
Beyonce teases surprise move away from country music for next album – with name a nod to ‘flamboyant' music legend
The
Texas
Hold 'Em singer has been dropping hints that her
next
album will be called Betty Black — and she is already teasing a corresponding tour before her current one has even finished.
9
Beyonce had a nod to American singer and model Betty Davis ahead of the release of her new album
Credit: Instagram/@beyonce
9
Beyonce is planning to release her new album next year and has another tour in the works
Credit: Redferns
Her 32-date Cowboy Carter trek finishes a week today in Las Vegas, but the website bettyblacktour.com now redirects to her own
beyonce
.com site.
It is believed that the title is a bid to reclaim the 1977 song Black Betty by Ram Jam, which has its roots in African-American music and has become controversial in recent years due to its connection with a whip used on enslaved people in prisons.
It is likely to also be a nod to late American singer and model Betty Davis, who was publicly scorned for her sexually liberating lyrics and funk-rock sound, which led to her being boycotted by
radio
and TV stations.
Betty has been described as 'wildly flamboyant', with the 'gritty emotional realism of Tina Turner, the futurist fashion sense of David Bowie and the trend–setting flair of Miles Davis,' the latter of whom she was briefly married to.
READ MORE ON BEYONCE
And it wouldn't be the first time Beyonce has referenced her.
On a remix of her Renaissance song Break My Soul, Beyonce sang 'Betty Davis, we love you', and on her Cowboy Carter track Bodyguard, she sang 'Davis in my bones'.
Bey went on to dress up as her for Halloween last year and, in a video for her GQ cover story to promote her whisky brand SirDavis, the Betty Davis song They Say I'm Different was used.
In another
teaser
about the Betty Black title, during her Cowboy Carter tour show, a newspaper appears on a screen behind her which has the headline: 'Betty Black tour sold out.'
Most read in Bizarre
And fans reckon they have worked out that her next album will be released on May 29, 2026, given she has picked Friday the 29th to release her last two records, and that is the next time the 29th falls on a Friday.
Blue Ivy looks IDENTICAL to mom Beyonce as she arrives in Paris with dad Jay-Z
The project will wrap up a trilogy of albums, which she announced when Renaissance came out in 2022.
In a message on her website at the time, she said: 'This three-act project was recorded over three years during the pandemic.
'Thank you to all of the pioneers who originate culture, to all of the fallen angels whose contributions have gone unrecognised for far too long. This is a celebration for you.'
Bey has been vocal about her love for rock'n'rollers like Betty and Tina Turner — who has inspired several outfits on her latest tour.
So I'm excited to see what she's cooked up, even if we do have a ten-month wait on our hands.
It Girl Sabrina
9
Sabrina Carpenter flew to Tuscany where she treated her pals to a luxury getaway
Credit: Supplied
SABRINA CARPENTER celebrated the biggest shows of her career by jetting off to a £6,500-a-night villa in Italy to unwind.
I can reveal that after performing to 130,000 fans during two shows at BST Hyde Park in London earlier this month, she flew to Tuscany where she treated her pals to a luxury getaway.
They stayed at the 600-year-old Villa I Busini which has seven bedrooms, a pool, walled gardens and a chef to make them breakfast.
The Espresso singer shared photos on Instagram of her well-deserved holiday.
She has had a stratospheric 18 months with a world tour and hit album Short n' Sweet, which spent a whopping 46 weeks in the Top Five.
On top of that, she has somehow found the time to record an entirely new album, Man's Best Friend, which will be released on August 29.
The first single Manchild has already gone to No1 and I've no doubt the follow-ups will be huge too.
I hope workaholic Sabrina managed to switch off on her break, because the rest of the year is going to be even busier.
New twist in Leigh-Anne's tale
9
Leigh-Anne showed off her flexibility in a promo photo for her new single Been A Minute
Credit: Niklas Haze
LEIGH-ANNE gets a foot up on her competition as she samples a Noughties favourite for her comeback tune.
The former Little Mix star, who is now going it alone as an independent artist, showed off her flexibility in a promo photo for her new single Been A Minute, which
features
the hook from the 2001 Masters At Work song, Work.
Also back with new music is Tinie Tempah with his song Eat It Up, WILL.I.AM with East LA, Jayo with Turning Me On and Robbie Williams' Spies, from his album BritPop, due out on October 10.
I also recommend newcomer Nectar Woode's sublime EP It's Like I Never Left, while Robert Plant has put out Everybody's Song, from his upcoming album Saving Grace.
