West "a dilettante".[67]

Release and promotion

In late July 2021, West's representatives announced an August 6 release date,[68][69] which was later confirmed via a Beats by Dre commercial and on West's Apple Music livestream.[70][71] On August 5, 2021, a pre-order for the album was launched on iTunes, revealing it to feature 24 songs, along with an August 7 release date, which was later revised to August 13.[72][73] Conflictingly, Apple Music displayed the release date to be August 15, before one set for five days later appeared on the service.[72][74] On August 25, 2021, West announced the Donda Stem Player, a standalone music player that would allow users to remix the album's songs using their stems. The player is to be produced in collaboration with Kano Computing.[75][76][77][78][79] On August 27, 2021, Donda's release date experienced another pushback on Apple Music, setting it to coincide with the release of Drake's sixth studio album Certified Lover Boy on September 3.[80] It was speculated on social media that the delay was intentional to increase competition between the two artists.[80][81]

Donda was eventually released on August 29, 2021, succeeding several delays during that month.[82] The song "Jail, Pt. 2" was originally absent, only appearing on the Spotify version of the album, though displayed as an "unavailable" track due to DaBaby's manager not having cleared his verse at the time of release.[83][84][85][86] Five hours after the album's official release, West claimed that Universal Music Group had released Donda without his approval and blocked "Jail, Pt. 2" from appearing on the album.[27][87] Apple Music and Spotify later replaced the original release with a version that included the song.[88][89] Universal Music Group denied that they had either released the album without West's approval or blocked the release of "Jail, Pt. 2", with an anonymous source at the company calling his claims "preposterous".[27][90][91]

In its first day of release, Donda earned the second-biggest global Spotify debut for album streams ever,[92] with approximately 100 million streams, and broke the record for biggest first day streams of 2021 on Spotify, surpassing Olivia Rodrigo's Sour.[93][94] The album also set a new record by reaching number one on Apple Music's top albums chart in 152 countries in its first day, and earned the third-biggest first day debut streams for an album.[95] West and Donda broke the 2021 record for the most-streamed artist and album in one day on Apple Music, while 19 of the top-20 tracks on the service's Top 100 Global songs chart were from the album.[95] Donda amassed 60 million first day streams in the United States on Apple Music, setting a streaming record for 2021 in the country.[96] After eight days of streaming, it had reached around 423 million on-demand audio streams in the US.[97] 25 of the tracks debuted with the top-40 of Spotify's U.S. chart, with 10 of them occupying the top-10.[92] The album's 2021 record for first day Spotify streams was broken by Certified Lover Boy, which also suprassed its eight day total of US on-demand audio streams within three days, amassing over 430 million streams.[97][98]

A music video for "Come to Life" was released on September 2, 2021.[99] The video features footage from the album's August 26 listening party, showing West setting on fire then reuniting with Kardashian.[99] On September 3, 2021, "Hurricane" was playlisted by Swedish mainstream station Sveriges Radio P3.[100] The song is set to be sent to American rhythmic contemporary radio stations by GOOD Music and Def Jam as the lead single from Donda on September 14, 2021.[101] "Hurricane" reached number 12 on the Swedish Singles Chart following the album's release, while it debuted five places higher on the UK Singles Chart.[102][103] The song entered the US Billboard Hot 100 at number six, giving West his 19th top-10 hit on the chart.[104] "Jail" simultaneously debuted at number 10 on the Hot 100, with the two entries making West the 21st act to have 20 top-10s on the Hot 100.[104] West purchased many large billboards to advertise Donda in Drake's hometown of Toronto during September 2021, outnumbering the ones used for Certified Lover Boy on the day of its release.[105] A music video for "24" was released on September 16, 2021. The video begins with footage from the album's second Mercedes-Benz Stadium listening event of West ascending towards the sky, before he rises above the stadium and floats around among clouds.[106]

Listening events

Invite to "Kanye West Presents: The Donda Album Release", the second event at Mercedes-Benz Stadium

