The undeniable danceability, lighthearted shade, free sexuality and unbridled joy found across “Renaissance” is clearly influenced by and indebted to the queer and trans pioneers who popularized house music, and artists from those genres are represented on nearly every track.
From trans icon Ts Madison and fashion pioneer Telfar Clemens, to late queen of the downtown drag scene, Moi Renee, and Beyoncé’s own uncle, these are some of the influences, artists and allies who shaped Queen Bey’s latest and greatest new work.
Freedia has lent her signature voice, deep and vibrant, on several mainstream tracks, including Drake’s “Nice for What,” and, of course, Beyoncé’s “Formation.”
Freedia has resisted labels when it comes to her gender, and she encourages the same fluidity in her uninhibited music: “I’m your brother or your sister, whichever one you wanna call me,” she said on CBS. “When you’re comfortable with yourself and you know who you are, I think people will get a better understanding of how to approach diff situations.”
Syd
Sydney Bennett, a solo indie R&B artist and lead vocalist of the group The Internet — who’s better known as Syd — is credited with co-writing the funky, slowed-down love song “Plastic Off the Sofa.” Her quietly seductive lyrics and production — her signatures — are evident throughout the track.
Grace Jones
Telfar Clemens
Moi Renee
Honey Dijon
Kevin Aviance
Ts Madison
MikeQ
House of LaBeija
“Tip, tip, tip on hardwood floors
Ten, ten, ten across the board
Give me face, face, face, face, yah
Your face card never declines, my gawd!”
Donna Summer
Beyoncé borrows heavily from disco queen Summer’s “I Feel Love” on the final track, “Summer Renaissance.” It’s at least the second time Bey has pulled from Summer: “Naughty Girl,” from Beyoncé’s solo debut, interpolates Summer’s “Love to Love You,” another gay nightclub anthem.
She was “blessed with a divine inability to intuit how 3am under a mirror-ball in a Metropolitan gay nightclub ought to sound,” Flynn wrote. “‘I Feel Love’ is still it.”
Uncle Jonny
“Thank you to all of the pioneers who originate culture, to all of the fallen angels whose contributions have gone unrecognized for far too long,” Bey wrote. “This is a celebration for you.”
Bey honors him with one of the greatest lines on the album: “Uncle Jonny made my dress,” she sings on “Heated.” “That cheap spandex, she looks a mess!”