See where it stops

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Beyoncé released more details about her upcoming cowboy Carter Tour overnight after Grammys.

It is not clear when she will perform or how to get tickets. But the singer sent a list of cities on her social media after a story that created a tour of the award show on Sunday. She also revealed the name of the tour.

Here’s where Cowboy Carter and Rodeo Chitlin ‘Circuit Tour stop:

  • Los Angeles
  • Chicago
  • New York
  • London
  • Paris
  • Houston
  • Atlanta
  • Washington, DC
  • Las Vegas

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Beyoncé wins this year’s album at 2025 Grammys, creates history

Beyoncé is the fourth black woman who won this year’s album on The Grammys, and the first to do so with a country music album.

The Grammy-winning singer revealed that she is going to tour for her eighth studio album “Cowboy Carter” The Night Before Sunday’s Grammy Awards.

In the caption below, Beyoncé wrote the list of “she was coming.”

Missing missing from the list is Nashville, Tennessee, home to country music. “Cowboy Carter” is Beyoncé’s first land album, and she has written about how it was inspired by how she did not feel welcome in the genre.

Last year, she was not nominated for any country music association awards.

But on Sunday she took three Grammy’s home. She won her first album in the year award along with two country music awards.

Beyoncé first teased the message by placing a cryptic Instagram post with the date of January 14 after her epic Christmas Day Half Time Performance, called Beyoncé Bowl. However, she postponed the great surprise because of the devastating fire in Los Angeles.

Beyoncé toured at the end of 2023 when she started her record-breaking Renaissance World Tour to accompany her 2022 album, “Renaissance.”

Of course, Beyoncé first announced “Cowboy Carter” under a surprise Super Bowl advertising in February when she released singles “16 wagons” and “Texas Hold ‘Em.” The 27-track project has been a huge catalyst for the recent limelight on Black Country artists and the roots of the genre.

Before sharing the album with the rest of the world, Beyoncé became honest about creating the five-year project and referring to her 2016 performance at the CMA Awards.

“This album has been over five years in creation. It was born of an experience that I had many years ago when I didn’t feel welcome … and it was very clear that I wasn’t,” she wrote further Instagram. “The criticism I was facing when I first entered this genre forced me to drive past the limitations set on me. Act II is a result of challenging myself and taking my time to bend and mix genres together to create this body of work. ”

Follow Caché McClay, USA Today Network’s Beyoncé Knowles-Carter Reporter, On InstagramAt Tiktok and X Like @cachemcclay.