With LUX, Rosalía creates more than just an album: it is part pop, part opera, and part global-language manifesto, pushing artistic boundaries while preserving her unique voice.
The Spanish artist sculpts LUX into four movements spanning 18 tracks, weaving a space between noise and silence. The album blends high art with catchy hooks, intimacy with grandeur, and emotion with spirituality.
“Rosalía ascends into LUX like Mary’s assumption.”
Throughout her career, Rosalía has drawn deeply from flamenco, reshaping it into a contemporary form that has won critical acclaim and worldwide interest.
Her 2017 debut, Los Ángeles, disrupted flamenco by deconstructing its 50+ traditional styles into a pop framework defined by verse-chorus structure, showcasing a modular interplay between singer, guitarist, and dancer.
El Mal Querer (2018), initially a baccalaureate thesis and later Album of the Year at the 2019 Latin Grammys, further reinvented flamenco by fusing traditional elements with R&B production.
“If El Mal Querer was about translation — turning flamenco into a pop language — then LUX is about the feminine mystique and transcendence beyond language.”
Author’s summary: Rosalía’s LUX masterfully blends flamenco traditions with pop and spiritual themes, marking a bold evolution in her pioneering sound and artistic vision.