How ‘Blue’ Made LeAnn Rimes A Global Pop Star
Just before the 2010s, streaming services like Spotify, Apple Music and Pandora picked up where Napster rose and fell in the late ’90s, driving the music industry toward a singles-driven market. Beyoncé’s 4 album showed she was clearly not having it. In her 2013 HBO documentary, Life Is But A Dream, she targeted the then-burgeoning trend.
“It’s a tough time for the music industry. I’m an artist that tours, I’m an artist that makes albums,” she explained in an exasperated tone. “People don’t make albums anymore, they just try to sell a bunch of quick singles and they burn out and they put out a new one. People don’t even listen to a body of work anymore.”
Before hip-hop dominated streaming in 2017, EDM and pop wore listeners out on sticky dance floors. Everyone wanted a piece of the mainstream radio pie, with songs like Usher’s “OMG,” Lady Gaga’s “Poker Face,” Rihanna’s “Only Girl (In The World),” Jay-Z’s and Alicia Keys’ “Empire State of Mind,” and the Black Eyed Peas’ “Boom Boom Pow” ruling Billboard‘s Top 40 chart before and during the new decade.
But rewind just a few years before the release of Beyoncé’s 4, a time when she, too, was caught up in the same sonic whirlwind she seemingly resented. In 2008, Queen Bey was at the height of her career thanks to her mammoth third solo album I Am…Sasha Fierce.
She scored five GRAMMY wins at