Beyoncé Says Excellent ‘Morning’ With Marvel Track


Beyoncé is celebrating America’s birthday with a gift for the BeyHive — and a reminder that, even after three decades in the spotlight, she still knows how to stage a surprise.

The superstar today (July 4) released “MORNING DEW (DONK),” her first new song in two years and the opening salvo in a 60-day countdown to the Sept. 4 release of a 20th-anniversary edition of her landmark sophomore album, B’Day. Written by Beyoncé alongside Pharrell Williams, The-Dream and Darius Dixon and produced by Beyoncé and Pharrell, the track is a direct salute to her fanbase ahead of the album’s milestone celebration.

The release also marks Beyoncé’s first new music since 2024’s Cowboy Carter, the Grammy-winning country opus that earned her the long-elusive Album of the Year trophy. In contrat, “MORNING DEW (DONK)” finds her looking backward as much as forward, reconnecting with the swaggering, maximalist energy that defined the B’Day era.

According to the artist’s Parkwood Entertainment, “MORNING DEW (DONK)” was originally conceived during the period surrounding B’Day, the blockbuster 2006 release that spawned hits including “Déjà Vu,” “Ring the Alarm” and “Irreplaceable.” The song will appear on the forthcoming anniversary edition of the album, which was originally released on Beyoncé’s 25th birthday and debuted atop the Billboard 200 with more than 541,000 copies sold in its first week.

The track arrives accompanied by a lyric video directed by longtime collaborator Cliff Watts, repurposing archival footage shot around the time of B’Day‘s original release. Watts also photographed Beyoncé’s iconic Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue cover during that same period, lending the visual an added layer of early-career nostalgia.

SPIN previously ranked B’Day No. 129 in its list of the 300 Best Albums of 1985-2014, writing, “Suga mama rings the alarm, slips into her freakum dress, blows up urban radio with a country ballad. Queen Bey’s feminism would mature — on the occasion of her 25th birthday, specifics were mostly limited to paying one’s own way and doing one’s best to keep rivals out of chinchilla coats. But there was something sly about the way Bey utilized Betty Wright’s creaky 1968 ‘Girls Can’t Do What The Guys Do’ on the proudly materialistic ‘Upgrade U,’ in which a famous boyfriend is urged to stick around if he wants to go places.”