Jay-Z marks 30 years of Reasonable Doubt with Beyoncé and Blue Ivy at Yankee Stadium
Jay-Z opened a three-night Yankee Stadium run celebrating 30 years of Reasonable Doubt — with Beyoncé on the very first song, Blue Ivy on piano and Alicia Keys closing.
Thirty years after Reasonable Doubt, Jay-Z went home. The Brooklyn rapper opened the first of three nights at Yankee Stadium in New York on Saturday, revisiting his 1996 debut album with a live band — and turned the anniversary into a family reunion that left the stadium in raptures.
The surprise came on the very first song: Beyoncé walked out in a pinstripe suit to sing the hook on Can’t Knock the Hustle, the part Mary J. Blige owned on the original record. A guest of that calibre is usually saved for the finale; putting her first was Jay-Z’s way of announcing this would not be a normal night.
What did Blue Ivy do at Jay-Z’s concert?
She sat down at the piano and stole the show. At 14, the couple’s eldest daughter closed out Feelin’ It with a piano solo, introduced by her father as “the legendary Blue Ivy Carter” — one of those moments that separate a big concert from a historic night. Across more than three hours there was also room for Nas, the old rival turned guest of honour, and for Alicia Keys, who joined Jay-Z on the inevitable Empire State of Mind to end the night.
Why does Reasonable Doubt matter?
Released on June 25, 1996, it was the record that introduced the world to a Brooklyn ex-hustler with a rare gift for turning the street into literature — and it founded the empire that today includes the label and agency Roc Nation, whose official schedule lives on Roc Nation’s site. Three decades on, the catalogue fills a 50,000-plus stadium without breaking sweat.
The celebrations continue with two more Yankee Stadium nights, and judging by opening night, nobody should expect the same guest list twice. The summer of 2026 has been generous to comebacks — even the Rolling Stones turned up with a new album — but few land with this much precision.
By Lucy Bennett
Image: Joella Marano / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 2.0)