Yoncé/Partition

Album: Beyoncé (2013)
Charted: 74 23
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Songfacts®:

  • Beyoncé introduces us to a new incarnation, Yoncé, in this two-part club jam. Her new alter ego is someone who likes her grill and being the hottest girl in the club. Beyoncé recalled the creation of Yoncé during an album screening party oat the School of Visual Arts Theatre in New York. "We were in the studio, and Justin Timberlake started beating on buckets," she said. "So, when you hear the beat, it's literally a bucket. And [The-Dream] just started, 'Yonce on his mouth like liquor,' and I'm like, 'What does that mean?'"

    "But I love it, I think Beyoncé is Beyoncé, Mrs. Carter is Beyoncé, Sasha Fierce is Beyoncé," she continued. "And I'm finally at a place where I don't have to separate the two. It's all pieces of me, and just different elements of a personality of a woman, because we are complicated."
  • The track opens with the call-and-response that Beyoncé pumps the crowd with before going to "Get Me Bodied" every night on tour.
  • The video for the "Yoncé" section was shot in Brooklyn by director Ricky Saiz and features Beyoncé with the supermodels Chanel Iman, Joan Smalls and Jourdan Dunn. Saiz told MTV News that the R&B star and him created a clip that focused on the themes of "voyeurism and kind of erotic sexuality rather than overt sexuality."

    Saiz added that it was, in part, inspired by George Michael's iconic "Freedom" visual, which featured a bevy of supermodels like Naomi Campbell, Linda Evangelista and Cindy Crawford. "I just tried to bring like a raw, kind of lo-fi, very New York kind of grimy, dark aesthetic to it," he said.

    Saix explained why Beyoncé doesn't sing in the video. "She almost plays like a madam character and the girls are doing the performing for her in a sense," he said. "I think they are so important individually and have their own characters and they each really brought that to the set... [It's] almost like this just happened and we were there with our cameras."

    The video finishes with Beyoncé walking down the runway, while photographers snap photos of her. Saiz told MTV News: "We knew the ending of the song was a transition into another song and the last line of the song is 'Welcome to Paris' and there's bulbs flashing and kind of a paparazzi sense. So we wanted to kind of have something that captured that high-flash paparazzi kind of feel and with a runway walk, it made sense in context with the models and left it quiet vague. And I thought it looked beautiful and an easy transition into the next video [which is 'Partition']."
  • The second half of the song, "Partition," refers to the privacy window in limousines - asking the driver to "roll up the partition" means he can't see what's going on back there, and Beyoncé can carry out her prurient intentions, as it quickly becomes clear she is singing about making love in the limousine.
  • Beyoncé sings in French on the bridge, where she criticizes those who believe feminists are not interested in sex. It translates as:

    "Do you like sex?
    Sex
    I mean physical activity, coitus
    You like it?
    Are you not interested in sex?
    Men think that feminists hate sex
    But it's an exciting and natural activity that women love."
  • The Partition video features Beyoncé dancing semi-naked. She discussed stripping in one of her series of of short featurettes on YouTube: "I was 195lbs when I gave birth. I lost 65lbs. I worked crazily to get my body back. I wanted to show my body," the singer explained. "I wanted to show that you can have a child and you can work hard and you can get your body back."

    "I know that there's so many women that feel the same thing after they give birth.," Beyoncé continued. "You can have your child and you can still have fun and still be sexy and still have dreams and still live for yourself."
  • The Partition clip was inspired by a trip to the famous Crazy Horse strip club in Paris. "I'm not embarrassed about it, and I don't feel like I have to protect that side of me because I do believe that sexuality is a power we all have," said Beyoncé. "The day I got engaged was my husband's birthday and I took him to Crazy Horse and I remember thinking, 'Damn, these girls are fly.' And I just thought it was the ultimate sexy show: 'I wish I was up there, I wish I could perform that for my man...' so that's what I did for my video."
  • Beyoncé references how Bill Clinton splooged on White House intern Monica Lewinsky's skirt during their infamous sexual encounters.

