ReportWire

Tag: Beyoncé Renaissance

  • INTERVIEW: Ink Spills All About Her ‘BIG BUSKIN’’ EP, ‘Sweet Tea,’ & More!

    If you think you’ve never heard Ink, we guarantee you that you’re wrong! This GRAMMY-nominated songwriter has already made it onto your playlists with songs like Beyoncé’s ‘16 CARRIAGES,’ Kendrick Lamar & SZA’s ‘luther,’ and Lay Bankz’s ‘Tell Ur Girlfriend.’ But now, she’s proudly stepping onto the stage with her own narratives and voice on her debut EP, BIG BUSKIN’, which proves that Ink is a vital storyteller defining this generation in music. We need music that connects and transforms us more than ever, and she has the perfect pen for the job.

    Across 13 songs, Ink throws a moving ‘Hoedown’ that walks us through her love story with music, her views on persistence and tough times, and the passion that’s carried her through life. “They can steal your style, but they can’t steal your story,” she muses on the spoken opener, ‘Inktro,’ over a western-inspired soundscape. At the heart of each song lies Ink’s authenticity and pure, all-encompassing love for the music she makes, especially on emotive tracks like the incredible ‘God’s Been Drinkin’.’ Even the EP title is an ode to her love for her craft – some of her earliest musical pursuits involved busking and learning how to make her storytelling as moving as possible, and the ‘Tony Machine on 42nd’ interlude tells the story of one of those performances. 

    The hell with all that BS — press play and find out — real music is back!

    Ink

    We’re ‘Comin’ Back’ from our listening experience with some extra sweet news: we got to ask Ink all about BIG BUSKIN’, writing her truth, and her biggest inspirations! Press play on BIG BUSKIN’ then keep reading to learn more about the project from the musical genius who created it.

    Hey Ink, congratulations on the EP release! What has it been like for you to drop it and see how much fans are loving it?
    It’s been incredible to drop the EP! Finally being able to say it’s out now is surreal.

    There are so many thoughtful lyrics on your standout single ‘Sweet Tea,’ with one of our favorites being “we can’t take it back, so really we gotta live again.” Which line from the song are you most proud of?
    “Yeah, my granny never even cuss ‘til she got Alzheimer’s / Uh, real GOAT, greatest of all timers.”

    The ‘Sweet Tea’ music video includes so many sweet home movie clips and throwback moments. What was it like for you to revisit so many memories for the song and video?
    It was the best part about it. It just took me back down memory lane. It felt so good to be back home and just have the spirit of my family and those that aren’t here anymore still be there to celebrate.

    We’re so excited about your debut BIG BUSKIN’ EP! Which song were you most hyped for fans to hear and why? Which tracks are the most meaningful to you?
    They’re all meaningful to me, but I’m most hyped for fans to hear ‘Sweet Tea’ because they get to hear a little about the fam, and ‘All I Got’ since it really summarizes the EP. Plus all the inkerludes!

    Inspired by ‘Turquoise Cowboy,’ which color do you think best matches the energy of BIG BUSKIN’?
    Turquoise with a little wood grain.

    The BIG BUSKIN’ title nods to your own experiences busking around Atlanta, which you’ve described as “resilience in motion.” What’s something you learned during that phase of your musical journey that you’ve taken with you as you’ve grown?
    The world is a beautiful place, you’ve just gotta choose to see it.

    In your recent INKtionary post on Instagram, you listed one of the definitions of BIG BUSKIN’ as “to live loud, global, and unapologetic – outlaw energy with superstar reach.” How do you stay true to yourself and your roots as your star rises?
    I just carry on the memory of the places I’ve been and the people I’ve met as I go. I take my boots off, get my feet in the grass, and connect to nature.

    Alongside your own work, you have writing credits on iconic songs like Kendrick Lamar & SZA’s ‘luther,’ Beyoncé’s ‘TEXAS HOLD ‘EM,’ and Lil Nas X’s ‘STAR WALKIN’!’ How do you approach writing for another artist differently than writing for your own releases, and how do your experiences on those songs inform how you approach your music?
    Each artist has their own story, so I just see it as me being there to help serve them creatively. It helps me learn new things for my process, as each artist has a different process and story. They each teach me something different.

    You told Billboard that you wrote the lyrics to The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill on flash cards one day after school – as a publication run by fans, we love the passion! Is there a certain song on the album that has most influenced you and your music?
    I think the whole album – it gives you the sense of creating a body of work. Some artists can make a few great songs, but she really made a great body of work.

    From Beyoncé to Shaboozey and Post Malone, country is definitely ‘Comin’ Back’ to the mainstream spotlight lately! What do you feel makes country so moving, especially in a time when we need the magic of music more than ever?
    The storytelling!

    You’ve called yourself “a faucet of creative energy that never runs out” to The Tennessean. When do you feel most inspired, and what inspires you most?
    Life and the people and places in it make me feel most inspired. I can just open my eyes and there’s a song waiting.

    What can your fans look forward to in the rest of 2025/2026?
    Performing, pulling up, doing shows, and lots of great music. Next year I’ll also be dropping my debut album!

    Is there anything else you’d like to mention or say to your fans that the questions didn’t touch on?
    Pull up when you see the spill!


    It sounds like BIG BUSKIN’ is just the very beginning, and we can’t wait to see what Ink will spill next! Thank you so much to Ink for answering our questions and pouring so much heart into every song you touch. 

    Now, honeybees, we have some questions for you! What are your favorite tracks on the BIG BUSKIN’ EP? Who do you hope to hear Ink write with in the future? Let us know in the comments below or hit us up on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter! You can also buzz on over to our Reddit community to chat with us.

    Check out more sweet music recs! 

    TO LEARN MORE ABOUT INK:
    INSTAGRAM | TIKTOK | WEBSITE | YOUTUBE

    Madison Murray

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  • (Re)Branded: There’s Not Much Country Gold in Them Thar Notes, But Beyoncé Has Made It Impossible Not to Be Called A White Supremacist If You Don’t Bow to Cowboy Carter

    (Re)Branded: There’s Not Much Country Gold in Them Thar Notes, But Beyoncé Has Made It Impossible Not to Be Called A White Supremacist If You Don’t Bow to Cowboy Carter

    For a long time, there was nothing “too political” in Beyoncé’s oeuvre. She went about the business of singing her songs that usually pertained to being cheated on and/or being hopelessly devoted and in love. Then 2016 rolled around and something within fully activated. Something that began in 2013, with a track like “Flawless.” Even if most of the political elements were delivered by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. But then, that’s Beyoncé’s gift: pulling from other people. It is many great artists’ gift, as a matter of fact, from Picasso to Madonna. Thus, with 2016’s Lemonade, Beyoncé achieved a new apex for borrowing from other musical styles and making what would be esoteric references…at least to the average person (In the visual album that accompanied it, that included reciting poetic texts from Warsan Shire.)

    Among the eclectic tracks was one in particular that stood out the most to people for its “which one of these is not like the other?” quality: “Daddy Lessons.” The song, ultimately, that compelled Beyoncé to “do” country in the first place. Not because she particularly liked or took an automatic shine to the genre, but because, as she clearly alluded to in her announcement of Cowboy Carter’s arrival, she “did not feel welcomed” enough in the country music space while performing a rendition of “Daddy Lessons” with the Dixie Chicks at the Country Music Awards. So, in a way, the level of petty (and that word does get used a lot on Cowboy Carter) one would have to be to sit on that grudge for several years before serving her revenge cold is something to remark upon. And really, why does Beyoncé (or any Black person) care so much about being accepted by a pack of conservative rednecks? For it’s obvious that few (if any) Black people accept them. It’s one of those “too diametrically opposed” conundrums. Too diametrically opposed to what, you might ask? Well, to agree on much of anything. 

    In this regard, everything about Cowboy Carter feels set up to be a trap. An overt way to expose prejudices and out the white supremacists who wouldn’t be attacking this music if it were anyone other than Beyoncé. For decades, music has been categorized largely according to race. Hell, it was only about forty years ago that the American Music Awards had Jim Crow-style awards to dole out for things like Best Black Album (which Prince won in 1985). In recent years, Billie Eilish has been particularly vocal about the absurdity of how music is categorized for the convenient purposes of the suits who want to decide on airplay and award-giving. 

    After the 2020 Grammys, Eilish went on to assert, “​​Don’t judge an artist off the way someone looks or the way someone dresses. Wasn’t Lizzo in the Best R&B category that night? [though it seems unlikely she ever will be again]. I mean, she’s more pop than I am. Look, if I wasn’t white I would probably be in ‘rap.’ Why? They just judge from what you look like and what they know. I think that is weird. The world wants to put you into a box; I’ve had it my whole career. Just because I am a white teenage female I am pop. Where am I pop? What part of my music sounds like pop?” (Side note: a lot of it does—including “Bad Guy.”)

    As for Beyoncé, she’s already frequently toed the genre lines, appealing to pop, R&B, rap and hip hop simultaneously from the beginning of her career, including during her time with Destiny’s Child. “Genre-bending” is nothing new for her. But her insecurity about “being accepted” in the country category, as she stated before Cowboy Carter’s release, stemmed from “an experience that I had years ago where I did not feel welcomed…and it was very clear that I wasn’t.” It didn’t take internet sleuths long to comprehend that Beyoncé was very clearly alluding to her 2016 performance with the Dixie Chicks (before they felt obliged to change their name to The Chicks) at the CMAs. The Dixie Chicks’ collaboration with Beyoncé on the reworked version was released as a single the same day as the November 2nd ceremony (eerily enough, it would be just six days later that Donald Trump “won” the election, making it an especially politically fraught year for someone like Beyoncé to show up in this milieu). 

