Alien Superstar
![Beyoncé performing "Alien Superstar" during the Renaissance World Tour at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium]float-right "Alien Superstar" is a song recorded by American singer Beyoncé Knowles-Carter, released as the third track on her seventh studio album, Renaissance, on July 29, 2022, via Parkwood Entertainment and Columbia Records.[1] The track, produced by Beyoncé alongside Mike Dean and others, incorporates house and disco elements with interpolations of Right Said Fred's "I'm Too Sexy" (1991) and samples from tracks including Bernard Edwards' "Right Track" (1983) and Donna Summer's "I Feel Love" (1977), resulting in 24 credited songwriters due to clearance requirements for multiple source materials.[2] Drawing from ballroom culture aesthetics and voguing terminology, the lyrics celebrate self-empowerment and uniqueness, with Beyoncé proclaiming her irreplaceable status amid a pulsating dance beat.[3] Upon release, "Alien Superstar" debuted at number 19 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, contributing to all 16 tracks from Renaissance charting simultaneously, and later achieved gold certification by the RIAA for 500,000 units in the United States as of December 2024.[4][5] The song faced scrutiny over its extensive writer credits, prompting public commentary from songwriter Diane Warren on the proliferation of sample-based attributions in modern pop production, though defenders emphasized standard industry practices for legal clearances.[6] Additionally, Right Said Fred alleged unauthorized use of their hit, but Beyoncé's representatives clarified that permissions were obtained for the interpolation, dismissing the claims as erroneous; a separate 2025 lawsuit alleges improper sample clearance sourcing for one element, though details remain in litigation.[2][7] Performed live during the Renaissance World Tour, the track underscored Beyoncé's return to dance music roots and her influence in revitalizing house genres for mainstream audiences.[8]Background and development
Conception and inspiration
"Alien Superstar" emerged as part of Beyoncé's seventh studio album, Renaissance, which she conceived and recorded amid the COVID-19 pandemic beginning in 2020, with the intent to foster escapism and communal joy through dance-oriented music.[9][10] Beyoncé described the project as a "safe place" drawing from club culture's history of resilience and reinvention, particularly honoring overlooked Black and queer contributors to house and disco genres.[10] The album's dedication to her late uncle Jonny, who exposed her to house music in the 1970s and 1980s, underscored this foundational influence, extending to tracks like "Alien Superstar" that evoke underground ballroom scenes.[11] The song's conception drew heavily from ballroom culture's performative elements, including voguing poses, category calls, and communal affirmations, as reflected in lyrics urging listeners to "find a way to get up on that floor" and embrace otherworldly uniqueness.[3] Co-producer Honey Dijon, a DJ rooted in Chicago's house scene, infused the track with black queer cultural motifs during sessions, aiming to amplify voices from those origins; she credited the collaboration with Beyoncé for channeling "supernatural love" and historical nods absent from mainstream narratives.[12][13] This aligned with the album's broader aim to re-center Black queer pioneers, though some critiques noted the interpretation of these elements through a commercial lens.[14] Songwriting contributions, including from Lucky Daye, emphasized Beyoncé's directive creativity, where initial ideas evolved through iterative refinement to capture an "alien" persona of unapologetic self-assertion, inspired by sampled speeches on Black stylistic innovation from Barbara Ann Teer's 1970 Black Theatre recording.[15] Daye highlighted Beyoncé's self-sufficient artistic vision, noting the process prioritized her innate style over external imposition.[16] These elements coalesced to position "Alien Superstar" as a manifesto of extraterrestrial confidence, blending empirical nods to subcultural history with first-hand production insights from collaborators immersed in those traditions.[3]Songwriting and production process
