Beyonce Album Highlights the Black Women Changing Country Music 

A musician performs on Broadway in Downtown Nashville on March 13, 2024 in Nashville, Tennessee. (AFP)
A musician performs on Broadway in Downtown Nashville on March 13, 2024 in Nashville, Tennessee. (AFP)
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Beyonce Album Highlights the Black Women Changing Country Music 

A musician performs on Broadway in Downtown Nashville on March 13, 2024 in Nashville, Tennessee. (AFP)
A musician performs on Broadway in Downtown Nashville on March 13, 2024 in Nashville, Tennessee. (AFP)

"Twenty-three in Music City / With dreams and high-heeled boots / Singin' for a crowd of blue eyes / Will they want me too?" croons Julie Williams at the Blue Room venue in Nashville.

The 26-year-old, who is biracial, is one of many Black female artists carving out space in country music's capital, where predominantly white, male gatekeepers dictate who makes it -- and who doesn't.

Megastar Beyonce's highly anticipated country album, out Friday, has cast a spotlight on efforts by Black performers -- a vital part of the genre's history -- to create a more inclusive Nashville.

"Who's excited for Beyonce's new country album?" hollered Williams to applause.

"Is this what all the white girls have been feeling this whole time? Like, when they look at just someone who's at the top of their craft and is just killing it and you get to be like, 'Wow, that could be me' -- it's pretty exciting."

Speaking to AFP backstage, Williams called Beyonce's move "a historic moment in bringing Black country to the mainstream."

Williams is among some 200 acts associated with the Black Opry, a three-year-old collective showcasing and amplifying the voices of Black artists working across genres including country, Americana and folk.

"I've always been a huge fan of country music throughout my entire life, and I've always felt isolated in that experience," the Black Opry's founder, Holly G, told AFP.

"Once I started Black Opry, I realized we're all there -- we're just not given the same platform and opportunities as some of our white counterparts."

'Trying to open the doors'

The institution's name is a direct reference to the Grand Ole Opry, the nearly century-old country performance space whose complicated history has been shaped by Black performers, but which has also spotlighted figures linked to racist ideologies.

The conversation about the marginalization of Black country artists has gained new traction in the wake of Beyonce's announcement, said Charles Hughes, author of "Country Soul: Making Music and Making Race in the American South."

"When we start to see things shift behind the scenes," he told AFP, "The effect of the Beyonce moment... is going to be felt, hopefully, by these communities and musicians and songwriters and fans and others who have been trying to open the doors."

Country is a quintessentially American style of music with influences from Africa: the banjo notably grew out of instruments brought to the Americas and the Caribbean by enslaved people in the 1600s.

Yet contemporary country has developed an overwhelmingly white, macho, conservative image, with industry leaders proving resistant to change.

In the 1920s, industry professionals developed the terms "hillbilly" and "race" records to define popular music charts. Those labels grew into country and R&B, respectively.

"That initial separation was based only on the color of their skin, and not on the sound of the music," said Holly G.

These divisions have persisted, meaning Black musicians -- especially Black women, as female artists at large have a demonstrably harder time getting airplay on tastemaking country radio -- face significant barriers.

"The song can sound exactly the same as some other people on the radio, and they're like, 'Yours isn't country,'" Prana Supreme, part of the mother-daughter act O.N.E The Duo, told AFP.

"And I'm like, hmm, what's the only difference here?"

'Mover of culture'

Even Beyonce has said she faced industry resistance.

"My hope is that years from now, the mention of an artist's race, as it relates to releasing genres of music, will be irrelevant," Beyonce said recently.

Dubbing her a "mover of culture," Prana Supreme said Beyonce's country moment is important not just for showing that Black artists are integral to country, but also to show Black fans that country is for them too.

"Southern culture is Black culture," she said.

Her mother Tekitha said Beyonce is a necessary "champion," not least to show the industry its blind spot: "You need some force that's going to come in and tell the market, 'Oh, wait a minute, there's money over here that y'all are leaving on the floor.'"

Trea Swindle, a member of country act Chapel Hart, said the group has noticed an attention and streaming boost since Beyonce's announcement, adding: "It's opening up country music as a whole to a completely new demographic."

The members of Chapel Hart grew up in a small southern town, and laugh off anyone who says they "aren't country."

"Honey, go to Poplarville, Mississippi -- no matter if you're Black, white, Asian, Hispanic -- it's Poplarville, and you're going to live that country experience," said Swindle.

"Country is a feeling. Country is a way of life."

Holly G said she'll believe mainstream change is afoot when she sees it.

"Beyonce is one of the most powerful celebrities in the world. And she was able to leverage that in order to see success in this space," she said.

"But I think that's because the industry is intimidated by Beyonce -- not because they're open to supporting Black women."



