Diva (Beyoncé song)

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"Diva"
The black and white portrait of the left side of a woman, who is standing in front of a wall. She wears a black jacket with flames on the front, and jeans and heels of the same color. Next to her image, appear the words "Beyoncé" in silver capital letters, in front of her, and "Diva" in white letters, behind her.
Single by Beyoncé
from the album I Am... Sasha Fierce
A-side"Halo"
ReleasedJanuary 20, 2009
Recorded2008
Studio
  • Bangladesh
  • Patchwerk
  • Silent Sound (Atlanta)
Genre
Length3:20
LabelColumbia
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)
Beyoncé singles chronology
"At Last"
(2008)
"Diva"
(2009)
"Halo"
(2009)
Music video
"Diva" on
YouTube

"Diva" is a song recorded by American singer and songwriter

Lil' Wayne
; critics coined "Diva" as a "female companion" to the latter.

"Diva" received mixed to positive reviews from critics, who had polarized opinions concerning its affiliation with "A Milli". Despite being released to rhythmic and urban radios only in the US, the song peaked at number 19 on the US

Hot Dance Club Play chart, and attained a peak position of number three on the US Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart. "Diva" was certified 2x platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America
(RIAA), denoting shipment of 2,000,000 copies. Although it was only officially released in the US, the song appeared on the singles charts in Australia, Ireland, the Netherlands, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom.

The accompanying

BET's Notarized: Top 100 Videos of 2009 countdown. Although Beyoncé did not perform the song in any televised appearances, it was a part of her set list on the I Am... World Tour (2009–10) and her revue show, Revel Presents: Beyoncé Live
(2012).

Background and release

"Diva" was written and produced by Beyoncé, Shondrae "Bangladesh" Crawford, and Sean Garrett.[1] According to an interview that Bangladesh gave with Rap-Up, the song was originally intended to be included on the track-listing of his own mixtape[2] after choosing a female artist to contribute vocals to "Diva".[2] However, he decided to play the song to American R&B singer Keyshia Cole, who liked the beat, but not the whole track. She eventually declined to record the song, but later said she would sing the song, however, by this time Beyoncé also wanted it for her then upcoming album.[3] Bangladesh ultimately gave "Diva" to Beyoncé and composed another song for Cole.[2] About one month after the release of I Am... Sasha Fierce, American R&B singer Ciara, who was working on her third studio album, Fantasy Ride (2009), remixed "Diva", which was supposed to be included on her Fantasy Ride Mixtape.[4]

"

urban contemporary radio[9] and rhythmic contemporary radios playlists,[10] while "Halo" was sent to contemporary hit radio on January 20, 2009.[11] In Germany, "Diva" was featured as the B-side to "Halo" single.[12] Upon its release, contemporary music critics noted many similarities between Beyoncé's "Diva" and Lil Wayne's 2008 song "A Milli
"; both feature a similar beat produced by Bangladesh. [13] [14][15] In an interview with MySpace, Beyoncé agreed that "Diva" is the woman's equivalent to "A Milli". However, she stated that it was not consciously.[16] "Diva" eventually became known as the feminine companion to "A Milli".[8][17]

Composition and lyrical interpretation

"Diva" is an

Allmusic, "Diva" aurally resembles Beyoncé's own 2006 songs "Freakum Dress" and "Ring the Alarm".[24] Spence D. of IGN Music further compared its hip hop composition to Missy Elliott's earlier songs.[25] Adam Mattera of The Observer noted "Diva" could be "a perfect independent women anthem";[26] its lyrics reflect a message of courage and determination.[15] Similarly, Houston Chronicle's Joey Guerra called the song an "ode to female fabulousness".[19]

