Country Music Star Defends Beyoncé, Shades Morgan Wallen While Calling Out Genre’s Double Standard

Beyoncé

Charley Crockett defended Beyoncé’s Cowboy Carter and slammed the country music industry’s double standards in a defiant Instagram post.

Charley Crockett fiercely defended Beyoncé and her genre-bending album Cowboy Carter, calling out the country music world for what he sees as years of hypocrisy and selective outrage.

In a pointed Instagram post earlier this week, the Texas-born singer addressed the backlash Beyoncé has faced from parts of the country music community.

“Hey country folks,” he began. “Beyoncé ain’t the source of your discontent. It was 25 years of bro country.”

Crockett, who has built his career blending traditional country with blues and soul, didn’t name names directly but appeared to take a swipe at Morgan Wallen, one of the genre’s biggest stars.

“#1 country artist on earth listens to nothing but rap,” he said. “Openly says he doesn’t really know any country music. Gotta respect his honesty,” he wrote.

He went on to criticize the industry’s treatment of Beyoncé, who became the first Black woman to win Best Country Album at the Grammys in 2025 but was notably left out of the Academy of Country Music Awards.

“The machine points to a black woman who’s making a statement about marginalized people being removed from the conversation altogether,” Crockett wrote. “And somehow we all act like the entire pop industry didn’t just ambush roots music.”

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He also took aim at the genre’s evolving sound, noting that many male country artists have long borrowed from Hip-Hop production styles. “These ‘country boys’ been singing over trap beats for years. So what’s different now? Authenticity,” he added.

Crockett shared his own experience with the Nashville music business, claiming industry insiders once tried to mold him into a prefabricated act. “Many of those business folks called me early on. They had whole albums pre-written and recorded, ready to just plug me in. I have receipts,” he wrote.

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He made it clear he wouldn’t tear down another artist—especially a Black woman—to get ahead.

“I don’t need to put down a black woman to advance my music. That’s just embarrassing to the idea of America and I got no respect for it,” he said.

Crockett also praised Texas rapper BigXThaPlug, calling him “genuine” and “a true story teller,” adding, “The best Hip-Hop sound to come out of Texas in this century.”

He ended his post by pushing back against the industry’s tendency to box artists into narrow categories. “I don’t have a problem with Americana. I have a problem with being compartmentalized by the music business.”

The post drew both praise and pushback.

One of the more vocal critics was Gavin Adcock, who previously dismissed Beyoncé’s album by saying, “It just ain’t country,” and argued that lifelong country artists shouldn’t have to compete with a global pop icon.

Cowboy Carter debuted in 2024 and has remained a lightning rod in country circles, with some praising its innovation and others questioning its place on country charts.