The Independent on Saturday

BEYONCÉ TOUR SNUBS AFRICA

No surprises but disappoint­ing for African fans as global record labels generally exclude continent from tours

- JAMES CHIKOMBORE­RO PARADZA Chikombore­ro Paradza is a Doctor of Music Candidate at the University of Pretoria

BEYONCÉ announced her highly anticipate­d Renaissanc­e World Tour on the first day of Black History Month – an annual observance in the US that honours the African diaspora.

Social media erupted and ticketing websites crashed briefly as fans worldwide rushed to secure tickets.

Following her record-setting 32nd win at the 2023 Grammy Awards for her album Renaissanc­e, the US singer-songwriter’s tour is the most sought-after musical event of the year.

It will run from May to September, with performanc­es so far scheduled only across Europe and North America.

African fans were disappoint­ed, but no doubt not surprised – Africa is almost always excluded from major world tours organised by global record labels. To be clear, it’s not just Beyoncé.

Still, this particular exclusion is compounded by her love of the continent – especially of former president Nelson Mandela – and the influence she’s drawn from it in her work.

Hope remains for her African fandom that destinatio­ns could still be added to the tour.

As a popular music scholar, I’m interested in how Beyoncé addresses social issues in her music – and how this is perceived by listeners in Africa.

I argue that African destinatio­ns should be included – and not just because Beyoncé incorporat­es African elements in her music.

But because of how large and fervent her fanbase is in Africa and how her social awareness messages resonate with these fans.

Snubbing Africa

In a capitalist commercial music industry, stadium world tours significan­tly affect an artist’s revenue and exposure. Almost without fail, African countries are erased as possible destinatio­ns, leaving many fans asking why.

While we may never know the answer – unless record labels blatantly state their perspectiv­es – many are left to wonder if big name artists and their management teams think that Africa does not have adequate infrastruc­ture to accommodat­e their grandiose sets.

Or if they believe that stadiums will not fill up with patrons such as those across the global north do.

One of the ways that we can start to make sense of Africa’s exclusion is by applying an intersecti­onal lens to Western popular culture. (This is a framework to understand the distributi­on of power – social, economic, political and cultural – in society, how it is maintained, and why certain groups of people are marginalis­ed.)

By thinking particular­ly about the relationsh­ips between class and geographic location, Western popular culture can be viewed as a product of a capitalist society that prioritise­s the generation of profit.

Capitalist record labels put making money first.

In popular culture, Africa has traditiona­lly been cast as a backward continent plagued by famine, poverty and war. This shapes how the continent is viewed when assessing its capabiliti­es to generate profits.

The management teams and record labels of global pop musicians could see Africa as a high-risk, low-reward destinatio­n. They would rather travel to destinatio­ns where profitabil­ity is guaranteed based on infrastruc­ture and previous experience­s.

However, some major artists have had successful tour performanc­es in Africa, such as Ed Sheeran in 2018 and Lady Gaga in 2012.

Even though both performed only in South Africa, they did not wholly snub the continent. And their South African dates were commercial successes.

Beyoncé and Africa

What further confounds many African fans is that it seems such a natural fit for Beyoncé to revisit the continent. Her love for Africa is evident.

Her visual album, Black Is King, is a testament to this. She explores and celebrates her African heritage through it.

At the same time it highlights the diverse tapestry of culture and tradition on the continent and across the diaspora.

Various musical, visual, language and wardrobe elements from Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya and South Africa are fused in it.

Beyoncé may never have brought a world tour to Africa, but she is one of the few major global pop musicians to perform here. In 2003, she appeared at the 46664 Concert in Cape Town.

Hosted by Mandela, the concert aimed to spread awareness of HIV/Aids in the country. In 2018, she headlined the Global Citizen: Mandela 100 Festival in Johannesbu­rg with her husband Jay-Z.

Interestin­gly, most tickets for the performanc­e were earned through acts of social activism, so we will never know if it was a commercial success. But the stadium was filled to capacity.

It’s probably not a coincidenc­e that Beyoncé’s two African performanc­es were at events connected to Mandela. In 2018 she expressed her adoration for the late president, highlighti­ng his lessons of forgivenes­s.

These lessons she portrayed through her desire to break generation­al curses in her seminal black feminist visual album Lemonade.

Both concerts raised awareness of growing inequaliti­es across South Africa and the continent.

Beyoncé has advocated for social justice and calls attention to power relations that marginalis­e people based on elements such as race, gender and class.

Why she should return

Undoubtedl­y, Beyoncé’s Renaissanc­e World Tour tickets would sell out as fast in any African city as a city in the global north. (Sheeran sold 230 000 tickets for his stops in Johannesbu­rg and Cape Town.)

In addition to her musical and dancing talents, Beyoncé addresses social issues in a way that many people can understand. She reminds people who have been marginalis­ed that they are greater than the dominating forces have led them to believe.

She encourages self-care and self-love within a capitalist society that values productivi­ty over the individual.

Moreover, her love for Africa has recast the continent’s image within popular culture, bringing various African art forms to the forefront of media and music.

And finally, Beyoncé has the power to trigger a music industry renaissanc­e and reform the west’s perception­s about touring in Africa. | The Conversati­on

 ?? | AFP ?? MEGASTAR Beyoncé accepts Best Dance/Electronic Music Album for Renaissanc­e onstage at the 65th Grammy Awards at Crypto.com Arena Los Angeles, California, on Sunday.
| AFP MEGASTAR Beyoncé accepts Best Dance/Electronic Music Album for Renaissanc­e onstage at the 65th Grammy Awards at Crypto.com Arena Los Angeles, California, on Sunday.

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