httpss://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lil6YUmxm0c

Thursday night, singer Frank Ocean released a long-awaited new work: Endless, available exclusively – at least for now – as a 45-minute film on Apple Music.

This is Ocean’s first studio project since his Channel Orange was released in 2012, the musician’s breakout year as a solo artist after his days as a member of the Odd Future collective and, prior to that, as a songwriter for artists like Justin Bieber, John Legend and Brandy.

Ocean himself has been feeding into the sentiment that his new project, thought to be titled Boys Don’t Cry, released instead as Endless, has been all too long in coming – and his team has been slyly building up anticipation for it, beginning with the image that greets visitors to the home page of the album’s website.

For the past week and change, the site has also carried an odd video of, for the most part, nothing remarkable – benches in a what look like a glaringly lit warehouse with an occasional appearance by Ocean, who seemed to be cutting or painting wood, and brief stretches of ambient or looped music.

All of it fueled the flames of Frank Ocean fans’ ardor.

Ocean’s deal with Apple appears to be the latest volley in the competition between subscription streaming services to stake claims to early-distribution deals with certain high-profile artists, as Beyonce, Kanye West and Rihanna did with their most recent albums on the platform of which they are all co-owners: Tidal.

These days, considering the constant and direct communication that many artists have with their fans on various social media channels, a four-year gap between releases seems like almost a generational divide.

Frank Ocean’s preferred platform has been Tumblr; it’s w he has written, searchingly, about his sexuality and, more recently, a meditation about the treatment of LGBT people in the U.S. and across the globe in this visibly violent year.

Frank Ocean