    Perhaps not fully aware of the outsized nature of her own ego, Beyoncé assumed the audience and the country music world at large would eagerly “bow down,” as she once told all her listeners to do on her 2013 self-titled album. But as mentioned, it was only with her sixth album, Lemonade, that she would hint at her first outright shift toward country. It wasn’t just “Daddy Lessons” though—there were also traces of the genre on “Pray You Catch Me” and “Don’t Hurt Yourself” featuring Jack White (who seemed tapped for the collab to lend more so-called credence to the “blues-rock” feel on it). It is on the latter track that she announces, “Fuck you, hater.” A sentiment that has been a large basis for her career. The same as it is for many driven women who are told they can’t do something, or that they should “stay in their lane.” 

    Unbeknownst to Beyoncé, she was veering out of her so-called lane from the moment she started working on “Daddy Lessons.” Co-writer Kevin Cossom would state of his collaboration with the singer on that particular track, “Once a formula works, people want to use that formula again until it doesn’t work anymore but what’s awesome about Beyoncé is she doesn’t have to play by the rules: she creates them.” Seeing as how it didn’t exactly “work” based on not being fully accepted by the Establishment (complete with the country music committee of the Recording Academy rebuffing the song for consideration in that category), it makes sense that Beyoncé would still try to tackle the genre again. After all, it’s as Groucho Marx said, “I refuse to join any club that would have me as a member.” Since the “Country Club” didn’t seem to want her, naturally, it made Beyoncé become all the more adamant about joining. Granted, the first time around, her optics weren’t so great. After all, showing up in an elaborate evening gown more suited for going to the opera or being guillotined in isn’t going to hearten country music fanatics. Especially the ones who insist that it’s music for “simple, working-class people.” But who knows better about working—and especially working the land—than Black people, who were forced to do so against their will for hundreds of years in large part thanks to lazy whites who accused Black people of being just that later on as a stereotype. 

    To that end, as was the case on Lemonade, Beyoncé is interested in revisiting the most painful parts of Black history to unearth buried truths and reclaim something for her race. In this case, country. Thus, her pointed decision to have Rihannon Giddens play banjo on “Texas Hold ‘Em,” for it is she who reminded, “Enslaved people of the African diaspora created the banjo in the Caribbean in the 1600s.” Here, one feels obliged to point out the Carrie Bradshaw quote that negates the idea of ownership over something just because you “invented” it (or rather the literal instrument to create it), “Man may have discovered fire, but women discovered how to play with it.” In a similar fashion, Germans created the blueprint for the hamburger, Americans perfected it/made it their own. 

    But anyway, what Giddens is saying/would like to remind is: no Black people, no banjo—ergo, no country music. Unsurprisingly, Giddens has been highly supportive of Beyoncé breaking down these musical barriers and reminding people that country music is more Black than it is white. Take away the Black elements of it, and all you’ve got is folk music. Regarding the backlash to Beyoncé’s, let’s just say it, concept album (and it is that), Giddens noted, “I’m like, people can do what they wanna do. They wanna make a country record, make a country record. Like, nobody’s askin’ Lana Del Rey what right do you have to make a country record?” 

    To be fair, Del Rey isn’t as big of an influence, nor is she as visible as Beyoncé. What’s more, Del Rey’s long-standing alignment with retro themes and beliefs blends right into what country music is all about, heteronormativity and “stand by your man”-wise. And, speaking of that song, it seems Del Rey beat Beyoncé to the punch on covering it—even though it’s much more suited to the likes of Beyoncé and her insistence on staying with Jay-Z after he cheated on her with “Becky.” Who has been repurposed, in this phase of her album cycle, as “Jolene.” That’s right, Beyoncé dared to take on one of the most classic and quintessential songs in country, with Dolly Parton’s blessing. Even though dredging up the message of this particular track hardly feels “revolutionary” or “forward-thinking.” Or what Lily Allen dubbed as a “weird” choice on her podcast with Miquita Oliver, Miss Me? Unfortunately, Allen fell right into the trap of saying anything negative about Cowboy Carter. In the wake of her “negative comments” (or expressing a simple non-laudatory opinion that makes no mention of B needing to “stay in her lane”) about the record, a slew of backlash headlines circulated soon after, among them being, “Lily Allen Criticizes Beyoncé’s Album Cowboy Carter,” “Beyoncé Slammed by Jealous Lily Allen as Paul McCartney Defends Her” and “Lily Allen Slams Beyoncé’s Country Album as ‘Calculated’ and ‘Weird.’” 

    Of course, the news outlets were sure to highlight the least flattering words out of Allen’s lukewarm response to the record. One that also related to downplaying Beyoncé’s looks, for, when Miquita tries a different approach to discussing the album by complimenting, “She does look great. She makes me quite excited about forties,” Allen balks, “She’s getting some help.” Miquita claps back, “She has not had any work done, if that’s what you’re implying.” “I didn’t say that. I’m just saying that, like, you know, she’s got a great team of stylists, hair people, you know, she works out a lot, you know, she’s got access to the best trainers in the world, like, you know, she’s Beyoncé.” Indeed. And, as Allen additionally pointed out, Beyoncé can do whatever the hell she wants. Yet that shouldn’t mean that the masses automatically have to be strong-armed into praising it lest they be accused of racism/white supremacy. Which was the automatic response to Allen for her assessment, complete with reductive internet comments like, “An English woman gatekeeping country music is wild.” Or Allen, like anyone, is allowed to say what she thinks about the record. This idea that she can’t say shit about country because of who she is and where she’s from is the exact thing people are saying shouldn’t be done to Beyoncé. Except the part where Beyoncé being from Houston is supposedly all the legitimacy she needs. Even though it’s not like just because you’re from San Diego, it automatically means you’re an authority on pop-punk. 

    What was also left out of the headlines was the fact that Miquita, a Black woman, herself said, “I don’t think the ‘Jolene’ one’s good.” And this provided the opening for Allen to say her quoted comment, “It’s very weird that you cover the most successful songs in that genre.” Miquita adds, “It just felt like a standard hip-hoppy…under a ‘Jolene’ cover. It’s like let’s do something with this song, if we’re gonna take it apart and put it back together, I feel like Beyoncé could have done a bit more with it or maybe picked something a little less big to cover.” Of course, the defense for that is: Dolly Parton wanted Beyoncé to cover it. Nonetheless, Allen continues, “Yeah, I just feel like it’s an interesting thing to do when you’re, like, trying to tackle a new genre and you just choose the biggest song in that genre.” Miquita, who, again, didn’t get mentioned at all in the headlines for her “negative comments” about the record then stated, “I think I’d like it a lot more if it wasn’t like, ‘This is Beyoncé’s country album!… I feel like it’s forcing itself to be part of its own narrative of, ‘I’m a country album.’” Precisely. 

    But that’s supposed to be the “whole point” of Cowboy Carter. To invoke the discourse around why it is so polarizing for Black musicians to dabble in country. But maybe the answer lies in the operative word dabble. Because, for the most part, the Black artists of the past few years who have “gone country” (e.g., Lil Nas X) have only gone right back to not being country. As though it can be activated and deactivated on a whim. Which is what country purists are most irritated by when it comes to crossover musicians—whereas country artists who cross over into pop (e.g., Shania Twain, Taylor Swift) are generally welcomed since pop is such a grab bag anyway. 

    The only truly solid, steadfast, all-out Black country musician of note is Linda Martell. Which is exactly why Beyoncé features her heavily on the record as one of the “radio DJs” (apart from Willie Nelson and Dolly Parton—both names clearly used to invoke clout), delivering the lines, “This particular tune stretches across a range of genres and that’s what makes it a unique listening experience.” The name of that brief interlude is, what else, “The Linda Martell Show.” In many ways, these little interludes mimic what The Weeknd did on Dawn FM, with Jim Carrey narrating all of the ethereal lead-ins into the next song. Indeed, a lot of what Beyoncé does is mimicry on this record…and on Renaissance, for that matter—but the latter is retroactively more listenable compared to this. Even if Bey was already alluding to her country “transition” by donning a lot of cowboy hats and also propping herself up on a disco-fied horse.

    ​​The media, indeed, keeps talking about why “so many artists” are “going country,” as though it’s a wearable trend. And, technically, it is. That’s, in the end, what it appears to boil down to. Not to mention being something Madonna established in 2000 with Music, an album for which she adopted a “ghetto fabulous cowgirl” persona. Back when one could still say things like “ghetto fabulous.” But rather than bothering to attempt to truly home in on the musical meaning of country, “Beyincé” banks on the identity politics of it. Knowing that the music itself will be irrelevant to anyone who goes into it with a “this isn’t country” mindset. To (cowboy) boot, it’s her way of styling herself as a modern-day Martin Luther King Jr. (she already paralleled herself with Malcolm X), parading statements like, “My hope is that years from now, the mention of an artist’s race, as it relates to releasing genres of music, will be irrelevant… The criticisms I faced when I first entered this genre forced me to propel past the limitations that were put on me. act ii is a result of challenging myself, and taking my time to bend and blend genres together to create this body of work.” She then goes on to negate the declaration that it’s a country album (complete with an album cover that makes her look like a Republican propagandist) by noting that it’s really just another “Beyoncé album.”

    And honestly, her message might have been less divisive if she had truly played it that way, without making a big pronouncement that it is country. Which, more often than not, it isn’t. It’s a grab bag, a fusion—as so much of music is (and feels it has to be) today in order to compete for as many category successes as possible. That fusion of sounds is apparent from the outset of Cowboy Carter, with “Ameriican Requiem” (and no, that won’t be the last time you see something spelled with two “i’s”), an opener that sounds more 60s psychedelic-inspired than anything else (and not just because she wields the Simon & Garfunkel-esque lyric, “Hello, my old friend”). But rather, because of the shift to a hippie-dippy sound around the forty-one second mark. Designed to set the stage for her defense against ever being called anything but a “real country gal” again, Beyoncé warns, “It’s a lotta chatter in here/But let me make myself clear (oh)/Can you hear me? (huh)/Or do you fear me?” 

