The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Beyoncé country album shatters records

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BEYONCÉ has become the first black artiste ever to hit number one with a country album in the United Kingdom, topping the chart with her eighth record,“Cowboy Carter”.

Not only that, but the star has done the double — with the album’s lead single, “Texas Hold ‘Em”, returning to the top spot in the singles chart for a fifth non-consecutiv­e week.

Beyoncé follows in the footsteps of Shania Twain, who was the first female country artiste to score a UK number one album when “Come On Over” topped the Official Albums Chart in September 1999.

Incredibly, Queen of Country Dolly Parton, with a career spanning nearly 50 years and hits that include “Jolene”, “I Will Always Love You” and “9 To 5”, has never achieved a number one single or album in the UK.

This is Queen Bey’s second UK charts double, mirroring her instant success as a solo artiste when she topped the album and singles charts simultaneo­usly with her smash hit“Crazy In Love”, featuring Jay-Z, and debut album“Dangerousl­y In Love”, in 2003.

Plus, she has two other tracks from“Cowboy Carter”in the singles top 10 — her cover of Parton’s “Jolene” at number eight and “II Most Wanted”, a duet with Miley Cyrus, at number nine.

Previously, she has achieved two top 10 entries on two separate occasions — in 2008 with“If I Were A Boy”and“Listen”, and again in 2009 with “If I Were A Boy” and “Single Ladies (Put A Ring On It)” — according to the Official Chart

Congratula­ting the star, Official Charts chief executive officer Martin Talbot said Parton should“step aside (for now)”as“Bey is the *current* Queen of Country”.

In a statement, he said: “In a career of huge achievemen­ts, congratula­tions to Beyoncé on securing a slew of UK chart records with her country single and album this week, underlinin­g her position as one of the world’s most ground-breaking musical artistes.”

As well as her cover of “Jolene”, Beyoncé also covers “Blackbird”, the civil rights-inspired song by The Beatles, on “Cowboy Carter”.

Sir Paul McCartney has praised the star for her“magnificen­t”version, saying it“reinforces the civil rights message that inspired me to write the song in the first place”.

Writing on Instagram, he said they had spoken on FaceTime about her recording the song.

“When I saw the footage on television in the early 60s of the black girls being turned away from school, I found it shocking and I can’t believe that still in these days, there are places where this kind of thing is happening right now,” Sir Paul said. — Wires

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