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Details

Autor(en) / Beteiligte
Titel
She gave you Lemonade, stop trying to say it’s Tang: Calling out how race-gender bias obscures Black women’s achievements in pop music
Ist Teil von
  • The LemonadeReader, 2019, p.234-245
Auflage
1
Ort / Verlag
Routledge
Erscheinungsjahr
2019
Link zum Volltext
Quelle
Alma/SFX Local Collection
Beschreibungen/Notizen
  • It was quite fortuitous that Lemonade premiered in the same news cycle as the sudden passing one of the late twentieth century’s biggest musical icons: Prince. In the wake of the world grappling with the loss of his enigmatic musical genius, a younger icon in the making—one who was three years old when “Let’s Go Crazy” made its debut—released what may now be considered the “masterwork” of her career. However, unlike the rave reviews and lightning bolt acclaim that occurred when Prince burst onto the mainstream pop scene to join the highest ranks of 1980s’ musical giants, Beyoncé’s Lemonade and the mixed receptions of it exposed a generational bitter pill that Black women in popular music in America have been forced to swallow time and time again. Just as the blues mothers of the 1920s and the mothers of rock and roll of the 1940s indelibly changed American music, only to have their contributions overlooked and their legacies lauded far too late, some of us observed how the magnitude of Lemonade as an artistic tribute to the lives of Black women and girls was being thwarted in the first days of its release. This essay will compare how some of the early reactions to Lemonade mirror biased responses to other iconic works by Black female artists, and examine how these biases reflect the slanted and even discordant readings of Black women’s artistic achievements in popular culture in ways not typically applied to male and white female artists. Beyonce was serving freshly squeezed, premium, organic lemonade on behalf of Black womanhood worldwide, but many were intellectually engaging her 2016 visual album like a plastic cup of artificially flavored Tang. Even though the impact and deeper influence of Lemonade would eventually prevail in the weeks and months after its premiere and its critical acclaim across a variety of mediums would become poignantly obvious, the initial responses by music critics and average listeners alike sounded a familiar set of biased tunes. By the end of 2016, Lemonade was at the top of most critics’ “best of the year list,” hands down and without equivocation—often being referenced as Beyonce’s most critically acclaimed album of her career. By April of 2018, over a year after Lemonade’s debut, “Freedom” was among several songs from Lemonade and other Beyonce albums used to set the first “Beyoncé Mass” at Grace Cathedral in San Francisco, California.
Sprache
Englisch
Identifikatoren
ISBN: 9781138596788, 9781138596771, 1138596779, 1138596787
DOI: 10.4324/9780429487453-25
Titel-ID: cdi_informaworld_taylorfrancisbooks_10_4324_9780429487453_25_version2
Format

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