On July 19, 2021, it was announced that West would hold a listening event for Donda, titled "Kanye West Presents: A Donda Listening Event", at Mercedes-Benz Stadium on July 22, 2021.[107][108] The event started nearly two hours behind schedule, beginning with West appearing from a tunnel while rocking a puffy red jacket and matching leather trousers, as well as orange shoes. West then raised an arm to greet the crowd, before walking to the centre of the stadium's white-clothed floor and mainly standing still as he was illuminated by a shape-shifting spotlight, making an occasional sway, stumble, or fall to his knees.[109]

A second listening event for the album at Mercedes-Benz Stadium, titled "Kanye West Presents: The Donda Album Release", took place on August 5, 2021.[69][110][111] The event ended with West being elevated to the stadium's ceiling by harness, in a manner reminscent of ascending to heaven.[112] Following the August 5 listening event, Kid Cudi was reported to be featuring on two tracks: "Moon" and "Remote Control", alongside Don Toliver and Young Thug respectively.[113] However, Kid Cudi was only included on the final version of "Moon" on the album.[114][115] On August 18, 2021, West announced a third listening event for the album scheduled for August 26, 2021, at Soldier Field in Chicago, titled "Kanye West Presents: The Donda Album Experience".[116][117] It was subsequently announced by West's manager that the album would be released the day after the listening event on August 27. The performance included a replica of West's childhood home, appearances by Marilyn Manson, Don Toliver, Shenseea, Travis Scott, DaBaby, and the son of Black Gangster Disciple Nation founder Larry Hoover Sr., and West setting himself on fire, then later remarrying Kim Kardashian.[118] On August 31, 2021, it was reported by the Chicago Sun-Times that the replica was used because Chicago's Buildings Department did not allow West to move the home from its street address, as originally intended. The department explained how moving a home in the city "is a very technical process that requires structural engineer reports and multiple city permits", revealing the denial of West's request was due to "no permit application ha[ving] been received to excavate and move the vacant property" while it was also in Demolition Court.[119]

During the album's listening events, guest appearances were revealed including Syleena Johnson, Pusha T, The World Famous Tony Williams, Don Toliver, Lil Baby, the Weeknd, Rooga, Baby Keem, Travis Scott, Lil Yachty, Playboi Carti, Lil Durk, Vory, Fivio Foreign, Kid Cudi, Young Thug, 070 Shake, Chris Brown, Roddy Ricch, Conway the Machine, KayCyy Pluto, Westside Gunn, Jadakiss, Jay Electronica, Sheek Louch, Styles P, Pop Smoke, DaBaby, Marilyn Manson, Jay-Z, and the Sunday Service Choir.[120] The reveal of DaBaby and Marilyn Manson as guest features on the album was met with widespread derision due to their allegations of homophobia and abuse, respectively.[118][121][122] West had updated Donda after each listening event like he did with his seventh studio album The Life of Pablo (2016), changing content such as the features on songs.[123] Speaking with Apple Music's Zane Lowe, Dean depicted the process as "interesting" and "gruelling", remembering "lots of hours" and changes, from which the album "came out great". He elaborated by explaining that "each listening party was like a test" of sorts, with West succeeding each one by taking all "the information he got from everyone, including online reviews [and] personal friends' reviews", then "digest[ing] it all" in a way to "adjust" Donda "the way" he wanted.[124]

Composition

Donda covers the stylistic groundwork of West's previous work;[125][126] it has been described as a hip hop,[127][128] gospel,[128][129] pop,[127] trap[130][131] and progressive rap[132] album, drawing influences from drill,[133] hip house[134] and boom bap.[133][134] Writing for the Los Angeles Times, Mikael Wood described the album as blending "the harsh industrial hip-hop of Yeezus, the church-organ gospel of Jesus Is King, the gothic swagger of My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy and the bleeping electro-pop of 808s & Heartbreak."[126] Spencer Kornhaber of The Atlantic perceived that "stylistic innovation has driven West's career till now, but maybe he conceives of Donda as the album of his life—a capstone, an anthology".[125] However, the album is unusual in his catalog due to its lack of drums,[135] besides a "mere smattering of snares" and "the occasional synth bass to mimic a rhythm section".[136] Donda's integration of gospel music is more subtle than that of West's previous studio album Jesus Is King (2019),[137][121] instead favoring the use of trap beats and Auto-Tune;[131] Carl Wilson characterized the music as "trap-beats-meet-organ-and-choir" in his review for Slate.[138]

