"I Took a Pill in Ibiza" (also known by its
censored title "In Ibiza" or its
clean title "I Took a Plane to Ibiza")[1] is a song by American singer
Mike Posner. The song was originally
acoustic guitar-based and released
digitally as a single in the United States in April 2015 before being
remixed a few months later by
Norwegian production duo
SeeB. The original version is on Posner's second
EPThe Truth, while both versions are on his second
studio albumAt Night, Alone. The title references
Ibiza, a
Mediterranean island that is part of the
Balearic Islands of
Spain, while the pill was a "mystery"
drug according to Posner; he later confirmed that the identity of the substance was
ecstasy.[2]
The original version of the song was initially unknown, while the SeeB remix helped the song peak within the top ten of the charts in twenty-seven countries, including number one in Belgium, Israel, Netherlands, Norway, the Republic of Ireland, and the United Kingdom. In the latter country, the song remained at the top of the
UK Singles Chart for four weeks. It achieved high chart positions in Posner's native United States, where it peaked at number four on the
Billboard Hot 100 chart for two weeks, also reaching number one on both the
Billboard Dance/Mix Show Airplay Chart and the
Billboard Pop Songs chart. The song became Posner's biggest single, outperforming his debut, "
Cooler than Me" (2010), and was later nominated for a
Grammy Award for Song of the Year. In May 2016, it was incorporated into the official soundtrack album for
MTV's ScreamSeason 2, appearing throughout the season, and re-released with Scream: Music from Season Two on July 29, 2016, under
Island Records.[3]
Background
It was sort of a mystery pill. I was already under the influence of alcohol at the time. I had written a song with
Avicii that week in Sweden called "Stay with You" and he was playing in
Ibiza so I said, 'I will just go there with you,' because I was already in Europe. I don't have like a regular 9–5 job ... so might as well go to Ibiza, right? I had never been there before. So I went.
We were at his show and I was drinking at the time. I just sort of moseyed out into the audience to watch Avicii spin from their point of view. I would go back and forth between the backstage and the VIP area and then where the actual kids were. And most people didn't know who the heck I was in Ibiza except for this one guy who recognized me. He was like, 'Are you Mike Posner?' and he was all excited. He holds up this little bag of pills and is like, 'You want one?' And drunk Mike Posner was like, 'Fuck it, yeah.' So I took one and I had never done that before, and then I felt amazing. Then when I came down I felt 10 years older.[4]
— Mike Posner explaining the inspiration for the song, August 2015
The song presents a self reflection by Posner on how, his fame having
long since faded, he has been left completely empty inside and unable to feel any kind of fulfillment, causing him to attempt to fill the void with rampant hedonism and material possessions. Posner's lyrics state he took the eponymous "pill" to impress
Avicii (real name Tim Bergling), a Swedish DJ who wrote a song with Posner called "Stay with You" in 2012. Bergling committed
suicide in 2018 after years of struggling with drug and alcohol addiction,[5] three years after Posner released "I Took a Pill in Ibiza".