"Diva" features Beyoncé as the female protagonist speaking about being a diva.[27] Chipmunked vocal samples and overdubs aplenty make up the song's foundation. According to Nick Levine of Digital Spy, Beyoncé's alter ego Sasha Fierce also salutes her earning power and proclaims herself as the "number one diva in the game".[28] "Diva" begins with metallic kick drum complemented by Beyoncé's robotic sly vocal stutters as she sings: "I'm a, I'm a, a diva".[17][21] She then starts the first verse, chanting the dictionary definition of a diva.[14][20] She references her millions of dollars, and raps, "I done got so sick and filthy with benjis, I can't spend it", channeling her alter ego.[29] After repeating the introductory lines, Beyoncé employs breathy drawls and robotic shouts to chant the chorus, where the lines, "Now diva is a female version of a hustla. Of a hustla. Of a, of a hustla", are looped.[8][30] In the second verse, she finds love in the club,[14] where she warns "Better have a six-pack in the cooler ... If you ain’t gettin[g] money, then you ain't got nothin[g] for me", and asks, "Where yo Boss at?"[30][31] After singing the third verse and the chorus for the third time, Beyoncé adopts her initial chipmunked vocals to end the song, chanting, "I'm a, I'm a, a diva".[21]

Critical reception

The song received mixed to positive reviews, with critics either praising or criticizing it being a female companion to "A Milli." Matos Michaelangelo of The A.V. Club said that "Diva" is a flagrant attempt to write a female version of "A Milli".[31] Leah Greenblat of Entertainment Weekly wrote that "Diva" can make a good feminine companion to "A Milli" thanks to their use of similar music instruments."[17] Noting its similarity to "A Milli", Andy Kellman of Allmusic picked out "Diva" as one of the three standout tracks from the album.[24] J. Freedom du Lac of The Washington Post chose it as one of the best songs on I Am... Sasha Fierce, calling it a "fun, [and] tuneless, gender-twisting play".[32] Colin McGuire of PopMatters picked "Diva" as the highlight of the album, noting its "Lil Wayne-inspired beat" and describing it as "cheeky". He further wrote it shows the singer's "impeccable street side... with enough attitude to make it work".[15]

Greg Kot of Chicago Tribune commented that the "menacing rhythm and chanted vocals" on "Diva", mark the album's biggest departure.[33] Adam Mazmanian of The Washington Times felt that the song was influenced by Beyoncé's husband, American rapper Jay-Z as it has a "bad soft-core gangster rap".[29] He also noted that its contains words that could get an "explicit" sticker by the chain stores.[29] Similarly, Daniel Brockman of The Phoenix remarked that the song is "particularly intriguing" as it progresses through "hard-knockish robbery scenarios" which does not resemble Beyoncé's clean public image.[34] Stacey Anderson of Spin magazine noted that "Diva" places a "startling, sexy snarl over window-rattling bass".[35] Christian Hoard of Rolling Stone noted Beyoncé turns out "modal-sounding hooks" over 808 bass on the song.[23] The Village Voice's Nana Ekua Brew-Hammond described Sasha Fierce as "suffer [sic] no such identity crisis, brassy, big-headed, confrontational, and witty...", reflected on "Diva".[36] James Reed of The Boston Globe described "Diva" as a "glitchy, bass-heavy thumper with the most ridiculous chorus of the year".[8] Reed nevertheless added that the song is "insanely catchy, but then, when you hear something looped incessantly, no matter how mindless, it's bound to stick".[8]

Mariel Concepcion of

E! Online placed the song at number nine on their list of ten best Beyoncé's songs.[41]

Chart performance

A brunette woman is standing in front of some stairs. She wears a super heroine costume, compound of a golden bra with red diamonds, silver pants, a long black coat and glasses. Behind her five people, dressed like golden mannequins, are standing in different positions.
Beyoncé performing "Diva" on her I Am... World Tour.

Initially, "Diva" charted on the Billboard's

Hot Dance Club Play chart on March 28, 2009, giving Beyoncé her ninth number one on the chart.[44][45] It peaked at number three on the US Hot R&B/Hip Hop Songs chart from the week ending February 14, 2009 to the week ending March 14, 2009.[46] "Diva" was certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) on March 12, 2009.[47] As of October, 2012, it had sold 1,037,000 digital downloads in the US.[48] In August, 2022 the song was certified double platinum with over 2,000,000 copies.[49]

Even though "Diva" was only officially released in the US, it managed to chart in other countries. In Australia, the song debuted at number 47 on March 15, 2009, becoming the fourth single from the I Am… Sasha Fierce to reach the top fifty of the

Mega Single Top 100 and peaked at number 73, based on downloads alone.[58]

Music video

Background and concept

A woman is walking away from an exploding car underneath a bridge. The entire image is in black and white, with the exception of the fireball rising from the car.
The music video for "Diva" used similar concepts to "Crazy in Love".