Remembering Quincy Jones: 10 Career-Spanning Songs to Celebrate His Legacy

Michael Jackson, left, holds eight awards as he poses with Quincy Jones at the Grammy Awards in Los Angeles, Feb. 28, 1984. (AP)
Michael Jackson, left, holds eight awards as he poses with Quincy Jones at the Grammy Awards in Los Angeles, Feb. 28, 1984. (AP)
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Remembering Quincy Jones: 10 Career-Spanning Songs to Celebrate His Legacy

Michael Jackson, left, holds eight awards as he poses with Quincy Jones at the Grammy Awards in Los Angeles, Feb. 28, 1984. (AP)
Michael Jackson, left, holds eight awards as he poses with Quincy Jones at the Grammy Awards in Los Angeles, Feb. 28, 1984. (AP)

Few artists have legacies so mammoth their very name could be considered synonymous with the music industry, but then again, most musicians are not the prodigious producer Quincy Jones.

The larger-than-life figure died Sunday night at his Los Angeles home, surrounded by his family. He was 91 and scheduled to receive an honorary Academy Award later this month.

Across his career, the 28-time Grammy Award winning Jones worked with everyone from Ray Charles and Frank Sinatra to Michael Jackson with hundreds in-between. The best way to celebrate his legacy, of course, is to listen to the music he made.

1963: Ella Fitzgerald and Count Basie's orchestra, “Honeysuckle Rose”

Those looking to kickstart their Jones listening journey at the very beginning of his career could do so with “Liza,” from his first album, “Jazz Abroad,” a joint release with Roy Haynes. For everyone else, look to his arrangements on 1963's “Ella and Basie!,” an album by Fitzgerald with Count Basie's orchestra. Moving from just vocals and bass before building into its own grandness — not to mention, a delightful scat solo from Fitzgerald — “Honeysuckle Rose” from the album is an exemplar of Jones' jazz brilliance.

1963: Lesley Gore, “It’s My Party”

Teenage heartbreak met its match on Lesley Gore's “It's My Party,” recorded when its pop singer was still in her own adolescence. Jones produced the record, with its addictive melodies, percussion and cheerful horn section — emotionally and diametrically opposed to its narrative tale of a girl getting dumped by her boyfriend for her best friend on her birthday. You'd cry, too, if it happened to you.

1964: Frank Sinatra, “Fly Me to the Moon”

Jones' legacy is defined by an idiosyncratic ability to master various American musical forms with an apparent ease. That is the case of this canonized cover by Frank Sinatra, “Fly Me to the Moon,” from Sinatra's 1964 album, “It Might as Well Be Swing,” arranged by Jones. The producer set the song to a punchy, swinging rhythm and wistful flute, and the rest is history. You can also thank Jones for “The Best Is Yet to Come.”

1967: Ray Charles, “In the Heat of the Night”

Jones scored the 1967 film “In the Heat of the Night,” which includes its R&B-gospel title track, “In the Heat of the Night,” performed by his good friend Ray Charles. It is soul committed to wax, amplified by the inclusion of a lusty tenor sax solo.

1979: Michael Jackson, “Don’t Stop 'Til You Get Enough”

Perhaps Jones' best-known production partnership is the one he had with Michael Jackson, working with the King of Pop on his culture-shifting albums, 1979's “Off the Wall," 1982's “Thriller” and 1987's “Bad.” The pair met while working on the 1978 movie “The Wiz" — Jones worked on its soundtrack, and Jackson was its star. “Don't Stop ‘Til You Get Enough," with its inventive disco-funk, ambitious production and Jackson's signature falsetto set the stage for the massive career to come.

1981: Quincy Jones, “Just Once”

Put it in the pantheon of great piano ballads: On Jones' 1981 album “The Dude,” James Ingram takes over lead vocal duties for “Just Once,” the big-hearted and bigger-feelings track.

1982: Michael Jackson, “Billie Jean”

What songs are more immediately recognizable? An elongated drum and bass lick introduce “Billie Jean,” one of the great genre-averse pop songs of all time, from Jackson's record-breaking “Thriller" album. Here, Jones' production is post-disco, but still funky, still prescient. And time tells the greatest tale: “Thriller” sold more than 20 million copies in 1983 alone and has contended with the Eagles’ “Greatest Hits 1971-1975” among others as the best-selling album of all time.

1982: Donna Summer, “Love Is in Control (Finger on the Trigger)”

And now for something completely different: In 1982, Jones worked with Donna Summer on her self-titled album, a dance-forward record that includes the synth-y pop single “Love Is in Control (Finger on the Trigger)," which earned a Grammy nomination for best R&B vocal performance, female.

1985: USA for Africa, “We Are the World”

Nearly four decades ago, some of the biggest stars on the planet — Jackson, Bob Dylan, Tina Turner, Dionne Warwick, Billy Joel, Stevie Wonder, Willie Nelson and Bruce Springsteen among them — came together for an all-night recording session. The result was “We Are the World,” a pop superhit overseen by Jones, the 1985 charity record for famine relief in Africa.

Lionel Richie, who co-wrote “We Are the World” and was among the featured singers, would call Jones “the master orchestrator.”

1989: Quincy Jones with Ray Charles and Chaka Khan, “I'll Be Good to You”

Back in 1976, Jones produced the Brothers Johnson's R&B hit, “I'll Be Good to You,” and then re-recorded the track with Ray Charles and Chaka Khan — an ebullient number with contemporary production, completely transforming the classic.