According to Ed Power of The Daily Telegraph, the album is a maximalist hip hop record that follows a "more is more" philosophy through its "gleaming, swooping grooves and several kitchen sinks worth of production".[127] In contrast, Craig Jenkins of Vulture said that Donda's "unifying quality is a subtle minimalism", with prominent silence. Fred Thomas of AllMusic similarly opined that the album is built on "minimal arrangements that linger while feeling eerily unfinished".[135] Jenkins also noticed West's diminshed presence on the record, whose "raps and hooks take up significantly less real estate here than on any album with his name attached to it since G.O.O.D. Music's Cruel Summer".[134] In The Sydney Morning Herald, Michael Dwyer wrote that the "gospel flourishes of organ and voices" on Donda are elevated by "passionate yearning".[139] Gigwise writer Charlie Brock depicted that the album "ebbs and flows", being "melancholic and subversive" at some points, and "outlandish and snarling" at others.[140]

Donda was inspired by religion, with many of the tracks being themed around it.[141] Some critics have described the album as sombre, with a darker lyrical content than West's previous works[142][143] and frequent references to addiction and mental instability,[125] as well as West's ego and family, including his mother Donda West and the collapse of his marriage with Kim Kardashian.[128][127][126] Jon Caramanica wrote for The New York Times that in Donda, West continues to trade off the lyrical focus on self-awareness and wordplay of his earlier material for a more "terse and immediate approach, one that complements his musical shifts toward the industrial and the spiritual", which he started to do in the 2010s.[144] Like his previous album Jesus Is King, Donda has no curse words, with all expletives being edited out.[137][144]

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
AnyDecentMusic?5.4/10[145]
Metacritic53/100[146]
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[135]
The A.V. ClubC−[147]
The Daily Telegraph[127]
Exclaim!7/10[142]
The Guardian[148]
The Independent[121]
NME[129]
Pitchfork6.0/10[133]
Rolling Stone[149]
Slant Magazine[143]

Donda was met with mixed reviews from music critics.[150] At Metacritic, the album received an average score of 53, based on 19 reviews.[146] Aggregator AnyDecentMusic? gave the album a 5.4 out of 10, based on their assessment of the critical consensus.[145]

Charles Lyons-Burt of Slant Magazine felt impressed with Donda, believeing it to feature West at "arguably the most vulnerable and broken that [he] has allowed himself to appear on record".[143] Lyons-Burt also praised the themes and production, and concluded by labeling the album West's "most unforgiving self-portrait yet".[143] Chris Willman from Variety saw its music as "close to unassailable" and praised the pacing, besides "those last four completely superfluous remixes", while he prefered the structure of the gospel elements to those on Jesus Is King.[137] Riley Wallace, writing for Exclaim!, regarded the album as "[West's] best body of work in recent memory" and appreciating the narrative behnd it, though was mixed about the features and criticized its length.[142] Marcus Shorter hailed Donda as the rapper's best album since Yeezus at Consequence, describing it as "ambitious, raw, indulgent, and, after several revisions, a cohesive vision".[128] Rhian Daly of NME felt although the album "certainly isn't a rushed job", it could have been improved by West wasting less time and "learning when to let things go", finding there to be a large amount of filler alongside "enough gems" that are worthwhile.[129]

