The weeknd starboy album cover
In case you have any issues please contact us first before leaving your feedback so we can resolve it in the best way for you. We tend to answer all the letters within 24 hours. Our priority is to provide the best customer service. Item will be shipped within 2-5 business days, and packaged in a poster tube or stiffened envelope, guaranteed to arrive in perfect condition. Colours may vary slightly due to different colour monitors. The weeknd releases his much anticipated single take my breath, the first from his forthcoming album as announced in his gq global cover story this week.Canadian singer, songwriter, actor and record producer The Weeknd gift fans his official Music Album for 2020.The Weeknd ‘Starboy’ (Tracklist & Album Cover) Just this time last year, we.Frame is not included, only the print will be shipped.We use Museum grade paper & Pigmented archival inks, which means it can be stored for a long time without turning yellow or fade even when exposed to sunlight regularly.Īvailable in a range of sizes - see dropdown menu. Our posters are printed on Premium Matte 180 gsm fine art paper using latest technology and environmentally friendly ink. Starboy received generally favorable reviews from critics and debuted at number one on the US Billboard 200, with 348,000 album-equivalent units, 209,000 of which were pure sales. This heavy cotton tee has the classic cotton look and feel. The album features guest appearances from Daft Punk, Lana Del Rey, Kendrick Lamar, and Future. Lets take a look to The Weeknd Starboy Album Cover T-Shirt for any size (S, M, XL, 2XL, 3XL ). It was released on November 25, 2016, through XO and Republic Records. It is the one track on this overlong, but unignorable album that just about manages to turn Tesfaye into yearning boyfriend material.Starboy is the third studio album by Canadian singer the Weeknd. The French robots return for I Feel It Coming, a sweet-natured coda to a mixed bag. Just as startling is the song’s amazing cheesewire electric guitar flurry. Much more convincing are the harder-hitting autobiographical tracks – chief among them the exceptional Sidewalks (“I ran out of tears when I was 18”), on which Kendrick Lamar lands a typically pulverising verse. He respects one woman, though: Lana Del Rey, who has a couple of cameos. What sounds like a tale of death-wish in-car fellatio rings truer: “Everybody said it would hurt in the end/ But I feel nothing,” sings Tesfaye on Ordinary Life. If the lengthy, 18-track Starboy has downsides, they are those puzzling tracks in which Tesfaye tries to persuade his listenership that he feels genuine emotions for girls when his entire canon attests otherwise. Instead, it’s a fairly standard R&B ballad, co-produced by Benny Blanco and Cashmere Cat, in which Tesfaye attempts to claw his way towards a sensitive loverman persona. Watch MANIA, a short film featuring tracks from Starboy.īy this point you’re almost expecting a song called True Colors to sample Cyndi Lauper. According to Tesfaye, the song began life as a country tune it also quotes 80s pop bagatelle Talking In Your Sleep by the Romantics. Tesfaye has always been musically omnivorous, sampling Siouxsie and the Banshees for House of Balloons/Glass Table Girls Starboy’s most ardent fanboy moment, the lower-register gem Secrets, finds him working with Roland Orzabal, and sampling Tears for Fears. Once again, Tesfaye brings his A-game Michael Jackson tics, but also takes his famed falsetto down a couple of octaves. Tesfaye, a formerly shadowy small-hours auteur, collaborated with glitzy super-producer Max Martin for the Weeknd’s breakout hit of 2015, Can’t Feel My Face, and Martin is back on board with this track – a rubber-coated party tune that out-synth-funks Daft Punk. Just as startling is its cheesewire electric guitar flurryīy now, Starboy’s electric collaboration with Daft Punk has lodged some of the Weeknd’s intentions firmly in the airwaves, and there’s another huge tune waiting in the wings – a jaw-dropper called Rockin’. Kendrick Lamar lands a pulverising verse on Sidewalks. Abel Tesfaye may play at being ambivalent about his superstar status, but his third album still has mainstream massiveness firmly in its crosshairs, with even more overt pop influences to the fore. Recorded music doesn’t make much money – touring does.Ī year on from Beauty Behind the Madness, his Grammy-winning, US triple-platinum pop rebirth, Starboy shows off the fruits of a solid business decision. C anadian R&B singer the Weeknd pulled out of Rihanna’s European tour back in March to record more music – a move that flew in the face of contemporary pop economics.