If You’re Going To Critique Beyoncé’s ‘Cowboy Carter,’ At Least Get It Right
Beyoncé’s “Cowboy Carter” isn’t a reclamation album. Instead, it’s a declaration of the place Black folks have always had in country music — and a middle finger to the industry gatekeepers that have tried to keep us out.
Bey makes this clear on the first track, “Ameriican Requim.” It’s the thesis statement for the album as she sings, “Plant my bare feet on solid ground for years / They don’t, don’t know how hard I had to fight for this.”
Beyoncé, too, is America. She, too, embodies country.
She spends the next 26 tracks challenging the box Nashville, Tennessee, has put on the genre, blending and twisting it. After all, she told us, “This ain’t a country album. This is a ‘Beyoncé’ album.”
“She is doing such intentional work out the gate to say this is going to be my critique, my analysis, my understanding, my lived experience as a Black woman in America,” journalist Taylor Crumpton said of the lead track on this week’s episode of “I Know That’s Right.”
“On first listen, it feels as if she is Lady Liberty and we’re looking through her eyes at America.”
That’s gone over many people’s heads, however.
That includes Washington Post writer Chris Richards calling the album “botched” and claiming that Beyoncé made an “album about award shows,” Azealia Banks claiming that Bey is cosplaying as a white woman and Lily Allen calling Bey’s foray into country music “calculated,” specifically with her cover of Dolly Parton’s classic hit, “Jolene.” (Never mind the fact that Parton requested Beyoncé to cover it.)
The bias behind these opinions is what led the global superstar to make this album in the first place, as she noted in an Instagram post ahead of the release of “Cowboy Carter.”
What naysayers are missing the point on, however, is