"Ultralight Beam" is a gospel hip-hop song by American rapper and producer Kanye West, released as the opening track of his seventh studio album, The Life of Pablo, on February 14, 2016.[1][2] Featuring guest vocals from Chance the Rapper, R&B singer The-Dream, gospel artist Kelly Price, and Kirk Franklin with a choir, the track blends soulful organ chords, choir harmonies, and a sermon-like intro to explore themes of faith, redemption, and divine love.[1][2] Its lyrics, including the refrain "We on an ultralight beam / This is a God dream," evoke a spiritual journey from personal doubt to communal hope, drawing parallels to Christian teachings on light and salvation.[1][3]The song's production took place rapidly in late 2015 at a Los Angeles studio and was finalized within 10 days before debuting live at Madison Square Garden during West's Yeezy Season 3 fashion show on February 11, 2016.[3] An extended version titled "Ultralight Prayer," emphasizing the outro prayer with additional choir elements, was shared online for Easter on March 27, 2016; a reinterpretation was released by West's Sunday Service Choir in 2019.[4]Critically acclaimed as a highlight of The Life of Pablo, "Ultralight Beam" was praised for its serene, choir-driven opener that sets a tone of forgiveness and spiritual elevation, with Chance's verse noted for its joyful energy and West's restrained presence allowing collaborators to shine.[1][2]Pitchfork named it the best new track upon its preview and later ranked it #77 on their list of the 200 best songs of the 2010s, highlighting its blend of egomania and grace.[5]Rolling Stone called it a "stunning opener" and placed it at #70 on their 100 best songs of the decade, underscoring its redemptive power amid the album's chaos.[6] The song has since influenced gospel-rap crossovers and been covered by artists including Harry Styles in 2017.[7]
Background and development
Conception and influences
The conception of "Ultralight Beam" emerged during Kanye West's intensive recording sessions for his seventh studio album, The Life of Pablo, which took place primarily in Los Angeles studios such as Windmark, Larrabee, Ameraycan, and Sound EQ between late 2015 and early 2016.[8] These jam sessions marked a pivotal shift in West's creative direction toward incorporating gospel elements, which he publicly described as a "gospel album" during the Yeezy Season 3 fashion show on February 11, 2016.[9]West's personal faith journey profoundly influenced the track, drawing from his longstanding engagement with Christian themes evident in earlier works like "Jesus Walks" from 2004, and evolving into a deeper exploration of spirituality amid personal and professional challenges during this period.[10] He envisioned "Ultralight Beam" as a powerful opener featuring a gospel choir to convey redemption and divine guidance, reflecting his desire to blend hip-hop with sacred music traditions.[9]Key collaborators shaped the song's early framework, with R&B singer The-Dream providing the hook spontaneously during a session, later recalling in an interview that the chords inspired him to write it "right on the spot" without needing additional preparation.[11] West reached out to Chance the Rapper for a verse addressing spiritual struggles, including lines about perseverance in faith; Chance noted that West initially resisted a reference to Grammys in the lyrics, leading to extended back-and-forth discussions before finalizing the contribution.[12] Additionally, West arranged a meeting with gospel artists Kirk Franklin and Kelly Price to infuse the track with authentic choral elements, as he later described on The Steve Harvey Morning Show, emphasizing the spiritual synergy during their collaboration.[13]The song's intro incorporates a spoken-word sample from a 2015 viral Instagram video of 4-year-old Natalie Green reciting a prayer about seeking God's protection from evil, which West's team sourced shortly before the album's release to evoke innocence and devotion.[14]
Recording and production
The recording of "Ultralight Beam" took place primarily in Los Angeles studios during late 2015 and early 2016, as part of the broader sessions for Kanye West's seventh studio album, The Life of Pablo, which extended through the album's finalization and iterative updates.[8] Sessions often ran late into the night, involving collaborative jam sessions where West and his team experimented with freestyles and arrangements to capture the track's gospel-infused energy.[3]West served as the lead producer, with significant contributions from Mike Dean, who played the initial piano chords and handled mixing and keyboard elements, alongside Swizz Beatz, who added the drum programming for additional production.