"Alien Superstar" was co-written by a team of 24 credited songwriters, reflecting contributions from interpolations, samples, and collaborative lyric and melody work typical in modern pop and house-influenced tracks. Beyoncé Knowles-Carter received primary writing credit alongside key collaborators including her husband Shawn Carter (JAY-Z), R&B singer Lucky Daye, producer Honey Dijon, house music veteran Luke Solomon, and Chris Penny; additional writers encompassed The-Dream (Terius Nash), Nova Wav duo Brittany "Chi" Coney and Denisia "Blu June" Andrews, and members of Right Said Fred due to the interpolation of their 1991 hit "I'm Too Sexy."[17][18] The extensive credits stemmed from the song's layered structure, incorporating a spoken-word sample from Foremost Poets' "Moonraker" (crediting John Holliday) and vocal ad-libs, which required clearance and attribution under publishing norms.[19] Songwriting sessions emphasized Beyoncé's directive for stadium-ready house energy, with Solomon, Penny, and Dijon developing initial musical frameworks in London studios, focusing on driving basslines and hooks designed for live performance scale.[20] Lucky Daye contributed lyrical elements during remote collaboration, later describing in a 2024 interview how Beyoncé refined ideas to align with her vision, stating she "has her own creativity" and elevates contributions without needing external imitation of her style.[21] The-Dream added melodic and production input, defending the multi-writer approach in a 2022 GQ profile as standard for tracks blending original composition with referential elements, countering critiques from songwriter Diane Warren who questioned the necessity of so many credits.[22] Production was led by Beyoncé alongside Solomon, Dijon, and Penny, with co-production from The-Dream and Mike Dean, and additional production by Nova Wav.[23][24] Dijon shared in a 2023 NPR discussion that her involvement drew from sending Beyoncé a playlist of New York house classics for inspiration, infusing black queer club culture into the track's synth-driven groove and ballroom voguing references.[25] Solomon noted in 2024 that the team prioritized "stadium" sonics from the outset, using monitors like PMC 6-2 for precise mixing to ensure the track's bass and vocal clarity translated to large venues.[26] Beyoncé oversaw final vocal recording and arrangement at her Los Angeles studio, integrating the "I'm Too Sexy" riff—cleared post-release despite initial disputes—and ensuring the production honored Renaissance's house music homage while amplifying her persona as an "alien superstar."[13]Composition and production
Musical elements and genre
"Alien Superstar" is a house track that incorporates elements of progressive house, Chicago house, and ballroom culture, characterized by its driving rhythms and celebratory energy.[27][28][29] The song maintains a tempo of 122 beats per minute, aligning with standard house music pacing to facilitate dance-floor momentum. It is composed in the key of C minor, contributing to its tense, pulsating atmosphere through minor chord progressions and melodic tension.[30][31] Musically, the production emphasizes layered synths, including monstrous techno synth lines that evoke an intergalactic, futuristic vibe, alongside throbbing basslines and hi-hat patterns typical of house genres.[29][28] Beyoncé's vocals are processed with effects for a chopped, repetitive quality in the verses, building to a maximalist hook that interpolates the cadence from Right Said Fred's 1992 hit "I'm Too Sexy," rephrased as "I'm too classy for this world / Forever, I'm that girl."[27][28] This structure creates a high-energy drop suited to club environments, with influences from Chicago house's swing evident in the bass swing and rhythmic groove produced by contributors like Honey Dijon.[27]Lyrics and themes
"Alien Superstar" opens with a synthesized voiceover directing listeners to stay on the dance floor during a "luminous invasion" of their minds, setting a scene of immersive, commanding performance akin to ballroom competitions. The lyrics employ repetitive affirmations of singularity, such as "I'm one of one, I'm number one, I'm the only one," underscoring the narrator's unmatched status and warning competitors against emulation.[32][33] These declarations draw from ballroom vernacular, where participants claim exclusivity in categories like "femme queen" or "superstar" through poised strikes and voguing.[3] The track interpolates Right Said Fred's 1991 hit "I'm Too Sexy," transforming its boastful male posturing—originally about being "too sexy for my shirt"—into lines like "I'm too classy for this world, forever, I'm that girl / Feed you diamonds and pearls" and "I'm too classy to be touched, I paid them all in dust." This subversion highlights themes of elevated femininity, material dominance, and untouchability, positioning the performer as an elite, transformative force.