PGM

Hurry Up Tomorrow

Album • Jan 31, 2025 • 22 songs, 1h 24m 49s
Hiphopheads 3k+ Pitchfork 7.8/10 The Needle Drop 8/10 NME 4/5 Rolling Stone 3.5/5 The Independent 5/5 All Music 3/5 Exclaim! 6/10 Clash 9/10 Slant 3/5 The Guardian 3/5 Spectrum Culture 65% music OMH 2/5 The Telegraph 4/5 The Irish Times 2/5 The Arts Desk 3/5
Abel Tesfaye gives his sordid, heartbroken pop-star persona a long, opulent finale: He’s going out on top by hitting rock bottom.
Abel Tesfaye has hinted this record could mark the end of his world-conquering alter ego. If that’s true, his sixth album makes for a fitting – and intriguing – swansong
The Weeknd's 'Hurry Up Tomorrow' Review
It would be easy to dismiss this 22-track album as indulgent – but the Canadian artist born Abel Tesfaye has created a fitting and astonishingly ambitious final score for his brooding alter-ego
Is this The Weeknd’s final chapter? The lead-in to ‘Hurry Up Tomorrow’ has found Abel Tesfaye in fatalistic mood, contemplating the end of his
On 'Hurry Up Tomorrow,' Abel Tesfaye is tired of the Weeknd, and after a while, the listener starts to feel it too.
On a somewhat exhausting sixth album, Abel Tesfaye uses Brazilian funk, punishing house and lush 70s soul to press great songs into the service of rotten lyrics
The Weeknd’s concept album about death is dark, banal and self-absorbed, yet there is no denying his talent. Plus, Gary Kemp and Cymande
Abel Tesfaye’s ever-ratcheting anxiety becomes overwhelming, then numbing over 22 tracks and 80 minutes