Echoes of Silence

"[13] Kyle Anderson of Entertainment Weekly wrote "Tesfaye's velvety melodies infuse his trippy minimalism like incense smoke, getting lost only on the too-woozy title track.

"[14] Alexis Petridis of The Guardian said "the dragging beats, washes of synthesizer and eclectic musical references – chillwave and crunk hip-hop, Aaliyah and France Gall – somehow contrive to sound not just eerie and desolate but cosseting as well, inexorably drawing the listener into a deeply troubling world.

"[16] Andrew Ryce of Pitchfork called Echoes of Silence "a strong finish to Tesfaye's first trilogy, providing just enough closure to satisfy, and just enough mystery left to entice us back for the next round.

"[17] Jon Dolan of Rolling Stone wrote "the Weeknd has helped make R&B a creepier place, crooning too-honest come-ons over cavernous, ballad-slow tracks that balance leering sensuality with vague menace.

"[18] In a mixed review, Matthew Cole of Slant Magazine said "disappointing as Echoes of Silence may be as a collection of songs, it nonetheless serves its purpose in giving the Weeknd's triptych a suitably grim finale.