"No Tears Left to Cry" (stylized in
all lowercase) is a song by American singer
Ariana Grande. It was released on April 20, 2018 by
Republic Records as the lead single from her fourth studio album
Sweetener (2018). The song was written by Grande and Savan Kotecha with its producers
Max Martin and
Ilya Salmanzadeh. An uptempo
dance-pop song driven by a
UK garage beat featuring
disco and
R&B elements, its lyrics reflect on Grande's efforts to move on following the
attack on her concert the previous year, "celebrating rising above the world's negativity" with a "nearly
spoken-word" vocalization.
The song received widespread acclaim from music critics, many of whom praised the song's positive message and optimistic composition. "No Tears Left to Cry" was nominated for various accolades, including an
MTV Europe Music Award and an
NRJ Music Award. In the US, "No Tears Left to Cry" entered the
Billboard Hot 100 at number three, further extending her record as being the only artist to debut in the top ten with the lead single from all of her studio albums. It became her third single to top the US
Mainstream Top 40 airplay chart. Internationally, the song topped the charts in thirteen countries, including Australia, Ireland and Norway.
An accompanying music video directed by
Dave Meyers premiered on
YouTube that same day to critical acclaim. It explores a concept of disorientation in life, and the complexities and disillusionment of the world. It received four nominations at the
2018 MTV Video Music Awards, including
Video of the Year, later winning
Best Pop Video.
Background
Following the
Manchester Arena bombing during her
Dangerous Woman Tour in May 2017, Ariana Grande became reluctant to record new music, preferring to spend time with her loved ones because of the emotional impact the tour had on her.[1] "No Tears Left to Cry" was the first song Grande wrote with
Max Martin,
Ilya and
Savan Kotecha for Sweetener, after working with
Pharrell Williams for most of the album.[2] She wanted her first single since the bombing to be hopeful and touch on the incident, but not dwell on it.[3] The song came about when Grande said, "I want it to be positive and talk about positivity and love. I don't have any tears left to cry."[2] Martin then sang the chorus melody.[3] They composed the music before writing the lyrics.[4]
Grande intended for "No Tears Left to Cry" to bridge a change in sound from her previous album Dangerous Woman (2016) by being more obscure and unexpected, inspired by her work with Williams, and thus suggested its verses and chorus to be in different keys.[5]
Kotecha cited
Lauryn Hill's' The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill and
En Vogue's "
Don't Let Go (Love)" as inspiration for the track's chord changes.[3] Grande also wanted it to start as a ballad and then become uptempo like "
I Will Survive" by
Gloria Gaynor.[2] Kotecha recalled, "It was important to her to start as a ballad and Max and Ilya started playing those chords and it just fit; it was magical. It all came together and had this flow."[3] However, a lot of time was spent working on the pre-chorus until Ilya found a fixed groove. According to Kotecha, they opted for simpler lyrics to make the song "digestible" and "easier to grasp" because of its already complex chord changes and melodic shifts.[3] The track was recorded at MXM and Wolf Cousins Studios in Stockholm, Sweden.[6] Grande said she hoped for it to bring light and comfort, and encourage listeners to dance and "live ya best life!"[7]
Lyrically, the song is about optimism; according to Rolling Stone, it "celebrates rising above the world's negativity".[13]Variety noted that the song's chorus contrastingly features Grande alternating between "lifting her voice, pleadingly, for positivity" with the lyrics "Oh, I just want you to come with me / We're on another mentality", and "rhythmically" chanting "I'm lovin', I’m livin', I'm pickin' it up" with a "nearly
spoken-word" vocalization.[14]
"No Tears Left to Cry" is the only song from Sweetener to not feature an "explicit" tag on
Spotify.[15]
Release
Variety initially reported on April 9, 2018, that the track would be released on April 27, 2018.[16] Grande began teasing
social media on April 15, 2018, using teardrop
emojis and the song's title written as "ʎɹɔ oʇ ʇɟǝl sɹɐǝʇ ou".[17] The title appeared on billboards across the US and featured on grey sweatshirts worn on social media by Grande, her half-brother
Frankie and then-boyfriend
Mac Miller.[18][19] A listening party in London was also held.[20] The song premiered worldwide at midnight
