ขณะที่แม้ The Weeknd หรืออาเบล ผลิตผลงานเพลงภายใต้ค่ายเพลงอิสระของตัวเอง และเลือกปล่อยผลงานให้คนฟังออนไลน์ได้ฟรี ๆ ในช่วงแรกของการเป็นศิลปิน
แต่หลังจากนั้น เขาก็เลือกนำค่ายเพลง มาร่วมทุนกับ Republic Records ค่ายเพลงยักษ์ใหญ่ในเครือ Universal Music Group (UMG) เพื่อรับการสนับสนุนด้านการจัดจำหน่ายและการตลาด
ซึ่งนับตั้งแต่อาเบลปล่อยมิกซ์เทปเล็ก 3 ชุดแรก ออกมาในปี 2011 ก็เป็นไวรัล และได้รับความนิยมอย่างรวดเร็ว โดยมีเพลงฮิตที่ใครหลายคนอาจรู้จัก อย่าง House of Balloons และ Wicked Game
How The Weeknd Leveraged His Hits to Raise $32 Billion Baht Without Selling His Music Rights /By Longtunman
The Weeknd, or Abel Makkonen Tesfaye, is the mastermind behind numerous massive hits such as "Blinding Lights," "Starboy," and "Die For You."
The sheer excellence of his music has garnered him a global audience of over 120 million monthly listeners on Spotify and generated record-breaking concert tour revenues.
If that wasn't impressive enough, another fascinating chapter in his career is how The Weeknd further capitalized on the value of his work, utilizing his catalog to raise over 30 billion baht.
How did The Weeknd pull this off?
Longtunman will break it down for you.
Great artistic work rarely happens without financial backing.
In the music industry, record labels play a vital role, handling production, marketing, and concert touring in exchange for a share of the artist's revenue.
This is the common starting point for countless artists.
In the case of The Weeknd, he initially produced his music under his own independent label and chose to release his tracks online for free during the early days of his career.
However, he later decided to form a joint venture between his label and Republic Records, a powerhouse label under Universal Music Group (UMG), to secure robust distribution and marketing support.
Since Abel dropped his first three mini-mixtapes in 2011, they went viral and rapidly gained popularity, featuring hits that many might recognize, such as "House of Balloons" and "Wicked Game."
As artists grow more famous, their avenues for generating income typically expand alongside their popularity.
For The Weeknd, this meant signing a deal with SONGS Music Publishing in 2013, just before the release of his first full-length studio album, to manage and collect songwriting royalties in exchange for a percentage of the revenue.
The portion of The Weeknd’s music catalog held by SONGS later changed hands, and today, approximately 50% of it is owned by Chord Music Partners.
From his debut studio album to the present day, The Weeknd has amassed a catalog of more than 200 songs.
These tracks have accumulated over 90 billion streams on Spotify, driven by megahits like "Blinding Lights," "Starboy," "Save Your Tears," "Die For You," and "The Hills."
This phenomenal success has made The Weeknd one of the artists with the highest number of billion-stream songs in the world.
Notably, "Blinding Lights" has become the most-streamed song in Spotify history, racking up over 5 billion streams.
These tens of billions of streams represent more than just widespread popularity—they translate into a continuous stream of recurring royalty revenue.
Because The Weeknd still owns approximately 50% of his music rights, he has several lucrative options to boost his income or raise massive amounts of capital to fund new creative projects, concert tours, or other business ventures.
The most common approach in the industry is selling an additional stake in one's music catalog to record labels or music investment funds in exchange for a massive lump sum of cash.
A prime example is Michael Jackson's estate, which chose to sell roughly 50% of his music catalog to Sony Music in a deal valued at around $625 million.
However, selling off more music rights means giving up future revenue streams.
It also means relinquishing a degree of control over how one's work is used, which is something many top-tier artists—including The Weeknd—wish to avoid.
This dilemma is exactly why The Weeknd chose to strike a joint venture agreement in late 2025 with Lyric Capital, a U.S. private equity firm specializing in music industry investments.
The funding structure was organized as follows:
1. An equity portion funded by Lyric Capital at 25%, valued at $250 million.
2. A debt portion structured via Royalty-Backed Notes (RBN) at 75%, valued at $750 million.
These Royalty-Backed Notes are a vital financial tool used for fundraising, managed under the supervision of Partners Group, a major investment institution based in Switzerland.
The debt instruments are backed by two main revenue streams that constitute the artist's assets:
- Rights to the master recordings.
- The artist's remaining 50% stake in the music publishing rights.
Meanwhile, the other 50% stake owned by Chord Music Partners is not included as an asset in this joint venture.
While an artist's annual income can fluctuate, Partners Group resolved this by structuring the notes into two tiers: a Senior tier, which has priority for payouts, and a Junior tier, which receives payouts after the Senior obligations are met.
Any remaining revenue after paying down the interest on the RBN goes directly to The Weeknd and Lyric Capital.
The ultimate result of leveraging these sophisticated financial instruments is that The Weeknd secured a massive capital injection of $1 billion—or roughly 32.6 billion baht—without selling off a single percentage of his music rights, while simultaneously retaining long-term operational control.
Furthermore, once the Royalty-Backed Notes are fully paid off, the entirety of the music catalog revenue will revert back fully to The Weeknd.
This enormous capital pool wasn't just left sitting in a bank; it is being actively deployed to fund new creative endeavors, business projects, and his global concert tour in 2026.
One of the major milestones of this tour is Thailand, which is set to host a massive stadium-scale production later this year, backed by an astronomical budget for lighting, sound, visuals, and stage design.
At the same time, The Weeknd's immense popularity was clearly reflected in Thailand's ticket sales, with both show dates completely selling out in the blink of an eye.
The case of The Weeknd serves as a crystal-clear reflection of the modern music industry—where behind a song of just a few minutes, or a concert lasting a few hours on stage,
lies a complex network of finance, investing, and tens of billions of baht in assets silently operating behind the music.