2013Released
4:37

Did You Know?

Interesting facts and trivia about Let Nas Down. By Songfacts®.

This track finds Cole recounting his struggles to come up with a good single to lead his debut album, Cole World: The Sideline Story. He eventually came up with "Work Out" only to be crushed when he found out that one of his idols, Nas, didn't like the song. Cole recounted during a private listening session in NYC, how when he presented his label boss, Jay-Z, with single options like "Who Dat" "Blow Up" and "Can't Get Enough" none were deemed suitable. "The next six months of my life was literally hell, which is what this album is about," he explained. "Going through hell, tryna make it to heaven, going through depression, trying to make it to happiness. The next six months of my life, I was making some of the worst, most uninspired music of my life." Finally, "Work Out" happened, which Cole acknowledged was a commercial radio record, but he was still surprised by the negative reaction. "It was the worst response I've ever gotten on any song I've ever put out. It was a terrible response," he revealed. "When I made that song, it was a triumph." But the real dagger blow was when producer No I.D. relayed to him Nas' disappointment in "Work Out." He recalled the producer saying: "I was in the studio with Nas and we was talking about you and he was like, 'Yo, why did he do that? Why did he put out that song? Don't he know he's the one? He ain't gotta do that.'"
Cole went on the defense. "I was hurt. I was like, 'damn, why he gon' say that? They ain't gon' box me in, like they box him in," he admitted. "I'm getting defensive, but really, I'm just hurt as a fan. I idolize that dude; I had his raps written on the wall." Despite all the criticism, the song proved to be a success, peaking at #13 on the Hot 100. "Eventually 'Work Out' became a monster record," Cole stated. "It wouldn't leave radio, it was a smash, and I'm grateful for that song. But at the time, it was hurtful. I really vented on that song."

So what does Nas think of this song? In an interview with BET, Cole revealed that Nas got to listen to the cut less than a week after it was recorded in 2012 when they both flying on the same plane. According to Cole, Nas listened to the track, enjoyed it, and put his seal of approval on it.

The bluesy heavy beat samples Fela Kuti's "Gentleman," which was the title track of the Nigerian multi-instrumentalist musician's 1973 album.

Top Listeners

Song Analysis

Key, BPM (tempo) and time signature of Let Nas Down.
CKey
MajorMode
4/4Time Signature
83BPM

Album

The album Let Nas Down is released on.

Released By

The record label that has released Let Nas Down.
Roc Nation LLC
© 2013 Cole World/Interscope Records
℗ 2013 Cole World/Interscope Records

See your Spotify stats (with number of plays and minutes listened) and discover new music.

Music data, artist images, album covers, and song previews are provided by Spotify. Spotify is a trademark of Spotify AB.

5.9MArtists
75.1MSongs
12.6MAlbums
6.5KGenres
2.5MLabels
494.5KPlaylists