Wednesday, April 24, 2024

How Rumi Carter Inspired Beyonce’s Black National Anthem Opening at Coachella

Beyonce – Vogue (September 2018)

*Not only is Beyoncé on the cover of this month’s Vogue – the first in the magazine’s history to be shot by a black photographer, Tyler Mitchell – she also wrote her own cover story.

The singer opens up about the emergency C-section she needed to safely deliver her twins, being comfortable with her new body, and shares behind-the-scenes details of her historic Coachella performance, including the launch of her set with “Lift Every Voice and Sing” — known as the black national anthem.

Bey said that decision actually came from a private moment with her youngest daughter.

“One day I was randomly singing the black national anthem to Rumi while putting her to sleep. I started humming it to her every day. In the show at the time I was working on a version of the anthem with these dark minor chords and stomps and belts and screams. After a few days of humming the anthem, I realized I had the melody wrong. I was singing the wrong anthem. One of the most rewarding parts of the show was making that change. I swear I felt pure joy shining down on us.”

Recently, Bey revealed that research into her family tree unearthed her lineage from a slave owner who fell in love with and married an enslaved person. On the significance of bringing the song to the national stage while knowing the full scope of her family’s history, she says the moment was bigger than her.

“I know that most of the young people on the stage and in the audience did not know the history of the black national anthem before Coachella. But they understood the feeling it gave them,” she says. “It was a celebration of all the people who sacrificed more than we could ever imagine, who moved the world forward so that it could welcome a woman of color to headline such a festival.”

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