Wood asserted that the album registers more as a way "of maintaining Kanye's powerful social standing" than "an organized aesthetic experience", characterizing it as feeling "slapdash" due to the disorganized themes.[126] He went on to praise how the album takes from West's various eras of the past, such as Yeezus, Jesus Is King, My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy, and 808s & Heartbreak.[126] Jonny Coleman, writing for The Hollywood Reporter, gave Donda a negative review, calling it a "slog". He was confused as to what the album "is supposed to be the soundtrack for", admitting it is neither a "party record" nor inviting of introspection. Coleman also believed the album lacks spirtuality "outside of literal references", saying it is "not really a radio record", and is "disposable and forgettable, like so much of culture spat down to us during COVID". In particular, Coleman felt the album lacked thematic coherence and reverence for Donda West, viewing it as self-indulgent.[151] Paul Thompson of Rolling Stone saw that Donda is "more considered and musically coherent than anything [Kanye] West has made in the past half-decade", though considered the album to be uneven and overlong, with a "radically superior second half".[149]

The selection of guest artists was also a point of criticism for some reviewers. Tirhakah Love of The Daily Beast called the album a "tribute to [West's] mom full of people who hate women" as well as an "overinflated mess".[122] Roisin O'Connor, writing for The Independent, granted Donda zero stars for Marilyn Manson's "inexcusable presence" on "Jail, Pt. 2" following multiple sexual assault lawsuits made against him, saying it "speaks volumes of society's apathy towards rape survivors" and that it left "a sour taste that no number of good beats, gospel choirs or church organs will cleanse." O'Connor also criticized the DaBaby feature due to controversial comments he made earlier in the year about HIV-infected individuals.[121]

Commercial performance

Donda debuted at number one on the US Billboard 200 after a five-day period of tracking, with 309,000 album-equivalent units that consisted of 272,000 streaming-equivalent album units, 37,000 pure album sales, and less than 1,000 track-equivalent units.[152][153] The album-equivalent units set a record for the highest amount of 2021, exceeding the 295,000 units amassed by Olivia Rodrigo's Sour.[152] West scored his 10th chart-topper on the Billboard 200 with the album, making him one of seven artists to have gathered this amount of number-ones on the chart. It also marked West's 10th consecutive album to debut at the summit, tying him with Eminem's record.[152] Donda ranked as the longest number-one album of the 2020s decade, spanning nearly 109 minutes.[154] It reached the summit of the US Top Christian Albums and Top Gospel Albums charts too, becoming West's second album to top the two charts and achieving the biggest unit week for both.[155] The album entered atop the US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart, on which it was the rapper's 10th chart-topper.[156] 23 of Donda's tracks debuted on the Billboard Hot 100, leading to West joining Drake as one of the two artists to have 23 or more songs chart simultaneously.[104] This also increased West's Hot 100 entries to 133, the fifth most of any act, a ranking he attained for top-40 hits as well by having scored 68. "Hurricane" was the highest charting track, reaching number six and becoming West's 19th top-20 hit.[104] The 23 tracks took up the top-23 spots on both the US Christian Songs and Gospel Songs charts, exceeding West's record of all top-10 positions on the former chart and the top-11 on the latter.[155] As a result of the album and its tracks, West went up from number 67 to the top position on the Billboard Artist 100, giving him his third week atop the chart.[157] By September 15, 2021, Donda had pushed 500,000 album-equivalent units in the US, making it eligible to be certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA).[158]

In Canada, Donda topped the Canadian Albums Chart.[159] Elsewhere, the album entered atop the ARIA Albums chart in Australia, standing as West's fourth number-one release on the chart. This led to him joining 5 Seconds of Summer, Justin Bieber, Keith Urban, Kings of Leon, and Lady Gaga as one of the acts to achieve their fourth number-one album in the 2020s decade. The debut increased West's number of chart-topping weeks to five, alongside giving the rapper his ninth top-10 release on the ARIA Albums chart. 19 of Donda's tracks debuted within the top-50 of the ARIA Singles chart; "Hurricane" charted the highest at number four. The entries surpassed Taylor Swift's milestone of 16 debuts in the top-50, as well as the record held by both Post Malone and Michael Jackson for 17 tracks present within this ranking. The album also topped the New Zealand Albums chart.[160]

