"All My Life" is a song recorded by American
R&B duo
K-Ci & JoJo. The song was written by Joel "JoJo" Hailey and Rory Bennett and produced by K-Ci & JoJo for the duo’s debut studio album, Love Always (1997). The song was released to airplay in January 1998 and was released physically on March 17, 1998, as the third single from the album through
MCA Records. "All My Life" is an
R&B and
soul song. Music critics have claimed this as the duo's most successful song of their career.
"All My Life" was a commercial success, and topped the US
Billboard Hot 100 for three consecutive weeks. It was certified
platinum in the US, and was the duo's longest-running number-one single of their career. "All My Life" performed well internationally, making the Top Ten list in many countries including Australia, Belgium, Germany, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom. It achieved platinum status in Australia, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom.
Background and writing
"The song was originally supposed to be used for another artist, a female artist on A&M Records. But we listened to it after we got out of the studio and it was like, 'I'm keeping this, this is too hot.'"
In 1996, K-Ci & JoJo traveled to various
recording studios in California and New York with multiple relatively unknown record producers for recording of their debut album, Love Always.[2] JoJo initially wrote the song, using his daughter as inspiration.[3] "All My Life" was originally written by JoJo Hailey for a female artist on
A&M Records, but ultimately he decided to keep the song.[1] "All My Life" was recorded at Audio Achievements in
Torrance, California.[4] Rory Bennett contributed on the song by helping the writing and the production.
Music and theme
"All My Life" is a slow-tempo
love song ballad, performed in slow
groove. It is composed in the
key of
D♭ major and is set to 63 beats per minute in the time signature of
common time.[5] "All My Life" has been classified as an
R&B[6] and
soul[3][7] song.
Release and reception
"All My Life" was released as the third single from the album Love Always. The song was released in the United States on March 17, 1998, as a
CD single.[8] It was released on March 30, 1998, in Germany as a
maxi single.[9] "
Don't Rush (Take Love Slowly)" was included as the
B-side on all copies. In many European countries, "All My Life" was released as a maxi single without a B-side, but contained a radio edit as well as two remixes.[10] On September 18, 2001, "All My Life" would be available to
download digitally via the
iTunes Store, but "
Tell Me It's Real" was included instead of "Don't Rush".[11]
The song was praised by music critics, who classify it as the duo's most successful song. Steve Heuy of
AllMusic calls "All My Life" a "sweet ballad" and claims the song "broke them big".[12]Billboard magazine writer Aliya King wrote "All My Life" "cemented the duo's reputation as sensitive and soulful crooners."[13] Gerald Martinez from New Sunday Times described it as "scintillating", noting that it "features some stunning vocal arrangements."[14] Ralph Tee from the Record Mirror Dance Update gave the song four out of five, adding, "The two
Jodeci boys thrill with this urban beat ballad, strings and plonky piano intro making it a real show-stopping performance piece. Rich with the duo's own harmonies, it's one of those records you can really grow into."[15]
Chart performance
The single debuted on the US
Billboard Hot 100 at number 15.[16] It reached the chart's top spot the following week.[17] The song stayed on the Hot 100 for 35 weeks.[18] "All My Life" achieved success on other Billboard charts, including the
Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart, peaking at number one, the
Rhythmic Top 40 chart, peaking at number one, and the
Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks chart, peaking at number 26.[19] It would also rank at number 98 on Billboard's Hot 100 decade-end chart.[20]
Internationally, "All My Life" performed just as well, peaking inside the top ten in multiple charts. It peaked at number two on the Australian
ARIA Singles Chart and was certified platinum by the
Australian Recording Industry Association for shipments of 70,000 units in Australia.[21] The song also peaked at number four on the Swedish
Singles Top 60 and was certified gold by the
IFPI Sweden.[22] "All My Life" also peaked at number 12 in Austria,[23] number 3 in Belgium (Flanders),[24] number 11 in Belgium (Wallonia),[25] number 43 in France,[26] number one in the Netherlands,[27] number one in New Zealand,[28] number 2 in Norway,[29] number 4 in Switzerland,[30] and number 8 in the United Kingdom,[31]
Accolades
"All My Life" was nominated for multiple awards. At the 1999
Grammy Awards, "All My Life" was nominated for Best R&B Vocal Performance and Best R&B Song.[32] Finally, the video was nominated for Best R&B Video at the 1998 MTV
Video Music Awards.[33]
Music video
The song's accompanying music video was directed by Lara M. Schwartz.[34] It begins by showing many of the people in the crowd, followed by a pianist playing the introduction. It eventually pans over the two as they begin singing into their microphones. Every so often, an outside scene of love will show up. Examples are of a teacher helping a student read, parents with a newborn baby, a woman giving a homeless man food, a lesbian couple laying in bed and talking, and a father with his daughter. In between these scenes, the camera pans over the stage, as well as the people in the crowd and the musicians. At the end, the camera shows a sunset and pans away.
The video was nominated for Best R&B Video at the 1998 MTV Video Music Awards, losing to
Wyclef Jean's "
Gone Till November". The song was also nominated for two
Grammy Awards.
* Sales figures based on certification alone. ^ Shipments figures based on certification alone. ‡ Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.
^Tee, Ralph (March 21, 1998).
"Hot Vinyl"(PDF). Music Week, in
Record Mirror (Dance Update Supplemental Insert). p. 8. Retrieved September 13, 2023.
^"Billboard". Nielsen Business Media, Inc. March 28, 1998. Retrieved May 8, 2021 – via Google Books.
^"Billboard". Nielsen Business Media, Inc. April 4, 1998. Retrieved May 8, 2021 – via Google Books.
^"Chart search". Billboard.biz. Type "K-Ci" into Artist, "All My Life" into Single Title. Select "The Billboard Hot 100" from the Single Chart Name, "All Weeks (Artist or Title Required)" from date. Click "Submit"