Ahead of the new series of Line Of Duty,
And after racking up half a million views in a fortnight, Yungblud has released his breathtaking cover of Black Sabbath's Changes, recorded at their Back To The Beginning farewell concert, to raise money for charity.
9
Alex Warren says he was not a fan of his own mega-hit Ordinary when he first wrote it
Credit: Getty
ALEX WARREN admitted he 'hated' his song Ordinary when he first wrote it – despite it going on to become the biggest track of the year, spending 13 weeks at No1.
On Hits Radio Breakfast yesterday, the American musician, below, explained: 'When we first wrote it, I actually hated it.
'I hated it when it was just us on a guitar, like, we didn't really do anything to it.
'We were still writing it and I was like, 'It just doesn't sound like a record I'd put out.'
'And then I sang it and I was like, 'OK, let's see where this goes.'
"And we started putting stuff into the file and it sounded insane when we started adding the choir and everyone on top of it, and I was like, 'Holy shoot. This is amazing.''
Sir Paul's piano made BGT Tom very Abbey
9
Britain's Got Talent star Tom Ball was pictured at Abbey Road with wife Hannah and daughter Adeline
Credit: Supplied
BRITAIN'S Got Talent singer songwriter Tom Ball is following in the footsteps of greatness.
The vocal powerhouse, who released new single Timeless last month, got to use Sir Paul McCartney's piano at Abbey Road studios when working on new music.
He told Bizarre: 'It was really amazing. I got to play on the piano when I was in Abbey Road and there's just so much
history
. You could still feel the dents in the keys where he used to play.'
Tom, pictured at Abbey Road with wife Hannah and their six-month-old daughter Adeline, will release second album Spotlight on October 10.
He is also playing shows around the globe, including in the US, where he gained new fans after winning America's Got Talent: All-Stars in 2023.
But the ex-teacher admitted that he isn't too proud to go back to the classroom.
Tom said: 'I love what I do but teaching was fun too. I'd go back.
'Right now I'm making a lot of music. I have my own studio at home, which is great.'
9
Katy Perry shared a picture on TikTok wrapped head to toe in a dressing gown
Credit: TikTok
KATY PERRY is still up for a laugh despite her
She shared a video on her secret TikTok page of herself wrapped head to toe in a dressing gown as she left the
Kia
Forum in Los Angeles following her latest Lifetimes Tour gig.
The Firework singer has been posting all sorts of silly clips @urmom_ontour – although not many fans have realised it's actually her.
I just want to wrap myself up in my dressing gown sometimes too, Katy.
Margot gin treat a tonic
9
Margot Robbie shocked punters at a bar in London by buying a round of drinks
Credit:
MARGOT ROBBIE is a woman after my own heart, having forked out for a massive round of drinks for surprised punters.
The Barbie actress was at a restaurant with her movie producer husband Tom Ackerley and a group of mates when she shouted to everyone she was giving them all a treat.
One of the lucky diners at Bondi Green in Paddington, West London told me: 'We were eating lunch and then sudden-ly Margot stood up and said she was buying every single person a drink.
'She had the bar staff make cocktails from her Papa Salt gin and had them served to everyone who wanted one.
'It was a lovely gesture and she was in great spirits – very relaxed and friendly.'
That's a sure-fire way to win people over. And an easy way to plug her booze brand.
JOJO SIWA's Infinity Heart Tour will head to the UK in October with gigs at Newcastle, London, Manchester, Brighton and Birmingham.
The Celebrity Big Brother finalist has just released a cover of Bette Davis Eyes, but we've been told she is also working on original music.
Safe to say Bizarre's Jack will be there front and centre.
Simon's Aston smarting
9
Kate Thornton has shared an old secret about how The X Factor was filmed
Credit: Getty
FORMER X Factor host
homes
.
She has claimed that someone damaged one of Simon Cowell's
cars
when they did
film
at his plush pad and he decided never to let them in again.
Kate who hosted X Factor from 2004 to 2006, said on her White
Wine
Question Time
podcast: 'Do you know why we'd gone to Spain? The year before, we'd done it in Simon's actual house.
'Somebody had driven something into one of his cars, the Aston or something.
'He was trying to pretend not to be p***ed off – but he was really p***ed off.
'So he was like, 'We're taking it abroad.''
