Beyoncé Doubles Down On Not Releasing Visuals For 'Renaissance' Or 'Cowboy Carter': 'The Music Is Enough'
While many people are still unpacking the CMAs shutting out Beyoncé'sCowboy Carteralbum, her cover story for GQ's October issue is now taking center stage. Beyoncé is shown rocking the big hair we've come to love in her country era, giving us queen realness as always.
In the interview, the multifaceted singer spoke about the two albums in the trilogy, Renaissance and Cowboy Carter, as well as her family. She also opened up about her exciting business ventures, such as her haircare brand Cécred and the launch of her whiskey, SirDavis, and why it's crucial for her to be more than just the face of her brands.
"There’s a huge contrast between the business journeys of men and women. Men often have the luxury of being perceived as the strategists, the brains behind their ventures. They’re given the space to focus on the product, the team, the business plan. Women, on the other hand, especially those in the limelight, are frequently pigeonholed into being the face of the brand or the marketing tool. It’s important to me to continue to take the same approach I have taken with my music and apply my learnings to my businesses," she said.
"I am here to change that old narrative. I’m here to focus on the quality. We took our time, and we did our research, and we have earned respect for our brand. I try to choose integrity over shortcuts. I’ve learned that true success isn’t about leaning on a name; it’s about crafting something genuine, something that can hold its own. It’s not about being perfect. It’s about being revolutionary."
I know that's right Bey! Check out the highlights below:
On her daughter Blue Ivy being a creative.
I build my work schedule around my family. I try to only tour when my kids are out of school. I always dreamt of a life where I could see the world with my family and expose them to different languages, architecture, and lifestyles.
Raising three kids isn’t easy. The older they get, the more they become their own individuals with unique needs, hobbies, and social lives. My twins are God-sent. Parenting constantly teaches you about yourself. It takes a lot of prayer and patience. I love it. It’s grounding and fulfilling.
My kids come with me everywhere I go. They come to my office after school, and they are in the studio with me. They are in dance rehearsals. It’s natural that they would learn my choreography.
Blue is an artist. She has great taste in music and fashion. She is a fantastic editor, painter, and actress. She has been creating characters since she was three. She’s a natural, but I did not want Blue onstage. Blue wanted it for herself. She took it seriously and she earned it. And most importantly, she had fun! We all watched her grow more and more every night before our eyes.
On her decision to not provide visuals for "Renaissance" and "Cowboy Carter" albums.
I thought it was important that during a time where all we see is visuals, that the world can focus on the voice. The music is so rich in history and instrumentation. It takes months to digest, research, and understand. The music needed space to breathe on its own. Sometimes a visual can be a distraction from the quality of the voice and the music. The years of hard work and detail put into an album that takes over four years! The music is enough. The fans from all over the world became the visual. We all got the visual on tour. We then got more visuals from my film.
On being proud of the work she put into "Cowboy Carter."
I am proud of what I have been able to do, but I also recognize the sacrifices—mine and my family’s. There was a time when I was pushing myself to meet unrealistic deadlines, while not taking the time to enjoy the benefits of why I was working so hard. There aren’t many of us from the late ’90s who were taught to focus on mental health. Back then, I had little boundaries, and said yes to everything. But I’ve paid my dues a hundred times over. I have worked harder than anyone I know. And now I work smarter. In the end, the biggest reward is personal joy. Has what I created pushed others to think freely and believe in the impossible? If the answer to that question is yes, then that is the gift.
On legacy being her biggest motivator in business.
I get excited about love, legacy, and longevity. Do I love what I am trying to create for the love of it? I am discovering that legacy is the common denominator in all the businesses that I have done.
On protecting her family and her peace.
We live in a world of access. We have access to so much information—some facts, and some complete bullshit disguised as truth. Our children can FaceTime and see their friends at any given moment. My husband and I? We used calling cards and Skype when we were falling in love. I couldn’t afford the international hotel bills, so I literally would get international calling cards to call him. Just recently, I heard an AI song that sounded so much like me it scared me. It’s impossible to truly know what’s real and what’s not.