[15]Noah Goldstein contributed engineering throughout the process, while co-production credits extended to Rick Rubin, DJDS (Sam Griesel and Oscar Scheller), Plain Pat, and Chance the Rapper, who also freestyled key melodic elements during the sessions.[15]Fonzworth Bentley (Derek Watkins) played a pivotal role in arranging the track, editing freestyles, and incorporating tambourines sourced from a nearby studio to enhance the rhythmic texture.[3]Vocal recordings emphasized the song's spiritual core, with Kelly Price delivering lead vocals and arranging the gospel choir elements, which were directed by Kirk Franklin and recorded live in Los Angeles over a single weekend in early 2016.[3] Franklin also provided the spoken prayer outro, infusing the track with a raw, improvisational feel after flying in specifically for the session.[3] A ten-piece choir was overdubbed for the bridge and chorus sections, taught their parts in just seven minutes to maintain spontaneity.[16]Justin Bieber participated in an early freestyle session, contributing a cappella melodies connected through producer Poo Bear, but his verse was ultimately omitted from the final mix due to scheduling conflicts.[17]The track's intro integrates a looped sample of four-year-old Natalie Green's prayer—"We don't want no devils in the house, God. We want the Lord, and that's it."—captured in a spontaneous Instagram video and layered with piano and organ swells for an ethereal opening.[14] West's team cleared the sample shortly before the album's release, editing it to loop seamlessly with the live choir overdubs that build into the bridge.[14]Post-production involved refinements during The Life of Pablo's rollout, with the March 2016 update enhancing the choir's mix for greater clarity, adding reverb to most vocals except Chance the Rapper's verse, and incorporating minor lyrical adjustments to Chance's contribution for improved flow.[18] These tweaks were part of West's ongoing iterative process, finalizing the track's balance of raw energy and polished gospel elements by March 2016.[19]
Music and lyrics
Musical composition
"Ultralight Beam" is a hip hop track infused with prominent gospel, soul, and R&B influences, creating a spiritually resonant soundscape within the rapgenre.[20] The song operates at a tempo of 105 beats per minute in the key of C minor, contributing to its deliberate, contemplative pace that evokes a sense of elevation and introspection.[21] This blend allows the composition to transcend traditional hip hop boundaries, positioning it as a modern gospelhymn adapted for contemporary audiences.[22]Structurally, "Ultralight Beam" adheres to a verse-hook-verse format over its 5:21 runtime, opening with a brief intro of spoken word that sets a reverent tone.[15]Kanye West delivers the first verse, followed by a hook performed by The-Dream, Chance the Rapper's extended verse, a choir-led bridge, and an outro featuring Kirk Franklin, all framed by an unconventional 12/8 time signature that deviates from standard 4/4 hip hop rhythms.[23] This arrangement unfolds in layered sections—Kanye's 8-bar verse, an 8-bar interlude with Kelly Price, The-Dream's 4-bar hook, Chance's 16-bar contribution, and Franklin's 4-bar close—culminating in a 4-bar choir outro that reinforces the song's communal ethos.[23]The instrumentation employs a minimalist approach, centered on piano chords that outline the harmonic foundation, swelling organ lines for emotional depth, subtle bass synths providing low-end support, and richly layered choir harmonies that dominate the texture.[20] Drums are notably absent or subdued throughout much of the track, maintaining a sparse, almost silent backdrop until the bridge introduces more rhythmic elements, including faint percussion and brass swells that heighten the anthemic build.[23] Ambient voices and possible muted trumpet accents further enhance the ethereal quality, emphasizing vocal interplay over dense production.[23]Harmonically, the composition relies on a repeating four-chord progression—C minor, E-flat major, A-flat major, and G7—that draws from the C natural minor scale while incorporating the harmonic minor's leading tone (B natural) in the G7 for added tension and resolution.[23] This progression starts sparsely in the intro and verses, gradually expanding into fuller, anthemic arrangements during the choir sections, where call-and-response vocals create dynamic interplay between soloists and the ensemble.[23] The overall arc transitions from intimate minimalism to a soaring collective harmony, mirroring the song's thematic uplift. Compared to Kanye West's earlier gospel-infused work like "Jesus Walks," "Ultralight Beam" amplifies the choir's role, shifting focus from individual bravado to communal exaltation.[24]
Lyrical content and themes
