Okay...who else watched Beyoncé's Lemonade special this weekend?! I was celebrating my birthday this weekend so I didn't catch it or DVR it when it aired because I thought I could stream it on my HBO Go account later...but no! I'm not sure why this was a limited event, but I tried watching it on Sunday and I couldn't find it. When I found out the only way I could watch it was to download Tidal, I was kind of feeling apprehensive about it, because...well, it's Tidal. But I really couldn't wait. I mean, she's my idol in terms of beauty, talent, female empowerment, self confidence. So I bit the bullet and downloaded Tidal. After watching it, I had a Lemonade hangover for days! This visual album got me feeling like my boyfriend is cheating on me, when he's probably not. Either way, I'm going to watch it again and make my boyfriend watch it too! I've now finally composed myself enough to write what I thought of it...
The special showcases Beyoncé's new album, Lemonade, with really amazing raw visual album of her. It was basically a really, really long music video. Also peppered in there was various empowering excerpts from Somali-British poet, Warsan Shire spoken by Queen Bey. Lemonade definitely made me want to look into more of Shire's work, because it was so moving and inspiring. The whole video's backbone was around Shire's Warsan vs. Melancholy: The Seven Stages of Being Lonely and traced Beyoncé's struggle with her husband, Jay Z's, infidelity.
Lemonade highlights Beyoncé's trouble in paradise with her husband, which left me so heartbroken, because since their On The Run tour, I've always thought of them as the perfect power couple. I loved her lyrics about the love she has for him and how they're still so horny for each other. But I guess, as life goes, it's not as perfect as we all thought it seemed. If anything, Lemonade brings to light this dark part of Bey's life in an honest, beautiful, powerful, and real way. She also alludes to her father, whom she's notoriously had issues with in the past, and I believe they haven't spoken in a long time, and compares his betrayal to Jay's. People are insinuating that "Becky with the good hair" who Jay cheated with is Rachel Roy...not to be confused as Rachel Ray! To this I say...duh! She's been behind these cheating rumors since the On The Run Tour so I don't doubt that it's her. Plus why would she post that cryptic photo on Instagram and caption it, "Big hair, don't care..."?
What was most heart sinking in the special was Bey's references to the Black Lives Matter movement. As someone who supports this movement, seeing the mothers of Trayvon Martin, Eric Garner, and Mike Brown holding pictures of their sons almost brought me to tears. What put me over the edge was a portrayal of a small excerpt from Malcom X's "Who Taught You to Hate Yourself?" speech, where he simply uttered, "The most disrespected person in America is the black woman". What a sad, but real realization that still rings true today.
In addition to Shire's empowering words, Beyoncé's lyrics are also so poetic and perfect clapbacks to your ex or if you happen to be in the midst of breaking up with your boyfriend. These were some of my favorite lyrics:
The special showcases Beyoncé's new album, Lemonade, with really amazing raw visual album of her. It was basically a really, really long music video. Also peppered in there was various empowering excerpts from Somali-British poet, Warsan Shire spoken by Queen Bey. Lemonade definitely made me want to look into more of Shire's work, because it was so moving and inspiring. The whole video's backbone was around Shire's Warsan vs. Melancholy: The Seven Stages of Being Lonely and traced Beyoncé's struggle with her husband, Jay Z's, infidelity.
Lemonade highlights Beyoncé's trouble in paradise with her husband, which left me so heartbroken, because since their On The Run tour, I've always thought of them as the perfect power couple. I loved her lyrics about the love she has for him and how they're still so horny for each other. But I guess, as life goes, it's not as perfect as we all thought it seemed. If anything, Lemonade brings to light this dark part of Bey's life in an honest, beautiful, powerful, and real way. She also alludes to her father, whom she's notoriously had issues with in the past, and I believe they haven't spoken in a long time, and compares his betrayal to Jay's. People are insinuating that "Becky with the good hair" who Jay cheated with is Rachel Roy...not to be confused as Rachel Ray! To this I say...duh! She's been behind these cheating rumors since the On The Run Tour so I don't doubt that it's her. Plus why would she post that cryptic photo on Instagram and caption it, "Big hair, don't care..."?
What was most heart sinking in the special was Bey's references to the Black Lives Matter movement. As someone who supports this movement, seeing the mothers of Trayvon Martin, Eric Garner, and Mike Brown holding pictures of their sons almost brought me to tears. What put me over the edge was a portrayal of a small excerpt from Malcom X's "Who Taught You to Hate Yourself?" speech, where he simply uttered, "The most disrespected person in America is the black woman". What a sad, but real realization that still rings true today.
In addition to Shire's empowering words, Beyoncé's lyrics are also so poetic and perfect clapbacks to your ex or if you happen to be in the midst of breaking up with your boyfriend. These were some of my favorite lyrics:
- "Headed to the club, I ain't thinking bout you".
- "Got a bigger smile on my face being alone".
- "You can watch my fat ass twist as I bounce to the next dick boy".
- "Sorry, I ain't sorry".
- "10 times out of 9, I know you're lying".
- "I fucked with you until I realized I was too much for you".
- "Don't hurt yourself".
- "Me and my baby gon' be alright, we gon' have a good life".
- "Your heart is broken cause I walked away".
- "Stop interrupting my grinding, I ain't thinking bout you".
- "Give my fat ass a big kiss, boy. Tonight I'm fucking up all your shit, boy".
- "When you play me, you play yourself".
- "Why do you deny yourself heaven?"
- "Ashes to ashes, dust to side chicks".
Let's also not forget that Bey's baseball bat she was holding during "Hold Up" said Hot Sauce on it!! Hot Sauce in her bag swag?!?! This infamous line from "Formation" had us all thinking she actually keeps hot sauce in her bag, but now we know, Hot Sauce is her freaking baseball bat!!
Aside from the beautiful lyrics and spoken word, the cinematography in Lemonade was nothing short of amazingly beautiful. These are some of my favorite shots from the visual album:
The end of Lemonade shows a home video of Jay Z's grandmother, Hattie White, giving a speech at her 90th birthday. Beyoncé iterates Hattie's recipe for lemonade over the video: take one pint water, add a half pound of sugar, the juice of 8 lemons, and the zest of half a lemon. During her speech, Hattie says that life gave her lemons, but she turned them into lemonade, and this ties the whole album together. Beyoncé was also given lemons in life: her husband's infidelity, her troubles with her father, racism in this country...but she took those lemons and turned it into feminist, black empowered, loving yourself LEMONADE.
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