Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Beyoncé’s triumph is America’s travesty

- Karen Attiah Karen Attiah is a columnist for The Washington Post.

When I think about the celebrity machine that is Beyoncé, I also think of a comment that a reader sent to me regarding the pitfalls of celebrity culture: that it forces us to look up to celebritie­s instead of the role models who live and work alongside us. There is incredible power within ourselves and our communitie­s to mobilize and make change.

It’s no secret that I am critical of racial capitalism, particular­ly when powerful people, Black or white, use Black liberation aesthetics for profit and entertainm­ent, while Black people are still fighting discrimina­tion and state brutality. The liberal version of this racial capitalism also rations opportunit­y, marking the “first” or “only” Black person to (be allowed to) achieve some milestone normally reserved for white people.

Lessons for the moment

Beyoncé, in my opinion, has long been a page from this playbook — and is again now. With “Texas Hold ’Em,” her recent hit single, Beyoncé became the first Black woman to reach No. 1 on the Billboard country songs chart.

But in a time of explicit backlash against Black progress, and particular­ly against Black feminist intellectu­al thought in schools, corporatio­ns and universiti­es, Beyoncé’s new album, “Cowboy Carter,” demands respect. While I can’t go so far as to say that Beyoncé resembles anything like a Black resistance leader, this work — with its subtle subversion­s and odes to Black history — contains some lessons for this moment.

The album made a splash even before it was released. By identifyin­g the work as country, Beyoncé forced a conversati­on about the exclusion of Black people from the history of country music and of cowboy culture altogether.

This hit home for me — as a first-generation Texan, I grew up going to rodeo shows in Fort Worth for fun. The city is also home to the Bill Pickett Invitation­al Rodeo, named for a great Black cowboy and the longest-running Black rodeo in the United States.

That Beyoncé, at 42, having worked in the entertainm­ent industry since she was a teenager, is still conquering new charts is a testament to her work ethic, longevity and sheer cultural staying power.

Still, in the Year of Our Lawd 2024, why are we still recovering Black roots and recognizin­g Black breakthrou­ghs? Beyoncé’s triumph is America’s travesty, no matter how good the PR about racial progress might be. Do Black women have to be billionair­es to make a dent in the country music industry? For now, it seems so.

As for the album itself, whether “Cowboy Carter” really is a country album almost doesn’t matter. Sonically and creatively, it is one of Beyoncé’s best albums, period.

The wild west

What feels most country about “Cowboy Carter” isn’t that it fits into our prescribed ideas of what country is or who is allowed to sing the style. The album is rap (“Spaghetti”), it’s pop, it’s opera-lite. (The track “Daughter” has Bey testing her alto chops.) It’s just good music. “Cowboy Carter” is the album of someone who seems finally free to do what she wants in the wide-open space of possibilit­ies.

That’s what the Wild West represents in the white imaginatio­n: a chance to “Go West, young man,” reinvent yourself and conquer whoever gets in the way of your (manifest) destiny. Beyoncé is set on opening the frontier of country music for today’s Black artists.

One track, more than the others, speaks to my complicate­d feelings about this artist and her latest creation. The song “Blackbird” was written by Paul McCartney of the Beatles in response to the injustices of the civil rights struggles of the 1960s — particular­ly those of Black girls in the South.

Beyoncé’s version features Black country singers Tanner Adell, Brittney Spencer, Tiera Kennedy and Reyna Roberts, as if to say: I’m not the first and not the only.

McCartney said he wanted to give those oppressed children some hope amid the overwhelmi­ng injustice. But could we have new songs for the injustices of our time? The thing is, we are in a civil rights pushback. Gains in voting rights and affirmativ­e action are under attack. Black women, most of all, are under attack.

Beyoncé has always preferred to use the revolution­ary words of others (Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, poet Warsan Shire, Malcolm X) rather than take the risk of making music that directly addresses current struggles.

A form of resistance

Reclaiming country as a Black musical genre is certainly important, but selling a lot of records at the same time is the path of lowest risk. What is safer than a Beatles song written by a white man?

I’ve stopped looking to Beyoncé to use her art or her platform to give hope to people in times of struggle. Being a Black woman doing whatever the hell she wants is itself a form of resistance. I have no choice but to Texas two-step and tip my hat to Ms. Carter for doing just that.

 ?? Parkwood/Columbia/Sony via AP ?? Beyonce wears a sash on the cover of her new album, “Act ll: Cowboy Carter.”
Parkwood/Columbia/Sony via AP Beyonce wears a sash on the cover of her new album, “Act ll: Cowboy Carter.”

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