| "Freedom" | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Single byBeyoncé featuringKendrick Lamar | ||||
| from the albumLemonade | ||||
| Released | September 9, 2016 (2016-09-09) | |||
| Recorded | 2016 | |||
| Studio | The Beehive (Los Angeles)[1] | |||
| Genre | Gospel rock | |||
| Length | 4:50 | |||
| Label | ||||
| Songwriters | ||||
| Producers |
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| Beyoncé singles chronology | ||||
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| Kendrick Lamar singles chronology | ||||
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| Audio video | ||||
| "Freedom" onYouTube | ||||
"Freedom" is a song by the American singerBeyoncé featuring the American rapperKendrick Lamar. It is the tenth track on her sixth studio album,Lemonade (2016), released throughParkwood Entertainment andColumbia Records. The song's music video is part of Beyoncé's 2016 filmLemonade, aired onHBO alongside the album's release.[2] In the years since, the song has become an anthem for various social and political movements, most notablyKamala Harris'2024 presidential campaign.[3][4][5]
Beyoncé performed the song live as part of the set list ofThe Formation World Tour (2016), and at the2016 BET Awards with Lamar. It received a nomination forBest Rap/Sung Performance at the2017 Grammy Awards.
The song contains samples of "Let Me Try" (1969) by Kaleidoscope, as well as "Collection Speech/Unidentified Lining Hymn" (1959) and "Stewball" (1947), performed by Prisoner "22" at Mississippi State Penitentiary at Parchman.
On February 7, 2016, Beyoncé performed at theSuper Bowl halftime show withColdplay,Bruno Mars andMark Ronson. She entered debuting a new single, "Formation", which would later be recontextualized as the lead single forLemonade (2016). Immediately after the performance, a commercial announcingThe Formation World Tour aired with the then-unknown instrumental of "Freedom". Musically, it is agospel rock song.[6]
"Freedom" was released withinLemonade on April 23, 2016. The album'sfilm of the same name simultaneously aired onHBO. The film includes the music video for "Freedom", which has exclusively streamed onTidal ever since.[2] On the three-year anniversary ofLemonade, the album became available on all music streaming services. However, the film, and by extension "Freedom" music video, are still exclusively on Tidal.
"Freedom" contains three musical samples: "Let Me Try", written by Frank Tirado, performed by Kaleidoscope; "Collection Speech/Unidentified Lining Hymn" (1959) and recorded byAlan Lomax, performed by Reverend R.C. Crenshaw; and "Stewball" (1947), recorded byAlan Lomax andJohn Lomax, Sr., performed by Prisoner "22" atMississippi State Penitentiary at Parchman.[1]
The spoken voice audio at the end of the song which starts with, "I had my ups and down..." is from Hattie White,Jay-Z's grandmother, at her 90th birthday party.[7] A clip from the gathering of her speaking is included in the video "All Night" which is part of theLemonade visual album.[8]
Arrow Benjamin, who collaborated with Beyoncé on "Runnin' (Lose It All)" by musicianNaughty Boy in 2015, served as the song'sbacking vocalist.[1]Marcus Miller and Canei Finch played thebass and additionalpiano in "Freedom".[1]
"Freedom" wasmixed and recorded by Stuart White at Pacifique Recording Studios and The Beehive respectively. Itsaudio engineering was finished by Ramon Rivas with the assistance of John Cranfield.Boots and Myles William were responsible for theprogramming whileDave Kutchmastered the song at The Mastering Palace NYC in North Hollywood, California.
"Freedom" was met with critical acclaim.Consequence of Sound named it the best song of 2016.[9] It was voted as the 36th best single of 2016 inThe Village Voice's annualPazz & Jop poll.[10]
Pitchfork named the song "Best New Track" on release, with editor Britt Jullious commenting "After [earlier songs onLemonade] of paranoia, anger, and revenge, we finally get a song that speaks truth to Beyoncé’s deep well of feelings. Bathed in psychedelic, synthetic organs and a propulsive drum beat, the track cuts straight, providing an alternative narrative of personal redemption. It is also the explanatory work on [the album]."[11]Everett True forThe Independent wrote that the track "roars like thunder, and threatens to topple governments in its wake".[12] Brittany Spanos and Sarah Grant ofRolling Stone called the song "one of the most striking political statements of [Beyoncé's] career".[13]
The song became an anthem for the 2020George Floyd protests and had a subsequent 625% rise in streamings, with the track being sung at protests including by actress and singerAmber Riley.[14][3][4]
In 2024, Beyoncé gaveVice PresidentKamala Harris permission to use "Freedom" as the official song forher 2024 presidential campaign.[15][16] The song then had a 1,300% rise in U.S. on-demand streams in the following two days.[17] On July 25, 2024, Harris launched a digital ad in support of her candidacy featuring the song.[18] In addition, Beyoncé would campaign for her inHouston, Texas, in October.
