Los Angeles Times

All hail festival queen

The ‘Beyoncé effect’ resonates as fans brace for singer’s Coachella set after a year’s wait.

- By Gerrick D. Kennedy gerrick.kennedy @latimes.com Twitter: @GerrickKen­nedy

This year the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival has a new nickname: Beychella.

Unofficial rechristen­ing aside, the anticipati­on for Beyoncé’s debut at the two-weekend, Golden voice produced desert blowout has been clear for almost a year.

Shortly after it was revealed early last year that Beyoncé would become the first woman to headline the fest in about a decade, the world found out the pop star was pregnant — with twins.

When she pulled out under doctor’s orders, promising instead to come back the following year, both festival organizers and ticket buyers faced a rare dilemma. Organizers needed to find a replacemen­t — they secured Lady Gaga — and fans needed to decide whether they still wanted to make the trek to Indio.

There was a 12% dip in the pricing of tickets on the secondary market after Beyoncé dropped out, according to TicketIQ, which tracks ticket sales on the primary and secondary resale markets. But the demand for Coachella outweighs any single act, as evidenced by the festival’s ability to largely sell out before its lineup announceme­nt.

Even without the world’s most recognizab­le superstar, Coachella had no problem drawing 125,000 attendees for each of its two weekends last year and the 2018 edition was again a near-instananeo­us sellout.

With a capacity crowd almost guaranteed, and with hotel prices in the surroundin­g region generally a few hundred dollars more than they were on Friday or Sunday, the questions surroundin­g this year’s Coachella — a largely apolitical event that pairs music with high-end food and larger-than-life art installati­ons — were focused on the act’s biggest celebrity.

Will she reunite with her old group, Destiny’s Child? Will she bring out husband Jay-Z? Or will she use Coachella as an opportunit­y to release new music?

Fans far from Indio were paying attention, made easier by the fact that Coachella streams many of its firstweek performanc­es online, and Beyoncé’s late Saturday evening slot was also set to be broadcast via YouTube.

“This is the most important set in her career,” said Cornelius Lyons, founder of popular Beyoncé fan site BeyRelease­s, 17, of Memphis, Tenn. He’s streaming the performanc­e at home and readying coverage for his followers. “Considerin­g that last year was her 20th anniversar­y [as a recording artist], I think this performanc­e will be a celebratio­n of her career.”

Still, with baseline tickets priced this year at $429 and about $1,000 for VIP add-ons, going to Coachella largely for Beyoncé was a hefty investment. So perhaps it’s no surprise that the effect of Beyoncé was felt beyond just her booking. There was something of a “Beyoncé effect” present throughout the weekend.

It was most closely seen in the singer’s young proteges Chloe x Halle, who kicked off the day many festivalgo­ers referred to as “Beyday.” The dynamic sister duo, signed to Beyoncé’s Parkwood Entertainm­ent imprint, feel like descendant­s of Destiny’s Child with their bouncy anthems crafted from the viewpoint of young black women, and their set was filled with the same sass and vigor that made their mentor compelling as a girl group ingenue in the late ’90s.

Beside SZA’s unapologet­ic stories of black womanhood, Sudan Archives’ grit and the ferocious sensuality of Hayley Kiyoko and Jorja Smith, Beyoncé led a bill that was richer in its inclusivit­y of female, queer and minority artists.

“The bill was worth it for me outside of Beyoncé. SZA is here, Daniel Caesar is here. Cardi B. People who are having great years,” said Brandon Hayes, a fan who traveled from Atlanta to attend the festival. “Looking at the pop charts, it made sense that the bill had more R&B and hip-hop. It makes up for not having her last year.”

While some fans opted out last year, pawning tickets to eager buyers, others decided the show would go on — knowing that like Beyoncé, they too would return next year.

“I’m glad I still came. The energy here is crazy, and I got an introducti­on to artists I wouldn’t have seen otherwise,” Hayes said of last year’s Coachella.

Hayes, like many, made his decision to come to his first Coachella strictly because of Beyoncé’s booking and returned this year to see the singer.

Brittaney Belyeu sold her ticket last year and waited. “Coachella is an experience. Ticket price isn’t a factor for me, but I really wanted to see her here so I waited,” she said.

Beyoncé’s performanc­e is also a historic one for the festival.

She’s only the third female-centric act to headline Coachella, after Gaga and Björk in 2002 and 2007.

Beyoncé, who has spent the current act of her career pushing the envelope with provocativ­e, genre-blurring projects, is also the first woman of color to top the bill.

 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? BEYONCÉ, right, performs at the Grammy Awards in 2017. She is this year’s headliner at Coachella.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times BEYONCÉ, right, performs at the Grammy Awards in 2017. She is this year’s headliner at Coachella.

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