The last time BeyoncĂŠ and Jay-Z toured together, their marriage was in peril, though they couldâve fooled the crowd. Weeks earlier, in May 2014, BeyoncĂŠ sister Solange was caught on tape physically accosting her own brother-in-law, Jay-Z, in front of BeyoncĂŠ in an elevator after the Met Gala. The tour that followed was pre-planned damage control, though it wasnât immediately clear then what, exactly, was broken. âWeâve put this behind us and hope everyone else will do the same,â the Carters said in their one and only statement on the incident shortly after the news broke. In that same statement they referred to themselves as a âunited familyâ and what could hold up the front of unity better than a joint tour? They ran through 21 shows over the course of three months performing a marriage, sharing never-before-seen private footage from their wedding, from BeyoncĂŠâs first pregnancy, and from their life together.
Fast forward four years and we know now it was all for show. In the years since that tour, both BeyoncĂŠ and Jay-Z have released two sides of the story of what happened to their marriage, on her soul-baring Lemonade and his repentant 4:44, then have recently rewritten that history on their joint album, this yearâs Love Is Everything, to complete the trilogy. It wouldâve been easy after On the Run to excuse what happened that night in that elevator as just a drunken tiff between in-laws, but to do so wouldâve been to run from the truth. It also wouldnât have explained why BeyoncĂŠ sang her heartbreaking jilted loverâs ballad âResentmentâ on that tour in a wedding dress and sobbed throughout like she was working through pain in real-time. Three years later, Jay-Z told us why on 4:44âs bonus track âMaNyfaCedGod,â admitting thatâd weâd been witness to their live marriage counseling that whole tour:
âOn the Run, we took a hundred together
More than the money, it was the fact that we done it together
Uh, healing in real time
âSong Cryâ to âResentment,â that was real cryingâ
BeyoncĂŠ and Jay-Z returned to MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey on Thursday night for the second iteration of their On the Run Tour, hitting all the same stadiums they visited the first run. But just as opening sets from Chloe X Halle and DJ Khaled had finished up, fans were evacuated from the stadium seats as the threat of severe lightning loomed overhead. The storms caused an hour-plus weather delay that pushed the start of the show well past 11 p.m. The only force more powerful than BeyoncĂŠ, it seems, is Mother Nature.
The On the Run tour that followed is now a mirror image of its original, with their newer works from the trilogy â âFormation,â âThe Story of O.J.,â âApeshitâ â saved until the showâs second act. Itâs still broken up with a short film, this one inspired by the 1973 Senegalese classic, Touki Bouki, a take on BeyoncĂŠ and Jay-Zâs greatest inspiration, Bonnie and Clyde. And there are still mammoth set pieces, including what becomes a stained glass backdrop to mimic the church in their âFamily Feudâ video, parallel moving catwalks on both sides of the runway for them each to perform on separately, and a floating stage in its third act cribbed from Kanye Westâs Saint Pablo tour that unfortunately isnât nearly as impressive as his invention.
Whatâs changed is the energy. Now that the curtain has been dropped on their marriage, peddling it to us now with PDA and home videos from their vow renewal is a tougher sell. BeyoncĂŠ does a lot of the work of repairing her husbandâs image for him by playing the doting alpha wife while he plays her inferior. Anytime she would leave him with the stage and her band (the same genius marching ensemble from Beychella) to himself to perform his 4:44 songs, especially its title track, her fans â the overwhelming majority of the crowd this time compared to the first tour â took a seat.
Mostly, the performance of husband and wife works here as well as it did on Everything Is Love because they arenât chasing perfection on this tour and are willing to put their marital setbacks behind them while also acknowledging that they were there all along. The awkward tension has been diffused. Now, when BeyoncĂŠ sings âResentment,â she does it in a billowing tangerine dress and belts more from her gut than her heart; all that pain isnât as urgent or real as her love for him â however much its been tested â still is. And when Jay-Z raps âSong Cryâ right before âResentment,â just as he did on the first tour, he now ends it with that same verse from âMaNyfaCedGodâ that revealed why On the Run ever existed in the first place: Itâs for the fans to have a First Family to believe in, but itâs BeyoncĂŠ and Jay-Z, as a couple, that need convincing the most.