Following the release of "
Perfect Illusion", the lead single from her fifth studio album Joanne, on September 9, 2016,
Lady Gaga announced the
Dive Bar Tour, a promotional concert series where the singer performed at various
dive bars in the United States.[1] The venues for the concert series remained undisclosed to have a more intimate approach.[2] The campaign was sponsored by
Bud Light, and premiered on October 5, 2016. Simultaneously, a live broadcast of the event was
streamed on Bud Light's official
Facebook page.[3] On October 2, 2016, several publications claimed that during the first show of the tour, new songs would be sung.[4][5]
Singer-songwriter
Hillary Lindsey, who previously had experiences in writing
country songs in Nashville, was identified by
Interscope Records as a potential collaborator on Joanne. The label's
A&R Aaron Bay-Schuck, who had heard the initial Joanne material, introduced Gaga and Lindsey.[6][7] During the Dive Bar Tour, Gaga recalled that she and Lindsey were seated in couches and having a back-and-forth conversation with guitar and piano.[8] They bonded over drinks and Gaga also played initial demos of some of the tracks she had written.[6] Lindsey remembered that Gaga's personal experiences and stories resulted in many ideas for songs, including "A-Yo".[7] On her
Twitter account, Gaga clarified that the track was about different things like cigarettes, one's enemies as well as having sex, expanding with the message: "Leavin ur haters in the dust is a sexy feelin, drag em' like a smoke, leave ur blazin' tracks in the road #AYO".[9]
"A-Yo" was originally planned as the album's second single, but another track, "
Million Reasons", was chosen due to the latter's commercial success.[10] "A-Yo" premiered on
Zane Lowe's
Beats 1 radio show on October 18, 2016, and was made available for digital download and streaming.[11] She posted a link to the song on her Twitter account, while responding to Alex Pall of
The Chainsmokers's dismissal of "Perfect Illusion", writing "maybe u guys'll like this 1 better [sic]".[12] The single's cover art features Gaga topless and covering her chest with her hand, wearing a feathered hat that hides her eyes.[13]
"A-Yo" is a
funky, "
electro-tinged" and "
rock-inspired" song.[13][15]Yahoo! described "A-Yo as a
country rock track.[16]Rolling Stone described "A-Yo" as an upbeat
country pop track.[17] According to the sheet music published at Musicnotes.com, "A-Yo" is written in the key of
A major in
common time with a
tempo of 150 beats per minute. The chords alternate between A7 and D7, and Gaga's vocals span two octaves from E3 to E5.[18] Michelle Lulic from Bustle felt that the lyrics seem to describe "things getting hot-and-heavy in her car": "I can't wait to rev you up /Faster than you can say "Ferrari" /Tearin' up the gravel, watching you unravel /Now it's a party".[19] During the chorus, Gaga sings "A-Yo, A-Yo, we smokin' 'em all", emphasizing her explanation about "leaving your haters in the dust".[20]
Critical reception
Tricia Gilbride from
Mashable called "A-Yo" "ridiculously catchy" and "a futuristic country-rock song egging you on to have a good time over guitar solos and digital beats".[21]Bustle's Michelle Lulic noted that "this may just be one of Lady Gaga's most simplistic yet most visual songs yet" and thanks to its repetitive chorus, it was "near impossible not to start singing by the time you get to the end of your first listen of the song".[19] Larry Bartleet of British magazine NME commented that "the transformation might grate on fans of Gaga's past few albums of pop, but from these lyrics it looks like on fifth album 'Joanne' she really doesn't care what people think".[20] Andy Gill from The Independent complimented
Josh Homme's "spiky but fluid breaks" on songs like "A-Yo" and "
John Wayne", which were "undoubted album highlights".[22] Daniel Welsh from The Huffington Post said that "A-Yo" sounded like a cross between "Manicure" from Artpop and "
Americano" from Born This Way, but with touches of country. He went on to compliment Gaga for pulling off "perfecly" her wish of Joanne having a "
