USA TODAY US Edition

BEYONCÉ FALLS INTO FORMATION

From bodysuits to sisterhood, world tour has it all and lots of ‘Lemonade’

- Maeve McDermott @maeve_mcdermott USA TODAY

Hold up, they don’t love us like she loves us.

Beyoncé’s Formation World Tour kickoff in Miami on Wednesday night was a glowing celebratio­n of love between sisters, between idols and their worshipers, and to a lesser extent, between partners.

Because while many spectators probably entered Marlins Park with the saga of Bey, Jay and Becky on their minds, it couldn’t have seemed further from the performer’s. Over the course of her marathon 30-plus song set, she sang plenty of love songs — she does make them better than nearly anyone else in pop. But while the dominant narrative of Beyonce’s last arena tour, 2011’s On The Run jaunt with Jay Z, was the couple’s married bliss, the

Formation tour’s ambitious first night was a thank-you present to fans, executed with her new girl gang at her side.

So now that the show’s officially on the road, here’s what to expect from 2016’s most-anticipate­d tour.

DJ KHALED’S ‘OPENING SET’ IS A LOOSE CONCEPT

Besides being the king of Snapchat, Khaled makes his money from helping produce big rap/ R&B ensemble tracks, and then yelling his name over them.

Don’t expect anything different from his opening set, which featured a parade of his famous friends at the Miami show, including Rick Ross, 2 Chainz, Yo Gotti, Lil Wayne, Future and more. While it’s safe to assume Khaled pulled out all the stops for the tour’s opening night, hopefully his sets at future tour dates also feature a surprise or two.

NO JAY — BUT IT’S OK

Khaled’s circus of A-list rappers only highlighte­d the completely solo affair that was Beyoncé’s set, which unfolded without Jay Z. Beyoncé, master of controllin­g the message that she is, managed to drop enough hints that all’s well in the Carter-Knowles household, introducin­g the lovey-dovey anthem All

Night, describing it as her “favorite song on Lemonade.”

And at the concert’s end, she shouted out “beautiful husband” before closing with Halo — “Booboo, I love you so much.”

BODYSUITS!

Black, white and red; leather, latex and crazily bejewleled; paired with her brimmed hat from Formation, with thigh-high boots for dance sequences or with no shoes at all for Freedom’s puddle-jumping; Beyoncé couldn’t have made the Formation tour’s dominant fashion trend more obvious.

We loved the wild fashion show of flowing gowns that was the

Lemonade visual album, but it’s hard to be upset with one-pieces as audacious, sexy and fun as we saw in Miami.

A LIFE-GIVING TEAM OF BACKUP DANCERS

Beyoncé’s live shows were never solo affairs, and some of her most iconic moments are notable for the dancers at her side, from

Single Ladies’ three-person routine to her incredible gear-shifting Ring The Alarm performanc­e.

After digesting the imagery of Beyonce’s Lemonade, which beautifull­y celebrates the sisterhood among women of color, her insanely talented squad of dancers (who were nearly, if not entirely WOC) feel even more like an essential force. They weren’t dancing behind Beyoncé but with her — often literally as they rock and twirl in line.

LOTS OF ‘LEMONADE’

The vast majority of the new album found its way onto the night’s sprawling set list, kicking off with a blazing version of For

mation and coming to a jubilant climax with Freedom, as a watercover­ed walkway emerged in the middle of Marlins Park for a stomping dance routine.

The Lemonade visual album was also a regular presence, as clips showed up during interludes. And more broadly, the concert roughly adhered to Lem

onade’s narrative arc. HIT AFTER (ABBREVIATE­D) HIT

Bey covered nearly all of her basics, and rather than performing full songs, she’d do a verse or two before flipping it into another hit to maximize her discograph­y’s insanely deep bench.

Also fun were the Easter eggs of other songs hidden throughout her set, from her guitarist sneaking Kanye’s New Slaves riff into the intro for Don’t Hurt Yourself to Bey seamlessly inserting a line from D’Angelo’s Untitled (How

Does It Feel) in the middle of the similarly smoldering Rocket.

MERCHANDIS­E YOU ACTUALLY WANT TO BUY

Merch booths at arena tours are almost inherently manipulati­ve, designed to make concertgoe­rs feel guilty for not paying exorbitant prices on a token to commemorat­e their night.

The Formation merch tent is full a pleasant surprises. There were cute pins and glossy posters for fans looking for something less expensive, a gorgeous bomber jacket for the big spenders. .

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AFP/GETTY IMAGES
 ??  ?? Beyoncé kicks off her Formation World Tour Wednesday night at Marlins Park in Miami.
Beyoncé kicks off her Formation World Tour Wednesday night at Marlins Park in Miami.

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