Dolly Parton wished for Beyoncé to cover “Jolene” years before “Cowboy Carter”


What inspired Beyoncé’s “Cowboy Carter”?


What inspired Beyoncé’s new album “Cowboy Carter”?

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Looks like Beyoncé got the message —and Dolly Parton got her wish.

In a 2022 interview with Trevor Noah on The Daily Show, Parton was asked about her wish to have the “Renaissance” singer cover her iconic song “Jolene.” 

“I don’t know if she’s even got the message, but wouldn’t that be killer?” Parton says in the interview. “I would just love to hear ‘Jolene’ done in just a big way, kind of like how Whitney [Houston] did my ‘I Will Always Love You.’ Just someone that can take my little songs and make them powerhouses.”

Beyoncé’s album “Cowboy Carter” arrived Friday, with Parton herself appearing on an interlude preceding the cover of “Jolene.”

“Hey miss Honey Bey, it’s Dolly P,” the country music legend says in the track. “You know that hussy with the good hair you sang about? Reminded me of someone I knew back when.” 

The interlude connects Parton’s 1973 ballad with Beyoncé’s reference to a “Becky with the good hair” on her 2016 album “Lemonade.”

The country legend has been heaping praise on Queen Bey’s latest music. When the “Cowboy Carter” single “Texas Hold ‘Em” hit No. 1 in February, Parton wrote on social media that she was “very excited that she’s done a country album.”

“I think she’s recorded “Jolene” and I think it’s probably gonna be on her country album, which I’m very excited about that,” Parton told the Knoxville News Sentinel earlier this month. 

But Beyoncé’s version of “Jolene” isn’t a line-for-line recreation —a change in the lyrics replaces “begging” and “crying” for a warning.

“I had to have this talk with you, ’cause I hate to have to act a fool. Your peace depends on how you move, Jolene,” Beyoncé croons on the track.

Parton seemed to be pleased with the changes, taking to social media again Friday to say “Beyoncé is giving that girl some trouble and she deserves it!”





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What inspired Beyoncé’s new album “Cowboy Carter”?


What inspired Beyoncé’s new album “Cowboy Carter”? – CBS News

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Beyoncé released her highly anticipated album “Cowboy Carter” on Friday, featuring 27 tracks and a genre-bending sound that pays tribute to country music’s Black origins. Lamar Dawson, radio host and pop culture expert, joins CBS News to discuss the new album.

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Beyoncé fans hope her new album brings more visibility to Black country artists



The Beyhive is busting out its cowboy hats and breaking out in line dances.

After the singer debuted two country singles, “Texas Hold ‘Em” and “16 Carriages,” on Sunday during the Super Bowl, some country enthusiasts hoped that Beyoncé’s star power would help bring more recognition for Black artists within the genre. Many people also pointed out country’s roots in the African diaspora and believed Beyoncé’s venture into country would be an act of reclaiming the music, which has often been perceived as a genre for white men. 

“I hope this is going to open up some people’s eyes to country music,” said Reyna Roberts, a Nashville-based singer who has previously opened for Reba McEntire. “Just [with] Beyoncé releasing her music, in the past day I’ve probably gained like 12,000 fans just from people looking at Black Country music.”

Beyoncé’s’s new album, Cowboy Carter, dropped Friday.

Many of Beyoncé’s fans — collectively known as the Beyhive — have been anticipating a full country album from the Texas-born singer since she released the song “Daddy Lessons” in 2016. As fans patiently await Act II, which releases March 29, they have started looking for other Black country artists to listen to in the meantime. 

As TikTok users have posted their love for Beyoncé’s new “country era,” the platform’s algorithm has served them content from smaller Black country artists. 

Julie Williams, an independent artist based in Nashville, posted a TikTok calling for more recognition and attention to Black country artists as people began posting about Beyoncé’s singles. 

Williams said in an interview that she is optimistic that more people will become interested in country music because Beyoncé is “the creator of culture.”

“Black music is country music,” she added. “My hope is that in this era of Beyoncé, those lines will be blurred and people will discover country and country artists and will begin to innovate and bring amazing changes to the genre that have been needed for so long.”

Williams said that some progress has been made in recent years as platforms such as TikTok and YouTube have allowed marginalized country artists to surpass the “gatekeepers” in mainstream country radio. In 2019, Lil Nas X’s “Old Town Road” became one of the first TikTok hits and exposed a wider audience to a new kind of country sound. However, it was controversial among country fans, leading Billboard to take it off the genre’s charts. 

The industry has still been slow to adapt, Williams said, despite calls to elevate Black country artists in subsequent years. She pointed out that women make up a small percentage of airtime on country radio — 11% in the entirety of 2022. The figure shrinks almost to zero when it comes to Black female artists. 

Francesca T. Royster, a professor of English at DePaul University and the author of “Black Country Music,” said that Black musicians’ contributions to the country genre have historically been made invisible by the industry. Modern country, she said, was born out of minstrel traditions that used blackface and turned Black music into a joke for white audiences. 

