Login
ForgotPassword?
Sign Up
Search this Topic:
Forum Jump
Posts: 324
01/25/12 9:00 PM
Interact
Posts: 24768
01/25/12 9:26 PM
Posts: 254
01/26/12 12:10 AM
Posts: 412
01/26/12 10:43 AM
Girl Thats Drob wrote:I wonder where this %$!!# would be without a Drake co-sign? . His music is straight though, I only play when I'm getting a broad in the zone and it works like a charm . Dude's concepts are brilliant but he won't last long
CLCTVE x @FLY___or____DIE
Posts: 1447
01/26/12 3:17 PM
Girl Thats Drob wrote: Dude's concepts are brilliant but he won't last long
Posts: 8332
01/28/12 9:35 AM
Girl Thats Drob wrote:Dude's concepts are brilliant but he won't last long
Posts: 959
01/28/12 7:07 PM
Posts: 23
01/28/12 7:14 PM
Posts: 4210
01/28/12 8:18 PM
Posts: 2163
01/29/12 3:21 PM
Rusty Shackelford wrote:Everyday I walk down my hallway in schoolI yell "XOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOHHOOOOOO!"IN my own Weeknd imitation voice
Ayo my herb smoke tastin like a nerd rope
Posts: 8856
01/29/12 4:09 PM
Posts: 8857
01/29/12 4:12 PM
JD161616 wrote:
Posts: 3420
01/29/12 7:13 PM
Checks McGee wrote: i just be yellin out "CAN WE P.. O....VEEEEEE" waitin for a weeknd fan chick to come up and be like well, yes
Rusty Shackelford wrote:Everyday I walk down my hallway in schoolI yell "XOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOHHOOOOOO!"IN my own Weeknd imitation voiceThis guys music is just
Posts: 9861
01/31/12 5:57 AM
http://beatsperminute.com...appreciating-the-weeknd/Nothing and nobody in the musical year of 2011 has stayed with me the way The Weeknd has. What upstart Toronto R&B crooner Abel Tesfaye pulled off over last twelve months is both truly remarkable and in some ways unprecedented. House of Balloons, Thursday, and Echoes of Silence, his three 2011 releases, were advertised as mixtapes, but that sells their worth as albums ridiculously short. Usually when someone mentions the release of a mixtape, I think of a DIY, thrown-together collection of tracks and song fragments. They can be very good, even great, but rarely do they exhibit the consistency and attention to detail that Tesfayeâs work does. That he put out three albums mere months apart that are both meticulously plotted and exhilaratingly rough-edged, before receiving industry backing of any kind outside of Drake tweeting a few of his lyrics, is mind-boggling. This is the kind of streak of high-quality albums we usually see from bands with established fan bases and widespread support, not the opening salvo of a kid that hasnât even been around long enough for the major labels to open a proper bidding war. But for as much critical acclaim as Tesfaye has garnered (House of Balloons was a fixture on many publicationsâ year-end lists, including this one), I still feel like heâs somewhat underrated. To begin with, he has flat-out one of the most mesmerizing voices Iâve ever heard, and that isnât an exaggeration. Itâs an astonishing instrument thatâs like a cross between Michael Jackson and Jeff Buckley. And while that alone would be enough to justify the praise heâs earned, itâs the risks he takes with this voice that make him compelling. An asset of this caliber is something most would elect to leave well enough alone. But Tesfaye and producer Illangelo have no qualms about bending and melding it to the point of unrecognizability. That âGoneâ and âInitiation,â which feed Tesfaye through a litany of vocal filters, are as affecting as straightforward performances like âWicked Gamesâ and âThe Morningâ betrays a set of melodic smarts decades beyond his 21 years. The Weekndâs songs mine virtually identical lyrical territory as early supporter/sort-of mentor Drake. However, most of the time they seem to exist in entirely different universes. When Drake airs his personal insecurities and tales of sexual regret, the overarching tone is one of longing for approval and understanding from the outside world. He asks whether heâs deserving of success not out of humility, but because he likes the sound of being reassured. Tesfaye, however, gives no @$!$* what we think about his coke-and-empty-hookups lifestyle. He doesnât care how most of the people in his songs view him. And a lot of the time, Iâm not even sure whether he cares what he thinks of himself. His music derives its power from its complete sense of detachment from any aspect of reality, something that allows him to be nakedly and brutally honest, consequences be damned. This defiant libertinism doesnât come at the expense of Tesfayeâs self-awareness. He explores every dark corner of his lifestyle with uncommon clarity and nuance. Both sonically and lyrically, the way he cycles through attitudes toward his actions over the three albums gives each one not only a thematic unity but helps them function as a larger narrative arc. House of Balloons is an out-and-out celebration of sexual danger and excess; the glee in his voice is palpable on âHouse of Balloons/Glass Table Girlsâ and âLoft Music.