Voices, Votes & Vision: The Latest in Politics & Public Policy
- Beyoncé’s unapologetic anger, especially on Don't Hurt Yourself, reclaimed the 'angry Black woman' narrative and validated cathartic rage.
- Through Formation, Beyoncé celebrates Blackness and Southern roots, embracing New Orleans imagery and pride in identity.
- Songs like Sandcastles and All Night show healing is messy; forgiveness is chosen gradually, not instantly restored.
- The defiant Freedom (feat. Kendrick Lamar) demanded active liberation; the album proved Black music spans genres.
As hard as it may be to believe, it’s been exactly 10 years since Beyoncé dropped “Lemonade,” one of the most personal and culture-shifting projects of her discography. The album was monumental artistically, musically and culturally as the Houston native decided to peel back the layers regarding her family, her marriage and her roots, giving us an album filled with messages, symbolism and phrases that are now a part of our collective lexicon.
That’s why we’re taking a look back on some of the things Beyoncé taught us about love, rage, self-pride, and womanhood through her classic “Lemonade” album.
Unapologetic Anger Deserves to Be Expressed
“Don’t Hurt Yourself” is arguably the most rock & roll and the angriest Beyoncé record we’ve ever heard. Not only is she frustratingly bewildered at the fact that her own husband stepped out on her, but she’s disgusted at his audacity. The way she cusses him out (and essentially all cheating men) on this record felt like a reclamation of the “angry Black woman” narrative and tacitly gave women listening permission to let out their rage after being wronged without feeling judged.
Unabashed Blackness Is Always In Style
“I like my baby hair with baby hair and Afros. I like my Negro nose with Jackson 5 nostrils. Earned all this money, but they never take the country out me,” Bey sings in “Formation,” one of the biggest tracks on the album. During her 2016 Super Bowl Halftime Show performance, she made it abundantly clear that she was proud of her Blackness and all that came with it. To see her with her “buss down” blonde Fulani braids, a then-toddler Blue Ivy rocking her afro (especially after so many in the media were bashing the grade of her hair), Bey’s embrace of something as simple as the general wideness of Black folks’ noses, the blatant “stop shooting us” message and more made it an important performance for the culture.
How To Take Pride In One’s Own Roots
“My daddy Alabama, mama Louisiana. You mix that Negro with that Creole, make a Texas-Bama.” That line alone in “Formation” was permission for Black people to embrace their Southern roots and loudly rep where they’re from. This, along with the video’s New Orleans imagery and her sister’s later “A Seat at the Table” album release, felt like the ushering in of a new wave of Black Southern pride.
Jay-Z’s Infidelity
On “Hold Up,” Bey turns suspicion into spectacle, channeling the emotional and mental chaos of Jay-Z’s betrayal into something both cinematic and eye-opening. The song’s bounce contrasts sharply with its biting lyrics and references to Jay-Z’s infidelity, making it feel even more pointed and intentional. Plus, seeing her hold that bat was proof that even someone like Beyoncé can get pushed to the brink.
The Power of Spirituality and Intuition
Throughout the album, especially in the opening song “Pray You Catch Me,” there’s an undercurrent of spiritual reckoning, especially as it relates to her own inner intuition and her husband’s infidelity.
“I pray you catch me listening; I’m praying to catch you whispering; I pray you catch me,” Beyoncé sings as she leans into her inner voice, faith, and unseen guidance to try to come to terms with her world crashing down. The result feels almost sacred—like she’s channeling something bigger than herself.
The Ups and Downs of Black Love
On “Love Drought,” Beyoncé captured the quiet ache of a relationship turned sour by neglect and emotional distance. The song made it clear that not all relationship conflict is explosive—sometimes it’s the silence that does the most damage. As a result, Bey paints Black love as layered and resilient, capable of weathering both droughts and downpours.
“Ten times out of nine, I know you’re lying;
And nine times outta ten, I know you’re trying,” she sings.
“Becky With the Good Hair” Became a Cultural Identifier
With a single line on “Sorry,” Beyoncé ignited a cultural firestorm that went far beyond the music. “Becky with the good hair” became shorthand for cheaters everywhere and a slick nod to the long history of beauty politics tied to race and “good hair” texture. It also earned every woman named Becky a deep side-eye from here on out. (You can never be sure, right?)
Black Women May Be Independent, But We’re Not Indestructible
When it comes to “6 Inch,” Bey reminded us that while Black women can have money, power and control, we’re not invincible against attacks on the heart and mind. We still can carry emotional scars beneath our glamorous exterior. She made it clear that independence and pain can coexist and that learning how to manage both is powerful.
“Stars in her eyes; She fights and she sweats those sleepless nights; But she don’t mind, she loves the grind,” she sings.
Loving After Damage Can Hit Different
In perhaps one of her most soul-stirring songs, “Sandcastles,” Bey captured the delicate process of trying again after trust has been broken. She doesn’t try to pretend things are fully fixed, but rather that the rebuilding process is long and uncertain. This song showed that love after hurt requires a different kind of courage – one that’s rooted in honesty and vulnerability.
“We built sand castles that washed away; I made you cry when I walked away; Oh, and although I promised that I couldn’t stay, baby; Every promise don’t work out that way,” she sings.
Healing and Reconciliation Is Necessary, But Not Linear
On “All Night,” Beyoncé leans into forgiveness, but not without acknowledging the weight of everything that came before it. When she sings, “I found the truth beneath your lies; And true love never has to hide,” the song feels like a long-awaited exhale after a storm, where love is rebuilt gradually rather than instantly restored. In doing so, she shows us that healing and reconciliation aren’t straight paths—they’re messy, ongoing choices that require both grace and honesty.
The Best Revenge Is Success
On “Formation,” Beyoncé closed the song with a declaration that feels both personal and universal: “always stay gracious, best revenge is your paper.” Rather than dwelling in pain like in other parts of the album, she pivots to power, reminding us all that success can be the loudest clapback.
Liberation Is Now, Not Later
“Freedom” featuring Kendrick Lamar is a full force demand for release in numerous ways, specifically: emotionally, spiritually, and politically. The way Bey’s voice comes through with urgency, and Lamar comes in with matching fervor, helped this song become an unofficial anthem for the Black liberation movement and yet another collective marching order. The song reminds us that liberation isn’t just a goal or a wish, but an active, ongoing act of resistance and a demand that will be met, no matter what.
Black Music Spans Different Genres
Across the entire album, it becomes increasingly clear that it’s not leaning towards one sound or another. We go from rock to trap and even country—a setup to Bey’s full country album, “Cowboy Carter,” nearly a decade later. “Lemonade” marked her most ambitious body of work to date and served as further proof that all music can be Black music and artists should be free to explore.
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