High Price


"High Price" is a song by American recording artist Ciara from her third studio album, Fantasy Ride. Featuring rapper Ludacris, it was written by Ciara, Ludacris, Terius Nash, and Christopher Stewart, and was produced by The-Dream and Tricky Stewart. The song was initially chosen as the lead single from the album and was due for release in June 2008, but after leaking to a mixed reception from fans, its release was subsequently cancelled and it was replaced by "Go Girl".

Composition

"High Price" is a crunk-influenced R&B song, with booming, low-end, creature-feature synths, which features Ciara singing in operatic soprano. Macpherson of The Guardian magazine commented that the song sees the singer "combining outraged soprano braggadocio with thunderous crunk baselines.". Lyrically, the song is an "ode to acquisitiveness" and a "dramatic, swaggering celebration of flashiness"

Critical reception

"High Price" received a mixed reception from music critics, with most criticizing the song's lyrics and noting its productions dated sound, while praising Ciara's vocals. Jon Sargent of Pop Matters called Ciara's operatic style "ridiculously awesome" New York Times writer, Jon Carmanica called the song Fantasy Ride's best and most conspicuous track, while noting its opera-style vocals as a "spooky and ethereal effect that's both innovative and natural". Many critics compared "High Price" to Ciara's previous single, "Oh", with Allmusic reviewer, Andy Kellman, calling it a "decent revamp", however he thought that the singer's "outlandish operatics" were a new and nice touch. Leah Greenblatt of Entertainment Weekly wasn't pleased with the song, calling it "lyrically obnoxious" Sal Cinquemani of Slant Magazine called the song" "ridiculous crunk-pop" and stated that "if it weren't so over-the-top, it would be a supreme failure". He also called the song's vocals and lyrics horrendous, noting the line "I should be an Iraq, shawty, 'cause I am the bomb... Booty look softer than a McDonald's hamburger bun"

Music video

A music video was due to be released in July 2008, in order to coincide with the song's single release, however with the single cancellation, its release was shelved. A snippet of the video leaked online in July 2010.