Fans of Beyoncé and Lady Gaga waited with bated breath for the premiere of the previous’s recent album, Cowboy Carter, and while they might not have gotten what they wanted, there was an Easter egg for them within the registry.
The 42-year-old star dropped her long-awaited country album on Friday, and speculation about her reunion with Lady Gaga has reached fever pitch in the times leading as much as the discharge.
The pair previously collaborated on the song “Video Phone” from Beyoncé’s 2008 album, I’m Sasha Fierce. However, it was a continuation of the song “Telephone” from 2009 from the Lady GaGa album. The fame monster which fans have been waiting for for a very long time.
Lady Gaga’s chart-topping song featured Beyoncé and co-starred in a short music video by which the pair played bandits riding out into the horizon because the words “to be continued” appeared on the screen at the tip.
A series of social media posts made a few days earlier by people near the pop stars Cowboy Carter led fans to imagine that they might reunite and release a sequel to “Telephone” for fans.
Lady Gaga doesn’t appear on the album, but considered one of her famous lines from the “Telephone” music video does appear and is muttered by none apart from country music legend herself, Dolly Parton.
“We did it, Honey B. Now let’s go far, far away from here,” Lady Gaga tells Beyoncé after she went on a murderous rampage against aggressive men within the “Telephone” music video. Beyoncé then responds, “Do you promise we’ll never come back?” because the pair drive away in a giant yellow truck called the “P**** Wagon.”
The mention of “Telephone” within the Easter egg appears in a cutscene voiced by Parton by which she calls Beyoncé “Miss Honey B.”
Her interlude references Beyoncé’s 2016 song “Sorry,” by which she sings about her husband, Jay-Z, having an inappropriate relationship with a woman known only as “Becky With The Good Hair.”
During a break before Beyoncé’s performance of “Jolene,” Parton mentions “that clumsy girl with the pretty hair you’re singing about” and says it reminds her of “someone I knew once. Except he has flaming locks of auburn hair.” Parton says, referring to Jolene, whom she sings about in her title song, and pleads for her to “don’t take my man.”
Beyoncé isn’t the first superstar to try her hand at country music. Lady Gaga herself released an American-inspired album Joanna in 2016, which charted in the top ten in over 25 countries.
Cowboy Carter serves as Act II in a three-part project for Beyoncé. Akt: I was her renaissance an album, tour and concert film that paid homage to house music and black LGBTQ+ people, especially ballroom culture, which gave way to hip dance.
She hasn’t revealed what Act III will be yet, but some are speculating that it will be a rock album.
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