“We were pretty prepared for this moment,” says Shaboozey, lounging on the floor of a Los Angeles recording studio. While putting the finishing touches on his forthcoming album, Where I’ve Been, Isn’t Where I’m Going (due out May 31), the fast-rising country artist is — perhaps for the first time — reflecting on how he arrived at this point in his career. Not only has the buzzy 29-year-old been working in music for nearly a decade, but a recent assist from Beyoncé helped spark a career-shifting breakout moment of his own.
After appearing as a featured guest on a pair of songs on the icon’s chart-topping and record-breaking Cowboy Carter (“Spaghettii” with Linda Martell and “Sweet * Honey * Buckiin”), Shaboozey released a solo single: the jaunty country-rap anthem “A Bar Song (Tipsy),” which interpolates J-Kwon’s 2004 smash “Tipsy” — and, just three weeks later, broke records of its own.
Even though his Bey-assisted breakout was unveiled first, Shaboozey suspects his solo track was the reason he was featured on Cowboy Carter at all. “Someone at Parkwood or in Beyoncé’s camp heard [“A Bar Song”] from me playing it live and was like, ‘We have to bring him in the studio,’ ” Shaboozey recalls. “Then the Beyoncé [album] came out, and we were like, ‘Oh, it’s time. Drop it.’ ”
After rising from No. 6 to rule Billboard’s Hot Country Songs chart dated May 4, Shaboozey and Beyoncé became the first Black artists to score back-to-back leaders in the chart’s 66-year history with “Texas Hold ’Em” and “A Bar Song.” His hit also debuted atop the all-genre Digital Song Sales list and has peaked at No. 3 on the Billboard Hot 100, marking his first solo entry on the chart. “A Bar Song” has also exploded on TikTok (soundtracking more than 150,000 posts in a few weeks) and has collected 64.9 million official on-demand streams through April 25, according to Luminate.
“I had been wanting to flip a 2000s song for a while,” Shaboozey says, noting Petey Pablo’s “Raise Up” was also in the running. “I just said, ‘Everybody at the bar getting tipsy,’ and then we were like, ‘Oh, sh-t!’ The producer picked up the guitar and started playing the chords, and then we started writing, just having fun and being creative.”
According to Shaboozey, J-Kwon is “more excited” about the song than he is. The two have been texting ever since the first sample clearance request, during which the St. Louis rapper assured Shaboozey that his song was “outta here.” (Upon its release in 2004, J-Kwon’s “Tipsy” reached No. 2 on the Hot 100.) “Feeling like you did the song you’re flipping justice and then getting that co-sign, not everybody gets that,” Shaboozey gushes.
An artist who cartwheels across country, hip-hop, rock and R&B, Shaboozey is a product of the melting pot that is Virginia. Born Collins Chibueze in the northern part of the state to Nigerian parents, his earliest musical memory is listening to Juvenile’s “Back That Azz Up,” along with a healthy dose of Kenny Rogers and Garth Brooks that his father would play. In 2015, Shaboozey experienced his first viral moment with “Jeff Gordon,” an independently released piano-inflected trap banger he says was “a whole moment in DMV music” that he conceived after sourcing a Gordon racing jacket and delving into NASCAR’s fashion aesthetics. Two years later, another quasi-viral song, “Winning Streak,” helped Shaboozey score a record deal with Republic, which released his 2018 debut album, Lady Wrangler.
In 2020, he scored a manager in Abas Pauti, whom he met through mutual friends. “After talking through our lives and hearing the music,” Pauti recalls, “I knew that I needed to be around and support in any way I could.” (Shaboozey is now co-managed by Range Media’s Jared Cotter.) Shaboozey released his second album, 2022’s Cowboys Live Forever, Outlaws Never Die, on indie label EMPIRE, saying his team there has “been down for the ride… it’s like a family.”
Since Cowboys Live Forever, Shaboozey has enjoyed a string of wins that set the stage for his breakout 2024. Late last year, he released “Let It Burn,” the lead single from Where I’ve Been, Isn’t Where I’m Going. It quickly gained ample traction online, even drawing attention from Timbaland and Diplo. And it was during those early months of his album campaign that Shaboozey received what became a life-changing call: a request to co-write with Beyoncé. “What I loved about [the] Beyoncé album is the inspiration and the influence that she had are probably the same as mine,” he says. “We’re studying
the same things.”
Evocative follow-up track “Annabelle” maintained momentum while Shaboozey’s live performance of “Vegas” for music discovery platform COLORS, posted in March just weeks before Cowboy Carter arrived, has since amassed 1.3 million YouTube views.
Now, as he finishes his third album — which he teases will include “crazy surprises featurewise” — while also opening on tour for pop artist Jessie Murph, Shaboozey is a front-runner to dominate the summer. But he’s already thinking well beyond this moment. Ahead, he hopes to share one other thing with Queen Bey: “I want the Grammy.”
This story originally appeared in the May 11, 2024, issue of Billboard.