The accompanying music video for "Diva" was shot in Downtown Los Angeles on November 22, 2008, and was directed by Melina Matsoukas, who worked with Beyoncé for several music videos.[59] The music video is conceptually similar to that for "Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It)" in the sense that it was filmed in black and white, shows Beyoncé as alter ego Sasha Fierce, who dons her metal glove and performs choreography with two back-up dancers with more formal leotards. Beyoncé wears a Gareth Pugh design in the video,[60] a custom Brian Lichtenberg bodysuit,[61] as well as a couple of vintage Thierry Mugler Haute Couture pieces, including a leather bodice and a reptilia inspired gown.[60]

The video for "Diva" premiered on the

Above and Beyoncé (2009).[63]

Synopsis

The video begins with a dictionary definition of the word "diva", before cutting to a parking lot outside of a warehouse. Beyoncé, wearing a pair of "dangle shades", walks past a car full of mannequin parts into the warehouse. From here, she is accompanied by her two dancers and a variety of high fashion outfits. When she states "Diva's gettin' money..." she waves a fan made of $100 bills. During the bridge to the climax, Beyoncé dances on a single light and then during the climax, she is seen very glossy in another wardrobe choice dancing in robotic movements to the beat with gold punctuating the black and white scene. In one scene, Beyoncé is seen dancing robotically in front of a set of gold-tinted mannequins; while in another, she dances against a wall with two large chains hanging from the ceiling. During the last chorus, Beyoncé is in her last wardrobe change in front of window which is where the paparazzi had taken photos of her. At the end of the song, Beyoncé walks back out to the parking lot. She lights up a cigar and throws the lighter into the car, letting it explode. As she walks away, the intro to "Video Phone" (a track from I Am... Sasha Fierce) plays. The explosion retains its original fiery colors in contrast with the black and white.

Reception

A writer of Rolling Stone described the video as "quite a hot mess", further comparing the dancers with the ones from the video for "Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It)".

Black Entertainment Television's (BET's) Notarized: Top 100 Videos of 2009 countdown.[66]

Live performances

Although Beyoncé did not perform "Diva" on televised appearances, the song was a part of her

Revel
.
[71] Maura Johnston of The Village Voice noted that the song was one of the "dancefloor-fillers" performed during the revue.[71] Rebecca Thomas writing for MTV News, noted that Beyoncé transformed in Sasha Fierce for the performance of the song.[72] On October 7, 2012, Beyoncé appeared at Jay-Z's concert at the Barclays Center and performed "Diva", "Crazy in Love" and "Young Forever".[73] Beyonce has also performed this song during her co-headline On the Run and On the Run II tours with her husband Jay-Z, as a mash-up with his "Clique". In 2023, Beyoncé performed "Diva" once again during her Renaissance World Tour, this time mashed up with Lil Uzi Vert's "Just Wanna Rock".

Cover versions

In 2008, Ciara recorded a remix of "Diva" for a mixtape of her album Fantasy Ride (2009).[74] Alex Newell, Heather Morris, Jenna Ushkowitz and Darren Criss covered the song in the eponymous episode of the fourth season of the American television series Glee which aired on February 7, 2013.[75][76] In a review of the episode, Daniel Sperling of the website Digital Spy, described the performance of the song as one of the "plenty of fierce moments" adding that it was "posy, [and] pouty".[77]

Credits and personnel

Charts

Certifications

Certifications and sales for "Diva"
Region Certification Certified units/sales
Australia (ARIA)[100] Platinum 70,000
Brazil (Pro-Música Brasil)[101] 2× Platinum 120,000
Canada (Music Canada)[102] Platinum 80,000
United Kingdom (BPI)[103] Silver 200,000
United States (RIAA)[104] 2× Platinum 2,000,000[48]
United States (RIAA)[105]
Mastertone
Gold 500,000*

* Sales figures based on certification alone.
Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

Release history

Release dates and formats for "Diva"
Region Date Format(s) Label(s) Ref.
United States January 20, 2009
  • urban contemporary radio
Columbia

See also

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External links