Unreleased The Weeknd Songs ((full)) May 2026
The Weeknd's Vault: A Deep Dive into His Unreleased Music
The Pop Transition: Starboy & My Dear Melancholy, Outtakes
Between 2015 and 2017, The Weeknd became a global phenomenon. The pressure to produce hits meant many introspective tracks were left on the cutting room floor. Unreleased The Weeknd Songs
Exploring the hidden side of Abel Tesfaye’s catalog reveals a world of dark, atmospheric demos and scrapped concepts that never made it to official platforms The Weeknd's Vault: A Deep Dive into His
However, the existence of this vault creates a complex relationship between the artist and his audience. The Weeknd has famously expressed frustration over leaks, calling them a violation of his creative process. There is a valid argument that consuming these tracks is an act of theft, robbing the artist of the context and sequencing he intended. Listening to “Take Me Back to LA” as a grainy SoundCloud rip is a vastly different experience than hearing it transition seamlessly into “Dawn FM.” Yet, for the devoted fan, these ghosts are irresistible. They represent a version of The Weeknd that isn't performing for the Super Bowl halftime show, but one still bleeding out on the bathroom floor of a Toronto nightclub. "Enemy" : Perhaps the most famous unreleased Weeknd
- "Enemy" : Perhaps the most famous unreleased Weeknd song of all time. It finally saw a semi-official release on the Kiss Land 5-year anniversary edition, but for years, it existed only as a grainy YouTube rip. The song is a masterpiece of tension, featuring a frantic beat and Abel singing about paranoia.
- "Our Love" (feat. Ricky Hil) : A duet that explores co-dependency. While it leaked in 2014, the production quality suggests it was nearly finished for the album.
- "I Don't Need Love" : A somber piano ballad that sounds nothing like the rest of Kiss Land. It shows that Abel was experimenting with a stripped-back sound years before "Call Out My Name."
- Source matters: Most legitimate leaks come from group buys on forums like The Weeknd’s subreddit or Leaked.cx (proceed with caution). If the song sounds like it was recorded in a tin can, it’s likely a real demo. If it sounds too clean but "feels" wrong, it might be an AI vocal overlay.
- The "Legend of the Fall" sessions: After Dawn FM, Abel claimed he recorded three albums' worth of material. As of 2025, only one (The Idol soundtrack) has surfaced. The other two remain the ultimate white whales for collectors.
- Avoid YouTube "Mashups": Search results are often flooded with fan edits that splice unreleased vocals onto mainstream beats. These are not real unreleased songs.