[34] Additional references, including "Hit the club, let me summon my inner Beyoncé" and "Queen bee, best hive," reinforce self-mythologizing and hive-like loyalty, evoking Beyoncé's established persona while nodding to house music's communal energy.[32] Central themes include radical self-empowerment and individuality, with the "alien superstar" motif portraying the artist as an extraterrestrial entity beyond earthly norms or rivalry. The song embraces ballroom culture's competitive ethos, originating in 1980s New York harbors for black and Latino LGBTQ+ communities, where verbal "reads" and poses assert identity amid marginalization.[3][35] This aligns with Renaissance's overall tribute to house music's black queer foundations, though interpretations vary; some analyses frame it as a universal call to inner uniqueness, detached from specific subcultural origins.[36] The lyrics avoid explicit vulnerability, prioritizing unyielding grandeur over introspection, which critics attribute to the track's role as an album opener signaling escapist defiance.[15]Samples and interpolations
"Alien Superstar" samples the drum break from "Moonraker," a 1998 house track by Foremost Poets. It also incorporates instrumental elements from "Unique," a 1997 eurodance song by Danube Dance featuring Kim Cooper. The track features an interpolation of the vocal hook and lyrics from Right Said Fred's 1991 hit "I'm Too Sexy," reinterpreted in the chorus as "I'm too classy for this world / I'm too classy for this world / I'm too classy for this world / Forever, I'm that girl." This re-recording of the melody and phrasing, rather than direct audio sampling, distinguishes it as an interpolation.[2] The use of "I'm Too Sexy" sparked controversy in October 2022 when Right Said Fred publicly claimed Beyoncé's team failed to seek permission, labeling her approach "arrogant."[37] Beyoncé's representatives countered that full clearance had been secured from the rights holders before the song's July 29, 2022, release on the album Renaissance.[2] No litigation ensued from the dispute.Recording and personnel
Recording sessions
The recording sessions for "Alien Superstar" formed part of the extended production timeline for Beyoncé's album Renaissance, spanning roughly three years amid the COVID-19 pandemic, with an emphasis on remote and improvisational workflows to evoke escapism and immediacy.[38] Engineer Stuart White, Beyoncé's primary collaborator for vocals and mixing, described a seamless integration of recording and mixing phases, aiming to preserve raw emotional capture on the first take—often completing up to 90% of a track's mix during initial vocal sessions to avoid over-refinement.[39] Sessions utilized non-traditional environments to prioritize vibe over polished acoustics, including Airbnbs featuring wooden interiors for natural reverb, bedroom rigs with mattress-lined walls for isolation, and high-ceilinged living rooms; formal work also occurred at Avenue A Studios West in Los Angeles.[39] Beyoncé's vocal performances were tracked using premium tube microphones like the Telefunken ELA M 251, with inline processing via EQ, compression, and effects in Pro Tools HD Native to handle her wide dynamic range (up to 6-10 dB headroom preserved initially, without early master bus limiting).[39] This approach mirrored techniques applied to adjacent tracks like "I'm That Girl," where aggressive transients and on-the-fly drum programming by White contributed to the song's high-energy house foundation.[39] Production involved Beyoncé as lead producer alongside Luke Solomon, Honey Dijon, and Chris Penny, incorporating co-production from The-Dream and Mike Dean, and additional input from Nova Wav; the process layered ballroom-inspired elements with live-feel instrumentation to build the track's pulsating synths and basslines iteratively during these fluid sessions.[24] No public details specify isolated dates or anomalies for "Alien Superstar," reflecting Beyoncé's guarded creative process, though the album's overall methodology prioritized spontaneity to mirror the track's themes of uninhibited self-expression.[39]Key personnel