One thing I’ve worked extremely hard on is making sure my kids can have as much normalcy and privacy as possible, ensuring my personal life isn’t turned into a brand. It’s very easy for celebrities to turn our lives into performance art. I have made an extreme effort to stay true to my boundaries and protect myself and my family. No amount of money is worth my peace.
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Feature image by Kevin Winter/Getty Images for iHeartRadio
London Alexaundria is the contributing editor for xoNecole. She is an alum of Clark Atlanta University, where she majored in Mass Media Arts and has worked in journalism for over ten years. You can follow her on Instagram and TikTok @theselfcarewriter
Exclusive: Dreka Gates Talks Farm Life, Self-Mastery, And Her Wellness Brand
Dreka Gates is making a name in wellness through authenticity and innovativeness. Although we were introduced to her as a music manager for her husband, Kevin Gates, she has now carved out her own lane outside of music as a wellness entrepreneur. But according to Dreka, this is nothing new.
In an xoNecole exclusive, the mom of two opened up about many things, including starting her wellness journey at 13 years old. However, a near-death experience during a procedure at 20 made her start taking her health more seriously.
“There's so many different levels, and now, I'm in a space of just integrating all of this good stuff that I've learned just about just being human, you know?” Dreka tells us. “So it's also fun because it's like a journey of self-discovery and self-mastery. That's what I call it. So it's never-ending.”
Courtesy
If you follow Dreka, then you’re familiar with her holistic lifestyle, as she’s no stranger to promoting wellness, self-care, and holistic living. She even lives part-time on a Mississippi farm, not far from her grandmother and great-grandmother’s farm, where she spent some summers as a child.
While her grandmother and great-grandmother have passed on, Dreka reflects on that time in her life and how having a farm as an adult is her getting back to her roots. “So the farm was purchased back in 2017, and it was like, ah, that'll just be a place where we go when we're not touring or whatever,” she said.
“But COVID hit, and I was there, and I was on the land, and I just started remembering back to going to my grandmother's during the summertime and freaking picking peas and going and eating mulberries off the freaking tree in the bushes.
“And she literally had cotton plants. I know some people feel weird about picking cotton and stuff. She had cotton plants and I would go and pick cotton out of her garden. And she had chickens, and I literally just broke down in tears one day when I was on the farm just doing all the things, and I'm like, ‘Oh my gosh. I'm literally getting back to my roots.”
"I literally just broke down in tears one day when I was on the farm just doing all the things, and I'm like, ‘Oh my gosh. I'm literally getting back to my roots."
You can catch glimpses of Dreka’s farm life on Instagram, which shows her picking fruit and vegetables and loving on her animals like her camel Eessa. Her passion for growing and cultivating led her to try and grow all of her ingredients for her wellness brand, Dreka Wellness. However, she quickly realized that she might be biting off more than she could chew. But that didn’t stop her from fulfilling her vision.
Watch below as Dreka talks more about her business, her wellness tips, breaking toxic cycles, becoming a doula, and more.
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Exclusive: Jordin Sparks Shares Emotional Story Of How Husband Dana Isaiah Saved Her Music Career
Jordin Sparks is living life with no restrictions, and her latest studio album is proof in the pudding.
The singer first rose to fame after winning the sixth season of American Idol in 2007. With almost two decades of experience in the music industry under her belt, Sparks's new album, No Restrictions, intentionally represents a very particular time in her life. Most of the songs on the project were written while the world was on lockdown, making the project not only very personal but one that showcases Sparks' ability to defy being categorized under one genre.
“There’s a song on the album called ‘No Restrictions,’ which is a whole different meaning, but I was just so drawn towards the title because I feel like that’s just where I am in my life,” Sparks tells xoNecole.
