All Tomorrow’s Parties

E506715

"All Tomorrow’s Parties" is a 1966 song by the Velvet Underground, known for its haunting atmosphere, minimalist instrumentation, and Nico’s distinctive vocal performance, and is considered one of the band’s most iconic tracks.

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Label Occurrences
All Tomorrow’s Parties canonical 1

Statements (48)

Predicate Object
instanceOf single
song
album The Velvet Underground & Nico NERFINISHED
artist The Velvet Underground NERFINISHED
associatedAct The Velvet Underground & Nico NERFINISHED
associatedArtist Nico NERFINISHED
associatedWithArtistImage Andy Warhol’s Factory scene NERFINISHED
composer Lou Reed NERFINISHED
countryOfOrigin United States of America
surface form: United States
criticalReception widely acclaimed by music critics
firstReleaseFormat single
genre art rock
avant-garde rock
experimental rock
psychedelic rock
hasInstrumentation bass guitar
drums
electric guitar
piano
hasMusicalFeature drone-based arrangement
haunting atmosphere
minimalist instrumentation
prominent piano part
hasTheme decadence of high society
melancholy and disillusionment
includedIn studio album
influencedGenre gothic rock
indie rock
post-punk
label Verve Records NERFINISHED
language English
leadVocalist Nico NERFINISHED
mood hypnotic
somber
notableFor Nico’s distinctive vocal performance
iconic status in The Velvet Underground’s catalog
influence on alternative rock
partOf The Velvet Underground & Nico NERFINISHED
performer The Velvet Underground NERFINISHED
producer Andy Warhol NERFINISHED
Tom Wilson NERFINISHED
ranking frequently listed among the greatest songs of the 1960s
recordingPeriod 1966
releaseYear 1966
side B-side of "Sunday Morning" on some releases
tempo slow to mid-tempo
vocalPerformanceBy Nico NERFINISHED
writer Lou Reed NERFINISHED

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

The Velvet Underground notableSong All Tomorrow’s Parties