ET on April 20, 2018, as the
lead single from Grande's fourth studio album, Sweetener.[21][13][22] The grey sweatshirts were made available for purchase on Grande's website the following day, bundled with a digital copy of the track.[23] In the US, "No Tears Left to Cry" was sent to
hot adult contemporary radio stations on April 23, 2018,[24] and to
rhythmic contemporary and
contemporary hit radio stations the next day.[25][26]
Critical reception
"No Tears Left to Cry" received universal acclaim from music critics upon its release.[27][28] Meaghan Garvey of Pitchfork said it is a musical progression for Grande and her vocals surpass those of her peers. According to Garvey, the song is "striking in its optimism: the soundtrack for the exact moment you decide to keep going."[11] Similarly, The Observer deemed it "a dazzling exercise in pop lightness, bringing optimism after last year's Manchester attack."[29] In The Guardian, Laura Snapes gave it four out of five stars, citing it as a "timeless sad song" and akin to Grande's
One Love Manchester concert as "one of the most joyful, defiant celebrations of pop and the communities it inspires".[30] Joel Golby, also from The Guardian, found the song expansive and appropriate, complimenting Grande's high notes and unconventional adlibs.[31] Matt Mellis of Consequence of Sound noted Grande's skill in cadence change and a lasting relevancy through hope and resilience.[32]
In NME, Nick Reilly complimented the track's "hugely infectious" chorus,[33] while Hannah Mylrea regarded it as
euphoria and concluded, "Tackling hate and devastation with hope and disco, 'No Tears Left to Cry' is a triumph."[34] Matthew Kent of The Line of Best Fit commented, "Ariana is picking it up while we're turning this up", and said she "certainly pulled it out of the bag".[35]Fact gave the track a score of 7.7 out of 10, describing it as "somber but triumphant and even though it includes cringy lyrics... it packs a punch."[36] In his review for Billboard, Andrew Unterberger wrote that the song is "a grower, not to be fully appreciated on first listen."[37] Writing for Variety, Chris Willman called it "the breeziest, most danceable kind of post-traumatic recovery anthem", but said "it's not likely to ever be inducted into the Max Martin Hall of Fame".[14] Spencer Kornhaber, in The Atlantic, called the song "one of the best pure pop singles in memory. ... Grande’s voice curls in surprising ways, from husky to flighty and back. Most glorious are the keyboards: The progressions verge on jazziness, with each chord stabbed out in a manner that evokes someone touching a hot surface. The lyrics describe being all cried out, but the arrangement clearly suggests a flood of tears on the dance floor."[38] In a May 2018 Time magazine cover article,
Sam Lansky says of the song:
"Grande made a song about resilience because she has had to be resilient, in ways that are difficult to imagine, after a terrorist detonated a bomb outside her May 22, 2017, concert in Manchester, England, killing 22 people and leaving more than 500 injured. What happened is part of the song, but the song is not about what happened. Instead of being elegiac, it's joyful and lush".[39]
Stereogum ranked "No Tears Left to Cry" as the ninth best song of the 2010s, praising it as "glittering and triumphant, grand and unapologetic [...] The song exudes the magic of moving forward and marked a new era of Grande. She graduates from the glitzy trend-pop that dominated her earlier work, transforming her grief and recovery into a soaring dance ballad. It has all the elements of a first-rate Ariana Grande song — her iconic vocal range is stretched for all its worth, backed by a contagious shuffling beat — and adds a new strength to her resume: vulnerability."[40]NME ranked it as the best song of 2018 in their year-end poll,[41] and ranked it at number 28 on their "Best Songs of the Decade" list.[42]Time Out ranked "No Tears Left to Cry" as the 25th best pop song of all-time.[43]The Guardian and Rolling Stone both named it as Grande's second best song, behind "
Into You".[44][45]
On the US
Billboard Hot 100, "No Tears Left to Cry" debuted at number three (barred from the top by the
Drake songs "
Nice For What" and "
God's Plan") with sales of 100,000 digital downloads sold in its opening week according to Nielsen Music, debuting atop the
Billboard Hot Digital Songs becoming Grande's third chart-topper there. The track drew in 36.9 million streams from the time of its release, allowing it to debut at number five on the
