Closed on Sunday
"Closed on Sunday" is a song by American rapper Kanye West from his ninth studio album, Jesus Is King (2019). The song was produced by West, Angel Lopez, Brian "AllDay" Miller, Federico Vindver, and Timbaland. It was co-written by the producers with No Malice, Rennard East, Pusha T and Victory Elyse Boyd, and since the song samples work by Grupo Vocal Argentino, a songwriting credit was added for Chango Farías Gómez. On November 28, 2019, the song was released by West's record labels GOOD Music and Def Jam as the second single from the album. A religious hip hop song, it is based around a sample of "Martín Fierro", performed by Grupo Vocal Argentino.
"Closed on Sunday"
November 28, 2019
2:32
- Kanye West
- Angel Lopez
- Brian Miller
- Chango Farías Gómez
- Federico Vindver
- Gene Thornton
- Rennard East
- Terrence Thornton
- Timothy Mosley
- Victory Elyse Boyd
- Kanye West
- Angel Lopez
- Brian "AllDay" Miller
- Federico Vindver
- Timbaland
The song's lyrics see West emphasizing Sunday Sabbatarianism, alongside him referencing the closure of Chick-fil-A on the Lord's Day. Since being released, "Closed on Sunday" has received generally negative reviews from music critics. They often criticized the lyrical content, mostly placing focus on the referencing of Chick-fil-A. Despite the negative reception, the song received a nomination for Top Gospel Song at the 2020 Billboard Music Awards. It reached number 17 on the US Billboard Hot 100, while further attaining top 20 positions in Australia, Canada, Ireland, Latvia, and the United Kingdom.
A music video for "Closed on Sunday" was released on November 28, 2019, coinciding with Thanksgiving in the United States. The video has a family theme, with it featuring West and Kim Kardashian, accompanied by their four children. The version of the song used for the visual features vocals from the Sunday Service Choir and North West. In October 2019, the song was performed by Kanye West and the Sunday Service Choir alongside a band on Jimmy Kimmel Live!. The performance received positive reviews from critics, with general praise for the chemistry of the performers. The song has since been performed during Sunday Service concerts on multiple occasions. It was covered by Chris Tomlin in October 2019.
Background and development[edit]
In December 2018, West collaborator Timbaland and American record producer Federico Vindver took part in recording sessions with numerous rappers in Miami, including Saweetie and Lil Mosey.[1] West showed up to the sessions in under 24 hours, with Vindver recalling that he and Timbaland were "blown away" when West started "playing tracks for the Yandhi project."[a][1] Vindver explained the collaborative process between West and Timbaland, saying: "Timbaland would freestyle with him in the studio — Tim on the drum machine, Kanye singing in real time. He wanted to make more healing music at that time. But he was still finding what it was."[1] West and Timbaland were reported to be working together in Miami again during January 2019 for completion of the album, alongside rappers Lil Wayne, 2 Chainz, and YNW Melly, among others.[3] In addition to "Closed on Sunday", Timbaland contributed production to Jesus Is King tracks "Water", "Hands On", "Use This Gospel", and "Jesus Is Lord".[4] Timbaland produced the former of the five tracks with West, Angel Lopez, Brian "AllDay" Miller, and Vindver.[4]
The song samples "Martín Fierro" (1970) by Argentinian folk group Grupo Vocal Argentino, and the group's director Chango Farías Gómez had died in 2011, meaning that the sample was posthumous. Speaking to Silencio, Vindver stated that generally, several producers are in charge of looking for the samples for most of West's songs.[5] Vindver elaborated, saying that Miller "goes through the internet and record stores where he gets mp3s, vinyl and a lot of weird stuff," and found the Grupo Vocal Argentino sample when he was looking for Latin American music. West introduced Vindver to Miller in 2018 and Miller then showed him the sample; Vindver explained that after they found a loop, West "recorded his raps on it, and then we replaced the guitars and recorded the vocals with Kanye's gospel chorus," though he admitted to West not knowing who Gomez is or "who many other artists are."[5] Due to having composed the recording, Gómez received credit as a writer on "Closed on Sunday".[4][5] West, Lopez, Miller, Vindver, No Malice, Rennard East, Pusha T, Timbaland, and Victory Elyse Boyd are also credited writers on the song.[4]
In August 2019, West's wife Kim Kardashian shared a track list for Jesus Is King in August 2019 that included a track titled "Sunday".[6] Two months later, "Closed on Sunday" was revealed to be set for inclusion on the album, though it was not known if the track was a retitled version of "Sunday".[7] The line "Closed on Sunday, you're my Chick-fil-A" was revealed by West to have been recorded as a Voice Memo on his iPhone, which West first starting doing for his sixth studio album Yeezus (2013).[8] Prior to referencing American fast food restaurant chain Chick-fil-A within the song, West had often shown his appreciation for fast food.[9] West tweeted in 2016 that the company McDonald's is "my favorite brand," while he later called it "my favorite restaurant" in 2018.[9]
