The Weeknd has been successfully making
music since 2012 as a mainstream R&B artist who balances nicely between
that and pop artist with both albums and mixtapes. His angelic voice has always
captivated us to listen to him sing about anything like drugs/partying and
women. He never actually makes bad music on any of his albums but it hard to
tell some of his songs from each other as they all have the same sound or theme
to them. “After Hours” his fourth studio album which is all of his is own work
without any features and him producing it all plus a short film to go with it. His
epic-post-breakup album is exactly what we all need during these dark times as
we can relate to heartbreak, toxic relationships, the want of not being alone,
overcoming addiction, mortality and the wanting of going home.
He shows us he is struggling between the
personas of the mainstream pop-star or the troubled authentic artist that he is
ever growing like everyone else. Tracks “Escape from LA” and “Blinding Lights”
deal with him tying LA/Vegas to all of his drug problems/his ex-girlfriends
hurting him that fame has ruined him that is why he talks about his childhood
home of Canada. The single “Blinded by the Lights” one of the best songs he
admits again he has to be single forever/lost his ability to love and that
fame/wealth has blinded him. That he only spends time around with women to
distract himself from being lonely/doing drugs.
We all do not want to be alone but is it
worth to be in a bad relationship just to escape the feeling which is a theme throughout
the album and him realizing all the mistakes he made in his life. Songs “Too Late”, “Hardest to Love” and “Scared
to Live” are about him realizing the mistakes he made like having a negative
impact on his relationship that his ex-girlfriend felt forced to keep loving
him and lost her love for him. “Scared to Live” is one of the best/emotional
songs on the album and he gives writing credit to Elton John for his interruption
of the lines from “Your Song”. He takes the blame for it how the relationship
ended that he made the mistakes.
The other themes like drug abuse are
mentioned in “Alone Again”, “Snowchild”, “Heartless” and “Faith”. He struggles
with knowing who he is on drugs or not and who he is with his girlfriend or
single that he has had some overdose scares that he needs her to help get him
clean. He talks about his past with self-harm and being homeless for a bit
during his younger days in Canada as he references snow which could be actual
snow or drugs. In “Heartless”(one of the best songs) the lead single he talks
about all the things like fancy cars and drugs have made him incapable of
loving anyone that he really does want someone to marry but all they want to do
is use him for his fame so he has to be heartless. In “Faith” he worried about
dying alone but is also struggling with his faith because of his addiction to
partying/drugs/hedonism it is like him losing his faith like in REM’s “Losing
my Religion” that the act of getting high is like losing your faith.
The album continues with more about his
relationship with his exes like in “In Your Eyes”(one of the best songs) that
he can tell she is cheating on him by looking at her but he is trying to be
positive about it by ignoring it, he is just vulnerable and wants to be loved.
Same for “Save your Tears” (one of the catchier songs on the album) he isn’t
interested in loving her again but will always be there for her because he
screwed that relationship but his other ex-girlfriend used him. He realizes
it’s too late to get back with the ex-girlfriend he hurt which is why in the
next song “Repeat After me” he is repeating to her that she still loves him not
the other guy by trying to convince her to come back to him. “After Hours” the
third single(longest song) is an apology letter about failed dating and
fighting his mortality again.
The final track “Until I Bleed Out” is a
good way to end the album/his journey of making the album/the story he is
telling by saying he has nothing left that all he wants to do is be sober from
drugs/women and not worried about the fame/wealth/love. Overall this a good edition
to his discography as one of the best singers/songwriters/performers of his
generation with no bad songs and it is filled with memorable songs that are
catchy.
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