    Again, the combative implication from the get-go is that anyone who doesn’t like her “style” of country/the music on this record in general is just “afraid” and, frankly, racist. Giddens corroborates that idea with her assessment, “Everybody has the opportunity to go back and explore their roots. To go back and they’re like, ‘This is my life too, I wanna do this.’ Like, the ‘stay in your lane,’ the ‘well, that’s not real country,’ that’s just racism. People don’t wanna say it’s because she’s Black. You know, but they use these coded terms.” As for Black people exploring their roots, it’s safe to say that not every Black person is directly related, by any stretch of the imagination, to a cowboy somewhere down the line. In fact, only a quarter of cowboys were Black by the end of the Civil War. Giddens’ logic, therefore, is what opens the floodgates for people with no real connection to their so-called roots to get citizenship in another country because they had a great-great-great-great-grandfather who immigrated from there. 

    Beyoncé is also sure to commence with her nod to the never-ending evolution of racism with the intro line, “Nothing really ends/For things to stay the same, they have to change again.” In short, racist attitudes have many different masks, many different “codes.” Her hippie mama shtick starts to come through more when she demands, “Can we stand for something?/Now is the time to face the wind/Coming in peace and love, y’all/Oh, a lot of takin’ up space/Salty tears beyond my gaze/Can you stand me?/(Can you stand me?/Can you stand me?/Can you stand me?).” The repetition of that last line being more pointed shade at any listener (especially the whites) who would dare find fault with a single note or lyric on Cowboy Carter. 

    But she makes that all but impossible by following up “Ameriican Requiem” with a cover of “Blackbird.” Not just because it’s a bit hooey, but because, well, it ain’t country. And if she did feel obliged to cover it for this album, at least save it for later in the record, after giving listeners some vague taste of the country flavor she’s offering. Instead, we have to wait until track three, “16 Carriages,” to hear Bey’s first true attempt at a country twang (one that at least does sound more sincere than Taylor’s years-long put-on). Especially as this is described as a country ballad. Hell, even a “work song” by some (not offensive at all, right?). In the same review of “16 Carriages,” it was said that Beyoncé remains “palpably in touch” with her “ordinary humanity.” But that’s the thing: Beyoncé was never ordinary. And one doesn’t mean that in the sense that she was inherently more special than anyone else, but in the sense that, from the outset, she was put on the path to fame. Or rather, put herself on that path, convincing her parents to let her pursue a career in music upon discovering her love for singing at seven years old. In this regard, Beyoncé actually avoided the true rigors of being “working class,” with the only “blue collar” job she ever dabbled in being to sweep up hair in her mother Tina’s salon. This idea that she’s “reaching back” to her “working-class” roots is, thus, more akin to trying to scrape the bottom of the barrel for inspiration.

    In another moment, Beyoncé’s obsession with “legacy” seems more aligned with rich white influential family goals (à la the Vanderbilts or some shit) than anything else. Because, again, everything about the Beyoncé/Jay-Z juggernaut is in keeping with the tenets of white capitalism (see also: their ad campaign for Tiffany & Co.). Concluding the song with, “Had to sacrifice and leave my fears behind/For legacy, if it’s the last thing I do/You’ll remember me ‘cause we got something to prove.” The “we” in this sentence, of course, can apply to Black people as a collective. And yet, the more Black people try to “prove” something to white hegemony, the more it seems like an admission somehow of “inferiority” in the first place. Elsewhere, Beyoncé provides the play on words, “I might cook, clean/But still won’t fold,” with that last word meaning that she won’t buckle under the pressure (or fold laundry). While Beyoncé insists the slogs of her early career make her “country strong,” one doubts ever had to hit the same grind as Britney Spears’ schedule for most of the 90s—and yes, Britney is probably more suited, vocally speaking and experience-wise, to singing a country ballad than Beyoncé. Who, despite her constant reminder of loving rodeos, BBQ and being from Texas, is more French than Southern. 

    With this, we segue into the cheesiest song on the record, “Protector” “featuring” Rumi Carter (who makes a cooing sound in the spirit of the one on Aaliyah’s “Are You That Somebody?”). This is Beyoncé at her most “ramblin’ man blew into town but I ain’t here to stay” while she sings, “Born to be a protector.” A protector of who? Why, Rumi of course (because Sir clearly gets no preferential treatment). In a certain sense, this is like Beyoncé’s version of Madonna’s “Little Star” from Ray of Light, a “lullaby,” of sorts, to her own daughter, Lourdes. 

    The tone then shifts on “My Rose,” a brief number that channels major Destiny’s Child vibes and, once again, isn’t country in the least. Though it does offer the self-affirming lyrics, “So many roses but none to be picked without thorns/So be fond of your flaws, dear.” Including one’s flaws when it comes to executing “conventional” country music. However, as though remembering the core of her “genre album,” Beyoncé transitions back to her attempt at country with “Smoke Hour * Willie Nelson.” Like Dolly, Willie (who is about to stand at ninety-one years old) has been brought in to assert the idea that Bey can be a country queen, too (and, on a coincidental side note, Dolly Parton won the Willie Nelson Lifetime Achievement Award that same year Beyoncé performed with the Dixie Chicks). 

    With Willie as “DJ” to lead us into “Texas Hold ‘Em,” the sound of a “flipping the dials” effect is made as the “radio” switches to different stations that each play Son House’s “Grinnin’ In Your Face,” Rosetta Tharpe’s “Down by the River Side,” Chuck Berry’s “Maybellene” and Roy Hamilton’s “Don’t Let Go.” And if Hamilton sounds, to the untrained ear, like Elvis Presley, that’s because he was one of the latter’s biggest influences (what’s more, Presley reportedly paid the cost of Hamilton’s funeral and outstanding medical bills after the singer died of a stroke at forty)—thus, more flexing/reminding from Bey about white people stealing shit all the time. A “friendly” reminder that everything “white” is actually Black. Though many were quick to remind Beyoncé of how “white” the intro to “Texas Hold ‘Em” is (banjo played by Giddens or not) due to its very similar sound to the Franklin theme. Though that isn’t the only unexpected sonic sampling—there’s also the Fluid ringtone (best known to those who had a Motorola in the early 2000s) that makes a pronounced cameo on “Riiverdance.” So yeah, Beyoncé is trolling a lot regarding people’s “precious” notions of genre. And yet, if genre isn’t “real,” why all this posturing about wanting to align herself with country?

    A genre she again circles around on “Bodyguard” (a song that’s seemingly strategically positioned right before Dolly Parton makes her entrance, seeing as how Whitney’s cover of “I Will Always Love You” was on The Bodyguard Soundtrack). Hints of the jealousy motif that’s about to rear its ugly head on Bey’s “Jolene” cover materialize in lyrics like, “I don’t like the way she’s lookin’ at you/Someone better hold me back, oh-oh/Chargin’ ten for a double and I’m talkin’/I’m ‘bout to lose it, turn around and John Wayne that ass.” Funny she should bring Wayne into it. For, although Beyoncé wants to invoke the image of the “quintessential cowboy,” she seems to be forgetting what an overt racist Marion Morrison truly was—this immortalized in a 1971 Playboy interview with fellow racist Bob Hope, during which Wayne remarked, “I believe in white supremacy until the Blacks are educated to a point of responsibility.” One doubts, then, that Wayne would be too keen on Bey using his name in a “country” song. 

    In any case, there are moments, too, when Beyoncé actually does deliver lyrics that sound quite Del Reyian, namely, “​​I give you kisses in the backseat/I whisper secrets in the backbeat/You make me cry, you make me happy, happy/Leave my lipstick on the cigarette.” One can imagine such imagery will also be present on Lasso. That said, “Bodyguard” marks the second song to style Bey as a “protector”—and that protection and guarding isn’t just about her children and her husband, but the legacy (that word again) of Black contributions to country. 

    As she delves into the cover that prompted Lily Allen to make her controversial comment, one can’t help but wonder where the covers of “Bang Bang” by Nancy Sinatra (which she sang to Jay-Z for the On the Run Tour) or “All My Ex’s Live in Texas” by George Strait are—these would actually be very well-suited to Beyoncé’s country brand. Nonetheless, to give her documented blessing, Dolly introduces the reimagining on the “Dolly P” intro, noting, “You know that hussy with the good hair you sing about? Reminded me of someone I knew back when. Except she has flaming locks of auburn hair. Bless her heart. Just a hair of a different color, but it hurts just the same.” 

    After giving Beyoncé the official sanction to cover this country classic, we’re then now taken back to the Lemonade days. Indeed, it’s a small wonder she didn’t sub out the name Jolene for Becky. And yes, Yoncé did feel obliged to make some lyrical adjustments so as to put her own stamp on it. Some of the standout differences being, “I’m warning you don’t come for my man” (instead of, “I’m begging of you, please don’t take my man”) and “You’re beautiful beyond compare” (instead of, “Your beauty is beyond compare”). And then, suddenly, she’s just makin’ a bunch of lyrics up, including, “Takes more than beauty and seductive stares to come between a family and a happy man/Jolene, I’m a woman too/The games you play are nothing new.”

    Just when you think things couldn’t possibly get more cringe, Beyoncé decides to make sure no one is confused about how she’s referring to Jay-Z by adding, “We’ve been deep in love for twenty years/I raised that man, I raised his kids/I know my man better than he knows himself.” And this is the clincher: “I can easily understand why you’re attracted to my man” (this changed from: “I can easily understand how you could easily take my man”). It was perhaps this line that set Azealia Banks off enough to say, “Who is this imaginary adversary that she thinks still wants to be involved with Jay-Z in 2024? She needs to change the subject. Nobody, and I mean NOBODY, finds him attractive.” Of course, Banks’ comment didn’t get as much play in the media as Allen’s because it’s fine when a Black woman critiques another Black woman. There’s no “racial tension” to that. In any event, Beyoncé changes the entire tone of the song from being an open, earnest plea with another woman to making it all about how hot and loyal her own man is (wrong on both counts). 