Reception[edit]
"Closed on Sunday" has been met with generally negative reviews from music critics, with many criticizing West's lyricism. Insider named the song as one of the worst tracks of 2019, with Callie Ahlgrim saying it is "hard to believe" that after releasing "lyrical masterpieces" such as "Black Skinhead" (2013) and "Runaway" (2010) that West "actually wrote and released a song that's all about" Kardashian being compared "to... Chick-fil-A."[29] The song was also listed as one of the year's worst by Spin, and the staff said that it "might be the most forgettable Kanye West song to date if not for the sheer inescapability of one line: 'Closed on Sunday, you're my Chick-fil-A.'"[30] Forbes ranked the song as the second worst track of 2019, with Bryan Rolli calling it "a dour, preachy ballad anchored by melodramatic acoustic guitar arpeggios and ham-fisted lyrics about waging spiritual warfare."[31] Brian Josephs of Entertainment Weekly labeled the song "the album's immediate meme thanks to the banal refrain" and attributed the "virality" to "how it sounds like the raving of an altar boy getting in his last chuckles before mass," while he noted the song's clumsiness.[15] Writing for The Independent, Roisin O'Connor stated that the "biblical terminology" of the song "reminds you of the preachers on street corners shouting at passers-by that they're going to hell – you feel uncomfortable and vaguely embarrassed on their behalf."[32] The Guardian writer Dean Van Nguyen branded West's suggestion of "turning off Instagram to spend more time praying with family" within the song as "a statement that would spark significant eye-rolling from kid worshippers if they heard it coming from the church pulpit."[33] In Spectrum Culture, Daniel Bromfield noted the song for being the only time on the album where "the trollish Trump energy that defined Kanye's Wyoming work creeps in."[34]
A few reviewers received the song less negatively. Aidy James Stevens from God Is in the TV was somewhat mixed, calling the song "a darker, brooding afair akin" to Yeezus, though he stated that the Chick-fil-A line "really made me consider my position" as a fan of West and concluded by labeling the lyric "a bit of a dampener on what is otherwise a callback to some of Ye's greatest work."[35] NME's Jordan Bassett wrote that the referencing of Chick-fil-A "will draw jokey headlines," despite admitting the song's message "is actually quite humble and grounding."[17] Will Rosebury was most enthusiastic in Clash, citing the song as one of the best tracks on Jesus Is King and writing that it manages "to thematically balance out, as Kanye discusses his life within the context of his new found faith."[36]
"Closed on Sunday" was nominated for Top Gospel Song at the 2020 Billboard Music Awards, ultimately losing the award to fellow album track "Follow God".[37]
Commercial performance[edit]
Following Jesus Is King's release, "Closed on Sunday" entered the US Billboard Hot 100 at number 17.[46] The song lasted for two weeks on the Hot 100.[47] It debuted at number two on the US Christian Songs chart, later becoming Kanye West's second most successful release on the chart.[48][49] On the Gospel Songs chart, the song charted identically by also opening at number two.[48] That same week, it reached number eight on the US Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart.[50] On September 15, 2020, "Closed on Sunday" was certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) for sales of 500,000 certified units in the US.[51]
Elsewhere, the track charted at number 20 on the Canadian Hot 100.[52] It performed similarly in Australia, reaching number 19 on the ARIA Singles Chart.[53] On the New Zealand Singles Chart, the track reached number 26.[54] The track performed best in Latvia, peaking at number 15.[55] It reached number 19 and 20 on the Irish Singles Chart and UK Singles Chart, respectively, remaining on the latter chart for two weeks in total.[56][57] The track charted in the top 40 of Denmark,[58] Estonia,[59] Iceland,[60] Lithuania,[61] and Slovakia.[62]
In popular culture[edit]
After the release of the album, "Closed on Sunday" was criticized by many users of Twitter.[13] Most of them panned the Chick-fil-A referencing, which they often viewed as promoting anti-LGBTQ+ discrimination.[13] American fast food restaurant chain Burger King tweeted "open on sunday" on October 25, 2019, indicating shade towards West and Chick-fil-A.[63] Three days later, contemporary Christian music artist Chris Tomlin released a video of him covering the song via Twitter.[64] During a round of the primetime Jeopardy! tournament Jeopardy! The Greatest of All Time on January 15, 2020, host Alex Trebek gave the clue for a question about West's discography by stating, "'Follow God' and 'Closed on Sunday' are tracks on this 2019 Kanye West album."[65] The contestants Ken Jennings, Brad Rutter and James Holzhauer failed to correctly answer with Jesus Is King.[65] West collaborator Consequence freestyled his version of the song under the title of "Cons On Sunday (Remix)" on February 11, 2020, sampling the original's guitar over more urgent percussion.[66]