Donda ranked at number one on the midweek album sales chart in the United Kingdom, before debuting at the same position on the UK Albums Chart.[161][162] It gave West his third chart-topper in the UK and stood as his first since Yeezus in 2013.[162] The album pushed 19,617 chart sales, 91 percent of which came from 17,921 streaming-equivalent units, while the other nine percent consisted of 1,696 paid downloads.[162][163] In total, Donda accumulated 33.4 million streams in the UK across its 27 tracks.[162] Three of the tracks debuted on the UK Singles Chart, with "Hurricane" attaining the highest position of number seven.[103] The album entered atop the Irish Albums Chart, standing as West's second number-one album in Ireland and his ninth to reach the top-10.[164] West had the three highest new entries on the Irish Singles Chart with the tracks that charted; "Hurricane" was the most successful, reaching number seven.[165] Donda opened at the summit of the French Albums chart, becoming West's first number-one album in France and selling 9,476 copies over a five-day tracking period.[166] The album also topped the charts in Austria,[167] Belgium's Flanders and Wallonia regions,[168][169] the Czech Republic,[170] Denmark,[171] Finland,[172] Iceland,[173] Italy, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Norway, and Sweden.[160] It further peaked within the top five in Germany,[174] Slovakia,[175] Spain,[176] and Switzerland.[177]

Track listing

Track listing adapted from Tidal.[178]

Donda track listing
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."Donda Chant"Kanye West0:52
2."Jail"
4:57
3."God Breathed"
  • West
  • Aaron Butts
  • Brian Miller
  • Dennis Young
  • Federico Vindver
  • M. Williams
  • Richard McGuire
  • Salvator Principato
  • Scott Hartley
  • Tavoris Javon Hollins
  • Evan Mast
  • Cubina
5:33
4."Off the Grid"
5:39
5."Hurricane"
4:03
6."Praise God"
  • West
  • 30 Roc
  • Ojivolta
  • Dean[a]
  • Zentachi[a]
  • The Twilite Tone[a]
  • Sloane[b]
3:46
7."Jonah"
  • West
  • DrtWrk
  • TT Audi
  • Dean[b]
  • Wheezy[b]
3:15
8."Ok Ok"
3:24
9."Junya"
2:27
10."Believe What I Say"
4:02
11."24"
3:17
12."Remote Control"
3:18
13."Moon"
  • West
  • E.Vax
  • BoogzDaBeast[a]
  • DJ Khalil[a]
2:36
14."Heaven and Hell"
  • West
  • Njapa
  • Gwin
  • Cubina
  • M. Williams
  • Edgar Panford
  • Paimon Jahanbin
  • Nima Jahanbin
  • West
  • 88-Keys
  • BoogzDaBeast
  • Ojivolta[a]
  • Nabeyin[a]
  • Wallis Lane[a]
2:25
15."Donda"
  • West
  • Gwin
  • Mulé
  • De Boni
  • M. Williams
  • Cubina
  • West
  • BoogzDaBeast
  • FnZ[a]
  • Ojivolta[a]
2:08
16."Keep My Spirit Alive"
  • West
  • BoogzDaBeast
  • FnZ
  • Ojivolta
  • Darius Woodley[b]
  • Dem Jointz[b]
  • Rico Nichols[b]
3:41
17."Jesus Lord"8:58
18."New Again"
  • West
  • Christopher Brown
  • Gwin
  • Abernathy
  • M. Williams
  • Cubina
  • P. Jahanbin
  • N. Jahanbin
  • Laraya Robinson
  • Njapa
  • West
  • BoogzDaBeast
  • Dem Jointz[a]
  • Ojivolta[a]
  • Wallis Lane[a]
  • Mia Wallis[a]
  • 88-Keys[b]
3:03
19."Tell the Vision"
  • West
  • BoogzDaBeast
  • FnZ[a]
  • Ojivolta[a]
1:44
20."Lord I Need You"
2:42
21."Pure Souls"
  • West
  • Rodrick Moore
  • Chinesa Lee
  • Donny Flores
  • Gwin
  • M. Williams
  • Cubina
  • M. Dean
  • Tim Friedrich
  • Christoph Bauss
  • Bastian Völkel
  • Orlando Wilder
  • Raphael Saadiq
  • Simon David Plummer
  • Tyshane Thompson
5:58
22."Come to Life"
  • West
  • Bhasker
  • Ojivolta
  • Campbell
  • Dean[a]
5:10
23."No Child Left Behind"
  • West
  • Hollins
  • Gwin
  • Lévy
  • Jahshua Brown
  • West
  • BoogzDaBeast
  • Gesaffelstein
  • Cashmere Brown[b]
2:58
24."Jail, Pt. 2"
  • West
  • 88-Keys
  • Dean
  • Ojivolta
  • Dem Jointz[a]
  • E.vax[a]
  • Solymar[b]
4:57
25."Ok Ok, Pt. 2"
  • West
  • Charles
  • Chinsea Lee
  • Ryles
  • Samuels
  • Bell
  • Flores
  • East
  • Plummer
  • Thompson
  • West
  • Boi-1da
  • Bell[a]
3:24
26."Junya, Pt. 2"
  • West
  • Digital Nas
  • Ojivolta
  • Bailey[b]
3:02
27."Jesus Lord, Pt. 2"
  • West
  • Swizz Beatz
  • Gesaffelstein[a]
  • Dean[a]
11:30
Total length:108:49