    The  interpolation of “Jolene” continues into “Daughter.” And here there’s an element of Taylor Swift-style songwriting at play (Bey even goes so far as to say, “Look what you made me do”), particularly when thinking of her later “country” efforts like “no body, no crime” and “Vigilante Shit.” There is an evocation of Kill Bill in the lyrics as well, with Beyoncé singing, “Your body laid out on these filthy floors/Your bloodstains on my custom couture.” She even brings “Daddy Lessons” back into it with the lines, “If you cross me, I’m just like my father/I am colder than Titanic water.” (Wouldn’t that just be Atlantic Ocean water?) One supposes that Beyoncé wanted to get the idea of being vengeful across by bringing Italians into it. Why else would she randomly start singing in the language (and not very well) toward the end: “Caro mio ben/Credimi almen/Senza di te/Languische il cor/I tuo fedel/Sospira ognor/Cessa, crudel, tanto rigor.” The other reason for bringing Italian into it is because the following song is the annoyingly misspelled “Spaghettii.” Not just a food, but also the name of Italian westerns a.k.a. spaghetti westerns. 

    Perhaps Beyoncé’s point in referencing this iteration of the western is that there are many different versions and interpretations of a kind of genre. So it is that Linda Martell provides the intro, “Genres are a funny little concept, aren’t they? In theory, they have a simple definition that’s easy to understand, but in practice, well, some may feel confined.” And with that, Beyoncé (with a feature from Shaboozey) delves into one of her least country (and most hip hop) tracks on Cowboy Carter, spitting lyrics (delivered in a Janelle Monáe sound) like, “Cunty, country, petty, petty, petty/All the same to me, plain Jane spaghetti” and “We all been played by the plagiaristic.” Naturally, Beyoncé is alluding to white people effectively “plagiarizing” country from Black people. Though it is rather amusing that someone who has been accused of plagiarism as many times as Beyoncé (most recently with her hair care brand, Cécred, which ripped off the packaging style from a small business based in New Zealand) should throw in this little dig. Maybe it’s just “Alligator Tears” on her part, this being another standout on the album for actually sounding country. 

    With its sparse guitar opening, there are immediate comparisons to the style of Fleetwood Mac or solo Stevie Nicks (later on, “II Most Wanted” featuring Miley Cyrus will freely interpolate “Landslide”—which is right up Cyrus’ alley considering that “Midnight Sky” is just “Edge of Seventeen” redone). Another “ride or die” sort of track, Beyoncé assures (presumably Jay-Z), “You say move a mountain and I’ll throw on my boots/You say stop the river from runnin’, I’ll build a dam for two/You say change religions, now I spend Sundays with you.”

    After this, Willie Nelson is back on as “DJ” for the “Smoke Hour II” interlude, wherein Beyoncé seems to vie for more clout by having Nelson say, “You’re tuned into KNTRY Radio Texas, home of the real deal.” He then introduces “Just For Fun” featuring Willie Jones, another slowed-down track that relies not only on acoustic guitar for being deemed country but Jones’ vocal contribution as well (his style being described as “lacing traditional country soundscapes of steel guitar, banjo, and harmonica with signature Louisiana hip hop gumbo”). Of course, nothing can outshine Beyoncé braggadociously touting, “I am the man, I know it/And everywhere I go, they know my name.” They know Miley’s, too. And that’s not the only reason Beyoncé would want her for a collab on “II Most Wanted.” For Miley also has plenty of country roots, starting with Billy Ray Cyrus’ inescapable-for-most-of-the-early-90s “Achy Breaky Heart.” With a father in country, Miley’s own vocal inflection was clearly influenced, and she’s had her fair share of “twangin’ tracks.” She brings out that twang just for Bey on “II Most Wanted,” which, in truth, feels like it should have been given to Lady Gaga so they could make that long-awaited follow-up video to “Telephone.” Ending with riding away in the Pussy Wagon together, there’s the same clear nod to a Thelma and Louise-level friendship as there is on this song. 

    However, the general poseurdom of both women is made apparent when they name-check the 405 as the freeway they’re driving down (“Smoke out the window/Flyin’ down the 405”). Ain’t nothin’ “country” about L.A.—unless you’re a self-superior New Yorker. A persona Beyoncé has been known to try on in her role as the wife of a born-and-bred Brooklynite.

    Continuing the trend of having features on her songs, Post Malone (also born in New York, albeit Syracuse) joins in for the next one, “Levii’s Jeans.” This is arguably more uncomfortable than “Jolene” at times thanks to Beyoncé offering, “Boy, I’ll let you be my Levi jeans/So you can hug that ass all day long.” Perhaps the only thing more difficult to stomach than the thought of Beyoncé singing this to Jay-Z is the thought of her singing it to Post Malone (on a side note: one can still picture her singing it to Jay-Z anyway as he has a songwriting credit on it). 

    Wanting to remind us how deft she is at weaving in and out of genres, the next song is called “Flamenco.” And it does indeed have that Spanish tinge to it (complete with castanets). As one of the shorter tracks (in the vein of “My Rose”), it’s most memorable lyric is, in fact, only memorable because of how generic it’s become ever since Joni Mitchell sang it on “Big Yellow Taxi”: “You don’t know what you’ve got until it’s gone.” By referencing Mitchell, is this, too, another subtle dig at how, without Black people contributing the banjo to country, country would just be folk music? Who can say? 

    Either way, the following song, introduced again by Linda Martell with a little commentary on genre, is “Ya Ya.” And it goes absolutely batshit. Not just on combining genres, but pulling from as many already well-known songs as it can. Starting with the opening notes that are blatantly taken from Nancy Sinatra’s “These Boots Are Made For Walkin’” and continuing with nods to Tina Turner’s “Proud Mary,” Mickey & Sylvia’s “Love Is Strange,” Jerry Lee Lewis’ “Great Balls of Fire” and, of course, Beach Boys’ “Good Vibrations.” From the latter, Beyoncé pulls a major Lana by simply repurposing the lyrics, “I’m pickin’ up good vibrations/He’s given’ me sweet sensations” (instead of “excitations”) as her own. And, back on the subject of Del Rey, at least she declared weeks before Beyoncé announced her album that the music industry was “going country,” and then made mention of her own upcoming country-themed album, Lasso. Which, to be sure, was immensely eclipsed by the countdown to Cowboy Carter. An album so entrenched in 60s-era sensibilities the way Del Rey has been for her entire career. 

    Among those 60s sensibilities is “Ya Ya,” with catch phrases like, “Keep the faith” and talk of how her  “family live and died in America, hm” while paying homage to artists of the Chitlin’ Circuit (Tina Turner included) a.k.a. venues where “where white people wouldn’t go to see Black people.” Hence, more than a tinge of sarcasm when she sings, “Good ol’ USA, shit/Whole lotta red in that white and blue, huh.” This being an allusion not just to bloodshed, but to the red that represents the Republican party. And, in some sense, Beyoncé seems to be trying to do with conservative-worshiped country music what Black people did with the “n-word” by taking it over for herself. Reappropriating it so that it can have less of an association with racist whites, and more of one with Black people. Ergo, her reminder again about the origins of country with the lyrics, “History can’t be erased, ooh.” She then backs into a hypocritical corner with her spiel about being able to relate to the common man (as she attempted to on “Break My Soul”) by asking, “Are you tired, workin’ time and a half for half the pay?” What would Beyoncé know about that, having spent most of her life as a millionaire and never working a minimum wage job? Granted, she’s happy to admit, “I just wanna shake my ass/(Have a blast).” Maybe “ass” and “blast” are even becoming a go-to rhyme for her after changing the lyrics on Renaissance’s “Heated” from, “Spazzin’ on that ass” to “Blastin’ on that ass.” Whether that’s true or not, one rarely has the luxury of actually enjoying shaking their ass for the cash. 

    The transition between “Ya Ya” and “Oh Louisiana” is practically undetectable as one “oh” leads into another and Chuck Berry’s essentially “TikTok-ifed” lyrics ensue before we’re back to Bey on “Desert Eagle” (though one would think it was called “Do-Si-Do”). The eagle, of course, being the well-known mascot of the United States. A symbol of “freedom”—for some. Mainly rich people, regardless of being Black or white. Just look at OJ Simpson getting acquitted of murder. 

    Repeating “do-si-do” with an echo-y effect, “Desert Eagle” quickly leads into “Riiverdance,” the aforementioned track that samples the Fluid ringtone. Mostly repeating the chorus, “Bounce on that shit, dance,” the fact that Beyoncé is now incorporating a beat inspired by the famed Irish dance that shares the same name as the song (minus the extra “i”) is perhaps another flex that’s meant to inform white people, “See, we can take genres you created and make it our own too. Do you like that?” 

    “Riiverdance” also has a seamless shift into “II Hands II Heaven,” another song that seems more at home on Renaissance than a country-themed record. Even so, Beyoncé doesn’t let up on reminding the whites, “They can’t do nothin’ but envy, ooh/Bliss, please…/Then taste this wine, I’ma taste what’s mine/‘Cause I’ma take what’s mine.” In another portion of the song, she even takes what isn’t by grabbing onto the Elton phrase, “No candle in the wind” (something Del Rey does a lot too). 

    Ostensibly saving one of the bests for (almost) last, Dolly gets on the mic again for “Tyrant,” even if only for the intro about lighting up the juke joint. Her presence makes sense though, as Beyoncé is about to dive into their favorite subject: a man being stolen from her. In this unique instance, it’s a hangman (or rather, hangwoman) that’s the culprit. This per the lyric, “I don’t want him back, but I can’t let go/Hangman, answer me now/You owe me a debt, you stole him from me.” More than the lyrics, the dance-worthy beat is what stands out—a beat that would be at home on any of Beyoncé’s previous hip hop-oriented records.

