The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

New doc shows how Beyoncé changed Coachella, forever

- By Mesfin Fekadu AP Music Writer “HOMECOMING: A film by Beyoncé,” a Netflix release, is rated TV-MA. Running time: 137 minutes. Four stars out of four.

Beyoncé is extremely private, and only lets you know what she wants you to know, when she wants you to know it — typically, in a surprise post be it on her website or Instagram.

But throughout the years, she’s slightly cracked open her door to reveal parts of her life and personalit­y — apart from what she gives through strong singing and extraordin­ary dance moves — to help remind us that though she is epic and flawless, she is still mortal.

“HOMECOMING: A film by Beyoncé,” which premiered Wednesday on Netflix, captures the human side of the superstar singer with behind-the-scenes, intimate moments of a mother, wife and artist tirelessly working on what’s already become one of most iconic musical performanc­es of all-time: Beyoncé’s headlining show at the 2018 Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival.

The performanc­e marked the first time a black woman headlined the famed festival and made Beyoncé just the third woman to score the gig, behind Bjork and Lady Gaga. Beyoncé took on the role seriously — as she does all live performanc­es — giving the audience a rousing, terrific and new show highlighte­d by a full marching band, majorette dancers, steppers and more that is the norm at historical­ly black colleges and universiti­es (HBCUs).

The film takes it a step further to showcase what was happening to get to the historic moment: you see a mother bouncing back from giving birth to twins via an emergency Csection; an African American woman embracing her family’s history and paying tribute to black college culture and honoring black art; and the world’s No. 1 pop star defying the odds yet again and pushing herself to new heights, creating an even wider space between herself and whoever is No. 2.

Simply put, Beyoncé changed Coachella — forever — and performing after her is like trying to out-ace Serena Williams or dunk better than Michael Jordan: You won’t win.

Woven into the film are audio soundbites from popular figures to help narrate the story: Nina Simone speaks about blackness, Maya Angelou talks about truth, and Tessa Thompson and Danai Gurira explain the importance of seeing people who look like you on large screens.

Beyoncé speaks, too, saying that she dreamed of attending an HBCU, though she explains: “My college was Destiny’s Child.”

She also says the importance of her Coachella performanc­e was to bring “our culture to Coachella” and highlight “everyone that had never seen themselves represente­d.”

So many people were represente­d during those performanc­es last April — her stage was packed with about 200 performers, from dancers to singers to band and orchestra players. Beyoncé kicked of the performanc­e dressed like an African queen, walking up the stage as the jazzy, soulful big band sound of New Orleans is played. After letting her dancers and backing band shine, she emerges again, this time dressed down — like a studious, eager, hopeful college student.

The musical direction and song selection flows effortless­ly and was purposely crafted to tell a story: the first song is 2003’s “Crazy In Love,” a massively successful No. 1 hit and her first apart from Destiny’s Child. It also was Beyoncé’s first of many collaborat­ions with Jay-Z. But then comes “Freedom,” representi­ng the Beyoncé of today, unconcerne­d with having a radio or streaming hit, but more focused on the art, and the message.

And her message was loud and clear on “HOMECOMING”: Her performanc­e is a homage to the culturally rich homecoming events held annually at HBCUs, but also showcases Beyoncé’s own homecoming — her return to her roots, and how she’s found a new voice by reinterpre­ting her music through the lens of black history.

Young, gifted and black, indeed.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This image released by Netflix shows Beyonce in a scene from her documentar­y “Homecoming: A Film by Beyoncé.”
ASSOCIATED PRESS This image released by Netflix shows Beyonce in a scene from her documentar­y “Homecoming: A Film by Beyoncé.”
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This image released by Netflix shows Beyonce in a scene from her documentar­y “Homecoming: A Film by Beyoncé.”
ASSOCIATED PRESS This image released by Netflix shows Beyonce in a scene from her documentar­y “Homecoming: A Film by Beyoncé.”

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