In the lead-up to her
highly anticipated Act II album,
Cowboy Carter (out on March 29) —a countrified continuation of her culture-shifting three-act project, which began with 2022’s
Renaissance— Beyoncé reflected on her formal country debut via a
lengthy Instagram caption, part of which seemingly nodded to the icy reception she infamously received at the 2016 Country Music Awards. “This album has been over five years in the making. It was born out of an experience that I had years ago where I did not feel welcomed…and it was very clear that I wasn’t,” wrote the Grammy-winning legend. Along with her statement, Beyoncé dropped the
Cowboy Carter cover art, a polarizing image that finds her sitting atop a white stallion in full red, white, and blue western gear while holding up a cutoff American flag, the Texas native’s way of honoring
rodeo queen tradition and her Southern roots. Both announcements immediately set the internet ablaze (for different reasons). However, the singer’s harrowing CMAs revelation echoed a sentiment Black country artists have been vocal about for years now, especially as of late. The feeling of being unwanted in
their domain, one built with their ancestors' musical innovation and traditions born from popular music of the South.