“Go tell your friends about it”, Canadian artist Abel Tesfaye croons on track three of latest album ‘Beauty Behind the Madness’. Indeed, it’s an album which boasts amorality, self-absorption and an insensate panorama of life. It is not the first of Tesfaye’s works; this is his second album and fifth collection of songs following three mix tapes and début album ‘Kiss Land’. But whilst ‘Kiss Land’ was a moderate success, it is latest offering ‘Beauty Behind the Madness’ that has captured the public’s attention. Largely propelled by huge single ‘Earned It’, certified platinum in the United Kingdom and best known for being featured in this years Fifty Shades of Grey movie, The Weeknd is fastly becoming the latest R&B sensation to hit the commercial music scene.
‘Beauty Behind the Madness’ adopts a nothing-to-hide approach, presenting themes such as no-strings-attached sex, drug usage, self destruction, the pursuit of fame and disloyal women amongst an eclectic amalgamation of thumping hip-hop beats, shiny brass instruments, syrupy-rich layered harmonies, funky bass lines and weeping guitars. It is a descent into melancholic psychedelia but one which thankfully avoids over-saturation through clever production and an assortment of genres.
Much of the album is an 80’s impelled anthology. ‘Real Life’ opens with irate synthesisers and crashing beats whilst ‘Losers’, a duet with Labrinth, utilises the piano in a similar fashion to Kanye West’s ‘Heartless’. Much of the album continues in the same way; eerie reverberations, clever production and Tesfaye’s angelic vocals smother symphonic scores. ‘As You Are’ borrows ’80’s gated pummelled percussion and clinking synthesisers with more reverberation than the dark side itself. It’s one of the album’s triumphant successes, however; a theatrical sound-scape in which Tesfaye vows to take his lover as they are, scars and all. ‘In The Night’ utilises a shuffle rhythm, growling bass and an irresistibly catchy melody.
Other moments slant heavily into hip-hop territory; ‘Often’ is comprised of a mesh of shrill sound-effects and Tesfaye’s salacious admission of doing it ‘often’. Lead single ‘The Hills’ is a song with instrumentation so precarious, it is a direct reflection of its lyrical content; a narrative about a plummeting sexual relationship. One of the more successful hip-hop tracks is ‘Tell Your Friends’ – a song so rife with hubris, Kanye West would be envious. It comes as no surprise, then, that Mr West himself is responsible for the production of this gentle R&B jam. Fluttering synthesisers and jazzy staccato piano chords make this track reminiscent of West’s ‘808’s and Heartbreak’ album. Whilst the album’s abundance of remarks such as ‘these b*****s’, these ‘n*****s’ and comments upon genitalia don’t come as a surprise, they are not the most fitting complement to Tesfaye’s innocent falsetto whispers. At times the contrast between the two becomes a little unnerving.
Thankfully, the sullen nature of the album is broken up by the odd injection of pop; the primary method Tesfaye has captured the public’s attention is through the selection of radio-friendly singles. Bleak waltz-ballad ‘Earned It’ known for its inclusion in the Fifty Shades of Grey movie is still captivating with its dramatic orchestration and sacharine sweet vocals. It is still as fierce as it was upon release. Still, even the pop moments disguise darker undertones; latest single ‘I Can’t Feel My Face’ is an ode to Tesfaye’s love of sex and cocaine, cleverly obscured by its radio-friendly pop sound. Co-written by songwriting genius Max Martin (the mastermind behind hits by Britney Spears, The Backstreet Boys and Katy Perry amongst countless others), Tesfaye does his best imitation of the King of Pop, drizzling his falsetto-ridden vocals over a funky bass line and tight percussion. It’s catchy, slick and pop music at its best. ‘Who’s gonna f*** you like me?” Tesfaye pines on saturnine acoustic guitar ballad ‘Shameless’. It’s another of the more pop-py moments on the album but one which works beautifully, complete with a warped guitar solo.
Tesfaye depends greatly on mainstream pop individuals on this album, enlisting Ed Sheeran, Lana Del Ray, Labrinth and Kanye West to name a few. ‘Dark Times’, a collaboration with Sheeran is a sulky waltz-like track in the same vein as ‘Earned It’ whilst the Lana Del Ray duet never quite reaches the heights it could. Nevertheless, the collaborations have resulted in an enthralling assortment of tracks.
It’s a dark, moody, seductive and powerful album, an innovative addition to the music industry.
Rating: 5/5.
‘Beauty Behind the Madness’ is out now on XO-Rebulic Records.
