Tales of Beyoncé Running Up on Rappers 50 Cent and Fabolous Resurface Amid Singer’s ‘Cowboy Carter’ Cover of ‘Jolene’


The highly anticipated release of Beyoncé‘s country album, “Cowboy Carter,” dropped on March 29, and the recording artist covered an old Dolly Parton song.

Parton is featured on Bey’s new album, along with another country music icon, Willie Nelson, and she accompanies the “Break My Soul” singer on “Jolene.” The original 1973 song is about a tall, red-headed bank teller who flirted with Parton’s husband, Carl Thomas Dean.

Parton pleads with Jolene to leave her husband alone in her version of the song, but Beyoncé takes a different approach in her version of “Jolene.” In Beyoncé’s cover of the song, a reference is made about the woman her husband, Jay-Z, had an affair with. The woman is widely referred to as “Becky with the good hair” on the singer’s “Lemonade” album.

Parton starts off the song with, “You know that hussy with the good hair you sing about? Reminded me of someone I knew back when. Except she has flaming locks of auburn hair, Bless her heart. Just a hair of a different color, but it hurts just the same.”

Then Bey sings and warns Jolene that she doesn’t want “no hеat” from the Grammy-Award-winning artist.

“You don’t want no hеat with me, Jolene / We been deep in love for 20 years / I raised that man, I raised his kids. I can easily understand why you’re attracted to my man / But you don’t want this smoke, so shoot your shot for someone else.”

“I know I’m a queen, Jolene / I’m still a Creole banjee b—h from Louisianne / Don’t try me,” Bey sings.

Beyoncé Checked Fabolous Over Solange Song Lyrics

After hearing the new version of “Jolene,” fans began asking on social media if Beyoncé nan fight, in light of the song’s lyrics. “You think Beyoncé got hands…she be talking like she got hands,” wrote one on X.