Beyoncé’s ‘Cowboy Carter’ Tour Just Made History—Again

“The best revenge is your paper…” — Beyoncé said that, and then made $407.6 million from a country tour. Let that sink in.

After a show-stopping Vegas finale to the Cowboy Carter Tour, Queen Bey officially broke another record. The numbers are in: 32 shows, $407.6 million, and a brand-new title — highest-grossing country tour of all time. Not bad for someone the CMAs once tried to ignore.

Let’s rewind. Back in 2016, Beyoncé performed with the Dixie Chicks at the Country Music Awards and was met with racism so loud, you could hear it over the banjos. From celebrity walkouts to passive-aggressive headlines, the message was clear: “this genre isn’t for you.”

Fast forward to 2024 and Beyoncé returned, rhinestones blazing, with Cowboy Carter — a genre-blending masterpiece that gave country its edge back. She didn’t just make an album. She documented country music’s Black roots, spotlighted rising stars like Shaboozey and Brittney Spencer, and ended up everywhere from the NFL halftime show to the Olympics. All without a single nomination from the CMAs. Not even one for Shaboozey’s TikTok-breaking hit “A Bar Song (Tipsy).”

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But the real mic drop? The tour’s revenue beat out everyone, including the men the genre has historically uplifted. And just as the GRAMMYs scrambled to create two new categories for country music (a not-so-subtle response to Beyoncé’s chart takeover), she gave a classy response:

“The criticisms I faced when I first entered this genre forced me to propel past the limitations that were put on me… Act II is a result of challenging myself and taking my time to bend and blend genres together to create this body of work.”

Translation? You can gatekeep the genre. She’ll just own it instead.

In other news, Beyoncé might’ve just teased her next tour — and the internet is in full conspiracy mode again

Daniel Usidamen

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