Alpinestars

GQ UK (BRITISH GQ) MAGAZINE-OCTOBER 2024-BEYONCE KNOWLES-CARTER

Description: “”””ITEM IS IN STOCK NOW"""""PLACE THE ORDER WITHOUT ANY HESITATAIONS””””” The Business of Being Beyoncé Knowles-CarterIn GQ’s October cover story, the artist talks business, legacy, art, and family: “It’s not about being perfect. It’s about being revolutionary.”By Frazier TharpePhotography by Bryce AndersonBeyoncé is breaking out. Midway through Cowboy Carter, her eighth and most recent studio album, released this past spring, a voice makes the project’s mission statement plain over blaring alarms and a thunderous beat—declaring the concept of genre to be a sense of confinement for those artists whose creativity is too wide-ranging to fit in a neat box. All before Beyoncé herself saunters in comparing herself to Thanos, the Marvel villain known for seeking precious stones of mystical power to claim as his own and assemble into one unified superpower. There may not be an accompanying music video, but the lyrics conjure a potent visual: Beyoncé, armed with a bedazzled gauntlet, breaking down every stultifying wall, label, or box the industry ever tried to put her in across her 30-year career. It’s a theme that applies to much of what Beyoncé has been up to for the past decade or so, especially in the last couple of years: a mission of reclamation, recentering Blackness in spaces where our influence has since been de-emphasized, whether in rodeo, on the great American plains, or on sweaty ballroom dance floors.  The project has been powered by legacy. Each step forward is illuminated with a look back, a tour through time tracing her own roots, while also yielding the knowledge that her family tree is just one in a larger forest where everything is connected. Whatever she does feels that much grander because of it. A new country-influenced album isn’t just an exercise in undoing the strictures of genre; it’s a history lesson, where forgotten pioneers can get their props and true lineages can be explored. (That voice denouncing genres belongs to Linda Martell, the Black country pioneer whose efforts endured some of the same resistance Beyoncé faced. And as such, her forays both inside and outside of music carry more weight than most celebrity brands can ever be expected to. For example, it felt equal parts momentous and inevitable when, in late July, Vice President Kamala Harris featured “Freedom” as the soundtrack to her first presidential campaign ad—and Beyoncé’s voice and lyrics seemed to announce a new political moment. Now, there’s SirDavis. Beyoncé Knowles-Carter is getting into the whiskey trade as a founder, in the most Beyoncé of fashions—challenging notions of masculinity and flipping them. Our biggest female entertainer presenting the manliest of all spirits, while honoring those in her lineage who came before. (SirDavis, created in partnership with Moët Hennessy, is named after her great-grandfather, Davis Hogue. And features the deliberate choice of branding it “whisky”—no e—like they do in Japan and Scotland, and in contrast to how it’s typically done in the US.) Like everything she does, it is ancestral, it is formidable, it has been concocted to perfection, and as a Black woman in a space perceived for old white men, it’s striking. At 43, Beyoncé has shown, time and again, the ability to exert a rare kind of control—over her image, her likeness, her music and business worlds. She has become adept at breaking rules and entering new spaces, in business and in art, creating new norms and new opportunities for others as she goes. At this rate, there’s no frontier she can’t conquer, no stone any longer outside of her grasp. As the end of that Cowboy Carter verse goes, “I ain’t no regular singer, now come get everything you came for.” Still, there’s plenty left to wonder about: What keeps her going, three decades in, with nothing left to prove? Who is she, really, between the critically acclaimed albums, the blockbuster tours, and the dynamic docu-concert films? We got a rare glimpse in an extensive back-and-forth conducted via email this summer. Order a copy to know more.................. Brand New Copies!! Newsstand Copies!! Magazine has a Bar-Code!! ORDER A COPY TO KNOW MORE...... BRAND NEW COPIES, NEWSSTAND EDITION, HAS BARCODE!!

Price: 17.99 USD

Location: Parsippany, New Jersey

End Time: 2024-12-01T03:04:01.000Z

Shipping Cost: 5.95 USD

Product Images

GQ UK (BRITISH GQ) MAGAZINE-OCTOBER 2024-BEYONCE KNOWLES-CARTER

Item Specifics

All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted

Language: English

Special Attributes: Collector's Edition, Limited Edition

Publisher: GQ

Country/Region of Manufacture: United Kingdom

Topic: THE BUSINESS OF BEING BEYONCE KNOWLES-CARTER

Subject: MEN'S FASHION/MEN'S STYLE

Year Printed: 2024

Recommended

GQ Magazine UK March 1999 Caprice Bourret
GQ Magazine UK March 1999 Caprice Bourret

$49.99

View Details
British GQ Magazine (UK) - Summer 2024 - Heroes - Ian Wright Cover
British GQ Magazine (UK) - Summer 2024 - Heroes - Ian Wright Cover

$9.03

View Details
2005 SEPTEMBER GQ MAGAZINE - EMILY MORTIMER COVER - BRITISH EDITION - RC 1282
2005 SEPTEMBER GQ MAGAZINE - EMILY MORTIMER COVER - BRITISH EDITION - RC 1282

$52.50

View Details
2014 UK GQ magazine JESSICA ALBA Chance the Rapper David Gandy Gugu Mbatha-Raw
2014 UK GQ magazine JESSICA ALBA Chance the Rapper David Gandy Gugu Mbatha-Raw

$29.99

View Details
GQ UK British Magazine Aug 2021 Subscriber's Edition Santan Dave Tim Burgess
GQ UK British Magazine Aug 2021 Subscriber's Edition Santan Dave Tim Burgess

$6.45

View Details
2005 UK GQ magazine ANGELINA JOLIE Mariana Coelho Jessica Alba Jelly Roll Morton
2005 UK GQ magazine ANGELINA JOLIE Mariana Coelho Jessica Alba Jelly Roll Morton

$49.99

View Details
GQ British UK Magazine September 2023 The Hype Issue Pharrell Williams
GQ British UK Magazine September 2023 The Hype Issue Pharrell Williams

$7.74

View Details
2004 MAY GQ UK MAGAZINE ~ UMA THURMAN! David Beckham, Michael Howard
2004 MAY GQ UK MAGAZINE ~ UMA THURMAN! David Beckham, Michael Howard

$23.55

View Details
GQ Magazine British UK Ver. OCTOBER 2014 - Benedict Cumberbatch Men's Fashion
GQ Magazine British UK Ver. OCTOBER 2014 - Benedict Cumberbatch Men's Fashion

$21.99

View Details
UK GQ 9/09,Sienna Miller,Carine Roitfeld,Gok Wan,Judd Apatow,September 2009,RARE
UK GQ 9/09,Sienna Miller,Carine Roitfeld,Gok Wan,Judd Apatow,September 2009,RARE

$22.99

View Details