Just weeks after her secret 2008 wedding to Jay-Z, Beyonce recorded Single Ladies, taking off her wedding ring in the vocal booth to channel the energy into an anthem for unmarried women. Released as a double A-side with If I Were a Boy, the track debuted the confident Sasha Fierce persona and hid a surprisingly aggressive composition beneath its playground handclaps.
This episode breaks down the song’s diminished chords, Morse-code production, and low-budget black-and-white video shot in an infinity cove. It traces the choreography’s roots in a 1969 Bob Fosse routine mixed with Atlanta J-setting, the resulting attribution debate, and how the track became the internet’s first massive viral dance craze, preserved in 2026 by the Library of Congress.
- Why Beyonce removed her wedding ring while recording the single
- The minor and diminished chords that make the chorus sound like a threat
- The infinity cove set and grueling single-take video shoots
- The Bob Fosse and J-setting choreography blend and attribution debate
- Its viral spread and 2026 induction into the National Recording Registry
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