dive bar feel" with the song.[23]
Stereogum's Chris DeVille wrote, "Despite its funky digital beat, rap-inflected hook, and playfully tweaked guitar twang, it might actually go over pretty well on country radio if enough programmers gave it a chance. That said, this computerized juke-joint party track is far from
M.O.R. by Nashville standards".[24] Carey O'Donnell from Paper magazine called it a "foot stomping, hand-clapping rock pop track", but said it sounded better live.[25]Stephen Thomas Erlewine from
AllMusic called the song "riotous".[26]The New York Times's
Jon Caramanica felt that "A-Yo" sounded like "a
Britney Spears parody or a song drawn from one of those live musicals that have been littering network television" since Glee ended.[27] Maeve McDermott of USA Today was negative, saying "songs that sound most like Gaga's earlier hits" like "A-Yo" were Joanne's weakest moments.[28]
Chart performance
In the United States, "A-Yo" reached number-one on the
Billboard Twitter Real-Time chart following the release of Joanne.[29] On the
Billboard Hot 100 it debuted and peaked at number 66.[30] On the
Canadian Hot 100, "A-Yo" reached number 55.[31] Similarly, in the United Kingdom the song reached number 66 on the
UK Singles Chart, selling 8,332 equivalent units,[32] and debuted with around the same numbers in Ireland and Scotland.[33][34] Other European countries where the song debuted includes France, Portugal and Switzerland, and the digital charts of Czech Republic and Slovakia.[35]
As of February 2020, the song has sold 5,500 digital downloads and acquired 6.47 million streams in the UK.[36]
Live performances
Gaga first performed "A-Yo" on the
Dive Bar Tour, a brief three-date promotional tour of U.S.
dive bars, with
Mark Ronson accompanying her by playing guitar during her performance in
The Bitter End (
New York City) and
The Satellite (
Los Angeles).[37][38][39] She performed "A-Yo" live on network television along with "Million Reasons", as a musical guest on Saturday Night Live dated October 22, 2016.[40] For "A-Yo", Ronson again assisted Gaga by playing guitar, and the singer did a
honky-tonk and
go-go dancing inspired performance. Rolling Stone's Daniel Kreps described it as intense singing, with Gaga "feverishly dancing and wildly shredding on her guitar".[41]Paste's Chris White called Gaga an "incredible performer and vocalist" based on the performances, adding that she "understands the stagecraft of playing live music on [the SNL stage]".[42] Three days later, she appeared on The Late Late Show with James Corden on
CBS Television City studios, and delivered the opening monologue, while also performing "A-Yo".[43] The same month she performed "A-Yo" during the
Victoria's Secret Fashion Show, while wearing a glittering, black catsuit.[44]
Gaga next performed "A-Yo" during her set at the 2017
Coachella Festival. While singing she played a special guitar, which was in wireless connection with her phone, allowing her to change its colour during the performance.[45] "A-Yo" was performed as the second song on the
Joanne World Tour (2017–2018) shows, where she again played the guitar.[46] She wore a black bejeweled fringe leotard and a crystallized hat for the performance.[47]
Sony/ATV Songs, LLC/ House of Gaga Publishing, LLC (BMI), BIRB Music (ASCAP) All Rights Administered by BMG Rights Management (US) LLC, Imagem CV/Songs Of Zelig (BMI), OWSLA Music Publishing, LLC/Check Your Pulse, LLC (ASCAP)
^"
ČNS IFPI" (in Czech). Hitparáda – Radio Top 100 Oficiální. IFPI Czech Republic. Note: Change the chart to CZ – RADIO – TOP 100 and insert 201643 into search. Retrieved November 8, 2016.
^"
ČNS IFPI" (in Czech). Hitparáda – Digital Top 100 Oficiální. IFPI Czech Republic. Note: Change the chart to CZ – SINGLES DIGITAL – TOP 100 and insert 201643 into search. Retrieved October 31, 2016.
^"
ČNS IFPI" (in Slovak). Hitparáda – Singles Digital Top 100 Oficiálna. IFPI Czech Republic. Note: Select SINGLES DIGITAL - TOP 100 and insert 201643 into search. Retrieved October 31, 2016.