Notes

  • ^[a] signifies a co-producer
  • ^[b] signifies an additional producer
  • "Donda Chant" features vocals by Syleena Johnson
  • "Jail" features vocals by Jay-Z, and additional vocals by Sunday Service Choir and Dem Jointz
  • "God Breathed" features vocals by Vory
  • "Off the Grid" features vocals by Playboi Carti and Fivio Foreign
  • "Hurricane" features vocals by Lil Baby and the Weeknd, and additional vocals by KayCyy Pluto and Sunday Service Choir
  • "Praise God" features vocals by Baby Keem and Travis Scott, and additional vocals by Donda West
  • "Jonah" features vocals by Lil Durk and Vory
  • "Ok Ok" features vocals by Lil Yachty and Rooga, and additional vocals by Fivio Foreign
  • "Junya" features vocals by Playboi Carti
  • "Believe What I Say" features additional vocals by Buju Banton, Stalone, and Dem Jointz
  • "24" features additional vocals by Sunday Service Choir and KayCyy Pluto
  • "Remote Control" features vocals by Young Thug
  • "Moon" features vocals by Don Toliver and Kid Cudi
  • "Donda" features additional vocals by Tony Williams, Donda West, Sunday Service Choir, MUSYCA Children's Choir, and Stalone
  • "Keep My Spirit Alive" features vocals by Conway the Machine and Westside Gunn, and additional vocals by KayCyy Pluto and Royce da 5'9"
  • "Jesus Lord" features vocals by Jay Electronica and additional vocals by Larry Hoover, Jr.
  • "New Again" features vocals by Chris Brown and additional vocals by Sunday Service Choir
  • "Tell the Vision" features vocals by Pop Smoke
  • "Lord I Need You" features vocals by Briana Babineaux and Sunday Service Choir
  • "Pure Souls" features vocals by Roddy Ricch and Shenseea
  • "No Child Left Behind" features vocals by Vory
  • "Jail, Pt. 2" features vocals by DaBaby and Marilyn Manson, and additional vocals by Sunday Service Choir and Dem Jointz
  • "Ok Ok, Pt. 2" features vocals by Rooga and Shenseea, and additional vocals by Fivio Foreign
  • "Junya, Pt. 2" features vocals by Playboi Carti and Ty Dolla Sign
  • "Jesus Lord, Pt. 2" features vocals by Jay Electronica and The Lox, and additional vocals by Larry Hoover, Jr.