As the music became mainstream, its origins in Black culture and creativity were erased, Royster said. 

Beyoncé’s move into country music is an “important gesture of taking up space,” she said.

“Country can potentially be this bigger thing that lots of people are participating in, even though I do think that there’s still this older sense of nostalgia and defensiveness that can be connected to country.” 

Black music is country music

-Julie Williams, an independent artist based in Nashville

Beyoncé’s “Renaissance” project saw her elevate Black pioneers in house, ballroom and disco, and some fans think that she will do the same with country artists. 

Williams said that Beyoncé has already started to reference Black country trailblazers. She pointed out that “Texas Hold ‘Em” starts with banjo playing from Rhiannon Giddens, a Grammy-winning country and Americana artist.

Giddens is known for her educational work around banjos. She led a documentary series called “The Banjo: Music, History and Heritage” last year that focuses on the instrument’s origins among the African diaspora, its role in slavery and its popularization in American music. 

“I used to say many times as soon as Beyoncé puts the banjo on a track my job is done,” Giddens wrote in a Facebook post.  “Well, I didn’t expect the banjo to be mine, and I know darn well my job isn’t done, but today is a pretty good day.” 

A representative for Giddens did not respond to a request for comment. 

“I think that it’s a huge statement right there in the first few lines of the song that shows the banjo is a Black instrument,” Williams said. “It was created by slaves. And this is an incredible Black artist who has been a champion of educating so many folks on that history, through her music and through playing it.”

Beyonce’s new album will show that country music can appeal to Black audiences and people of color, Williams said. Country music has long been perceived as a patriotic genre and the domain of white men. 

“There’s a space in this genre that so often has not felt safe, has not felt comfortable,” Williams said. “And so my hope is that as we bring in this new wave of folks and that we will change the country music industry at shows, making sure that it is a comfortable place for fans to be.”

While the response to Beyoncé’s singles has been positive among fans, there has been resistance. Oklahoma radio station KYKC received backlash after one person tried to request “Texas Hold ‘Em.” The radio station had said that it does not “play Beyoncé as we are a country music station.” 

Roger Harris, general manager of South Central Oklahoma Radio Enterprises (S.C.O.R.E.) which owns KYKC, said the station was unaware that Beyoncé had released country songs when the request was made. Harris said KYKC is a “small station” that doesn’t “get serviced by the big labels like bigger stations do.”

“As we got more and more emails…and more and more phone calls, we made an effort to track down the song,” Harris said in an email. He said the song was added to the country station’s playlist and the libraries of two other S.C.O.R.E. stations. 

Still, Roberts, the country singer, said it was indicative of the challenges facing Black artists who try to get airplay on country radio. 

“If it’s hard for Beyoncé to get played on country radio, how hard do you think it is for artists like me trying to get played on country radio?” she said. “Hopefully it opens people’s eyes to seeing how difficult it is for Black women, and just people of color in general, to be played in country music and to get the recognition and the platforms and the stuff that other artists have.”



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Robert Randolph talks performing on new Beyoncé album, “Cowboy Carter”


Beyoncé’s new album, “Act Two: Cowboy Carter” dropped at midnight.

The 27-song album features collaborations with different artists, including musician Robert Randolph, leader of Robert Randolph and the Family Band.

“As you can see today with the release of so many songs, rightfully so, I mean she had all of this creative energy for all of these different country collaborations,” he said. “So it’s like rock meets country.”

Randolph is a six-time Grammy nominee and an expert on the pedal steel guitar. He has collaborated with Joe Walsh of The Eagles, Dave Matthews, Los Lobos and blues legend Buddy Guy.

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Robert Randolph appears on CBS Mornings on March 29, 2024 to talk about collaborating on Beyoncé’s new album.

CBS News


Randolph said he was at home cooking on a grill when he received a call about participating on Beyoncé’s latest album. Her hit song “Texas Hold ‘Em” came out last month and made her the first Black woman ever with a No. 1 single on the Hot Country Songs chart.

“So I got the call and I’m like, ‘What, for real? Play on Beyoncé? What am I going to do? Am I going to do “Bootylicious” or something?'” he joked.

Randolph, who collaborated on the song “16 Carriages,” said they would rehearse the song in different ways, adjusting his usual style.

“Oh yeah, I had to work on some country licks,” he said.

On the album, Beyoncé shines light on some of the pioneering, unsung Black artists throughout country music’s history. Randolph said she’s inspiring new artists.

“For the last 20, 30 years, there’s been a lot of Black country artists trying to break through out of Nashville,” he said. “Many have moved there, and just the fact that she’s sort of hinted at releasing a record and now that it’s out, she’s given all of those people newfound hope.”



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“Cowboy Carter” — Beyoncé’s first country album — has arrived


Beyoncé Knowles-Carter’s has officially gone country with the release Friday of her new album, “Cowboy Carter.”

