'Black Is King': Beyoncé's Visual Album is a Feast of Fashion and Symbolism
There are many quotable lines and lyrics in "Black Is King," Beyoncé's new visual album, which dropped today on Disney+. But two in particular seem especially apt to describe the stylistic feast the artist has created. The first comes three minutes in: "Let Black be synonymous with joy."
The
second arrives half an hour later, on the song "Mood 4 Eva,"
featuring Jay-Z, Childish Gambino and Malian singer Oumou Sangaré. Clad in a
full-length leopard gown with a higher-than-high slit, Beyoncé laughs at the camera
as she sings, "I'm a whole mood."
The
almost 90-minute-long film is evidence of both affirmations.
Conceived
as a celebration of "the breadth and beauty of Black ancestry," as
Beyoncé wrote on an Instagram post announcing its release, "Black
Is King" is a companion to 2019's "The Lion King: The Gift," the
album she made to accompany Disney's CGI remake of the 1994 animated movie.
(Beyoncé voiced adult Nala in the film.) It follows a young man's journey to
self-discovery, with a focus on Black
history
and African traditions, told through the artist's own narration.
Aesthetically,
though, the project is a world unto itself. Shot around the world, from South
Africa to West Africa, England to Belgium, New York to Los Angeles, it shows
Queen Bey -- who wrote and directed the project, and is executive producer --
in a universe of phenomenal, larger-than-life looks and sets that are as
powerful and artful as the cultural messages conveyed through the music.
The
fashion moments, curated by Bey's longtime stylist and costume designer Zerina
Akers, are too many to count. Just like in "Lemonade," released in
2016, Beyoncé transitions seamlessly from outfit to outfit, from block colors
to patterns, from major European labels to independent African brands.
Accessories
also play a big role in "Black Is King," from sunglasses (tiny,
cat-eye, diamond-encrusted, you name it) to towering headdresses that pay
homage to African fashion traditions and the Egyptian queen Nefertiti. Earrings
are big and flash; bangles adorn the lengths of her arms; pearls appear and
reappear throughout. Nothing is understated, and that's the point.
This sartorial flair is shared by the rest of the cast, too. Jay-Z and the young protagonist look dapper in camel-colored suits, paired with matching turtlenecks and oversized necklaces. Tina Knowles-Lawson, Bey's mom, appears in a hot pink suit that's as sharp as the headpieces that goes with it. Even Blue Ivy looks on point in a ballgown and pearls.
For
the song "Brown Skin Girl," Naomi Campbell, Adut
Akech, Lupita Nyong'o, Kelly Rowland and Aweng Ade-Chuol wear stunning
ensembles to a fairytale-like, all-Black debutante ball. (Other well-dressed
celebrities appearing at different points in the movie include Pharrell
Williams, Nigerian singer Mr Eazi and Ghanaian artist Shatta Wale.)
The
choral moments are perhaps where the film's aesthetic prowess really shines. A
synchronized swimming number reminiscing of Esther William's aquatic
technicolor musicals of the 1940s and '50s is a hypnotic kaleidoscopic dream in
orange and fuchsia, with Bey at the center. The final choreographed sequence in
the middle of the desert, where dancers don primary colors, looks like a moving
painting.
These
scenes epitomize Beyoncé's creative mission for the past few years: honoring
Black histories and identities, and celebrating Black talent.
"The
events of 2020 have made the film's vision and message even more relevant, as
people across the world embark on a historic journey," she wrote on
Instagram. "I believe that when Black people tell our own stories, we can
shift the axis of the world and tell our REAL history of generational wealth
and richness of soul that are not told in our history books."
Shatta wale we love you, your collaboration with Beyonce is the highest.
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