â By Thursday, Tesfaye isnât so much chasing thrills as maintaining status quo. Things donât truly start to go off the rails until âXO/The Host,â the fourth track on Echoes of Silence. The way he tells a prospective hookup, âIf they wonât let you in / you know where to find meâ is dripping with a terrifying mix of lust and insanity that lays plain Tesfayeâs imminent downward spiral. The batshit âInitiationâ and more resigned melancholy of âSame Old Songâ and âNextâ are a mere formality after that. His willingness to take risks manifested itself musically in the impossibly ballsy decision to open Echoes of Silence with a âDirty Dianaâ cover. But if his lyrics are anything close to reality, the fact that it took until album number three for the self-destruction to truly kick in is nearly as astounding as the music itself. The completeness and cohesion Tesfaye achieved with the Balloons trilogy makes his inevitable major-label debut both somewhat superfluous and utterly fascinating. The versatility of his voice and his association with Drake make him appear primed for pop superstardom. All the tools are there, but Iâm curious as to how itâll manifest itself. Iâm not sure whether Iâm giddy with excitement for, or utterly dreading, a future with Tesfaye as a pop hitmaker. Hearing him on Drakeâs âCrew Loveâ was weird enough â Drizzy appeared on Thursdayâs outstanding âThe Zone,â but it worked more as reinforcement of the songâs mood than as a feature on a heavily-hyped release by a heavily-hyped rapper. There were none of the peripheral trappings typical of a superstarâs guest appearance on an up-and-comerâs mixtape. When the album was released, the MP3 of âThe Zoneâ wasnât even tagged as â(feat. Drake).â On the other hand, the entire point of âCrew Loveâ is to establish Tesfaye as someone with whom marquee names should want to collaborate. But on his records, he exists completely outside of any world we could relate to, let alone one as self-referential and self-conscious as the modern-day pop-radio environment. If The Weeknd can carve out a niche for himself in the mainstream without actively making his music more palatable to pop audiences, itâll be a minor miracle. Or, he could flame out, either from all that coke he brags about doing or from the crushing weight of the expectations that are implied for someone doing this caliber of work this early on. If Tesfaye never recorded again, his legacy would be set. But more likely, his upcoming tour (including a pair of performances at Coachella that are all but guaranteed to be among the festivalâs most talked-about) will remove just enough of the mystery that surrounds him to raise his commercial profile, while retaining enough genuine excitement about his potential to set him up for a long and successful career. Heâs as exciting, fascinating, and singularly captivating as any newcomer in recent memory, and he doesnât even have a record deal yet. Letâs hope he sticks around for a while.
http://beatsperminute.com...appreciating-the-weeknd/
Nothing and nobody in the musical year of 2011 has stayed with me the way The Weeknd has. What upstart Toronto R&B crooner Abel Tesfaye pulled off over last twelve months is both truly remarkable and in some ways unprecedented. House of Balloons, Thursday, and Echoes of Silence, his three 2011 releases, were advertised as mixtapes, but that sells their worth as albums ridiculously short. Usually when someone mentions the release of a mixtape, I think of a DIY, thrown-together collection of tracks and song fragments. They can be very good, even great, but rarely do they exhibit the consistency and attention to detail that Tesfayeâs work does. That he put out three albums mere months apart that are both meticulously plotted and exhilaratingly rough-edged, before receiving industry backing of any kind outside of Drake tweeting a few of his lyrics, is mind-boggling. This is the kind of streak of high-quality albums we usually see from bands with established fan bases and widespread support, not the opening salvo of a kid that hasnât even been around long enough for the major labels to open a proper bidding war.
But for as much critical acclaim as Tesfaye has garnered (House of Balloons was a fixture on many publicationsâ year-end lists, including this one), I still feel like heâs somewhat underrated. To begin with, he has flat-out one of the most mesmerizing voices Iâve ever heard, and that isnât an exaggeration. Itâs an astonishing instrument thatâs like a cross between Michael Jackson and Jeff Buckley. And while that alone would be enough to justify the praise heâs earned, itâs the risks he takes with this voice that make him compelling. An asset of this caliber is something most would elect to leave well enough alone. But Tesfaye and producer Illangelo have no qualms about bending and melding it to the point of unrecognizability. That âGoneâ and âInitiation,â which feed Tesfaye through a litany of vocal filters, are as affecting as straightforward performances like âWicked Gamesâ and âThe Morningâ betrays a set of melodic smarts decades beyond his 21 years.