Regarding their remix,
SeeB told
Official Charts: "We got it from Matt D'Arduini, VP A&R at Island Records. It was really slow and we only listened to the vocals on it. Matt sent us the multitrack of Mike's new EP and we picked Ibiza right away. Such a brilliant lyric and melody but it needed a new soundscape to be a hit."[6] Posner has called the success of the remix version both "ironic" and "beautiful": "I wrote this sad thing, and it was me processing some dark and heavy emotion, and now people seem to be having their own joyous memories out of my sadness. That’s a very beautiful thing as an artist."[7]
Composition
The original version of "I Took a Pill in Ibiza" by Posner is a
folk pop song,[8] and is written in the key of
B ♭ major.[9]
SeeB's remix is a
tropical house song,[10] and is written in the key of
G minor in
half time with a faster
tempo of 102 beats per minute.[11] It follows a chord progression of Gm – F – E♭maj7 – B♭, and Posner's vocals span from B♭2 to D4.[12]
Critical reception
Billboard ranked "I Took a Pill in Ibiza" #30 on its "100 Best Pop Songs of 2016: Critics' Picks" list, writing, "The weirdness of 2016 might be best encapsulated by Mike Posner earning his first Hot 100 top 10 in nearly six years—and ending the year with a Grammy nomination for Song of the Year—for a song lamenting his status as 'a singer who already blew his shot.' That's due in part to the power of SeeB's buoyant, tropical house-flavored remix, but the cautionary tale of post-fame and excess drives it home, even as it ironically became Posner’s biggest hit yet."[13]
Time was more negative toward the remix, stating, "Originally conceived as a folksy pop song in the vein of
Jason Mraz, there was something clever about Posner's withering takedown of drug-taking
EDM bro culture. But the much more popular SeeB remix sapped it of its wit, turning it into the exact thing it was satirizing. What a comedown."[14]
Live performances
Mike Posner performs the song live in the style of SeeB's remix, but with a live band and adding the third verse on vocals and guitar only. He has performed the song on a number of talk shows including The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon and The Ellen DeGeneres Show. In his rendition on the talk show Conan, he brought in a 10-piece string orchestra and 4 backing vocalists, and he introduced a new intro and final verse to the song, the latter of which talked about Posner's father having cancer. He also performed an acoustic version on Elvis Duran and the Morning Show at the Elvis Duran Performing Arts Center.
English singer
Tom Odell performed a cover of the song on
BBC Radio 1's
Live Lounge, which received very good feedback from fans and critics.
Controversy
In April 2016, it was reported that
tourism officials in
Ibiza, Spain were "annoyed" by the song as they felt it contributed to Ibiza's reputation for drug-related debauchery due to lyrics in the song such as "I took a pill in Ibiza" and "You don't want to be
high like me". The island's tourism director, Vicent Ferrer, stated, "We have invited the author of this song to discover Ibiza because we have much more to offer besides the nightlife which is known worldwide," and noted that the island had been "typecast" due to its reputation for nightlife and as a partying destination.[15]
Music videos
The music video for the
SeeB remix was launched first, via Posner's YouTube
Vevo account, on February 26, 2016. It features Posner taking an unknown pill which transforms his face into a smiling
papier-mâchéd mask representing himself. Posner spends the video becoming increasingly intoxicated as he mingles with girls and male friends at a crowded
nightclub, before ending with Posner, back to his normal self, staring in silence at the reflection in a mirror of his empty papier-mâché form. As of June 2023, this music video has received over 1.6 billion views on
YouTube.[16]
The music video for the original version was released on March 15, 2016. The black-and-white video features Posner standing silently with sheets of paper depicting lyrics of the song in a style similar to
Bob Dylan's 1965
electric folk song, "
Subterranean Homesick Blues". The music video was shot in Bateman's Buildings in
London, an alleyway to the south of Soho Square Gardens, just off Oxford Street. As of May 2023, this music video has received over 44 million views on YouTube.[17]
Cover versions
In 2016, British
Jazz musician
Jamie Cullum published a piano/bass/drums version of the
Seeb remix as the sixth entry in his
pop covers project The Song Society. According to Cullum, the
trio learnt and recorded the song live "within 20 minutes", taking it "somewhere between the original acoustic version and the Seeb remix".[18]
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ČNS IFPI" (in Czech). Hitparáda – Radio Top 100 Oficiální. IFPI Czech Republic. Note: Change the chart to CZ – RADIO – TOP 100 and insert 201625 into search. Retrieved June 27, 2016.
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ČNS IFPI" (in Czech). Hitparáda – Digital Top 100 Oficiální. IFPI Czech Republic. Note: Change the chart to CZ – SINGLES DIGITAL – TOP 100 and insert 201614 into search. Retrieved March 1, 2016.
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ČNS IFPI" (in Slovak). Hitparáda – Radio Top 100 Oficiálna. IFPI Czech Republic. Note: insert 201630 into search. Retrieved June 14, 2016.
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ČNS IFPI" (in Slovak). Hitparáda – Singles Digital Top 100 Oficiálna. IFPI Czech Republic. Note: Select SINGLES DIGITAL - TOP 100 and insert 201616 into search. Retrieved March 29, 2016.