![]() As fans are well aware, the pop diva, 36 who also shares three-month-old twins Rumi and. Rumors quickly spread that Jay and Beyoncé’s seemingly picture-perfect marriage was troubled. Back in 2014, a video surfaced showing Solange physically confronting the rapper in an elevator after the Met Gala as her sister stands by. She’s also decked out in gold jewelry and couture-and further eschewing tradition by peering directly through the screen at her husband. JAY, 47, raps on the LP’s title track, referencing Blue Ivy, his five-year-old daughter with Beyoncé. Beyonc seemed to have addressed the Jay-Z cheating rumours as well as the infamous Solange Knowles elevator incident on her new album, Rennaissance. Who could forget the infamous elevator incident with Bey’s sister, Solange Clearly, not Jay Z. You can taste the dishonesty/ it’s on your breath. It then cuts to Beyoncé standing intimidatingly high upon an altar, flaunting her authority (and her imperiously tall clerical head-dress) before descending to join Jay-Z as he drops into the confession booth, with Beyoncé of course listening in from the priest’s side. Break one of these out the next time a friend tells you her significant other is cheating on them. The 34-second clip begins with Jay-Z’s lyric “nobody wins when the family feuds,” followed by a shot of him walking down the aisle of an ornate church holding hands with his and Beyoncé’s oldest daughter, Blue Ivy. Speaking to the New York Times, Jay said he cheated as a result of 'shutting down' his emotions. Now that Jay-Z has finally admitted to his infidelity- in the New York Times, no less-the pair seems to be done with dancing around the issue, as further evidenced in a new teaser for the “Family Feud” music video that will be released tomorrow on Tidal. Jay Z appears to have admitted to the cheating Beyonce alluded to on Lemonade via the lyrics of his new album released today, 4:44. The lyrics to Jay-Z‘s “Family Feud,” the ripped-from-the-headlines track featuring Beyoncé from his latest album 4:44, were already explicit enough as is: “Yeah, I’ll f- up a good thing if you let me/Let me alone, Becky,” a direct reference to Beyoncé’s‘s many allusions to Jay-Z cheating on her on her album Lemonade.
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