As the Weekndâs new album, Dawn FM ⌠dawns, so have the fan theories. Abel Tesfaye has never shied from drawing on his personal life in his music â remember My Dear Melancholy and all its Selena Gomez references? Still, one particular song on Dawn FM surprised fans with its lyrics: âI Heard Youâre Married.â Sound like a shot at the Weekndâs âSave Your Tearsâ and âoff the tableâ collaborator Ariana Grande? The same Ariana Grande whom fans often theorize dated the Weeknd and who indeed got married last year as the Weeknd prepped the follow-up to his 2020 smash, After Hours. So did the Weeknd and Ari hook up â and did he save his tears about the split for his new album? And on top of it all, how does Angelina Jolie fit into this mess?! Letâs break it down.
What is âI Heard Youâre Marriedâ about?
Nothing good, thatâs for sure! The Weeknd saves some of his biggest punches for one of the final songs on Dawn FM, on which he sings about being in âa flingâ with a woman whoâs already taken. âIt hurts to think Iâm sharinâ you,â he sings in the first verse. Later, he goes on to state things more plainly: âWhy you even with him if youâre cheatinâ?â he asks his partner. As the song goes on, he has decided to leave the affair, telling the girl in question, âI canât be with you / Youâre too deceiving, girl.â Sorry to this woman!
Okay, but how is it about Ariana Grande?
The Weeknd doesnât make the subject of âI Heard Youâre Marriedâ too explicit, but itâs definitely possible to read between the lines. First, we know the Weekndâs two highest-profile exes (not to mention some of his favorite lyrical topics), Bella Hadid and Selena Gomez, are not married. That opens the door to some speculation as to other women the Weeknd could have been involved with ⌠including Grande. After collaborating on the sensual 2014 duet âLove Me Harder,â the two reconnected in 2020 for âoff the table,â another duet for Grandeâs album positions, widely seen as a proclamation of love to her then-new boo, Dalton Gomez. About half a year later, in April 2021, Grande hopped onto a remix of the Weekndâs After Hours single âSave Your Tears.â By that point, she was engaged to Gomez, just weeks away from her eventual intimate wedding and, theoretically, could have been intimate with the Weeknd, too. (And howâd he hear she was married? Well, he liked the Insta post, for starts.) The two went on to perform âSave Your Tearsâ at the iHeartRadio Music Awards in late May and released a Vevo live performance of âoff the tableâ in July, both reportedly after Grandeâs wedding.
Not buying it? Letâs look at the text. The sleuths at Genius say the early line âYou manifested this, but girl, I blame myselfâ could be a reference to Grandeâs positions song âjust like magic,â which also touches on manifesting (in her case, âgood karmaâ). Some stans also say that âtoo good to be trueâ line in the chorus could be pulling from a favorite saying of Ariâs, which appears on songs like âpositionsâ (âYouâre just too good to be trueâ) and âsomeone like uâ (âBaby this time, please donât be too good to be trueâ), both also off positions. Perhaps the most convincing piece of evidence, though, or at least the most head-turning coincidence: The Weekndâs song features Lil Wayne, who previously worked with Grande on âLet Me Love You,â an ode to single loving off her 2016 album, Dangerous Woman. Could that song have been about the Weeknd? The jury remains out.
Does the Weeknd sing about Grande anywhere else on Dawn FM?
Hereâs where things get fuzzier. Some fans have latched on to other Dawn FM lyrics as references to Grande, but not all of those check out. On the albumâs first proper song, âGasoline,â for instance, the Weeknd sings, âIâm dozing off to R.E.M. / Iâm trying not to lose my faith.â And sure, Grande has a song and a beauty line called âr.e.m.â But the next line is the important part â thatâs a reference to âLosing My Religion,â by the widely influential rock band R.E.M., which shares the darker sonic palette the Weeknd uses on Dawn FM. Sometimes itâs just not that deep.
Elsewhere, on the song âHere We Go ⌠Again,â the Weeknd addresses an ex whoâs with a new, less famous man. âYour girlfriendâs tryna pair you with somebody more famous / But instead you ended up with someone so basic, faceless,â he sings. Now, this could also be the Weekndâs confirmed ex Bella Hadid, whoâs currently dating a dude not many people know by face or name, art director Marc Kalman. But letâs go back a few lines before, where the Weeknd is singing about living large after his Super Bowl performance. âSaid you wanted your boyfriend jealous with a couple pics,â he seriously sings. âAnd you didnât expect to fall for me once you got this dick.â At the time, Grande would have been engaged to Gomez â a noncelebrity real-estate agent â and working on the âSave Your Tearsâ remix with the Weeknd. Could that have been part of a stunt Grande pulled on Gomez that escalated? If so, the Weeknd goes on to sing on âHere We Go ⌠Againâ that he doesnât care. âMy new girl, she a movie star,â he sings in the same verse, throwing in a seeming confirmation of his rumored relationship with Angelina Jolie. The real buried lede here!
Oh, and one more note on movie stars: The Weekndâs album, formatted as a radio broadcast, is narrated by none other than Jim Carrey as a DJ. If the Weeknd is singing about a split from Grande, that detail could be salt in the wound considering her own well-documented friendship with the comedian.
But what has Grande said about all of this?
Nothing yet. The pop star didnât congratulate her (former?) friend on the release of his new album on Instagram. But contrary to some reports, she also didnât unfollow him on Instagram. Remember, sheâs no longer gracing us with her Twitter presence. Mrs. Grande seems to be content living her quiet, married life at the moment.