

An album without features is pretty rare by. The Weeknd has always been big on symbolism, too, and the most telling tip about his new music could be in his statement to Variety over the weekend. The Weeknds fourth studio album, 'After Hours,' is set to drop Thursday night, and our sources tell us his voice is the only one fans will be hearing. He also tends to bring in a few new collaborators on each album, and in addition to the duet partners above, he also has been working with avant-electronic musician Oneohtrix Point Never, who came in toward the end of the “After Hours” sessions and has performed and recorded with him regularly over the past few months. “I’m guilty of wanting to outdo my last album, but it’s never like, ‘I’ve got to do the same type of song.’ I’m so happy I’m not like that. R&B superstar The Weeknd (Abel Tesfaye) recently released his fourth studio album After Hours. After Hours presents listeners with a satisfying yet uneasy (and arguably disturbing) theme of personal destruction attached to what appears to be a loose narrative. The Weeknd could be dropping his After Hours followup once quarantine ends. Get your tickets for October 2020, The Weeknd will be touring the UK towards the end of the year. The Weeknd has created a blend of R&B, Pop, Synth and 80s sound with the new album, check it out below. In early 2011, The New York Times marvelled at the three songs he had released, calling them, a marvel of texture, drawing from the aching moans of screw music and the sexual impulses of early 1990s new jack swing, all buried in a hazy cloud that’s part too-cool affectation, part bleeding-out puddle. “I might have another album ready to go by the time this quarantine is over,” he said. The story within The Weeknd’s new album After Hours. The album promises to have quality R&B tracks, but there are influences from the 80s including synth and electronic sounds. The Weeknd started releasing music in late 2010, when he was just 20. Each of his albums has represented a dramatic change from the one that preceded it, and as he told Rolling Stone last fall, the next one will probably be no exception.