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Irish Examiner
6 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
Sam Gilliam: IMMA exhibition underlines impact of Irish visits on output of US artist
Sam Gilliam was an American abstract artist who revolutionised the display of work in gallery spaces. Draping unstretched canvases from the ceilings, and arranging industrial fabric on the floor, he blurred the line between painting and sculpture, and helped shape the development of installation art in the 1960s and '70s. Gilliam broke ground also by becoming the first African American artist to represent the United States at the Venice Biennale in 1972. By the time of his passing, aged 88, in June 2022, he had enjoyed any number of public commissions and major museum shows across the US. Although Gilliam is not as well-known on this side of the Atlantic, he visited Ireland in the early 1990s, and was greatly moved by the experience. His stay is commemorated in Sewing Fields, the new exhibition of his work curated by Mary Cremin and Seán Kissane at the Irish Museum of Modern Art in Kilmainham, Dublin. 'When we first started talking about this exhibition,' says Cremin, 'I met Gilliam's widow, Annie Gawlak. She came to IMMA and told us about how Gilliam had completed a three-week artist's residency at the Ballinglen Art Foundation in County Mayo in 1993. 'Gilliam normally worked on large canvases with petroleum paints, but he wasn't allowed to bring those paints on the plane, so he dyed and painted fabric and sent it on ahead to Ballinaglen. And when he got there, he worked with a local seamstress to collage pieces of the fabric together, so they're kind of stacked on top of each other. You'll see one of those pieces in the exhibition, it's part of a series of four called Cottages. I think the experience was quite transformative for him.' Gilliam was one of the many international artists who have spent time in Ballinaglen with the support of the arts foundation established in the early 1990s by Margo Dolan and the late Peter Maxwell, who owned a prestigious art gallery in Philadelphia. The foundation runs workshops, residencies and fellowships, along with education and outreach programmes and a museum of art. 'It's this amazing place in the middle of the village,' says Cork-born curator Cremin. 'People like Howardena Pindell, who we've shown at IMMA, and Jo Baer, who was very influenced by the archaeology in the area, have all done residencies there. It's very interesting that Ireland has had a real impact on these artists, and a real resonance with them in terms of art making.' Down Patricks-head, by Sam Gilliam. When Cremin began work on the Sewing Fields exhibition, she discovered that Gilliam had once shown in Dublin. 'In the early 1970s, he had a solo exhibition with a gallerist named Oliver Dowling, who passed away just last year. Dowling was a maverick, and quite an influential person within the arts in Ireland. He helped set up the ROSC exhibitions. But it was news both to Annie and to us that Gilliam had ever exhibited in Ireland. We don't think he came over for the opening, but everyone involved is dead now, so it's not possible to say for sure.' Gilliam was born in Tupelo, Mississippi in 1933. 'Growing up where he did,' says Cremin, 'where there's a massive cotton industry, he was probably seeing a lot of quilting and that type of making. We have an exhibition of quilts from Gee's Bend in Mississippi on at IMMA at the moment, and we know that Gilliam had several Gee's Bend quilts in his own art collection. There's a correlation between this idea of stitching and layering, telling narratives through the fabrics, that I think is referenced in his work as well.' In Gilliam's youth, his family migrated north. He studied art at the University of Louisville in Kentucky and then settled in Washington DC. 'He was part of the colour field movement, with people like Kenneth Noland. They made minimal abstract paintings. But later on, he made works that were much more three-dimensional, or sculptural, and he started really playing around with the paint, scraping, stitching and layering. There was really a lot of improvisation. 'He was very interested in jazz as well. Improvisation is very important in jazz, of course, but it's also very important to the kind of way he worked. There were no limitations in terms of how he worked with paint or with the canvas. He was very liberated.' Gilliam came of age during the Civil Rights Movement in America. 'That was, very obviously, hugely important to everyone,' says Cremin. 'And for Gilliam, being a black artist coming up at that time was a big deal, because it was predominantly white males in the art world. He wasn't making work that was overtly political, he was making art for art's sake. But that said, he was very involved in the establishment of the Studio Museum in Harlem, and he was part of a very important exhibition called X in America. 'And also, I guess he does engage politically, in that a lot of his paintings are called after significant black figures, like Martin Luther King. There's one piece in the exhibition here called Count On Us, which is this beautiful three-coloured canvas that's referencing when Obama was voted in as president. It was a very aspirational and very exciting time. So, he referenced politics in a different way.' Mary Cremin, curator. Sewing Fields was organised in collaboration with the Sam Gilliam Foundation, which is run by the late artist's family. 