"Ultralight Beam" centers on the theme of faith as a guiding "ultralight beam" that illuminates paths through personal and spiritual darkness, inspired by the biblical imagery in Matthew 11:30, where Jesus describes his yoke as easy and his burden as light.[25] The song portrays divine guidance as weightless yet powerful, offering redemption and protection amid life's trials, with contributors weaving individual testimonies into a collective spiritual narrative.[26]Kanye West's sung verse reflects on family, fame, and redemption, expressing relief in returning "home" to faith and loved ones after navigating public scrutiny and personal challenges. Lines such as "Feet don't fail me now / Take me to the King / I'm so happy that I'm finally home" convey a sense of arrival and gratitude, tying into broader autobiographical elements of fatherhood and seeking solace beyond celebrity pressures.[26] This portion underscores redemption as a return to divine purpose, echoing West's evolving spiritualintrospection.[3]The-Dream's hook delivers repetitive, prayer-like affirmations of striving to maintain faith amid vulnerability, with phrases like "I'm tryna keep my faith / We on an ultralight beam / This is a God dream, this is everything" emphasizing divine protection as an essential, ethereal force.[26] The incantatory repetition evokes a communal plea for guidance, highlighting the fragility of belief in the face of doubt and external chaos.[27]Chance the Rapper's extended verse offers a stream-of-consciousness personal testimony of spiritual warfare and reliance on God, referencing battles with demons—"Foot on the Devil’s neck 'til it drifted, Pangaea"—and protective instincts toward family, including shielding his daughter from public eyes.[26] He draws on Chicago roots and cultural figures like Harriet Tubman and Spike Lee to illustrate a journey from loss and judgment to unyielding faith, declaring "You cannot mess with the light" as a defiant affirmation of divine resilience.[27]Kirk Franklin's outro features prophetic spoken-word prayer that reinforces communal gospel roots and generational faith, addressing those who feel unworthy: "Father, this prayer is for everyone that feels they're not good enough / This prayer's for everybody that feels like they're too small."[3] Delivered with choir backing, it shifts focus to collective inclusion and hope, portraying God as accessible to all regardless of past mistakes.[27]The song's overall narrative arc progresses from individual expressions of doubt and struggle—evident in the hook's vulnerability and verses' personal confessions—to a crescendo of collective praise in Franklin's outro, mirroring the album's autobiographical exploration of faith's transformative power.[26] This structure fosters a sense of communal uplift, blending hip-hop introspection with gospel exhortation.[27]
Release and promotion
Debut and initial rollout
"Ultralight Beam" first appeared publicly as part of Kanye West's Yeezy Season 3 fashion show at Madison Square Garden on February 11, 2016, where the track served as the opener for West's seventh studio album, The Life of Pablo, accompanying visual projections during the event that blended fashion and music unveilings.[28] The performance featured live elements that set the tone for the album's gospel-infused aesthetic, drawing an audience of celebrities and industry figures to the sold-out arena.[29]The song's world premiere took place two days later on the February 13, 2016, episode of Saturday Night Live, where West delivered a stirring rendition backed by a full choir and guest vocalists including Chance the Rapper, The-Dream, Kelly Price, Kirk Franklin.[30] This appearance not only showcased the track's collaborative spirit but also marked the surprise announcement of The Life of Pablo's impending release, amplifying anticipation through West's high-profile platform.On February 14, 2016, The Life of Pablo—with "Ultralight Beam" positioned as its lead track—was released exclusively for streaming on Tidal, West's initial distribution strategy that limited access to subscribers while building exclusivity.[31] Promotional efforts included social media posts from West and Chance the Rapper sharing clips from the SNL performance, which quickly went viral and fueled online discussion.[32] The track drew immediate media attention, with Pitchfork lauding it as a "gospel music that's hollowed out" and the album's spiritual core in an early review.[20] This buzz contributed to the album's strong launch, amassing over 250 million global streams in its first ten days on Tidal.[33]
Alternate versions and remixes
