Beyonc becoming a bit more ‘Fierce’


NEW YORK (AP) — With a new album and a movie on the horizon, it appears the Season of Beyonce has begun.

Then again, one could argue that it’s always Beyonce season.

Two years ago, it was all about the release of her second CD, “B’Day” and her starring role in the movie “Dreamgirls.” Last year, her “Irreplaceable” was up for a top Grammy and she was on a world tour. And this year, besides a high-profile Grammy performance with Tina Turner, her hush-hush marriage to Jay-Z and appearances on hit remixes with Justin Timberlake and Usher generated headlines.

Though it may have been hard to tell, she actually did take a yearlong hiatus from recording music.

Of course, Beyonce being Beyonce, her hiatus wasn’t a complete vacation: She spent part of that “break” filming her upcoming movie, “Cadillac Records,” in which she peels off the glamour to play R&B great Etta James during her drug-addled years.

Beyonce says not only did the role propel an acting breakthrough, it provided a musical one, too.

“I felt like after I played Etta James, and I sang these beautiful, emotional, deep, honest songs, I really learned a lot about myself. And I wanted to make classic music ... to grow and make that transition into legendary,” she says.

Her bid at musical immortality comes this week with the release of “I AM ... SASHA FIERCE,” her third solo CD, something of a departure from the frenetic funk of her previous two multiplatinum albums, “Dangerously in Love” and “B’Day.”

While the new album certainly has its share of club anthems, it is a double-CD with two personalities. The upbeat side is dubbed “SASHA FIERCE” (the namesake of her onstage, divalicious alter ego); the “I AM ...” portion is a ballad-centric pop album that features Beyonce at what her father and manager, Matthew Knowles, calls her most revealing.