'Gilliam was very supportive of young black artists, and his foundation has continued that work,' says Cremin. 'They also collaborate on exhibitions such as this, ensuring that Gilliam's work is shown as he would have liked. Some of the work in Sewing Fields has never been shown before, and some of the technicians who'd been with Gilliam since the 1980s came over to help with the installation. 'It's only two years since Gilliam passed, but I guess it's important for his work to continue to grow, and for people to have an increased awareness around him. In terms of contemporary Ireland, this is not just the first time he's been shown here since the 1970s, it's his first museum show here as well. Many of these works have never been exhibited before, and many people are travelling over from America to see the show. It's really exciting for us.' Gilliam's time in Mayo may have been brief, but the landscape had a big influence on his work, says Cremin. 'Even towards the end of his life, he was making these really large paintings, with thick impasto, he called Downpatrick Head and Irish, County Mayo. As Annie says, he always referenced back to his time in Ireland.' Sam Gilliam, Sewing Fields runs at the Irish Museum of Modern Art until January 25, 2026. Further information:


The Irish Sun
6 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
Beyonce sends fans into a frenzy with surprise Destiny's Child reunion during final Cowboy Carter show
Destiny's Child have reunited for the first time in several years during Beyoncé's final Cowboy Carter show. The smash-hit singer reunited with her former bandmates Advertisement 6 Beyonce treated her fans to a special surprise to finish off her Cowboy Carter world tour Credit: Shutterstock Editorial 6 The superstar reunited with her Destiny's child bandmates for a special show Credit: Shutterstock Editorial 6 They strutted down the stadium stage in co-ordinated gold outfits Credit: Shutterstock Editorial After performing 31 shows across Europe and the states, Beyonce took to the stage for her final show of the worldwide But as she wrapped up her performances to a sold-out crowd in Vegas, Queen Bey sent her fans into a frenzy with a special surprise performance. The trio took to the stage together for the first time since their Coachella Her loyal fans went wild as the famous noughties group sported co-ordinated sparkly gold ensembles. Advertisement READ MORE ON BEYONCE They strutted down the stage as the music for 'Lose My Breath' blared out to tens of thousands of Beyoncé's biggest fans. Beyonce, Kelly and Michelle sang a mashup of some of their most popular tracks which also included 'Bootylicious' on Saturday night. Videos going round social media also show Beyoncé participating in her famous mute challenge with her 'Independent Women' bandmates. This was during her song ' Energy ' from her Renaissance album that was released in 2022. Advertisement Most read in Entertainment Live Blog Exclusive All three members of the group took to their respective profiles on social media the following morning to commemorate the special occasion. Kelly captioned her image with three black heart emojis, whilst Michelle wrote: "The Chil'ren!", along with a shooting star. Blue Ivy looks IDENTICAL to mom Beyonce as she arrives in Paris with dad Jay-Z According to next time!! SIKE!!" This was as Beyoncé uploaded multiple snaps of the trio in a mini-album in two separate posts. Advertisement For the grand finale of the tour, Beyoncé also brought out her husband Jay Z and This was a culmination of her performances across the globe, Destiny's Child: The album discography WHAT albums did the band release and where did they place in the charts? Destiny's Child (1998) - Chart position: 67 (US) / 45 (UK) The Writing's on the Wall (1999) - Chart position: 5 (US) / 10 (UK) Survivor (2001) - Chart position: 1 (US) / 1 (UK) 8 Days of Christmas (2001) - Chart position: 34 (US) / 117 (UK) Destiny Fulfilled (2004) - Chart position: 2 (US) / 5 (UK) #1's (2005) - compilation album - Chart position: 1 (US) / 6 (UK) Starting in Los Angeles with several shows, she also headed to Chicago, New Jersey , London, Paris, Houston, Washington, D.C. and Atlanta before finishing up in Sin City. Over 1.5million people attended her stadium concerts across 32 gigs, which grossed over $387million in ticket sales. Advertisement Since their initial disbandment, Destiny 's Child have reunited several times, which included Beyoncé's set for the Super Bowl halftime show in 2013. 6 The trio sold more than 60million records worldwide Credit: Getty 6 Beyonce also brought out other special guests at various points in the show Credit: Shutterstock Editorial 6 This is the first time the ladies have sung together on stage since Queen Bey's Coachella set in 2018 Credit: Shutterstock Editorial Advertisement


RTÉ News
6 hours ago
- RTÉ News
Concern over future of planned €300m Wicklow film studio
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