Following the initial release of "Ultralight Beam" as the opening track on Kanye West's album The Life of Pablo on February 14, 2016, several official alternate versions emerged, primarily emphasizing the song's gospel elements. On March 27, 2016—Easter Sunday—West released "Ultralight Prayer," an extended rendition focusing on the outro prayer led by Kirk Franklin.[34] This version isolates and prolongs the spiritual invocation, running approximately 1:54 in length, and was shared exclusively via West's SoundCloud account as a seasonal gesture tied to the holiday's themes of faith and redemption.[35][4]Shortly after, in late March 2016, West updated The Life of Pablo on streaming platforms, introducing minor revisions to "Ultralight Beam" itself. These included a new lyrical line in Chance the Rapper's verse and additional vocal contributions from Kirk Franklin, refining the track's gospel choir dynamics without altering its core structure.[36][37] No major remixes by external artists were officially endorsed or released during this period.[38]In 2018 and 2019, West's Sunday Service Choir performed a reimagined gospel rendition of "Ultralight Beam" at weekly events blending hip-hop and traditional worship music.[11] This version, featuring fuller choir harmonies and an acapella-infused arrangement, was officially recorded and included on the choir's debut album Jesus Is Born, released on December 25, 2019.[39] The album, distributed through West's GOOD Music imprint, reached No. 2 on the Billboard Top Gospel Albums chart, with the "Ultralight Beam" adaptation contributing to its focus on spiritual reinterpretations.[40] These variants, exclusive to West's platforms like Tidal and streaming services, underscored his evolving emphasis on gospel during this phase of his career.[41]
Reception and accolades
Critical reviews
Upon its release in February 2016, "Ultralight Beam" garnered widespread critical acclaim for its innovative fusion of hip-hop and gospel elements, West's raw vulnerability in exploring faith, and the seamless collaborative synergy among its contributors. Pitchfork designated it "Best New Track," portraying it as "a plea, a confession, an anointment" that hollows out gospel traditions with a choir and organ evoking isolation amid persecution, while praising Chance the Rapper's "virtuosic verse" on redemption.[20]Rolling Stone awarded the parent album The Life of Pablo 4.5 out of 5 stars, spotlighting "Ultralight Beam" as a transcendent opener where the gospel choir elevates the track to spiritual heights, blending sacred sounds with West's introspective confessions.[2] The Guardian similarly rated the album 4 out of 5 stars, lauding the song as a standout amid its fractured structure, with Chance's verse emerging as one of rap's most candid expressions of personal struggle and hope.[42]Reviewers consistently highlighted the track's emotional depth in portraying faith as both divine aspiration and human frailty, tying into its lyrical themes of redemption and prayer. Minor criticisms targeted the album's overall pacing and inconsistencies, but "Ultralight Beam" was rarely faulted, often celebrated for its choir-driven uplift and West's restrained delivery that amplifies the ensemble's power.In retrospective assessments during the 2020s, the song has been viewed as a high-water mark in West's evolution toward gospel-infused artistry, emblematic of his pre-Jesus Is King vulnerability. Pitchfork ranked it number 77 on its list of the 200 best songs of the 2010s in 2019, commending its "Godlike perspective" from an artist grappling with chaos.[5]Rolling Stone placed it at number 2 among the 50 best songs of 2016, emphasizing the choir's chant of "This is a God dream" as a beacon of collaborative transcendence.[43]The track's reception contributed to The Life of Pablo's Metacritic aggregate score of 75 out of 100, where critics frequently isolated "Ultralight Beam" as the album's pinnacle for its raw depiction of spiritual seeking.[44]
Awards and nominations
"Ultralight Beam" received one nomination at the 59th Annual Grammy Awards in 2017: Best Rap/Sung Performance, which was awarded to Drake's "Hotline Bling."[45] No other major award wins or additional nominations for the song have been recorded.The track has been highly ranked in retrospective lists. Pitchfork named it the best song of 2016, praising its spiritual depth and collaborative gospel elements.[46] Rolling Stone placed it at number 2 on their 50 best songs of 2016, highlighting its choir-backed innovation in hip-hop.[43]In decade-end compilations, "Ultralight Beam" ranked 77th on Pitchfork's 200 best songs of the 2010s, noted for its redemptive plea amid West's personal turmoil.[5] NME included it at number seven on their best tracks of 2016, commending the contributions from Chance the Rapper and Kirk Franklin.[47]As part of Kanye West's enduring catalog, the song was performed during his 2024 Vultures Listening Experience tour dates, including shows in China, underscoring its lasting performance appeal without new formal accolades since 2017.[48]