Streaming Songs chart, and received early radio support causing it to enter Billboard's
Radio Songs chart at number 35 with 27 million audience impressions. The single became Grande's ninth top-ten single and her highest debut on the Hot 100 (tied with her 2014 single "
Problem") at the time. The song also marked her sixth top-ten debut, thus tying Grande with
Lady Gaga and
Rihanna in sixth among acts with
most top 10 debuts on the chart.[54] Grande also continued her record for being the first artist to debut within the opening ten positions of the chart with every lead single—"
The Way", "
Problem", and "
Dangerous Woman"—of her first four studio albums.[55][failed verification] Following the release of Sweetener, the song rebounded into the Hot 100's top ten at number seven in its eighteenth week on the chart, rising five positions from number 12 the previous week, allowing it to notch a 12th week within the top ten.[56] In March 2019, "No Tears Left to Cry" was certified triple
platinum by the
Recording Industry Association of America for shipments exceeding three million units in the United States.[57]
On the BillboardMainstream Top 40, "No Tears Left to Cry" debuted at number 30 as the highest entry of the week, rising to number 22 the following week. The song eventually topped the chart on the issue dated July 21, 2018, becoming her third number one on the chart following "
Problem" in 2014, and "
Side to Side" in 2016.[58] The song has also reached a peak of number three on the Radio Songs chart, number four on the
Adult Top 40, number 12 on the
Rhythmic Songs chart, and number 16 on the
Adult Contemporary chart. On the BillboardDance Club Songs, it reached number-one on the magazine's June 23, 2018 issue, becoming her second number-one hit on the chart and first as lead artist. She also became the first female artist ever to have two number one hit songs on the chart.[59] In Canada, the song became Grande's highest-charting single at the time, entering in the runner-up position on the
Canadian Hot 100, behind
Drake's "
Nice for What",[60][61] while debuting atop the Canadian Digital Song Sales chart. The track was later certified platinum by
Music Canada in July 2018 for shipments of 80,000 units.
Europe, Oceania and Asia
In Australia, "No Tears Left to Cry" debuted at the summit of the
ARIA Singles Chart, making it Grande's first number one and sixth top-ten single in Australia.[62][63] The single was later certified platinum by the
Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) for exceeding the 70,000 sales limit in June 2018.[64] In New Zealand, it entered the
New Zealand Singles Chart at number four, becoming her sixth top-ten single there,[65] as well as being certified gold for shipments exceeding 15,000 units there.[66][67] In the United Kingdom, the song debuted at number two on the
UK Singles Chart for the issue dated May 3, 2018 with first-week sales of 74,290 units, marking Grande's sixth top-ten single in the territory.[68][69] It was held off the top spot by
Calvin Harris and
Dua Lipa's "
One Kiss" for two consecutive weeks.[70] The track was certified double platinum by the
British Phonographic Industry (BPI) for selling over 1.2 million units.[71] As of March 2021, "No Tears Left To Cry" is Grande's second most-streamed song in the United Kingdom and overall 15th most-streamed song by a female artist in the country.[72] In Ireland, the song debuted on the
Irish Singles Chart at number one becoming Grande's second number one single and her fourth top-ten entry in the country.[73] Across Europe, the song topped the charts in Czech Republic, Hungary, Norway, Portugal and Slovakia,[74][75][73][76][77][78] reached the top five in Austria, Germany, Finland, Netherlands (
Single Top 100), Poland and Switzerland,[79][80][81][82][83][84] and the top ten in Belgium (Flanders), Denmark, Italy, Spain and Sweden.[85][86][87][88][89]
"No Tears Left to Cry" saw success in Japan as well, peaking of number 12 on the
Japan Hot 100 becoming her sixth top-twenty single in the country.[90] It also debuted at number six on the Japanese Hot Overseas chart, and reached number one in its fifth week there.[91] In Malaysia, the song debuted at number one on the official
RIM Charts and stayed at the top of the chart for four consecutive weeks.[92] On South Korea's International
Gaon Digital Chart, the song peaked at number 19.[93]
Music video
Development and release
A revolving hallway was created for the video (above), which allowed Grande to move on walls and ceilings (below).
