MusicNewsMusic / News1,095 days later, Beyoncé’s Lemonade is available to stream everywhereThe conceptual visual album took its time to spread its wings beyond Tidal, but it’s now available on all streaming platformsShareLink copied ✔️April 23, 2019April 23, 2019TextPatrick Benjamin Beyoncé’s visual album Lemonade is now available to stream on all platforms for the first time. The artist’s “conceptual project” was initially released on lossless streaming service Tidal – co-owned by Beyoncé and Jay-Z – on 23 April 2016 before hitting the shelves the following day, but now subscribers of Apple Music and Spotify can stream it in full. When @Beyonce gives you Lemonade... https://t.co/VNXOfiiJ9wpic.twitter.com/6g4ykSeyGo— Spotify (@Spotify) April 23, 2019 The record sparked intense rumours of a split from husband Jay-Z with explicit references to his infidelity bubbling up to the surface on several tracks: “You can taste the dishonesty... it’s on your breath” she sings on “Pray You Catch Me”, and “He only want me when I'm not there, he better call Becky with the good hair”, the now infamous lines from “Sorry”. The release was announced by Spotify via Twitter: “When Beyoncé give you Lemonade…” comes complete with a bonus track, a previously unheard demo of “Sorry”. We stan. @Beyonce's #Lemonade is now available to stream on Apple Music. 🍋https://t.co/W0d7egVmLOpic.twitter.com/RCx7UpEgo2— Apple Music (@AppleMusic) April 23, 2019 Just last week the singer dropped Homecoming, a feature-length Netflix film about her monumental headline set at Coachella in 2018, featuring cameos from sister Solange and her former group Destiny’s Child, a release that was met with widespread critical acclaim and hailed soon after as “historic”. You can stream Lemonade on Spotify here and Apple Music here. Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MORE7 of Chase Infiniti’s favourite K-pop tracksMeet The Deep, K-pop’s antihero ‘This is our Nirvana!’: Are Geese Gen Z’s first great rock band?10 of Yung Lean’s best collabs‘We’re like brother and sister’: Yung Lean and Charli xcx in conversationIs art finally getting challenging again?The only tracks you need to hear from November 2025Inside the world of Amore, Spain’s latest rising starLella Fadda is blazing a trail in the Egyptian music sceneThe rise of Sweden’s post-pop undergroundNeda is the singer-songwriter blending Farsi classics with Lily Allen 6 Flog Gnaw artists on what’s inspiring them right now