On August 20, 2024, Trump campaign spokespersonSteven Cheung posted a 13-second video ontoX (formerly known as Twitter) of Trump's arrival for a rally inMichigan, using an excerpt from "Freedom".[19][20] The following day, Beyoncé's record label and music publisher sent acease-and-desist to Trump for using the song without permission.[21]
On its release inLemonade, "Freedom" debuted on the USBillboardHot 100 chart at number 35 along with every other track from the album on May 2, 2016.[22] It also entered on theHot R&B/Hip-Hop songs chart at number 21. In Canada, the song debuted and peaked at a position of 60 on theCanadian Hot 100.[23] On theUK Singles Chart, "Freedom" debuted at the position of 40 for the chart issue dated May 5, 2016.[24]
The following week, it descended five positions and exited.[25] It set a peak position of 15 on theUK R&B Singles on May 12, 2016.[26] In Australia, "Freedom" peaked at 62 and six on theAustralian ARIA Singles Chart and Australian Urban Chart respectively.[27][28] In France, "Freedom" debuted at its peak position of 53 on April 30, 2016, spending a total of three weeks on the singles chart.[29] It ranked higher in Spain, where it climbed at number 37 on the country's chart.[30] On theBelgian Ultratop Singles Chart in the Flanders region, "Freedom" attained a peak position of 27 in its second week of charting on May 14, 2016, where it spent a total of eight weeks.[31]
Weekly charts[edit]
| Year-end charts[edit]
|
| Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
|---|---|---|
| Australia (ARIA)[41] | Gold | 35,000‡ |
| Brazil (Pro-Música Brasil)[42] | Gold | 30,000‡ |
| United Kingdom (BPI)[43] | Silver | 200,000‡ |
| United States (RIAA)[44] | Platinum | 1,000,000‡ |
‡ Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone. | ||

"Freedom" was part of the set list ofThe Formation World Tour, with the first performance taking place in Miami at theMarlins Park on April 27, 2016.[45] The song was performed during the concert's closing act, in a large pool of water on the tour's secondaryB-stage. Beyoncé and her dancers performed a choreographed dance, splashing in the water.[46]
On the July 7, 2016 show inGlasgow,Scotland, Beyoncé held amoment of silence for Black people in America who had been killed bypolice brutality. Behind her, the'monolith' screen displayed names of the hundreds of people who had been killed by police, includingAlton Sterling andPhilando Castile, who were killed in the previous two days. She then sang ana cappella version of "Freedom".[47]
Pitchfork's Liz Tracy noted that though the choreography's tone was "serious and powerful given the song's strong Civil Rights message", the way the dancers "splashed as they marched and stomped was also playful—and just incredible to watch, visually".[48]
Beyoncé performed "Freedom" withKendrick Lamar as the opening number at the2016 BET Awards on June 26. It opened with a voice-over ofMartin Luther King Jr.'s 1963 "I Have a Dream" speech as female dancers marched towards the main stage.[49][50] For the performance, Beyoncé was backed by dancers wearing tribal patterns, and performed a stomping choreography in a pool of water, similar to the one performed during The Formation Tour. The stage was illuminated by red and yellow lights, and filled with pyrotechnics and smoke. Toward the end, Lamar joined Beyoncé in the pool, where he performed his part and they both stomped in the water.[51][52]Billboard praised their performance for its dynamic and intense choreography and political themes.[52]
Time writer Nash Jankins noted the "intense, thoroughly choreographed" performance of the song, with the King snippet, furthered Beyoncé becoming more politically involved in her music.[49] Similarly, August Brown ofLos Angeles Times deemed the rendition "powerful, politically and aesthetically charged," and felt that it was evocative of concepts found onLemonade with its "Hurricane Katrina floods, imagery of the African diaspora, and the relationships between personal and national traumas". Brown went on saying that the politically charged performance came in during a right time, when the matters ofblack pride,xenophobia andracial justice were highly discussed and finished his review by concluding that watching Beyoncé and Lamar perform was "a consummation of everything good and right in pop music today".[53]
The Daily Beast's Marlow Stern called "Freedom" the show's "shock opener" with its themes ofslavery and theBlack Lives Matter movement, and noted how seeing the duo perform together was "truly a sight to behold".[50] Matthew Dessem, writing forSlate magazine, noted how the "spectacular" performance was suitable for being anOlympic opening ceremony. He praised both singers for being in their top forms, with Beyoncé particularly being "note-perfect" and summarized the performance as "the rare case of a performer as hyped as Beyoncé actually exceeding sky-high expectations".[54]
Beyoncé later performed "Freedom" during her2018 Coachella performance, which according to Mikael Wood from theLos Angeles Times "rode a heavy groove played on sousaphones"; the song then transitioned into "Lift Every Voice and Sing", commonly known as the Black National Anthem, whose lyrics "depict the trials and triumphs of Black people in the United States from theMiddle Passage to now".[55][56] The number was subsequently included in the 2019Homecoming film andlive album.[57]
The same year, "Freedom" was performed during theOn the Run II Tour, Beyoncé's second co-headlining, all stadium tour with her husbandJay-Z. ForPasadena Star-News's Kelli Skye Fadroski, the singer "brought down the house" with the number.[58]
The song was on the set list for her and Jay-Z's performance at the 2018Global Citizen Festival: Mandela 100 charity concert in Johannesburg, South Africa, which commemoratedNelson Mandela's 100th birthday.
Beyoncé performed "Freedom" on January 21, 2023, as part ofher performance in Dubai.[59]
On December 25, 2024, Beyoncé sampled "Freedom" to transition "Blackbiird" into "Ya Ya" as part of her2024 NFL Halftime Show set list.[60]
"Freedom" was a part of theCowboy Carter Tour setlist, with the first show taking place in Los Angeles atSoFi Stadium on April 28, 2025.[61]
Credits adapted fromLemonadeliner notes.[1]
| Region | Date | Format | Label | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Italy | September 9, 2016 | Radioairplay | Sony | [62] |