Commercial performance
Chart positions
"Ultralight Beam" experienced moderate commercial success on music charts worldwide, primarily driven by streaming activity from its inclusion on Kanye West's albumThe Life of Pablo, which was initially exclusive to Tidal before expanding to other platforms like Spotify. The track's chart performance reflected the album's streaming-heavy consumption model, though its gospel-infused style and occasional explicit lyrics limited traditional radio airplay.[49]In the United States, the song debuted at number 67 on the Billboard Hot 100 for the chart dated April 23, 2016, marking its peak position, and remained on the chart for a total of 12 weeks.[50] It also entered the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart at number 22 during the same week, bolstered by 7.8 million streams.[49]Internationally, "Ultralight Beam" reached number 58 on the UK Singles Chart, first entering at number 63 in March 2016.[51] It performed stronger on genre-specific rankings, peaking at number 15 on the UK Official Hip Hop and R&B Singles Chart.[52] In Canada, it peaked at number 88 on the Billboard Canadian Hot 100, while in Ireland, it reached number 78 on the Irish Singles Chart.A reinterpreted version by the Sunday Service Choir was featured on the 2019 album Jesus Is Born.
In the United States, "Ultralight Beam" was certified Platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) in June 2017 for sales and streaming equivalent to 1 million units. The certification was upgraded to 2× Platinum in 2018, reflecting combined units from downloads and streams at 1500 streams equaling one unit.By 2018, "Ultralight Beam" had accumulated over 1.5 million equivalent units in the United States through streams and downloads.[54] Globally, the song had surpassed 390 million streams on Spotify as of November 2025.[55] No additional international certifications have been awarded as of November 2025.
Live performances
Early television and tour appearances
"Ultralight Beam" debuted live on the February 13, 2016, episode of Saturday Night Live, with Kanye West joined by Chance the Rapper, Kirk Franklin, The-Dream, Kelly Price, El DeBarge, and a gospel choir positioned in a triangular formation while dressed in light denim.[30][56][57] The minimalist staging, centered on a multimedia backdrop and the choir's layered harmonies, underscored the track's spiritual essence without relying on extravagant visuals.[30]On the Saint Pablo Tour, spanning August 25 to November 20, 2016, across more than 40 U.S. arena concerts in support of The Life of Pablo, the song was a staple closer performed at 37 dates, often encouraging audience sing-alongs to heighten its communal vibe.[58][59] Staging emphasized the gospel choir's prominence under dim, immersive lighting, with occasional guest spots from artists like Kirk Franklin adding dynamic energy to the renditions.[60] The tour concluded prematurely after West's hospitalization for exhaustion on November 21, 2016, following the final performance in Sacramento.The performances cultivated a sense of shared spirituality, with viral highlights—such as Chance the Rapper's emotive verse and ad-libbed extensions during select shows—driving extensive social media engagement and shares in 2016.[57]
Later performances and tributes
In May 2017, Chance the Rapper performed a solo cover of "Ultralight Beam" during his Be Encouraged Tour, incorporating it into a medley of tracks from Kanye West's The Life of Pablo at stops including Sacramento's Golden 1 Center.[61] This rendition highlighted Chance's verse from the original song, emphasizing its gospel influences amid his own faith-centered live sets.[62]Kanye West's Sunday Service series, launched in early 2019, reinterpreted "Ultralight Beam" as a full gospel hymn featuring over 100 voices from the Sunday Service Choir, transforming the track into a worship staple during weekly gatherings in Calabasas and larger events.[11] The performance reached a global audience at Coachella in April 2019, where West led the choir in an extended version amid a spiritual revue on Easter Sunday, blending the song's soulful elements with live instrumentation and dancers.[63]During the Donda listening events in 2021, "Ultralight Beam" appeared in the setlist at the August 26 show in Chicago's Soldier Field, serving as a tribute to West's evolving gospel sound within the album's thematic framework. In August 2024, West and Ty Dolla Sign included the track in their Vultures Listening Experience at Goyang Stadium in South Korea, performing it as part of a marathon set drawing from West's catalog.[64]The song received further tribute in 2024 on The Voice Norway, where contestants Adele Erichsen and Odette Johansen Toukam delivered a duet rendition during the Battles round, earning praise for capturing its emotional and vocal depth.[65]In September 2025, Chance the Rapper performed his verse from "Ultralight Beam" live during his And We Back Tour stop in Houston, Texas.[66]Over time, "Ultralight Beam" shifted from its hip-hop roots to a cornerstone of pure worship in West's Ye era, exemplified by the Sunday Service Choir's 2019 gospel revision on Jesus Is Born, which stripped back production for choral emphasis and reflected West's deepening religious focus.[11]
