<Tr> <Td> </Td> <Td> "Runaway" A sample of "Runaway" which features the repetitive piano riff over the lush production . West sings the song's chorus about having a "toast to the scumbags ." </Td> </Tr> <Tr> <Td_colspan="2"> Problems playing this file? See media help . </Td> </Tr> <P> The song takes influences from the hip hop genre and contains a large array of musical instruments . The song begins with a sparse, isolated sounding piano melody that drones on during the start of the song . After about a minute and a half, West provides his first verse . West sings "you've been putting up with my shit just way too long," before launching into the ironic chorus of "let's have a toast for the douchebags". A vocal sample of "Look at you! Look at you!" is also heard throughout the song at seemingly random points, excerpted from Rick James' 1981 live performance in Long Beach, California . West begs his girlfriend to "run away" from his destructive behavior, warning her of further behavior, while also dwelling on his own intimacy issues . The piano chord that introduces the song continues on, but the production then introduces a forceful cello and a light string section . The second verse is delivered by Pusha T who is used as a juxtaposition against West; where West is heartfelt and sincere towards his girlfriend the song, Pusha T is rude towards his and also glorifies cocaine dealing . </P> <P> After the composition continues, West ends the song with a three - minute unintelligible outro containing a distorted West utilizing a vocoder . It begins with West mumbling something that sounds like "I'ma be honest ..." before the vocal effects drowns out what is audible in his words, to the point where what he is saying is impossible to understand . Allmusic editor Andy Kellman commented that "when West blows into a device and comes out sounding something like a muffled, bristly version of Robert Fripp's guitar ." Slant Magazine's Matthew Cole interpreted the purpose of the outro as a "fantasy of escape through pure catharsis, with the vocoder literalizing Kanye's ability to transform his personal shortcomings into art ." Chicago Tribune writer Greg Kot described the production of the song in detail, writing: </P>

What kanye west song starts with a piano
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