Baptized In Fear

Album: Hurry Up Tomorrow (2025)
Charted: 46
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Songfacts®:

  • "Baptized in Fear" is not what you'd call a lighthearted listen. Recorded by The Weeknd for his album Hurry Up Tomorrow, the track plunges straight into the deep end - quite literally - with an opening scene of near-drowning in a bathtub. The Weeknd finds himself paralyzed, overwhelmed by guilt and fear as the water rises around him. In case that wasn't unsettling enough, he then declares himself the "chief of sin," borrowing language straight from Saint Paul, a man who knew a thing or two about redemption after spending his early years persecuting Christians.
  • If this song's title and lyrical content didn't already hint at the album's heavy Christian symbolism, The Weeknd made sure to hammer the point home. On July 7, 2024, he posted an image of Saint Paul alongside the phrase, "The present humanity is frail, deteriorating and weak, but to share eternal life the bodies must be transformed" (2 Corinthians 1-10). This was a clue to some of the album's themes: mortality, sin, redemption and rebirth.
  • Musically, "Baptized in Fear" is a collaboration between The Weeknd, Oneohtrix Point Never, Nathan Salon, and Mike Dean.

    Avant-garde electronic composer Oneohtrix Point Never, real name Daniel Lopatin, contributed to 12 tracks on Hurry Up Tomorrow. He was The Weeknd's Super Bowl halftime show music director in 2021.

    Mike Dean, known for his work with Kanye West, Travis Scott, and 2Pac, mastered the entire album and co-produced 18 tracks.

    This is Nathan Salon's first time working with a major artist, a break he likely got thanks to Oneohtrix, having mixed his 2023 album A Barely Lit Path.
  • Lyrically, the song is a stew of personal turmoil, biblical allusions, and existential dread. The Weeknd is drawing from several wells of inspiration:

    Near-death experience: The song's opening scene suggests a real-life brush with mortality -perhaps a drug-induced episode or an unsettlingly vivid nightmare.

    Struggles with substance abuse: Hallucinations and paranoia creep into the lyrics, a recurring theme in The Weeknd's past work.

    Guilt and regret: There's a sense of trying to "right wrongs," with the singer wrestling with his past indulgences.

    Religious symbolism: With its references to baptism and Saint Paul, the song seems to question whether redemption is even possible.

    Fame's pressures: The repeated line "Voices'll tell me that I should carry on" hints at the weight of public expectations and his own inner conflict about continuing under The Weeknd persona (Abel Tesfaye said Hurry Up Tomorrow would be his final album under his The Weeknd moniker).
  • Directed by Trey Edward Shults, the eerie video conveys the song's exploration of fear, guilt, and the elusive quest for redemption. It's visually linked to the themes and style of the Hurry Up Tomorrow album and its companion film, which Shults also directed.

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