The Weeknd’s dreamy new album <i>Dawn FM</i> is the Grammy Awards' worst nightmare. With the Canadian pop star continuing to <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/arts-culture/music/the-weeknd-s-grammys-boycott-continues-despite-latest-rule-change-the-trust-has-been-broken-1.1216270" target="_blank">boycott the competition</a>, the 2023 ceremony is set to run again without arguably one of the year’s best releases in contention. It was at last year's Grammy's that The Weeknd’s critically lauded album <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/arts-culture/music/is-the-weeknd-s-after-hours-the-first-great-quarantine-pop-album-of-the-year-1.995181" target="_blank"><i>After Hours</i></a><i> </i>sensationally received no nominations. Not only did this spur the artist’s walkout from the competition, but it<a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/arts-culture/music/the-grammy-awards-vows-to-take-a-hard-look-to-improve-following-the-weeknd-s-boycott-1.1183358" target="_blank"> led to a raft of new changes</a> from the Grammys' committee resulting in a more representative awards field. Hopefully there is time for a truce, because while <i>Dawn FM </i>is not a guaranteed shoe-in for Grammys domination, it is destined to be a <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/arts-culture/music/2022/01/04/10-of-the-most-anticipated-albums-of-2022-from-the-weeknd-to-rihanna/" target="_blank">major music talking point of 2022</a>. The Weeknd’s fifth album is both a sonic and thematic follow-up to <i>After Hours</i>. It also has him riding the cinematic and retro synth-pop sounds first explored in 2016’s <i>Star Boy</i> to its zenith. This is immortalised by the A-list personnel behind the new project, from Swedish pop maestro <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/arts-culture/music/the-most-important-man-in-pop-music-is-someone-you-ve-probably-never-heard-of-1.811719" target="_blank">Max Martin</a> and EDM trio Swedish House Mafia to US producer and film composer Daniel Lopatin, who goes by Oneohtrix Point Never, or OPN. <i>Dawn FM </i>is presented as a mysterious radio station to be listened to amid gridlocked traffic. The host is none other than actor and fellow Canuck <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/arts-culture/television/jim-carrey-quits-as-joe-biden-on-snl-9-other-comedians-who-portrayed-politicians-on-sketch-show-1.1131928" target="_blank">Jim Carrey</a>, whose somewhat anguished pleas to “accept your fate with open arms” echoes some of the fraught insecurities of his character in the 2004 film <i>Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind.</i> While these interjections and fake commercials ultimately sound gimmicky, they don’t take away from the appeal of the 16 tracks, a near half-half mix of shuddering neon-lit club stompers and exquisite balladry recalling Michael Jackson’s <i>Off the Wall </i>era – indeed, that album’s producer, Quincy Jones, appears on <i>Dawn FM </i>for a spoken-word interlude about relationship failures. While we are familiar with the chart-conquering single <i>Take My Breath</i>, the album has more chart firepower in store with <i>How Do I Make You Love Me?</i> and <i>Sacrifice.</i> The former is the kind of burbling synth-pop bliss reminiscent of the 1980s heyday of Depeche Mode, while <i>Sacrifice</i> is anchored by a buoyant funk guitar loop guaranteed to keep dance floors heaving. <i>Dawn FM</i> also benefits from OPN’s growing involvement in The Weeknd’s work. After first collaborating on three of <i>After Hours'</i>s tracks, the producer, who has worked with English experimental pop artist FKA Twigs and composed the score for the Adam Sandler film <i>Uncut Gems</i>, lends his abstract and cinematic sensibilities to a lion’s share of <i>Dawn FM</i>. The best of which is <i>Gasoline</i>, an ethereal disco jam where the cold robotic beats are matched by The Weeknd singing in a vague British staccato resembling David Byrne from The Talking Heads. While production is impressive overall, it is the overarching lyrical narrative fans will really soak up. Where <i>After Hours </i>had the singer applying the blowtorch to himself and admitting to the faults and hurts caused by his "King of Toxic Romance" status, <i>Dawn FM</i> is about the wisdom that comes with that acceptance. It’s the kind of self-knowledge only maturity can achieve, something alluded to with the greying image of the singer on the album cover. In the sensitive ballad <i>Out of Time, </i>The Weeknd reflects on the lessons learnt from a doomed relationship: "The last few months, I've been working on me, baby. There's so much trauma in my life," he croons. "I regret I didn't tell you. Now I can't keep you from loving him. You made up your mind." It is a line of thinking followed through in the equally lush <i>Starry Eyes,</i> where he seizes the initiative: “Let me love you like you need and I'll make it my responsibility. I'll be there every step of the way.” Then again, with The Weeknd, happiness is a relative concept. The emotional tension coursing throughout his career comes from that eternal strive for contentment and the existential fear of its loss once attained. It is summed up in <i>Dawn FM</i>’s closing number <i>Less than Zero</i>. Its sheer melodic euphoria<i> </i>is undercut by The Weeknd’s agitation by what these positive vibes mean. “I can't shake this feeling that crawls in my bed, I try to hide it,” he says in the final verse. “But I know you know me, I try to fight it, but I'd rather be free.” Where <i>After Hours </i>was the first great quarantine pop album, <i>Dawn FM</i> is the soundtrack of a troubled artist and world slowly finding their feet again.