Unreleased The Weeknd Songs -
: A remix of the Lana Del Rey track that predates their official collaborations. Fan Favorites and Leaks
: Before the duo disbanded, it was rumored they recorded several more tracks with Abel beyond "Starboy" and "I Feel It Coming." 4. The Modern Era: After Hours Unreleased The Weeknd Songs
Before The Weeknd became a household name, he was just a young artist experimenting with his sound. In 2010, he released his debut mixtape, , which would eventually become a cult classic. However, there are a handful of early tracks that never made it to the mixtape. One such track is "The Party & the After Party" , a slow-burning, atmospheric jam that showcases The Weeknd's signature falsetto. This track has been floating around online for years, and its existence serves as a reminder of The Weeknd's early creative endeavors. : A remix of the Lana Del Rey
Kiss Land was The Weeknd’s paranoid, cyberpunk sophomore slump (a masterpiece to purists). During this era, he experimented heavily with J-pop aesthetics and horror movie synths. Several tracks from these sessions, like (a cover of the Eraserhead soundtrack), showcase a level of experimental dread he has rarely touched since. In 2010, he released his debut mixtape, ,
In the digital age, an artist’s “vault” has become as mythologized as their official discography. For fans of Abel Tesfaye, known professionally as The Weeknd, this shadow catalogue is not merely a collection of B-sides or demo scraps. It is a parallel universe. From the murky, haunted R&B of the House of Balloons era to the synth-wave grandeur of the After Hours sessions, the hundreds of unreleased tracks, leaks, and snippets circulating online offer a raw, unvarnished map of an artist’s psyche. For The Weeknd, these ghost tracks are not anomalies; they are the essential blueprints for his three defining themes: hedonism as trauma, the impossibility of escape, and the decay of fame.