    But no, she wants to keep reiterating her country commitment, falling in and out of it like another personality throughout the record. This is true of “Sweet * Honey * Buckiin’” for sure, as she opens by singing Patsy Cline’s “I Fall to Pieces” before letting Shaboozey (appearing for the second time) deliver his verses. It’s obvious once this portion commences that it’s a Pharrell-produced song, rejoining Bey after his contribution to Renaissance, which included pissing Kelis off by sanctioning a sample of “Milkshake” on “Energy” (which was removed soon after the album’s release). The three stars that divide the words signify that each portion explores a different musical and lyrical theme (in this regard, it’s a foil for Renaissance’s “Pure/Honey”), at one point bringing us to the subject of Black people’s rightful mistrust in white-dominated institutions via the verse, “They yankin’ your chain/Promisin’ things that they can’t/You the man at the bank?/Is you is or you ain’t?” Nelly asked that a long time ago on “Iz U.”

    The album at last concludes with the fittingly titled “Amen.” And that’s what many will be saying after getting through all that. At least Renaissance reined in the tracklist at sixteen, for fuck’s sake. Indicating that Beyoncé didn’t think she had as much to prove with the house music genre. Beyoncé nails one part of country though—and that’s providing little levity in terms of the stories she’s unfurling. “Amen” is no exception to the rule, with Yoncé being sure to mention to them nefarious whites still listening, “This house was built with blood and bone/And it crumbled, yes, it crumbled/The statues they made were beautiful/But they were lies of stone, they werе lies of stone.” 

    Alas, more than this feeling like an album of “reclamation,” it feels, ironically, like Beyoncé wanting to make the complete transition into “white culture” (what with the skin and hair bleaching portion already done) despite the crux of the record’s existence being in the name of reappropriating Black culture. And yet, her obsession with being accepted by (rather than toppling) the Establishment run by white patriarchal influences was made all the more apparent when Jay-Z took the stage at the 2024 Grammys to make an over-the-top speech about how, despite being the most awarded artist in Grammy history, it still isn’t enough because she’s never won Album of the Year (something she’s sure mention in “Sweet * Honey * Buckiin’” with, “A-O-T-Y/I ain’t win”). Neither has Nina Simone, or Diana Ross, or Mariah Carey (those first two more influential women on Beyoncé’s career have, in fact, never won a Grammy at all). But you never saw their husbands get onstage crying, “No fair!” (In Simone’s case, that was because her husbands were too busy abusing her themselves—so was Mariah’s, Tommy Mottola, even if “only” emotionally.) 

    Ultimately, though, if you want so-called respect in country, then just do country without making race the linchpin of the project. A tactic that, in the end, will not hearten the standard country audience to her. And it doesn’t seem like a way to “blur the lines” or “unite” people over the idea that country is for everyone, so much as a vengeful “fuck you, hater” to everyone who 1) told her she didn’t belong in country and 2) stole country from Black people in the first place. In terms of reason number one, Cowboy Carter is, first and foremost, a vanity project and not quite the “cultural reset” that Lemonade was for this cowgirl, who perhaps set the bar too high for herself that year. Even if the CMAs couldn’t comprehend that.

    Genna Rivieccio

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  • Beyoncé’s Recent White-ification Now Makes Plenty of Sense in the Wake of Her Country Album Announcement

    Beyoncé’s Recent White-ification Now Makes Plenty of Sense in the Wake of Her Country Album Announcement


    At the end of a Verizon commercial during the Super Bowl on February 11th, Beyoncé announced that the world was ready for her new music to drop (thanks, of course, to the strong internet network that only Verizon can provide). And while some might have hoped that Renaissance Act II might be a continuation of the house flavor she repurposed from artists like Robin S. and, yes, even Madonna, on Renaissance, it is instead slated to be a country album. This declared on the heels of Lana Del Rey making a similar announcement about “going country” for her next record, titled, what else, Lasso. Because, yeah, what the U.S. needs now is more people confirming it’s a place for shitkickers. 

    Many might have speculated Beyoncé was going to keep running with this cowgirl shtick for Act II, but perhaps thought said shtick might also maintain the house stylings present on Act I. Those with a more perspicacious eye, however, could have detected a genre shift based on Yoncé’s “color shift” in recent months. And what with frequently citing Michael Jackson as an influence, it can come as no surprise that Bey has also taken apparent inspiration from his propensity for skin lightening. As a woman who, like Jackson, has forged her empire on Blackness and what it means to be Black, the increased and not so gradual bleaching of her skin feels particularly traitorous. After all, this is the same woman who has a song called “Brown Skinned Girl.”

    These days, though, she’s looking light taupe at best and “tan for a white person” at worst. But now, with the confirmation of her transition to country (because everyone must presently copy the “old Taylor” for some reason), her whitening suddenly makes all the sense in the world. After all, country is still the whitest genre you know, no matter how much Beyoncé tries to “funk-ify” it (to use a white person’s euphemism), or how much she might later bill it as “reclaiming the Black origins of the genre” (as was her intention with “taking back” house music for Renaissance). Doing her best to show us that she can with the first two offerings she’s revealed from the record, “Texas Hold ‘Em” and “16 Carriages.” It is the former that many are attempting to bill as a “Daddy Lessons” redux. But no, it’s so much less listenable than that. And “Daddy Lessons” (a recent appropriate favorite of Britney Spears to dance in her living room to) is, obviously, more tolerable because it serves as an irreverent sonic divergence from the rest of Lemonade, which, to be frank, is the most country-sounding Beyoncé should ever allow herself to get (complete with Jack White helping her out on “Don’t Hurt Yourself”). 

    As for “16 Carriages,” it is a slowed-down “ballad”—or, more accurately, Beyoncé finding a way to play up her “rough” childhood spent seeking fame and essentially being pimped out (after being “invested in”) by her parents in a manner similar to the abovementioned Spears. With regard to the lyrics, “Sixteen carriages driving away/While I watch them ride with my fears away/To the summer sunset on a holy night/On a long back road, all the tears I fight,” that word, “carriage,” can refer both to the tour buses she rode while still in the germinal days of Destiny’s Child as well as the “country-centric” type of carriage that refers to the frame of a gun supporting its barrel. And yes, needless to say, Beyoncé already packs a pistol, of sorts, for her “Texas Hold ‘Em” visualizer, featuring three minutes and fifty-seven seconds of the whitest version of Yoncé yet forming her thumb, index and middle finger into a gun as sparks shoot out of it. All while wearing tights with black underwear over them and little else up top. A pair of reflective sunglasses with a winding snake over one of the lenses rounds out the look with a “Swiftian flair” (since everyone knows snakes have been “her thing” since Reputation…even if they were Britney Spears’ first by sheer virtue of the “I’m A Slave 4 U” performance at the 2001 VMAs).

    The trailer for the album itself is a nod to Texas, displaying an overt homage to Paris, Texas (again, more Lana Del Rey shit on Beyoncé’s part) not only via the desolate desert landscape with its many electrical towers, but also the Harry Dean Stanton-esque man in the red baseball hat (though some conspiracy theorists might interpret its presence as some kind of subliminal “support” for Trump). So again, some super white references. The opening to the trailer itself harkens back to the vibe of Beyoncé driving away in the Pussy Wagon with Lady Gaga in the video for 2010’s “Telephone,” with Beyoncé capitulating to playing sidekick at a time of “Gaga supremacy.” But Bey doesn’t seem intent on staying in the Lone Star State by any means, slamming on the gas pedal as she approaches a billboard of herself waving what appears to be goodbye, rather than hello. The “hoedown” tone of the song commences with the lines, “This ain’t Texas, ain’t no hold ‘em” in a manner that smacks, in its own way, of Elton John declaring, “You know you can’t hold me forever.” Beyoncé certainly seemed to feel that way about her home state, jumping at the chance to ascend the ladder of fame as she drifted further and further from whence she came (no rhyme intended). Physically and emotionally. 

    And yet, once a person like her reaches such a stature, there’s nothing left to do but “look back.” Reflect on the roots that one abandoned in order to mine “fresh” material. Even though, as usual, Beyoncé is incapable of writing a song entirely on her own. Just as, of late, she seems to be incapable of coming up with an original idea, “persona-wise.” For it’s only too familiar, this “disco-fied cowgirl” thing she has going on. Or, let’s say, “ghetto fabulous” (though it’s probably no longer allowed). This also being the aesthetic Madonna already gave us in 2000 with Music. Indeed, even Madonna has moved beyond the look she herself cultivated by stripping it down to a more conventional cowboy appearance (minus the massive, cartoonish cowboy hats she and Bob the Drag Queen sport) for Act III of The Celebration Tour, which hinges thematically on “Don’t Tell Me,” her most cowboy-oriented visual of Music. And, as a Midwestern gal, returning to this aspect of herself makes sense. Some might say it does for Beyoncé, too. As a “Texan gal.” But we all know she wasn’t exactly vibing (least of all in 80s-era America) with the hoedown life or “hick culture” (an oxymoron, to be sure) until now, when it served her “musical inspiration” purpose. 

    Funnily enough, in 2016, as Beyoncé was starting to fully embrace her Blackness as a “brand” with the release of “Formation,” there was an SNL sketch that made fun of how white people were finally starting to realize she was Black. Now, it seems the tables have turned again, and Bey has gone back to her pandering-to-whites roots. Not only by releasing a country record, but by literally becoming white. And, to quote another lyric from “Texas Hold ‘Em,” “That shit ain’t pretty.”



