
That’s a weird place to be, and The Weeknd rocks it well. “Reminder” is an announcement of self in an strange world where, quite literally, The Weeknd wins awards from children’s networks for songs about doing cocaine. This is how you get the industry’s attention.Īs much as drugs are a theme, so too is The Weeknd’s struggle with fame. It’s mostly moody noise, throbbing percussion, and The Weeknd’s mystifying voice. That drug use is the running theme of his catalogue only makes it that much more perfect. So effectively, it’s like The Weeknd sits you down and warns you that you probably wanna be high for the musical greatness that is to follow, i.e. It’s the first track on The Weeknd’s debut mixtape House of Balloons, also known as the first EP in the Trilogy series. “Tears in the Rain” is rather cinematic, as well, and we could argue there are sonic echoes between its composition and the film’s soundtrack what with the raindrop key notes and heavy background synth, but there’s no direct sampling we know of.Īs far as musical introductions go, “High For This” might be one of the greatest of all time. Just as the robot enemy accepts his death, so too does The Weeknd lyrically accept the death of his pre-fame romance. “Tears in the Rain” is dark, beautiful, and sorrowful, just like that scene. Dick’s Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? It’s true, and this final track references the climactic speech made by the film’s “replicant” antagonist. The chorus is an A-plus sing-along when you find yourself up in the club with your besties.ĭid you know Kiss Land is thematically based on the 1982 sci-fi classic Blade Runner, directed by Ridley Scott, starring Harrison Ford, and in turn based on Phillip K. It deserved to be there no matter what, of course.

Today, the two Canadians are both superstars in their own right, but this joint collab from The Weeknd’s debut studio album Kiss Land may have only landed on radio because of Drake’s feature. One upon a time, The Weeknd was Drake’s protege. Someone bust out the lighter, and please, don’t dance on the hood of the car. He’s getting his Guns’n’Roses on with this epic metal ballad music, too. He knows he’s too dirty for the beautiful woman who’s stolen his heart, and he knows it probably won’t work out, because he’s bound to muck it up, but he still wishes her the best. Here we see a soft, vulnerable, guilty side of The Weeknd not often displayed.

Kygo Remixed The Weeknd & Daft Punk's 'Starboy:' Listen
