Beyoncé Just Became the First Black Woman Artist With a Number One Country Song

O.G.B

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Beyoncé Just Became the First Black Woman Artist With a Number One Country Song

"Texas Hold 'Em" topped Billboard's Hot Country Songs chart, the publication announced Tuesday

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"BEYONCÉ HAS BECOME the first Black woman artist ever to top Billboard’s Hot Country Songs chart in the modern history of country music, thanks to her country debut “Texas Hold ‘Em,” which also opened at Number Two on the Hot 100, the publication announced on Tuesday."

“Texas Hold ‘Em” dethroned Zach Bryan and Kacey Musgraves’ “I Remember Everything,” which has spent 20 weeks at Number One on the country chart and topped the Hot 100 last year. Beyoncé was buoyed mainly by strong streams and sales, with “Texas Hold ‘Em” getting 19.2 million streams last week along with 39,000 traditional sales (per Luminate), as the Beyhive looked to push the song up the charts. The song also got 4.8 million audience impressions from radio."

“16 Carriages,” Beyoncé’s other country song, hit Number Nine on Hot Country Songs. It has 10.3 million streams, 14,000 sales and 90,000 radio impressions."

Beyoncé isn’t the first woman of color in country music, as other artists like Mickey Guyton and Brittney Spencer have found success in recent years, while Linda Martell blazed the trail as the first Black female solo artist to find success in the genre 50 years ago. But as chart history shows, country remains overwhelmingly white and prominently male. Despite a handful of songwriters like Alice Randall and Tayla Parx with Number One co-writes, no Black woman songwriter had ever solely written a Number One country song until last year, when Luke Combs had a hit with Tracy Chapman’s “Fast Car.”

Beyoncé Just Became the First Black Woman Artist With a Number One Country Song
 

Roger king

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Brothers lets stop this capping or pretense i havent heard this song i dont particularly like this genre and have no interests listening to it
 

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Can somebody explain this heading?
Is this organic?

Is this song being propelled to that spot because of country music listeners?

Or her fans?
 

Blessings

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That’s sad the black community hasn’t cared to show up for actual black female country artists all this time
You mean the industry/gatekeepers who stifle actual black country artists. You excuse those white folks for screwing black country artists but put the blame on the black community.

You another one of those fukking c00ns….I can’t stand y’all nikkas
 
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