    Genna Rivieccio

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  • For the Broke Asses in the Ultra Cheap Seats: The Eras Tour in Movie Format Makes It Clear That Taylor Swift Is Still the Apolitical “Good Girl”

    For the Broke Asses in the Ultra Cheap Seats: The Eras Tour in Movie Format Makes It Clear That Taylor Swift Is Still the Apolitical “Good Girl”

    Billed instantly as a “three-hour career-spanning victory lap,” Taylor Swift’s sixth tour is, needless to say, her most ambitious yet. Part of that ambitiousness has extended to releasing it as a concert film while still touring the world with the production. Obviously, she’s not worried about losing any profits by making it available to the “broke asses” who couldn’t manage to get themselves to the real thing. And even to those who already did, but simply want to see it in an even more “larger than life” format (IMAX being designed to accommodate such a desire). As Swift says, “Too big to hang out/Slowly lurching toward your favorite city.” That she is, as movie theaters across the globe roll out the reel and proceed to endure what can best be described, rather unoriginally, as Swiftmania. Indeed, one wishes Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr would weigh in on the matter, but instead non-Beatle Billy Joel already decided of Swiftie fanaticism and the Eras Tour, “The only thing I can compare it to is the phenomenon of Beatlemania.”

    Rob Sheffield of Rolling Stone tapped into part of why people are so, ugh, enchanted with the tour when he wrote, “​​Taylor Swift keeps building the legend of her Eras Tour, week after week, city by city, making every night so much longer, wilder, louder, more jubilant than it has to be. There’s nothing in history to compare. This is her best tour ever, by an absurd margin. It’s a journey through her past, starring all the different Taylors she’s ever been, which means all the Taylors that you’ve ever been.” The thing about that, of course, is, well, Swift hasn’t exactly been all that multi-dimensional over the years. Sure, she’s changed her sound from country to pop and dabbled with some musical styles in between, but, in the end, she’s still the Aryan wet dream wearing red lipstick. Steadfastly committed to delivering a good time without much of any true substance to say in her position of power. Not through the music itself anyway (unless one counts the forced feeling of “allyship” in “You Need To Calm Down”). Over every so-called era, that has remained the most constant of all—Swift’s singular focus on one non-political topic and one non-political topic only: bad boyfriends. And, sometimes, when she’s cresting on the high of being in love, “good” boyfriends…before they inevitably turn bad. 

    This is one of the key aspects of Swift’s “relatability quotient.” With the “everywoman” seeing themselves in her despite the fact that few “average” women are giraffe tall, thin, blonde and blue-eyed. The Barbie ideal, as it were. Once upon a time, this was embodied by Britney Spears, who experienced a similar level of fervor at her so-called peak (that word always suggesting, somewhat rudely, that a person will never be as good as they were at a certain moment in time). The fundamental difference between the two is that Swift has remained America’s sweetheart throughout her career, while Britney defiantly ripped off the shackles of that role when she shaved her head and, months later, gave a somnambulant performance of “Gimme More” at the MTV VMAs. Up until that instance, Spears had always been a consummate performer. Dancing, (mostly) singing and sexing it up for the crowd. She chose one year in her life to have a rightly deserved breakdown, and things never really went back to being the same for her. 

    In 2007, Swift (a Sagittarius like Britney) was eighteen, and had just released her self-titled debut one year prior. This reality seemed to reinforce that, when it comes to the music industry, there is always another young(er) blonde pop star in the making, waiting to take over for the current “hot thing.” And Swift would embody the same “I’m a good girl who does as I’m told” aura (that Britney initially did) for the vast majority of her career. Herself admitting, “My entire moral code as a kid and now is a need to be thought of as good” and “The main thing I always tried to be was, like, a good girl.” Even now, after “going political” (a.k.a. making one public statement against a Republican Congresswoman), it’s clear that what lacks most from Swift’s work, ergo her stage shows, is a message worth imparting. Of course, her fans and casual listeners alike will say that there can be no more important message than simply “making people feel good.” To a certain extent, that’s true. However, after a while, one wonders if Swift’s failure to say anything on the same level as a Madonna stage show is an exemplification of how the public no longer really wants to be challenged. “Preached to,” as it were. This, in some respects, is emblematic of the “algorithm effect” that has taken hold of society, with everyone seeing only what they want to see, and no “unpleasant” (read: contrary) viewpoints thrown into the mix. Including the one that would dare call out Swift for being anything other than perfection. 

    In this regard, too, she differs from Spears, who was far more derided for being a talented blonde girl, but with “nothing to say.” This being most clearly immortalized in an 00s interview during which she said of George W. Bush, “We should just trust our president in every decision that he makes and we should just support that, you know. And, um, be faithful in what happens.” Alas, Spears’ faith in a few patriarchal institutions has been shaken to its core in the decades since and, similar to Swift, she’s had a reckoning with the “good girl” she once thought she wanted to be in order to receive endless accolades and praise. For someone like Madonna, who provided the blueprint of the modern theatrical stage show with 1990’s Blond Ambition Tour, that was never a reckoning that needed to occur. She was always a “bad girl” from the start. In other words, a woman who spoke her mind without fear or inhibition. This is why one of her earliest stage shows, the Who’s That Girl Tour, addressed political topics ranging from AIDS to essentially directing the missive of “Papa Don’t Preach” at Ronald Reagan and the pope. No other woman, least of all in the hyper-conservative 1980s, would have ever dared to do that, and certainly not at the very beginning of her career. 

    And yes, it is Madonna, who was once marveled at for staying in the business for a paltry fifteen years, that has allowed for someone like Swift to exist in it for almost two decades without anyone questioning it. Because, as Madonna established, the idea of a pop star, particularly a woman, having many eras is merely a reflection of an inherently misogynistic public that expects to see something new in order to be kept interested in the same woman. Especially when there are more youthful options cropping up all the time. As Swift noted, “The female artists have reinvented themselves twenty times more than the male artists. They have to or else you’re out of a job. Constantly having to reinvent, constantly finding new facets of yourself that people find to be shiny.” This speaks to something Madonna said about the Who’s That Girl Tour: “That’s why I call the tour Who’s That Girl?; because I play a lot of characters, and every time I do a video or a song, people go, ‘Oh, that’s what she’s like.’ And I’m not like any of them. I’m all of them. I’m none of them.” In actuality, the real reason to highlight that title was the fact that she had a movie of the same name playing in theaters (briefly) the summer the tour was happening. A movie that was originally going to be called Slammer before then-husband Sean Penn ended up being thrown in the slammer himself and it seemed like it would be in poor taste. 

    Swift’s luck with movie roles hasn’t been much better than Madonna’s, but people seem to talk about the clunkers that are Valentine’s Day and Cats far less than, say, Body of Evidence or Swept Away. Both Swift and Madonna are, of late, focusing on what they do best, with the latter kicking off her own world tour the same weekend the Eras Tour film debuted in theaters. Perhaps an unwitting “flex” on Madonna’s part, as she still seems keenly aware that, of all the pop stars, she’s the only one willing to make a truly political statement during her shows. What’s more, no matter how “old” she’s gotten, she has always been an active participant in the choreography expected of a pop star/musical extravaganza. And so, while the Eras Tour film is deft in creating the kind of spectacle that allows the viewer to feel like they’re actually at the show (complete with annoying audience members singing along in the theater), perhaps what stands out more in the movie than it would in person is the lack of choreography that Swift herself engages in. Instead, she’s a master at the art of the illusion of movement as she struts frequently up and down the ample stage. Here, too, Swift can be differentiated from a “real” pop star in that she has always merely dipped her toe into what that means as someone who more strongly identifies with the singer-songwriter qualities that theoretically mean chilling at home and writing poignant lyrics without having to worry about executing a dance move correctly onstage. But this is where Swift makes it clear that, in the twenty-first century, a musician has no choice but to become the multimedia art project that Madonna always was from the get-go. A walking, talking embodiment of synergy. Even if an embodiment that has never truly “ate” (despite Swift’s recent comparisons to the likes of Madonna and Michael Jackson…stage presence-wise, among other ways). 

    The uninformed accusations that Madonna is jumping on the Taylor and Beyoncé bandwagon of doing marathon, theatrical shows is rather absurd considering this is what Madonna has been doing from the beginning, long before anyone else thought to put in the effort it requires. Particularly the effort it takes to endure the personal risk to one’s life and reputation by speaking out against the injustices of the world. This has not been received warmly by quite a few institutions, not least of which was the Vatican, who urged Italians to boycott Madonna’s Blond Ambition Tour for being blasphemous. In response, Madonna made a public statement in Rome during which she declared, “My show is not a conventional rock show, but a theatrical presentation of my music. And like theater, it asks questions, provokes thought and takes you on an emotional journey. Portraying good and bad, light and dark, joy and sorrow, redemption and salvation.” 

    As the Eras Tour film underscores, that’s not really what’s happening at a Taylor Swift show. And that’s fine, one supposes—it just serves as a reminder that what people go apeshit over often isn’t very thought-provoking. With Swift preferring to, instead, take a page from the name of an LCD Soundsystem documentary by just “shutting up and playing the hits.”

    Genna Rivieccio

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  • Timothée Chalamet and Kylie Jenner at the Beyoncé Concert

    Timothée Chalamet and Kylie Jenner at the Beyoncé Concert

    A headline such as “Timothée Chalamet and Kylie Jenner at the Beyoncé Concert” seems like the stuff of an AI-generated sentence arbitrarily spit out from some other non-related prompt. And yet, the sentence became a reality (whatever that means anymore) on September 4th (no less than Beyoncé’s birthday), at the final Inglewood date of the Renaissance Tour. Although many had speculated that the duo’s “romance” had already fizzled out, it seems they were just biding their time until they could unveil it in a more bombastic official capacity. For it’s no secret that the Kardashian-Jenner clan is known for making the announcement of their “relationships” in a big way (with none of these men ever deterred by how many children the K-Js might already have from previously failed “interludes”). And, considering, Jenner was also joined at the concert by her momager, Kris, and half-sisters, Kim and Khloé, it appears as though the outing is ultimately made for The Kardashians episode fodder. 

