A much more at-ease Beyoncé graced the Coachella stage on Risa Sakamoto ArchivesSaturday night for her second festival performance in as many weekends.
Her two-hour set featured few surprises, repeating the previous week's guest moments for Jay-Z, Solange, and a Destiny's Child reunion. The only new addition -- other than a color palette change that highlighted silver and hot pink -- was J Balvin, who stepped out on stage for "Mi Gente."
SEE ALSO: Incredible teen perfectly nails Beyoncé's Coachella choreographyBut many attendees took note of the looser vibe. Surely some of that has to do with the relief of Saturday's set being round two of a production that was said to be six months in the making -- and which was executed perfectly during its first live runthrough.
Rolling Stone's write-up of the second weekend set does a great job of getting at the heart of what separates the two performances:
In fact, the greatest change between the two shows seemed to be Beyoncé herself. Last week, a small but vocal contingent disparaged the show with the kind of complaint that seems harmless on the surface, but turns darker when cracked open: "The show is tooperfect." It's an insult that would only be lobbed at a woman, and especially at Beyoncé's headlining set – as a few writers noted in their pieces last week, she was "too perfect" because she had to be too perfect. Beyoncé's performances have seemed staged down to the eye roll before, but last night, she seemed loose, a little giddy. Maybe it was knowing the first show had been received so well, or maybe she was just relieved to have such a high-pressure show off the docket. Whatever it was, she was more charming and off-the-cuff than I can ever remember seeing her.
There was even a memorable flub when Beyoncé went in to hug Solange, only for both of them to tumble to the stage floor together. Rather than veering off into train wreck territory, both sisters rose and laughed off the moment as one of those organic occurrences that imbue a sense of humanity into high-energy, high-stress productions like this. A "happy accident," if you will.
It's just too bad Coachella didn't stream video of the second weekend set like it did the first one. But as usual, social media came to the rescue with photos, videos, and fan takes straight from California.
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