Kanye West has now officially changed his name to "Ye."- The Los Angeles Superior Court confirmed the change to Rolling Stone.
Kanye West has officially changed his name to "Ye."
The Los Angeles Superior Court confirmed the change to Rolling Stone, after Judge Michelle Williams Court signed off on his petition. He filed the papers for the name change in August and cited "personal reasons" for wanting the new name.
The 44-year-old rapper first discussed changing his name with a tweet in September 2018. He said: "The being formally known as Kanye West I am YE."
-ye (@kanyewest) September 29, 2018
Ye - pronounced "yay" - has long been the rapper's nickname and was even the title of his 2018 album.
California only requires that names be formed from the 26 letters of the English alphabet, as Insider's Cheryl Teh previously reported. In a 2018 interview with the radio host Big Boy, he explained the meaning of the word Ye and why he liked it.
"I believe 'ye' is the most commonly used word in the Bible, and in the Bible, it means 'you,'" he said. "So I'm you, I'm us, it's us. It went from Kanye, which means 'the only one,' to just Ye - just being a reflection of our good, our bad, our confused, everything."
Ye has also made headlines this week for his appearance. On Monday, the rapper debuted a new avant-garde hairstyle, which seemingly features a series of random shapes styled across his head with a picture on his Instagram. The rapper captioned the post with the Japanese Yen symbol.
Earlier this year, Ye released his long-awaited 10th studio album Donda following several delays. The 27-track album - which is named after the rapper's late mother Donda West - is 108 minutes long. The album topped the Billboard 200 list and set a new first-day streaming record, which was promptly broken by Canadian rapper Drake who released his latest album "Certified Lover Boy" on September 3.