With “LUX,” Rosalía creates more than just an album — it’s part pop, part opera, and part universal music statement. She pushes boundaries while maintaining her distinct artistic voice.
The record unfolds through four movements and 18 tracks, where the Spanish visionary sculpts a sonic space between noise and silence, merging high art with rhythm, confession with spectacle, and emotion with spirituality.
“Rosalía ascends into LUX like Mary’s assumption.”
The Spanish singer and producer’s latest work expands her creative reach, showing her as both performer and architect of sound.
Throughout her career, Rosalía has drawn inspiration from the timeless art of flamenco, transforming it into something contemporary and globally resonant. Her innovative approach has earned her both critical praise and international attention.
In 2017, she emerged as a disruptor with her debut album Los Ángeles, which deconstructed over fifty flamenco styles — traditionally performed in spontaneous exchange between singer, guitarist, and dancer — into a cohesive, narrative-driven pop format.
Her next milestone, El Mal Querer (2018), originally conceived as her academic thesis and later awarded Album of the Year at the 2019 Latin Grammys, advanced her transformation of the genre by mixing authentic flamenco elements with R&B influences.
If El Mal Querer focused on turning flamenco into a modern pop dialect, then LUX explores introspective femininity and a metaphysical transcendence that moves beyond linguistic boundaries. This artistic vision redefines the scope of her entire discography.
Rosalía’s album “LUX” blends flamenco roots with divine imagery and modern sound design, showing her evolution from a genre innovator into an architect of spiritual pop.