The Weekndâs songs mine virtually identical lyrical territory as early supporter/sort-of mentor Drake. However, most of the time they seem to exist in entirely different universes. When Drake airs his personal insecurities and tales of sexual regret, the overarching tone is one of longing for approval and understanding from the outside world. He asks whether heâs deserving of success not out of humility, but because he likes the sound of being reassured. Tesfaye, however, gives no @$!$* what we think about his coke-and-empty-hookups lifestyle. He doesnât care how most of the people in his songs view him. And a lot of the time, Iâm not even sure whether he cares what he thinks of himself. His music derives its power from its complete sense of detachment from any aspect of reality, something that allows him to be nakedly and brutally honest, consequences be damned.
This defiant libertinism doesnât come at the expense of Tesfayeâs self-awareness. He explores every dark corner of his lifestyle with uncommon clarity and nuance. Both sonically and lyrically, the way he cycles through attitudes toward his actions over the three albums gives each one not only a thematic unity but helps them function as a larger narrative arc. House of Balloons is an out-and-out celebration of sexual danger and excess; the glee in his voice is palpable on âHouse of Balloons/Glass Table Girlsâ and âLoft Music.â By Thursday, Tesfaye isnât so much chasing thrills as maintaining status quo. Things donât truly start to go off the rails until âXO/The Host,â the fourth track on Echoes of Silence. The way he tells a prospective hookup, âIf they wonât let you in / you know where to find meâ is dripping with a terrifying mix of lust and insanity that lays plain Tesfayeâs imminent downward spiral. The batshit âInitiationâ and more resigned melancholy of âSame Old Songâ and âNextâ are a mere formality after that. His willingness to take risks manifested itself musically in the impossibly ballsy decision to open Echoes of Silence with a âDirty Dianaâ cover. But if his lyrics are anything close to reality, the fact that it took until album number three for the self-destruction to truly kick in is nearly as astounding as the music itself.
The completeness and cohesion Tesfaye achieved with the Balloons trilogy makes his inevitable major-label debut both somewhat superfluous and utterly fascinating. The versatility of his voice and his association with Drake make him appear primed for pop superstardom. All the tools are there, but Iâm curious as to how itâll manifest itself. Iâm not sure whether Iâm giddy with excitement for, or utterly dreading, a future with Tesfaye as a pop hitmaker. Hearing him on Drakeâs âCrew Loveâ was weird enough â Drizzy appeared on Thursdayâs outstanding âThe Zone,â but it worked more as reinforcement of the songâs mood than as a feature on a heavily-hyped release by a heavily-hyped rapper. There were none of the peripheral trappings typical of a superstarâs guest appearance on an up-and-comerâs mixtape. When the album was released, the MP3 of âThe Zoneâ wasnât even tagged as â(feat. Drake).â On the other hand, the entire point of âCrew Loveâ is to establish Tesfaye as someone with whom marquee names should want to collaborate. But on his records, he exists completely outside of any world we could relate to, let alone one as self-referential and self-conscious as the modern-day pop-radio environment. If The Weeknd can carve out a niche for himself in the mainstream without actively making his music more palatable to pop audiences, itâll be a minor miracle.
Or, he could flame out, either from all that coke he brags about doing or from the crushing weight of the expectations that are implied for someone doing this caliber of work this early on. If Tesfaye never recorded again, his legacy would be set. But more likely, his upcoming tour (including a pair of performances at Coachella that are all but guaranteed to be among the festivalâs most talked-about) will remove just enough of the mystery that surrounds him to raise his commercial profile, while retaining enough genuine excitement about his potential to set him up for a long and successful career. Heâs as exciting, fascinating, and singularly captivating as any newcomer in recent memory, and he doesnât even have a record deal yet. Letâs hope he sticks around for a while.
Posts: 1801
01/31/12 11:07 AM
Posts: 10719
01/31/12 11:15 AM
Posts: 1803
01/31/12 11:47 AM
Posts: 4331
01/31/12 3:10 PM
Posts: 3231
01/31/12 3:49 PM
Posts: 1111
01/31/12 4:27 PM
coryturner wrote:Like real talk I never get tired of the song The Party & The After Party i play it 5 times a day
Share This