A new chapter for the Weeknd is underway. Do you feel it coming?
A week after saying he was ready to move on from his stage persona, the Grammy-winning singer surprised his fans Monday when he changed his name on social media to his birth name, Abel Tesfaye.
“why have you changed your display name what’s going on here @theweeknd,” one user tweeted.
“the weeknd is changing his name ??,” a second fan wrote.
“WHY IS THE WEEKND REMOVING HIS STAGE NAME FROM ALL HIS SOCIALS WHATS HAPPENING?!!,” a third user tweeted.
The name change was met with mixed reaction and jokes, but it’s a move Tesfaye seems to have been thinking about for a while now. Earlier this month, Tesfaye told W Magazine that he was on a “cathartic path” and reconsidering his presentation.
“It’s getting to a place and a time where I’m getting ready to close the Weeknd chapter. I’ll still make music, maybe as Abel, maybe as the Weeknd,” he said.
Tesfaye continued: “But I still want to kill the Weeknd. And I will. Eventually. I’m definitely trying to shed that skin and be reborn.”
According to the interview, Tesfaye’s Weeknd was a “character he created at the start of his career.”
The character aspect to the Weeknd became more evident in recent years, when the Canadian singer-songwriter appeared at several awards shows with a bright red suit jacket, a bloody nose and bandages — as was the case at the 2020 MTV Music Video Awards and the 2020 American Music Awards.
He even brought the look all the way to the 2021 Super Bowl in Tampa, Fla. — remember all those Weeknd clones?
Tesfaye told W that his ability to perform as the Weeknd began to waver once he started acting on the forthcoming HBO series “The Idol,” in which he stars alongside Lily-Rose Depp as a nightclub promoter named Tedros.
“It was tough to go from one head to another. Then, after the concert, I lost my voice. No voice came out at all,” he said, referring to a September 2022 concert at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood. “That’s never happened before. My theory is that I forgot how to sing because I was playing Tedros, a character who doesn’t know how to sing.”
In a matter of weeks, Tesfaye will debut as Tedros in “The Idol.” And for now it seems fans will have to get used to seeing “Abel Tesfaye” on their social media timelines — whether or not they embrace the change.
This story originally appeared on LA Times