The music video for "No Tears Left to Cry" was directed by
Dave Meyers and produced by
Nathan Scherrer.[94] It explores a concept of disorientation in life, and the complexities and disillusionment of the world.[95] "We sort of flirt with the ambiguity of whether you need to find the ground or whether the ground's just what you make of it," Meyers said.[96][97] Grande was filmed in front of screens to
chroma key locations in
post-production. Referencing dancer
Fred Astaire, a revolving hallway was built to allow Grande to walk on ceilings and walls. Other stunts involved her harnessed to a rotating stairway and jumping through a
chute.[98][99] Grande's face was covered in a green substance and bandaged for 30 minutes to create masks of her face.[100] The music video premiered on
Vevo at midnight ET on April 20, 2018.[101][102] Three
behind-the-scenes videos were released on April 23, April 27, and May 25, 2018, respectively.[95][100]
Synopsis
Grande wears six different outfits in the music video, including a voluminous green gown, satin minidress and
Stuart Weitzman platform shoes.[103][104][105] She also eschews her signature high ponytail for styles such as a braided and low ponytail.[106] The video begins with an extended choral introduction and an evening
bird's-eye view of a
metropolis of skyscrapers sideways, overhead and underfoot.[14][107] Grande is first shown reclining on a window-lined hallway before walking on its walls and ceiling in an
optical illusion.[14][103] She then falls through the floor into a wall with
fairy lights, and is shown swinging from the banister of a fire escape overlooking the city.[106][108][109]
In another scene, the singer and a troupe of suited dancers perform with umbrellas from the sides of a skyscraper.[110] Grande then falls through the sky ahead of an interlude featuring a
kaleidoscope of her face.[111][112] The next segment shows Grande seated on a ceiling removing her face like a mask while also surrounded by multiple versions of her face showing multiple expressions and singing.[106][112] In the last scene, Grande sits in a field at sunrise, playing
fetch with her dog, Toulouse.[111] The video concludes with a
worker bee flying off screen, one of the
symbols of Manchester.[113]
Reception
The video received critical acclaim.[114] Emily Heward of the Manchester Evening News called it "a touching tribute" to Manchester, noting that its symbolic worker bee represents the city's resilience.[115] Similarly,
MTV UK's Ross McNeilage said the video "perfectly encapsulates the dream-like euphoria of the song and is a beautiful, subtle tribute".[116] McNeilage deemed it "a truly stunning visual that is undoubtedly her best music video to date."[116] Charles Holmes of
MTV likened it to visuals by
M.C. Escher and praised the juxtaposition of moods, writing, "Instead of Ariana telling us her world was turned upside down the video shows us... The dark muted video feels like sadness, while Ariana's voice sounds like triumph."[117]
Chris Willman of Variety described the music video as "a combination of Inception and Fred Astaire's old dancing-on-the-ceiling movie musical routine".[14] Calin van Paris of Vogue called it "an Inception-style dreamworld", and regarded Grande's braided ponytail as "a surprising twist on a classic updo" and "a high-impact aesthetic".[118] In Billboard magazine, Abby Jones viewed the visual as a spectacle, finding it "dazzling and dizzying",[103] while Shanté Honeycutt deemed it "a beautiful, mind-bending video".[98] Spencer Kornhaber wrote in The Atlantic: The video ... is lush and transporting, aestheticizing the idea of one's feet searching for solid ground."[38]
Published by Universal Music Group Corp./Grand AriMusic (
ASCAP), MXM (ASCAP) — administered by Kobalt (ASCAP) —, Wolf Cousins (
STIM) and Warner/Chappell Music Scand (STIM)
Personnel
Ariana Grande – lead vocals, background vocals, songwriting, vocal arrangement, vocal production
^Hé, Kristen S. (April 27, 2018).
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