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The Weeknd's Quotes About His Life and Music in Variety

The Weeknd Opens Up About the Darkest Time in His Life and His Album After Hours in Rare Interview

He felt it was important to revisit his demons and let his guard down on After Hours. "I didn't want to, but sometimes you try to run away from who you are, and you always get back to that place. By the end of this album, you realize, 'I'm not that person.' I was, but I'm growing and wiser, and I'm gonna have children someday, and I'm going to tell them they don't have to be that person," he explained. "You could hear the vulnerability in the music before, but there was such a shield, such a f*ck you to the world, and now I'm very comfortable with letting the world know that I can be that way."
  "Faith" is about the darkest time in The Weeknd's life. "So, ['Faith'] is about the darkest time of my entire life, around 2013, 2014. I was getting really, really tossed up and going through a lot of personal stuff. I got arrested in Vegas. It was a real rock-star era, which I'm not really proud of," he said. "You hear sirens at the end the song — that's me in the back of the cop car, that moment. I always wanted to make that song but I never did, and this album felt like the perfect time, because [the character] is looking for an escape after a heartbreak or whatever. I wanted to be that guy again — the 'Heartless' guy who hates God and is losing his f*cking religion and hating what he looks like in the mirror, so he keeps getting high. That's who this song is."
  He got Elton John's seal of approval for "Scared to Live" (which features an interpolation of Elton's "Your Song"). "Before I played it for Elton, I was like, 'F*ck, I hope he likes it.' But he was freakin' — he was like, 'Mate, you're gonna be doing this for a long time!'" Elton added, "[The Weeknd] has his own unique artistic voice — that's the hallmark of a genuinely great, long-term artist. I'm utterly thrilled that the DNA for 'Your Song' has found its way into 'Scared to Live.' It's the greatest compliment a songwriter can ever receive."
Image Source: Variety / Pari Dukovic

We're not used to seeing The Weeknd give interviews, but he seems to have had a change of heart coming into 2020. After gracing the cover of Carine Roitfeld's CR Men March issue, the 30-year-old R&B crooner recently sat down for another interview with Variety. Yep, that's two interviews in nearly five years! That's a pretty big deal for The Weeknd. In the April issue, he talked about everything from ringing in his birthday with Jim Carrey to his After Hours album, which is filled to the brim with references to his ex Bella Hadid.

The Weeknd was originally set to hit the road later this year for his After Hours Tour. Things were supposed to kick off on June 11 with stops all across the US, Canada, the UK, Belgium, the Netherlands, Germany, and France, but the dates are now being moved around due to the novel coronavirus pandemic. "The tour is still happening — we're not canceling. We just have to rearrange the dates, which is unfortunate but certainly understandable," The Weeknd said. While we wait for the new dates to be announced, read ahead for everything we learned about The Weeknd, straight from the artist himself.

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