Radical and riveting: Is Rosal?a's Lux the year's best album?

Radical and riveting: Is Rosal?a's Lux the year's best album?

37 minutes ago Share Save Mark Savage Music correspondent Share Save

Getty Images Rosal?a emerged in 2018 and has become one of the biggest Latin stars in music

Over her brief discography, Rosal?a has never met a convention she couldn't break. Born in Barcelona, the singer has spent the last seven years innovating at a speed that makes her contemporaries look comically lazy. Her breakthrough album, El Mal Querer (recorded as her graduate thesis in 2018) took the folkloric traditions of Flamenco and fused them to addictive R&B rhythms. The follow-up, 2022's Motomami, was a wildly innovative pop smash, twisting Latin American genres like cumbia and reggaeton around glitchy hip-hop beats and her playful, sinuous melodies. With lyrics about fame, sex and self-discovery, Motomami debuted at the top of Spotify's global albums chart, took home album of the year at the Latin Grammys, and became 2022's best-reviewed record on Metacritic - even topping Beyonc?'s celebrated Renaissance. After Rosal?a's tour for her critically acclaimed album ended three year ago, her fans were left wondering where she'd go next. The answer is revealed on her fourth album, Lux, released on Friday.

Rosal?a/Columbia Records The album cover shows Rosal?a hugging herself while wearing a nun's headdress, reflecting themes of self-acceptance and spiritual yearning

Rather than walk in the footsteps of its predecessors, Lux carves its own, unique path - harnessing Rosal?a's classical training at the prestigious Catalonia College of Music. Recorded with the London Symphony Orchestra, and featuring multiple arrangements from Pulitzer Prize winner Caroline Shaw, it's a radical, rebellious operatic opus that sounds like nothing else in the pop sphere. Lead single Berghain riffs on Verdi's Dies Irae, the strings played with serrated knives as a German chorus chants about fear and anger, until Bjork arrives to inform everyone, "the only way to save us is through divine intervention". Another early highlight, Reliquia, chops and splices a chamber quartet into unrecognisable electronic patterns, as Rosal?a reconciles herself to the idea that she loves too hard, and locates the beauty in that vulnerability. "Take a piece of me, keep it for when I'm gone / I'll be your treasure, I am your relic." Fellow pop iconoclast Madonna has already declared herself a fan, posting a message to Rosal?a on Instagram, saying: "I can't stop listening! You are a true visionary!!!"

'Emotional terrorist'

Pieced together over three years, Lux reflects on a period of personal and professional upheaval for the 33-year-old. In that time, Rosal?a broke off her engagement to Puerto Rican reggaet?n star Rauw Alejandro, ditched her management in favour of Adele's manager, Jonathan Dickins, and landed her first major acting role in the teen drama Euphoria. The split from Alejandro seems to inspire the record's most barbed lyric. La Perla is aimed at a man she calls an "emotional terrorist" and "the Olympic gold medallist of sons of whores" ? with a jaunty waltz arrangement that suggests she's thoroughly enjoying her litany of insults. The cathartic Focu 'Ranni (only available on CD and vinyl copies) pairs a desolate melody with a scrambled vocal sample; reflecting the emotional turmoil of a bride who calls off her wedding at the last moment. In an interview with France's Le Monde, she said the song was inspired by her namesake, Saint Rosalia de Palermo, who fled the altar to dedicate her life to God. "I found that coincidence pretty insane," the star added, but refused to elaborate, simply saying it was a "long story".

Getty Images The singer's tour for her album Motomami featured a minimalist stage and backing dancers

The quest for spiritual fulfilment underscores the rest of Lux ? whose title is the Latin word for "light". Sauvignon Blanc is a gossamer ballad that contains the self-deprecating pledge: "I will listen to my God / I will throw away my Jimmy Choos"; while the dazzling dopamine rush of Divinize finds her, in the word of Loki, burdened with glorious purpose. "Bruise me up, I'll eat all of my pride / I know that I was made to divinize." But it's the more reflective moments that steal your breath. The closing track, Magnolias, is a delicate acceptance of death: "What I never did in my life, you'll do when I'm dead." And the tender, subdued La Yagular is an acknowledgement of the divine on earth that celebrates our shared humanity. "I fit in the world / And the world fits into me / I take up the world / And the world occupies me," she sings, in wide-eyed wonder. The song ends with a recording of Patti Smith in 1976, encouraging artists to shatter expectations. "Break on through to the other side," the rock star exclaimed. "Going through one door isn't enough, a million doors aren't enough." As an encapsulation of Rosal?a's creative impulse, it's almost too perfect.

Rosal?a/Columbia Records Rosal?a studied 14 languages including Hebrew, Ukrainian and French during the creation of the latest album