The production of "Alien Superstar" was led by Beyoncé, who served as executive producer, lead vocalist, and co-writer, alongside primary producers Honey Dijon (Honey Redmond), Chris Penny (Christopher Lawrence Penny), and Luke Solomon.[24][40] Co-production was handled by Terius Nash (The-Dream) and Mike Dean, with additional production contributions from the duo Nova Wav (comprising producers like Jonathan Roye and others associated with the track's rhythmic elements).[24] Songwriting credits encompass a collaborative team reflecting influences from house, hip-hop, and R&B, including Beyoncé, Honey Redmond, Christopher Lawrence Penny, Luke Francis Matthew Solomon, Denisia Andrews (Blu June), Brittany Coney, Michael Bianco, Shawn Carter (Jay-Z), David Hamelin (Dave Blunts), David Brown (Lucky Daye), Terius Nash (The-Dream), Andre Benjamin, Warren Felder, Rodney Jones Jr., Michael Cox Jr., Bryan Williams, and Nathan Barton Jr.[41] This extensive roster underscores the track's interpolation of Right Said Fred's 1991 hit "I'm Too Sexy," credited to its original writers Richard Fairbrass, Fred Fairbrass, and Rob Manzoli, integrated to evoke ballroom and vogueing aesthetics.[24] Recording engineers included Stuart White, who oversaw principal engineering, with assistance from Chris Penny and others, ensuring the song's polished fusion of electronic beats and vocal layers during sessions tied to the broader Renaissance album production in 2021–2022.[32]Release and promotion
Release details
"Alien Superstar" was released on July 29, 2022, as the third track on Beyoncé's seventh studio album Renaissance, issued by Parkwood Entertainment and Columbia Records.[1][42] The track runs for 3:35 and debuted exclusively on digital streaming platforms and for download as part of the full album rollout.[43][44] No standalone single release occurred for "Alien Superstar" at launch, with promotion tied to the album's surprise drop following the earlier single "Break My Soul."[45]Promotional activities and live performances
The official lyric video for "Alien Superstar" was released on July 28, 2022, coinciding with the album Renaissance launch the following day, serving as an initial promotional element to highlight the track's ballroom-inspired themes and lyrics.[46] No official music video was produced, distinguishing it from lead single "Break My Soul," with promotion instead channeled through album visuals and social media teasers.[32] The primary promotional platform for "Alien Superstar" was the Renaissance World Tour, commencing May 10, 2023, in Stockholm, Sweden, and concluding September 24, 2023, in Kansas City, Missouri, spanning 56 shows across Europe and North America.[47] The song featured prominently in the setlist as the third track in the opening sequence, following "I'm That Girl" and "Cozy," often incorporating mashup elements from Eurythmics' "Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)."[48] Performances emphasized futuristic alien aesthetics, with Beyoncé in metallic outfits evoking the song's extraterrestrial motif, such as a Loewe corset during the European leg.[49] Staging included synchronized dancers, LED screens projecting cosmic visuals, and interactive fan elements like illuminated wristbands syncing to the beat, enhancing the track's house and ballroom energy.[50] These live renditions were captured in the concert film Renaissance: A Film by Beyoncé, released October 7, 2023, which documented performances from the tour's North American leg, including "Alien Superstar," further extending its promotional reach via theatrical and streaming platforms.[47] In 2025, Beyoncé incorporated "Alien Superstar" into the Cowboy Carter Tour setlist, blending it with material from her prior albums to bridge her Renaissance and Cowboy Carter eras; it appeared in a medley with "I'm That Girl" and "Cozy" during shows such as Houston's Night 1 on July 7 and Los Angeles dates in May.[51][52] This inclusion sustained visibility for the track amid the tour's focus on country and hip-hop influences, with performances adapting the original's high-energy choreography to varied stadium settings.[53]Commercial performance
Chart achievements
"Alien Superstar" debuted at number 19 on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart dated August 13, 2022, which became its peak position, and the song spent a total of 12 weeks on the ranking.[54] It also reached number 15 on the Billboard Global 200 chart.[8] In the United Kingdom, the track entered the Official Singles Chart at number 16 upon the release of Renaissance on July 29, 2022, marking its highest placement there.[55] The song achieved additional peaks on international charts, including number 31 in Australia on the ARIA Singles Chart and number 33 on the Canadian Hot 100.[8]| Chart (2022) | Peak Position |
|---|---|
| Billboard Hot 100 (US) | 19 |
| Billboard Global 200 | 15 |
| UK Singles Chart | 16 |
| ARIA Singles (Australia) | 31 |
| Canadian Hot 100 | 33 |