The Houston native’s eighth album features 27 song tracks and guest appearances from some of country music’s biggest stars including Willie Nelson, Mylie Cyrus and Dolly Parton, whose 1973 hit “Jolene” is one of two covers featured. 

“I think people are going to be surprised because I don’t think this music is what everyone expects,” Beyoncé said in a statement Friday. “But it’s the best music I’ve ever made,” said the 42-year-old, considered the one of the top-grossing music artists of all time. 

Upon its release, “Cowboy Carter” jumped to the No. 2 spot on Apple Music. The lead single on the album “Texas Hold ‘Em,” grabbed first place in the country music category on Billboard’s Hot 100, making Beyoncé the first Black woman to top the country music charts.  

Heavy buzz around the new album began last month with the debut of “Texas Hold ‘Em” during Super Bowl LVIII. Soon after, the country single hit No. 1 in both the U.S. and U.K., marking the first time since 2003 that Beyoncé had a chart-topper in both countries at the same time.

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Cover art for “Cowboy Carter” which jumped to the No. 2 spot on Apple Music. The lead single on the album “Texas Hold ‘Em,” grabbed first place in the country music category on Billboard’s Hot 100.

Blair Caldwell


Beyoncé said she drew inspiration for the album, in part, from growing up in Texas and watching performances at the Houston Rodeo. She said it took five years to finish Cowboy Carter and she wanted songs throughout the album to sound more down-home, given that a lot of music produced these days is heavily computer-aided.

“With artificial intelligence and digital filters and programming, I wanted to go back to real instruments, and I used very old ones,” Beyoncé said. “All the sounds were so organic and human, everyday things like the wind, snaps and even the sound of birds and chickens, the sounds of nature.”

It will take weeks before record labels Parkwood Entertainment and Columbia Records can generate album sales figures. Beyoncé’s  previous album, “Renaissance,” has sold more than one million copies, including downloads and streams, according to the Recording Industry Association of America.

“Texas Hold ‘Em” was at the center of an uproar last month when a country music station in Oklahoma refused to play the song, leading some Beyoncé fans to accuse the station of racism.

After being flooded by emails, calls and more requests for the song, the station agreed to add the single to its playlist. Roger Harris, the stations’ general manager, said his staff listened to the song and agreed that it sounded “country.” 





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Six-time Grammy nominee Robert Randolph talks collaboration with Beyoncé as her new album drops


Six-time Grammy nominee Robert Randolph talks collaboration with Beyoncé as her new album drops – CBS News

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Robert Randolph, a six-time Grammy nominee and leader of the “Robert Randolph and the Family Band,” discusses his collaboration with Beyoncé as her new album, “Cowboy Carter,” drops.

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Beyoncé drops 27-song track list for new album “Cowboy Carter”


Beyoncé dropped the track list Wednesday for her hotly anticipated country album, “Cowboy Carter,” in a vintage-inspired social media post, prompting a flurry of excitement and hypotheses among her fans. 

Beyoncé’s post features a collection of red, white, black and blue-colored graphics and text boxes reminiscent of a printed, old-school concert advertisement. “Cowboy Carter” appears in block lettering along the upper edge of the graphic beside the album’s release date, which is Friday, March 29. 

Although the pop star revealed the album’s title and cover art last week, Wednesday’s teaser included what appeared to be an extended name for the record: “Cowboy Carter and the Rodeo Chitlin’ Circuit.” 

With 27 titles listed — assuming they’re all tracks — the album will be Beyoncé’s longest by far.

Beyoncé announced the album during the 2024 Super Bowl, describing it as “act ii” of the three-act project that began with her critically acclaimed “Renaissance” album, which she released in 2022. 

The announcement was accompanied by the release of two singles — “16 Carriages” and the smash hit “Texas Hold ‘Em,” which catapulted to the top of Billboard’s country music chart, making Beyoncé the first Black woman to score a No. 1 country hit. The song ultimately nabbed the top spot on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, too.

Both “Texas Hold ‘Em” and “16 Carriages” are included on the apparent track list, and they appear among several intriguing breadcrumbs. The first is “Jolene,” the classic hit by country music legend Dolly Parton that Parton had hinted might appear on the new album.

There also appears to be a track called “Dolly P,” as well as a potential collaboration with Willie Nelson, another country icon, on a song called “Smoke Hour.” Other titles include “Tyrant,” “Desert Eagle” and “Amen.” There’s also a reference to Linda Martell, who is considered to be the first Black woman to have found commercial success in the country music genre.

“This album has been over five years in the making,” Beyoncé wrote on Instagram last week, marking the 10-day countdown to the album’s release. 

“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,” she wrote, hinting at her appearance at the 2016 Country Music Awards. “act ii is a result of challenging myself, and taking my time to bend and blend genres together to create this body of work.”

“I have a few surprises on the album, and have collaborated with some brilliant artists who I deeply respect,” Beyoncé added, before ending her message with, “This ain’t a Country album. This is a “Beyoncé” album.”





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