    This, undoubtedly, isn’t something that would bring much joy to Beyoncé, who has never been known for being all that “chummy” with Kim, whose marriage to Ye obviously didn’t sit well with Jay-Z or Bey, with both skipping their wedding back in 2014. And yet, Kim did manage to make the cut for being invited to Beyoncé’s forty-first birthday last year, so who’s to say that she hasn’t “made peace” with any ill will toward the constantly-seeking-attention “reality” star? Though one can imagine her vexation upon learning that the biggest headline to come out of her birthday show was not the fact that Diana Ross (sort of) sang “Happy Birthday” to Miss Knowles onstage, but that Chalamet and Jenner were rather heavy on the PDA as a means to confirm their “relationship” is still going strong, and now in a public capacity. 

    Indeed, even in an article that offered the headline as “Diana Ross Sings Happy Birthday to Beyoncé During Surprise Appearance at Los Angeles Tour Stop,” the topic quickly shifted to the presence of the Kardashians, with Kim’s appearance also stealing some of the spotlight as well. But her “sparkle” was nothing compared to the video footage seen ‘round the world of Chalamet’s displays of affection toward Jenner, some of which were often a bit half-hearted as he actually tried to watch the show and kissed her with his eyes open while Jenner had her back to the stage (how sacrilegious!). The image of Chalamet looking at Beyoncé while kissing Kylie can be interpreted as one would like. One interpretation being that Jenner has already siphoned some of his soul out and he’s growing more dead-eyed and complacent by the day. 

    Jenner, whose skin tone is “on-brand” with the blackfishing that all the Kardashians are known for, is a clear step down from one of Chalamet’s first famous girlfriends (and an actual person of color [“POC” sounds too much like “POS”]), Lourdes Leon. A.k.a. Madonna’s daughter a.k.a. Chalamet is probably never going to do better than that, fucking for clout-wise. Yet that hasn’t stopped him from seeming to relish the so-called perks of orbiting the famous-for-being-famous brood. After all, he hasn’t ever gotten half as much publicity for any of the movies he’s starred in, no matter how critically acclaimed most of his performances have been (even if often on the one-note side). Yet it seems a new “era” is on the horizon for Chalamet…one that might be his “flop” period (Wonka does, in truth, look like a harbinger for that). For it’s no secret that there’s something of a Kardashian-Jenner hex upon any man who dares “enter the fold” (pardon the sexual innuendo of that phrase). With Ye being the most overt example of that amid the various Get Out comparisons that were made before he went entirely off the rails. 

    Perhaps that’s why Jenner has transitioned to “white meat,” as it were, “taking one for the team” by switching it up from the fam’s usual fetishization of Black men as a means to be able to tell the public, “See? We’re not like Rose Armitage.” Chalamet doesn’t seem to mind that he’s an inevitable pawn in their game called “Social Climbing With Our Pussies.” The more they can infiltrate the world of Legitimate (Low) Art (complete with Kim now starring in a season of AHS), the more people will forget that they have no talent of their own, other than, of course, commodifying their names in new, ever-changing ways. 

    And as the two “canoodled” to the tune of “Alien Superstar” (a song choice that’s almost too on the nose for the illuminati theories that abound with regard to any celebrity and their “romantic pairings”), Beyoncé’s extra-sensory “B” feelers could likely intuit the attention being detracted from her performance—and on her birthday! Echoing the effect of Taylor Swift showing up to Jack Antonoff and Margaret Qualley’s wedding festivities, the attention strayed slightly too far from the main attraction for the main attraction’s taste. Worse still, Chalamet, in “indie boy” fashion, smoked cigarettes at the concert like some sort of heathen defying a holy place of worship. 

    But of course, Beyoncé is “graceful” and “humble” enough not to be bogged down by such ego-tripping trivialities, n’est-ce pas? At least, that was meant to be the takeaway from her focus on Diana Ross’ “cameo,” running across the stage to embrace her (which was met with typical Ross coldness) and gush, “You are so amazin’—this is the legendary Diana Ross! There would be no me without you and thank you so much for all of your sacrifice and your beauty and your grace. Thank you for opening doors for me.” Because, yes, the ego of every celebrity can’t help but make things about them. Much to Ross’ repressed chagrin. As if women who came before want to be reduced to nothing more than a “stepping stone” for the current “hot thing” (Madonna also knows a bit about being diminished in that way under the guise of being exalted). 

    Thus, while Beyoncé might have given the performance of a lifetime, it was all, in the end, mitigated by this “odd couple” taking their “romance” to the proverbial stage as well. With Jenner adding to the “theater” by engaging in her PDA antics right next to where her murdering ex, Travis Scott, was also standing in the “VIP area.”

    So it is that point one went to the Kardashians for the ongoing celebrity battle to grab attention (even causing people to let persona non grata Lizzo’s presence go, um, largely unpublicized). Perhaps Beyoncé can get back to being the true spotlight at her upcoming Vancouver (a place with far fewer celebrities bound to materialize) show on September 11th. Except that, well, the date of September 11th is always a spotlight stealer in and of itself. Even so, it’s far less “stealing” than Kylie and Timothée, who are so different that they don’t even have monikers that can be turned into a “clever,” one-unit couple name. Unlike Bey-Z, Jayoncé, etc.

    Genna Rivieccio

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  • Album of the Year and the Beyoncé Was “Snubbed” Narrative

    Album of the Year and the Beyoncé Was “Snubbed” Narrative

    It’s an awards show that, like so many others, never quite gets it right. And can never possibly please everyone. Nonetheless, the “objective” viewpoint regarding the 2023 Grammy Awards was that one, Beyoncé Knowles, ought to win Album of the Year for Renaissance. A record that plundered and pillaged from the formerly underground, Black gay male-dominated 90s-era house scene with as much delight as Madonna’s “Vogue” (and yes, Beyoncé made that connection by offering a “Vogue”-infused “Queens Remix” of “Break My Soul”). The difference between Madonna doing it and Beyoncé doing it is that, obviously, the latter is Black, so she has a “right” to plunder said loot. And it seems the world can forgive her of anything, including her own forgiveness of Jay-Z cheating on her. Because, after all, it brought rapt listeners Lemonade. Yet another album that the Grammys snubbed at the 2017 awards when they opted to give the Album of the Year vote to Adele for 25.

    Unlike fellow Briton Harry Styles, however, Adele couldn’t seem to take the award in good conscience, arriving onstage to make her guilt over winning known as she declared, “I can’t possibly accept this award [yet of course she then did], and I’m very humbled and very grateful and gracious, but my life is Beyoncé, and the album to me, the Lemonade album, Beyoncé, was so monumental, and so well thought-out. And so beautiful and soul-baring and we all got to see another side of you that you don’t always let us see, and we appreciate that. And all us artists adore you. You are our light. And the way that you make me and my friends feel, the way you make my Black friends feel, is empowering, and you make them stand up for themselves. And I love you. I always have. And I always will. I appreciate it.” The Recording Academy, on the other hand, doesn’t appreciate it quite as much, notorious for choosing to laud white boy records or albums that are otherwise totally unknown to the public at large (e.g., Jon Batiste winning Album of the Year at the 2022 edition of the awards show).

    They opted for the white boy route this year. And when Styles took the stage, it was clear many wanted him to pull some kind of Cady Heron at the prom moment where he might break the Grammy into pieces to give to all the other nominees—or maybe just in half to bequeath the other part to Beyoncé. But no, Styles, for all the grand displays of self-effacement, was not of the belief, like Adele, that Beyoncé deserved it more than he did—or should even be mentioned at all in the speech. Instead, he felt obliged to say, “This doesn’t happen to people like me very often.” Um, what does that even mean? Success doesn’t come rather easily very often (read: all the time) to cisgender (regardless of queerbaiting tendencies) white males? ‘Cause that’s a goddamn lie, and really not something to conclude in front of an audience full of venomous Beyoncé lovers. Particularly as Beyoncé helped to carve out a genre (for girl group is to boy band as breakout solo career is to being the most standout vocalist in one of those entities) that Styles’ generation would later capitalize on through post-empire music competition “reality” shows like The X Factor, where One Direction was summarily farted out of Simon Cowell’s ass. But, as it is now said, begat of an asshole one day, Grammy Award winner the next.

    Plus, “at least” the Recording Academy saw fit to throw Beyoncé a bone by “allowing” her to secure the title of most Grammy wins ever by any artist as a result of awarding her in the categories of Best Dance/Electronic Music Album, Best Dance/Electronic Recording, Best Traditional R&B Performance and Best R&B Song. As for the “controversy” of “Mrs. Carter” not finagling Album of the Year, the thing is, Harry’s House says just as little about the current collective experience as Renaissance (which prefers to rely on musical tropes of the past because of pop culture’s permanent state of hauntology), on which “Queen” Bey also deigns to talk about how everyone should quit their job as she proceeds to siphon unreasonable amounts of cash from them so that they might better demonstrate the extent of their “devotion.” Perhaps being a “Church Girl,” she can only look at dynamics in this way: as either being the worshipper or the worshipped. Revealing herself to be the former for only one “man,” Beyoncé stated in her acceptance speech, “I wanna thank God for protecting me. Thank you, God.”

    First of all, vomit. And second of all, how fucking narcissistic to believe that even if there was a god, he gives more of a shit about protecting celebrities than “normals” (granted, that is what evidence appears to prove). But such is the ego of someone at that level in the entertainment industry. What’s more, Beyoncé as a more calculated person than anyone has ever accused Taylor Swift of being is manifest in acceptance speeches past during which she’s stuck to the same script about thanking god and her “beautiful” husband (is she looking at the same man?).

    So the real upset, if we’re truly talking “objectivity” as opposed to overwrought deification, was that the Recording Academy still couldn’t bring itself to select an album that’s actually reflective of the present climate, which, in this year’s case, would have been either Kendrick Lamar’s Mr. Morale & the Big Steppers or Bad Bunny’s Un verano sin ti. But because something about Beyoncé elicits a more crack-licking response, compounded by a white male, um, beating her, we have this level of outrage on the same day a massive earthquake has wiped out thousands in the Turkey-Syria vicinity. But no, here in the United States, Beyoncé’s “loss” is far more upsetting that the loss of life of literally thousands of people. But they’re just ordinaries and ISIS members, so who cares, right?

