Country Music
Stations Refusing To Play Beyonce's Fake Foray Into
The Genre And The Lead Single '16 Carriages' Is A
Rip Off Of The Classic Song 'A Whiter Shade Of Pale'
February 13. 2024
Beyonce last week looking like
a black "Boss Hog" (LOL)
[Editorial Note: I'm not a fan of
Beyonce as she has stolen music from my preexisting copyrights
such as "Halo" "Welcome To Hollywood" "Single Ladies" "Daddy" "Greenlight"
"Upgrade U" "Diva" "Amor Gitano" "Worldwide Woman" "Black
Culture" (among other songs) and the music videos
"Suga Mama" "Flaws And All" "Still In Love" "Beautiful Liar"
and "Greenlight" among other videos (The FBI Is
Stonewalling Congress On Releasing FBI File In
Madonna Human Rights Abuse Case (Congressional
Documents). Beyonce is
a known copyright thief who has been sued by many people for
these crimes (Beyonce And
Jay Z Copyright Infringement)].
Reports online reveal country music stations are
refusing to play music by R&B singer Beyonce, who is trying to
break into their genre. Beyonce has released two lackluster,
confusing so[gs she is calling country music, when people who
know and have formally studied music can hear it is not of the
genre. I was a child prodigy. I began copyrighting intellectual
property in the arts at a very young age. I have written and
copyrighted (registered
in the
Library of Congress in Washington, DC) country
music songs, among many other genres (beginning over 20-years
ago). I know what country music is supposed to sound like.
Beyonce's beyhive, a group of a few HUNDRED
crazed, fanatical people, who flood social networking with
repetitive madness about the singer, and routinely bully and
threaten others for not insanely worshipping her as they do, are
losing their minds at the fact country music stations will not
play Beyonce's new music. The beyhive are calling country music
stations in America racist for not playing, Beyonce, an artist
who has not musically met the criteria for their playlists.
Country music stations in America do play black recording
artists. However, they are black recording artists who actually
release COUNTRY MUSIC.
Charley Pride (who passed away), Aaron Neville,
Darius Rucker (formerly of pop/rock/blues band Hootie and the
Blowfish), Mickey Guyton, Kane Brown, Brittney Spencer, Blanco
Brown, Yola, Jimmie Allen, and Allison Russell, are some of the
black recording artists who are played on country music stations
in America. If Beyonce was really into country music as she
claims (all of a sudden), she would know what she has released
is not of the genre. Musically the songs she has released sounds
like R&B and pop, not country music.
Speaking of that, Beyonce is a known copyright
infringer. Just take a look at all the copyrights she has
stolen, which comprise her fraudulent career:
Beyonce And
Jay Z Copyright Infringement.
There's a song I've liked since I was a teen called "A Whiter
Shade Of Pale." It was originally recorded in 1967 by English
rock/folk /blues group Procol Harum. In 1995, Eurhythmics lead
singer Annie Lennox released a remake of the track for her
second solo album and it became a hit again. "A Whiter Shade of
Pale" has been remade hundreds of times. It is one of the most
successful pop/rock songs in music history.
My dad is a musicologist and radio disc jockey
with over 50-years experience. He has been featured in award
winning documentaries and many mainstream publications in
Britain, Europe, America and the Caribbean. Since I was a child
we always talked about music. When I was 8-years old I was
singing music by Sam Cooke, Aretha Franklin, The Temptations and
The Platters, among others, who are way before my time. I was
even singing music from other parts of the Caribbean that were
released decades before I was born.
I remember one day when I was in my late teens I
told my dad "I love the song 'A Whiter Shade of Pale.'" I told
him the song is so moving, meaningful and poignant. My dad
paused for a second and flatly said, "Aisha, they're singing
about drugs!" I was like "What?" *crickets.* I can laugh about
it now, but at the time...
I've written about 'A Whiter Shade of Pale'
before online. So in listening to Beyonce's new song this week
entitled "16 Carriages" I immediately realized she ripped off "A
Whiter Shade Of Pale." The lyrics are very similar and so is the
drum pattern.
The 1967 song "A Whiter Shade of Pale" by Procol
Harum has lyrics about '