“I’ve stepped into my power as a wife, a mother, a friend, an artist, a songwriter, a woman, a human, and I just feel like sometimes there are times when other people try to restrict you and put you in a box. But sometimes, you can be your own worst enemy, and you can do it to yourself. You can hold on to outdated versions of yourself. You can hold on to things that were said that don’t apply to your life anymore.”
“That’s the space I’m in,” she continues. “I’m dropping all of those things. The ball and chain of people’s opinions because everybody’s going to say what they’re going to say. I feel like I’ve always had pretty thick skin, but now I’m just like…and?”
"I’m dropping all of those things. The ball and chain of people’s opinions because everybody’s going to say what they’re going to say. I feel like I’ve always had pretty thick skin, but now I’m just like…and?"
Moreover, if it wasn’t for her husband, Dana Isaiah, Sparks would have walked away from music as a whole. She recalls having the U-Haul packed and ready to head out until their paths crossed.
“This music would not be happening without him,” reveals Sparks. “I really was, like, my house was up for sale. I had a storage pod halfway packed, and then he came into my life and said, ‘Why are you running?’ And I was like, sir, I do not know you well enough for you to ask me this. I didn’t say that, but I did laugh in my head. He was right, and I was running because I was just tired of the games. I was tired of all the craziness, and he really loved me back to life, to be honest.”
She adds, “He helped remind me who I was, like, ‘No, we need your voice. Your voice needs to be heard.’ It took me a second to be like wait, Oh yeah, I did that. He’s really put me on his shoulders. He has elevated me to levels that I never thought that I could be.
"And in terms of a relationship, to have the freedom to just be myself and to do the things I love and go for what I’m doing without the fear of anxiety, like this is going to cause a fight, or this is going to do this or whatever the fears we can get within relationships can be. I never have that. I’m very much like, alright, babe, what do you think about this one? I fell in love with his mind and I fell in love with his heart, so I’m always asking his opinion and asking what he thinks.”
For Sparks, it's important for their son to see his mother not only being loved out loud but also having the freedom to flourish and just be.
“It’s important as a woman and as a mother for your child or children to see you living your most authentic self and doing things because you love to do it and because it makes you happy and it fulfills you,” says the “No Air” singer.
“It may not happen at the time you think it’s going to happen, but for me, I’m always like what’s meant for me will never miss me. I’m just really happy that he has parents that are like that because my husband’s that way, too. He’s very much like I’m going to do my own thing. He knows what he wants, and so I’m really grateful that he’s got parents that have that kind of mentality to just speak up.”
Sparks and hubby Dana Isaiah tied the knot in 2017, and when a position for management came open on her team, she knew that he was the only one who could fulfill the job she needed at the time.
"It’s important as a woman and as a mother for your child or children to see you living your most authentic self and doing things because you love to do it and because it makes you happy and it fulfills you."
“It was an easy decision because I was like, nobody knows the story of what I’m trying to do more than he does, so if I want this to be put out the right way, what better way than to have somebody who is, every single day, knows who I am. He knows my heart. He knows my dreams, my goals, and he just wants to see me achieve them. That just made it an easy decision.”
“It’s been a couple of years, and he never took that spot to be permanent, so I now have a manager. His name is Silas White, he’s amazing,” Sparks continues.
“So Dana now does like day to day and Silas does the overall, which has been great because I get tired of it being about me all the time. We’re always together, so once he came into that position, it was like everything we talked about outside of it was always like work or something that I needed to do, so I was just like, I’m ready for this not to be about me.”
Outside of music, these days, Sparks finds enjoyment in, of course, the family time that she shares with her husband and son, but also her spiritual development and spending time to be one with nature.
“I always imagined that I’d get there, but now I’m here, you know?” says Sparks. “I’m in the space where I can see the signs very clearly. I’m very clear with my path and what I’m supposed to be doing, and I know I’m supposed to be here singing and bringing joy to people and healing people, making them feel something, through my music. So with that being said, it applies to having no restrictions as well. It makes things very clear and simple.”
No Restrictions is now available for streaming on all digital streaming platforms.
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Feature image by Parsons