    He popped all my buttons, and he ripped my blouse
    He Monica Lewinsky-ed all on my gown


    Speaking to the May 8, 2014 edition of Vanity Fair, Lewinsky issued a rebuttal to the scandalous couplet, saying, "Thanks, Beyoncé, but if we're verbing, I think you meant 'Bill Clinton'd all on my gown,' not 'Monica Lewinsky'd.'"

    After Beyoncé's removed the ableist slur "spaz" from her 2022 song "Heated," Lewinsky asked that she also excise the derogatory use of her name in "Partition."
  • The conservative TV show host Bill O'Reilly got worked up over the "Partition" video, playing part of it on his show and asking his guest, music mogul Russell Simmons, to explain why she make such an explicit video. O'Reilly went on about how harmful the video and this type of entertainment is to young girls, and calling it "exploitive garbage." Simmons didn't take the bait, as he wanted to talk about his meditation initiatives, but many left-wing commentators later pointed out that the sex portrayed in the video was between a married couple.
  • According to UK Grime rapper Dizzee Rascal, he was originally given the beat to "Partition" but gave it up because he couldn't come up with any lyrics.

    "This time I was around in LA – it was 2011, 2012 or something," he reflected to Posty on GRM Daily's YouTube series Thoughts In A Culli. "I was working with these different producers and some of them gave me little beat packs. In one of them, there was this beat; it was wicked. I was like, 'Ah!' – I just couldn't come up with nothing for it."

    "Maybe like a year later or something like that, I heard Beyoncé on it," Rascal continued. "I had 'Partition.' I just didn't write to it."

Comments: 5

  • Darkautumn from NjOk. I grew up listening to the Grease soundtrack as a kid only realizing in my late 20s that, The Grease Lightening lyrics weren't appropriate for a kids soundtrack. BUT there were no ratings on albums back in the 70's. That's why media from songs to videos now have a rating systems. This was rated E for Explicit. If you don't know what the word Explicit means and you're a parent, You need to READ more and expand your vocabulary. All people have sides to them. Actors, Actresses, and Musicians all do work that might not be age appropriate. This is her unabashed sexual side hence the E rating. This is your hint not to let your kids see or hear the songs or videos UNTIL you speak to them about sex and sexuality. You know, "Ok, kids I'm sorry but this one album or this one song and the video that go with aren't for your age right now. Maybe next album?" I'm mean she's a mom. You know she's not like how she's portrayed in the video ALL them time. I bet at the end of the day, she's cleaning out her kids' used Kleenx and candy wrappers out of her pockets like everyone else. Hell, if I got the chance to look like that for, say, a week, I'd run the gauntlet from running around in Kate Beckinsale's Death Dealer out fit to elegant queen to Evil Sorceress to Ethereal Angel to Sex Goddess. She didn't go from doing Lullabies to Explicit songs so I don't see what the deal is. Read the label. Pay attention. Have you seen some of that cute manga? It's is NOT all hello Kitty. A lot of it is HEAVILY edited for non Asian cultures. For example, American 8 year olds who like Sailor Moon. TOTALLY different in Japan folks. Pay attention. Take a good look at those video games too.
  • Y’all Is So Annoying from Canada if y’all don’t shut up abt beyoncé… like she said she not the baby sitter or nun! stop actin like she not respecting herself there’s nothing wrong with feelin sexy in ur OWN music.
  • Lynthese people in the comments can shutup literally, beyonce doesn't need to raise yall kids or be a rolemodel for them thats YOUR job as a parent. yall need to stop acting like celebrities need to be the one raising yall kids when thats your job. dont blame beyonce, blame yourself for not controlling what your child is watching. tf.
  • Kiarrah Jacksonn from Louisiana I will never let my children watch Beyonce songs again!!! Shame on public media for releasing it!
    Very hurt by what the video is portraying. Yes sexual activity is a private, beautiful thing, it’s not for portraying like this.
    In this era of songs like this and movies like Shades of gray, parents need to be more vigilant as to what we are passing down to the next generation!!
    Pitiful!
  • Paul from San Francisco, CaBeyoncé is a very beautiful woman and so many young girls look up to her as a role model but this song is too trashy for the mainstream! Yes, sex is a very beautiful thing but you have to respect yourself first which Beyoncé does not do in this song! Beyoncé, if you're so open about your sexuality then why don't you start making porn!? You will make more money which seems to be what you're all about!
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