    Back in 2017, when this happened with Lemonade, Adele was, as mentioned before, the most vocal advocate for her idol. Not just in her speech, but even afterward when she tried to vaguely give the benefit of the doubt re: the Recording Academy’s out-of-touch decision-making with the placation, “I just said to [Beyoncé], like, the way that the Grammys works, and the people who control it at the very, very top—they don’t know what a visual album is. They don’t want to support the way that she’s moving things forward with her releases and the things that she’s talking about.” This year, there was no “visual album” (not yet, anyway) to “confuse” the stodgy members of the institution. And Beyoncé was talking about less “controversial” subjects than on Lemonade. But those “capitulations” were apparently still not compelling enough to make them choose her.

    The truth is, though, it was “enough” on the Recording Academy’s part to give her the required number of award wins that would bestow her with the record for having the most Grammys. By not ceding Album of the Year, there is at least some acknowledgment of the fact that Beyoncé is, if one wants to be candid, overblown in many ways. And no one seems to want to address that the “empire” she has become was (and remains) built on the backs of many. It takes a literal village to make “Beyoncé” happen, including her songs (see: what Linda Perry said). Most seem to discount that in failing to remember that even the “gods” are capable of frailty—instead holding her up as some beacon of perfection that no human can actually embody—it creates an environment of contempt and hostility among “the fans” (a.k.a. blind worshippers) and those they deem responsible for their god’s “failing” when everything doesn’t automatically go Bey’s way.

    To further quote Adele in 2017, “My view is, like, ‘What the fuck does she have to do to win Album of the Year?’ The Grammys are very traditional, but I just thought this year would be the year that they would kind of go with the tide.” In going against it yet again, however, the Recording Academy might unwittingly be onto something…if only they hadn’t counteracted the curveball with Harry’s House as their pick. Hopefully, for Taylor’s sake at the 2024 Grammys—as she’ll surely be nominated many times next year for Midnights—Bey won’t release any new qualifying material that results in yet another Kanye-at-the-2009-VMAs moment. An immortal instant that many were drawing comparisons to when certain audience members at the Crypto.com Arena (which will always be the Staples Center) booed Styles as he accepted the award for Album of the Year. So if nothing else, it can be confirmed that Bey has definitely won the award for triggering white guilt every time they “take” one away from her.

    Genna Rivieccio

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  • When Beyoncé Said, “Who Run the World? Girls,” This Isn’t What She Had In Mind… But It Was More of a “Symbolic” Statement Anyway

    When Beyoncé Said, “Who Run the World? Girls,” This Isn’t What She Had In Mind… But It Was More of a “Symbolic” Statement Anyway

    While a “pretty thought” to express, the assumption made by most (realists) when Beyoncé said, “Who run the world? Girls” back in 2011 was that it was a more “metaphorical” sentiment. For it certainly didn’t apply in practice to the political arena: the sole source of true power on Planet Earth (apart from “billionaire businessman”). Not then, and not even now. Yes, there have been “strides,” but, at present, only about seven percent of women comprise leadership positions in high-ranking government roles. As of 2022, only thirteen countries were represented by women as a Head of State. Sadly, this will no longer include Jacinda Ardern, the beloved prime minister of New Zealand who has decided to step down from her role in February of 2023 and let someone else take on all the stress that comes with it. Ardern was an especially remarkable “anomaly” in the political arena because she was the youngest woman to become a head of state, and then did that one better by becoming the second female head of state to give birth while in office. Proving that, yes, women really can do it all. Often because they’re not given much of a choice.

    Ardern’s decision to leave her post, however, proves that when a woman is given the opportunity not to have to juggle it all, she should take it. And Ardern was very candid in openly declaring, “I know what this job takes and I know that I no longer have enough in the tank to do it justice. It is that simple. We need a fresh set of shoulders for that challenge.” This is something that, clearly, most men would fail to admit. Complete with “statesmen” like Ronald Reagan, Donald Trump and Joe Biden taking on the presidency at an age that calls into question a particular mental fitness required for such a rigorous job. Or what should be a rigorous job if one is actually doing it. Nonetheless, these men are given the green light to take on positions they have no business “performing” (and it is all ultimately just a performance for them).

    But Beyoncé clearly didn’t want to think about that when she touted repeatedly, “Who run the world? Girls.” In addition to, “My persuasion [read: vagina]/Can build a nation/Endless power/With our love we can devour.” But it’s obviously the hate-driven subjugation spurred by men that has continued to succeed in this life. With messages of hate, if we’re being honest with ourselves, truly winning out over “radical love.”

    What’s more, the type of women that do seek power often end up being walking examples—see: Margaret Thatcher, Giorgia Meloni, Marine Le Pen, Marjorie Taylor Greene—of internalized misogyny within the very gender that should seek to obliterate it at all costs. The only shining beacon of that obliteration has been Iceland (whose current prime minister is Katrín Jakobsdóttir). This not only being the first country to have a female president with the election of Vigdís Finnbogadóttir in 1980, but also the first openly gay (female or otherwise) president in the form of Jóhanna Sigurðardóttir, who took office in 2009. And it was Finnbogadóttir who said that her election would not have been possible without Kvennafrídagurinn, or the Women’s Day Off strike that took place on Friday, October 24, 1975. On this day, ninety percent of Iceland’s female population participated in the strike, which entailed not going to their jobs or doing housework/child care of any kind.

    The intent, of course, was to show men “the indispensable work of women for Iceland’s economy and society.” That indispensability wasn’t just in Iceland, but worldwide. And yet, Iceland remains among the few countries with something vaguely resembling gender parity. So sure, if Beyoncé was thinking about Iceland when she sang “Run the World (Girls),” the lyrics might apply. For even Finland, for all its Scandinavian progressiveness in having a youthful female prime minister like Sanna Marin, couldn’t avoid the “scandal” that arose when videos of Marin drinking and partying at a private residence with her friends leaked to the public. The question of whether or not a man in power would be subject to even half as much scrutiny was immediately raised by women, including those who showed support for Marin’s right to party by posting videos of themselves drinking, dancing and generally having a good time in the wake of her “moral fitness” being put under a microscope. Indeed, a woman having a good time is still a cardinal sin in most men’s eyes—especially when she’s in a position of authority. Authority that is constantly undermined by male judgment, hypocritical accusations and a general petulant outcrying. All designed to somehow “prove” that women are “inept” and “too emotional” to shoulder the responsibility of running a nation. Cue the abrupt record scratch sound effect over the tune of this song potentially playing over an election win for Hillary Clinton.

    Even Beyoncé’s lyrics don’t provide much in the way of a “vote of confidence” for female capability as she says things like, “This goes out to all my girls/That’s in the club rocking the latest.” As though the highest achievement a woman can reveal to accent her “power” is being well-dressed in the most expensive garb. Which is ultimately just a reiteration of the stereotype of women’s frivolity (hear also: “Girls Just Want To Have Fun”) more than a “boosting” commentary on a woman’s ability to pay for her own shit. To that point, Beyoncé also declares, “I work my nine to five [no she doesn’t], better cut my check.” This being yet another prime instance of Beyoncé pretending to act like she’s ever been a part of the conventional working world (with the “nine to five” trope also cropping up in “Haunted” via the lyrics, “Workin’ nine to five/Just to stay alive/How come?”). The most recent sonic illustration of that being “Break My Soul,” during which she urges the masses to quit their job by insisting, in this alternate universe where she’s an office worker, “I just quit my job I’m gonna find new drive/Damn, they work me so damn hard/Work by nine, then off past five [once again, Bey clearly hasn’t updated herself on what more modern working hours are]/And they work my nerves/That’s why I cannot sleep at night.” Really? It has nothing to do with the pain of a lie like, “Who run the world? Girls”?

    For what Beyoncé is really alluding to in that song is the Lysistrata-based fact that women “run the world” with their sexual power (e.g., “You’ll do anything for me”—yeah, because pussy runs dick, hence the term, “Pussy Power”). As Samantha Jones once said of giving head (as opposed to head of state), “The sense of power is such a turn-on—maybe you’re on your knees, but you got him by the balls.” This being one of those things women have to tell themselves in order to keep going. That no matter how demeaned they are, they still have their ultimate power: the threat of withholding sex (once more: Lysistrata). And even that isn’t much of a source of power when it’s so often ripped from them through sexual assault.

    To boot, what will become of that power in a world ever-changing with regard to gender fluidity and sexuality? It seems that’s the real reason “conventional” women like Giorgia Meloni end up in high government positions: to somehow ensure that they can keep what little power they have with the cisgender straight white males who actually run the world by championing discriminatory practices that exclude trans and LGTQIA+ rights. It’s a bleak reality, to be sure—but it is reality. And according the UN’s prognostications for gender parity in government at the current rate, it will remain a reality for another “130 years.” At which time, most of the population will probably be dead because of male decisions made (or rather, not made) about how to conserve what’s left of the environment.

    To add insult to the injury of it all, Beyoncé chose to kick off 2023 by performing in the United Arab Emirates—even if somewhere as “progressive” as Dubai. Where laws against women (including a husband’s “right” beat his wife) are notoriously not in favor of the Bey-backed sentiment regarding women running the world (but “principles” tend to go effortlessly out the window when one is paid twenty-four million dollars to lose them). Not to mention the Emirates being very anti-LGBTQIA+ a.k.a. the community that Bey freely pillaged from for her Renaissance album.

    In short, it’s pretty hard evidence that she’s not all that committed to making a point about women running the world in any way other than “symbolically.” And the same goes for women like Meloni, who actively seek to reinforce the patriarchal system we’re trapped in by working “within it” instead of against it.

    Genna Rivieccio

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