

Frank Dukes – songwriting, sample producer.Noel Cadastre – recording, additional drum programming.Personnel Īdapted from TIDAL and comments to HNHH. The instrumental was used at the 2014 BET Hip Hop Awards for an on-stage cypher featuring various artists. The instrumental became very popular among hip-hop artists, with several rappers such as the late XXXTentacion, Cassidy, Fat Trel, Remy Ma, David Stones, Montana of 300, G-Eazy, G-Unit ( 50 Cent, Lloyd Banks, Tony Yayo, Young Buck and Kidd Kidd), Gudda Gudda, Jin, Joell Ortiz, Lil Durk, Meek Mill, Ace Hood, Kurt Rock, Juice Box Boys, Papoose, Problem, Rich Homie Quan, Soulja Boy, Stiz Grimey, YFN Lucci, Uncle Murda, Vado, Waka Flocka Flame, Lil Mouse, Wiz Khalifa, Alpha Wann and Stormzy recording their own versions of the song. The song is also featured in the NBA 2K16 basketball videogame soundtrack and is usually played during Golden State Warriors pre-match cutscenes as Warriors player Stephen Curry is mentioned in the song. The lyric "She gon' be upset if she keep scrollin' to the left, dawg / She gon' see some shit that she don't wanna see" is referenced in Letterkenny 1x06 "A Fuss in the Back Bush".

The Sprite line featured the "Know yourself, know your worth" lyric from this song. The commercial was supposed to promote a limited-edition line of Sprite cans with hip-hop lyrics printed on them called "Obey Your Verse". The song was used in a Sprite commercial starring Drake and Nas. The song was nominated for Best Rap Performance and Best Rap Song at the 57th Annual Grammy Awards. HipHopDX named the song as one of the "Top 10 Singles of 2014". Rolling Stone listed the song as one of the "50 Best Songs of 2014", stating that it is "six minutes that pan across the whole Drake saga". In July 2014, Billboard listed "0 to 100" as one of the "10 Best Songs of 2014 (so far)" saying that "months after releasing another hit album, Drizzy returned briefly to take it from '0 to 100' with careening bars punctuated by boasts like 'If I ain't the greatest, then I'm headed for it'." The magazine also listed the track as the best rap song of 2014. The song received critical acclaim from music critics, appearing on several year-end top 10 lists. The second half of the song, titled "The Catch Up", features a sample of an unreleased James Blake song, and contrasts the boisterous claims of the first half with a pensive promise: that "if hasn't passed you yet, watch catch up now." Critical reception Instead of "starting from the bottom", "0 to 100" speaks of the rapper going from zero to one-hundred in order to gain ground on all of his competition. The first song, "0 to 100", is a stripped-back hip hop song that sonically and thematically resembles Drake's " Started from the Bottom" from his third studio album, Nothing Was the Same (2013). Retrieved April 12, 2016."0 to 100 / The Catch Up" is a two part song with a length of six minutes and eight seconds. ^ "Drake Chart History (Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs)".^ "Drake Chart History (Canadian Hot 100)"."Drake Takes Over Charts in Wake of Meek Mill Feud". ^ Mendizabal, Amaya (August 12, 2015).^ "Drake - Chart History - Canada Hot 100".^ "Drake- Charged up prod by Maneesh and 40.^ "iTunes - Music - Charged Up - Single by Drake"."Meek Mill ends Drake beef with open letter before removing his Wanna Know diss song from Soundcloud". ^ "Meek Mill hits back at Drake with diss track 'Wanna Know '".^ "Drake Disses Meek Mill Again on 'Back to Back' Freestyle | Rap-Up".

^ "Drake Fires Back at Meek Mill on 'Charged Up' | Rap-Up".He don't write his own raps! That's why he ain't tweet my album because we found out! "Meek Mill Says Drake Doesn't Write His Own Raps In Twitter Rant". ^ "Drake Performs "Back To Back" At OVO Fest 2015".^ "Drake Performs Back to Back During OVO Fest".The song also debuted and peaked at number 78 on the Billboard Hot 100. "Charged Up" debuted and peaked at number 75 on the Billboard Canadian Hot 100. Track listing Īll are credited as songwriters.

Meek Mill later removed his diss to Drake on SoundCloud. Meek Mill later responded with another diss song about Drake, titled " Wanna Know". On July 22, 2015, Meek Mill publicly criticized Drake on Twitter after being upset with Drake's non-involvement with the promotion of his album Dreams Worth More Than Money, claiming that he used ghostwriters to write his verse on " R.I.C.O." Following this, Drake released two diss songs within a week, "Charged Up" and "Back to Back", both aimed at Meek Mill.