Sample credits

Personnel

Credits adapted from Tidal.[178]

Musicians

Technical

  • Maurizio "Irko" Sera – mix engineering, master engineering (all tracks)
  • Alejandro Rodriguez-Dawsøn – record engineering (1–9, 11–18, 20–22, 24–27)
  • Enzo Rarri – record engineering (1, 3, 23, 27)
  • Will Chason – record engineering (1, 4, 6–9, 15, 20, 23, 25–26), assistant record engineering (12–13)
  • Ronald Lark III – record engineering (2)
  • Gimel Keaton – record engineering (2, 24)
  • Josh Berg – record engineering (2–27)
  • Mikalai Skrobat – record engineering (2–18, 20–22, 24–27)
  • Roark Bailey – record engineering (3–9, 12–13, 21, 26)
  • Dem Jointz – record engineering (10, 15)
  • Drrique Rendeer – record engineering (4, 13, 17, 27)
  • James Kelso – record engineering (4, 13, 17, 27)
  • Jonathan Pfzar – record engineering (12, 15, 20, 24)
  • Randy Urbanski – record engineering (3, 20)
  • Lorenzo Wolff – record engineering (4)
  • Shin Kamiyama – record engineering (5)
  • Zack Djurich – record engineering (5)
  • Jesse Ray Ernster – record engineering (5)
  • Devon Wilson – record engineering (5, 6, 10), mix assistance (6)
  • Wilson "Zaigo" Mejia – record engineering (7)
  • Gentuar Memishi – record engineering (8)
  • Henry Russell Walter – record engineering (14, 22), vocal editing (9, 26), vocal production (12)
  • Preston Reid – record engineering (10)
  • Angad Bains – record engineering (12)
  • Federico Vindver – record engineering (15), vocal production (15)
  • Nagaris Johnson – record engineering (15)
  • Todd Bergman – record engineering (15, 20)
  • Kalam Ali Muttalib – record engineering (16)
  • Rashade Benani Bevel – record engineering (16)
  • Jess Jackson – record engineering (19)
  • Scott McDowell – record engineering (23)
  • Rafael Fai Baautista – record engineering (26), mix assistance (26)
  • Louis Bell – vocal editing (2–8, 10–12, 14, 16–18, 20–22, 24–25, 27)
  • Patrick Hundley – vocal editing (3–5, 9–11, 13–14, 16, 21, 24, 26–27)
  • Stef Moro – mix assistance (3, 22)

Charts

Chart performance for Donda
Chart (2021) Peak
position
Australian Albums (ARIA)[184] 1
Australian Hip Hop/R&B Albums (ARIA)[185] 1
Austrian Albums (Ö3 Austria)[167] 1
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Flanders)[168] 1
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Wallonia)[169] 1
Canadian Albums (Billboard)[186] 1
Czech Albums (ČNS IFPI)[170] 1
Danish Albums (Hitlisten)[187] 1
Dutch Albums (Album Top 100)[188] 1
Finnish Albums (Suomen virallinen lista)[172] 1
French Albums (SNEP)[189] 1
German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[174] 4
German Albums (Top 20 Hip Hop)[190] 1
Icelandic Albums (Plötutíóindi)[173] 1
Irish Albums (OCC)[191] 1
Italian Albums (FIMI)[192] 1
Japan Hot Albums (Billboard Japan)[193] 21
Japanese Albums (Oricon)[194] 38
Lithuanian Albums (AGATA)[195] 1
New Zealand Albums (RMNZ)[196] 1
Norwegian Albums (VG-lista)[197] 1
Portuguese Albums (AFP)[198] 28
Slovak Albums (ČNS IFPI)[175] 2
Spanish Albums (PROMUSICAE)[176] 5
Swedish Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[199] 1
Swiss Albums (Schweizer Hitparade)[177] 2
UK Albums (OCC)[200] 1
UK Christian & Gospel Albums (OCC)[201] 1
UK R&B Albums (OCC)[202] 1
US Billboard 200[203] 1
US Christian Albums (Billboard)[204] 1
US Top Gospel Albums (Billboard)[205] 1
US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums (Billboard)[206] 1


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External links