Legacy and impact
Cultural significance
"Ultralight Beam" played a pivotal role in pioneering the fusion of hip-hop and gospel music, blending raw lyrical introspection with soaring choral elements to create a template for subsequent works in the genre. The track's collaboration with gospel icon Kirk Franklin and rapper Chance the Rapper highlighted this innovative synthesis, influencing Chance's own gospel-infused mixtapeColoring Book released later in 2016, which similarly elevated spiritual themes within hip-hop. This approach not only revitalized gospel's reach among younger audiences but also set the stage for broader cross-genre explorations, as seen in Franklin's later hip-hop collaborations.[67][68]The song's cultural impact extended deeply into discussions of faith and mental health within Black communities, serving as a touchstone for Black Christians navigating the tensions between spiritual devotion and secular expression. By integrating gospel traditions with hip-hop's unfiltered narratives of struggle and redemption, it resonated as an anthem for those embracing faith amid personal and societal pressures, often referenced in sermons that incorporate contemporary music to address humility and divine connection. Its themes of hope and inner peace have been recognized for promoting self-care and emotional resilience, fostering conversations on balancing identity, spirituality, and mental well-being in Black church contexts.[27][69]Within Kanye West's discography, "Ultralight Beam" marked a significant transition toward overt expressions of Christianity, laying the groundwork for his later gospel-centric projects such as Jesus Is King in 2019, which fully immersed in sacred sounds and themes of deliverance. This evolution echoed in Donda (2021) and persisted in the 2024 album Vultures 1, which attempted to recapture the song's choral progressions amid West's experimental style. The song thus symbolized West's ongoing rhetorical embrace of faith, influencing his public persona and artistic trajectory.[70][71]In broader cultural legacy, "Ultralight Beam" gained prominence through its use in Arthur Jafa's 2016 video installation Love Is the Message, The Message Is Death, where the track's gospel-inspired anthem underscores a montage of Black life, blending joy, trauma, and resistance to systemic racism through affective visual and sonic alignment. This integration amplified the song's role in contemporary art, highlighting African American existential and political narratives. From a 2025 perspective, amid West's ongoing controversies, the track endures as a touchstone for redemption narratives, referenced in reflections on his influence and the complexities of faith in popular music.[72][73]
Legal disputes
In February 2019, the adoptive parents of Natalie Green, Andrew and Shirley Green, filed a lawsuit in Charleston County Court, South Carolina, against Kanye West, Def Jam Recordings, Universal Music Group, and others, alleging unauthorized use of an audio sample from a 2014 Instagram video of their then-2-year-old adopted daughter praying.[74] The suit claimed that West's team had contacted the girl's biological mother, Alice Johnson, for permission to use the sample in "Ultralight Beam" without obtaining consent from the adoptive parents, who held legal rights to the child's likeness following the adoption.[75]The complaint accused the defendants of copyright infringement, violation of the right of publicity, and unjust enrichment, asserting that the sample—featuring the child's voice reciting a prayer—appeared at the song's opening and echoed throughout without proper licensing or compensation to the family.[76] The Greens sought unspecified damages, including a share of profits from the track, and highlighted the emotional impact on the child, emphasizing that her likeness was used commercially without her guardians' approval.[77]The case was removed to the U.S. District Court for the District of South Carolina shortly after filing, where West and the defendants moved for dismissal in July 2019, arguing that the biological mother's apparent authority had been relied upon in good faith.[78] In January 2020, the court partially granted the motion, dismissing some claims related to federal copyright preemption but allowing the state law claims to proceed.[79]The lawsuit was settled out of court in October 2020 for an undisclosed amount, with no admission of wrongdoing by the defendants, and the song's existing credits— which had listed Natalie Green as providing additional vocals since the album's 2016 release—remained unchanged.[80] The settlement resolved all claims without further public details on financial terms or additional remedies.This dispute underscored ethical concerns in hip-hop sampling practices, particularly regarding the use of minors' voices and the complexities of parental rights post-adoption, prompting discussions on clearance processes in the industry.[81] As of 2025, no additional legal actions related to "Ultralight Beam" have been reported.[82]
Covers and media adaptations
Notable cover versions
One of the earliest notable covers of "Ultralight Beam" came from the indie rock band Local Natives, who delivered a haunting, stripped-down rendition in a 2016 Spotify studio session, transforming the gospel-rap original into an ethereal folk-infused track.[83] Later that year, Australianindie pop group Cub Sport offered an emotive acoustic interpretation during a triple j's Like A Version performance, highlighting the song's soaring choir elements with layered harmonies.[84]In 2017, British grime artist Stormzy provided an acoustic cover in BBC Radio 1's Live Lounge, emphasizing the track's introspective lyrics with raw vocal delivery and minimal piano accompaniment.[85] That same year, Harry Styles performed a moody piano-led version during his solo tour debut at London's The Garage, slowing the tempo to accentuate its spiritual vulnerability and earning widespread praise for its intimate reinterpretation.[86] Also in 2017, Chance the Rapper, the song's original featured artist, showcased a high-profile live tribute on his Be Encouraged Tour, often weaving it into medleys with other Kanye West tracks to underscore its gospel roots.[87]New Zealand singer Stan Walker released a soulful R&B cover in 2020, later dedicating performances to rugby player Sean Wainui following his death in 2021 and infusing Māori cultural elements, which amassed over 7.7 million YouTube views and resonated deeply in Australia and New Zealand for its emotional depth.[88] In 2024, contestants Adele Erichsen and Odette Johansen Toukam delivered a duet on The Voice Norway, blending pop vocals with the track's spiritual core; the performance advanced Johansen to the next round, impressing judges with its contemporary flair.[65]These covers span diverse styles, from gospel choir arrangements by various church groups that amplify the original's hymn-like quality to pop interpretations like Styles' and R&B infusions as in Walker's, often centering the lyrics' emphasis on divine intervention and personal testimony.[89]
Usage in media and sampling
"Ultralight Beam" has been prominently featured in visual art and documentary media, underscoring its thematic resonance with spirituality and Black experience. The song soundtracks Arthur Jafa's 2016 video installation Love Is the Message, The Message Is Death, a seven-minute montage of found footage exploring Black joy, pain, and resilience, which has been exhibited at institutions including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Institute of Contemporary Art Boston, and the Museum of Contemporary Art Denver.[72][90][91]The track has also been integrated into commercial advertising, aligning its uplifting gospel elements with themes of aspiration and unity.In sampling and interpolation by other artists, "Ultralight Beam" has influenced subsequent works emphasizing redemption and spiritual struggle. Kendrick Lamar interpolates its melody and lyrical motifs in "Count Me Out" from his 2022 album Mr. Morale & the Big Steppers, using the reference to frame personal accountability and healing.[92] West himself drew from the song's structure in "Selah" on his 2019 gospel album Jesus Is King, interpolating its choral swells to amplify themes of divine intervention.[93] Additionally, British rapper Scarlxrd sampled vocal elements in his 2018 trap track "HEART ATTACK," transforming the original's ethereal vibe into aggressive industrial beats.[94]More recently, in 2024, the song was incorporated into visuals and set elements during West and Ty Dolla Sign's Vultures listening experience tour, including performances at events in Haikou, China, where snippets enhanced thematic projections of light and elevation.[48] No major official samples have emerged post-2022, though its influence persists in underground and remix circuits.