FEATURE:
Revolutionising the Possibilities of Live Music
IN THIS PHOTO: ROSALÍA’ live at London’s 02 during her LUX TOUR/PHOTO CREDIT: Samir Hussein
ROSALÍA’s Phenomenal and Transformative LUX TOUR
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PHOTO CREDIT: Samir Hussein
saw ROSALÍA in London last week. She is on her LUX TOUR at the moment. We have seen some recent tours that have changed what live music is. Taken it to new levels. Beyoncé and Taylor Swift have mounted these stunning and hugely ambitious sets. Beyoncé especially has always been an innovator and groundbreaking artist. It seems that every year, phenomenal artists expand what live music is and where it can go. However, we may be witnessing one of the greatest tours that has ever been produced. I want to bring in a few reviews for ROSALÍA’s awe-inspiring tour. Even if many artists do not have the same sort of budget and opportunity as her, it is easy to think big or try and take a live show somewhere different and fail. One could argue that the greatest tours of all time have happened. Madonna and the Blond Ambition World Tour of 1990 as one. However, in terms of scale, concept and its impact, one could argue that ROSALÍA’s LUX TOUR has surpassed anything that has come before. I don’t think it is an overexaggerating to say that LUX is one of the greatest albums of the past few decades. The Spanish-born artist is revolutionising music. Even though there was criticism from some when she introduced Opera into her music, it is so different to everything around. Berghain is a masterpiece. Even if many recent Pop tours have been an incredible spectacle, ROSALÍA has created something with the impact and genius of an Opera production or an incredible piece of theatre. This is what The Guardian observed when they caught her at London’s 02:
“It’s a remarkably visceral experience, partly down to the fact that the disruptive electronic elements of the songs’ arrangements bombard the audience at astonishing volume – you can literally feel them in your ribcage – but mostly down to Rosalía’s voice. It’s not so much her way with an operatic flourish or ability to hit a high B flat, impressive though that is, but how emotionally powerful her vocals are: all the virtuosity in the world can’t account for her ability to break your heart with the fragility of Divinize or to send it soaring with the climax of Mio Cristo Piange Diamanti.
With its references to 10th-century saints and 20th century philosopher Simone Weil, Lux was an album that invited people to take it very seriously indeed – critics were only too happy to oblige – but the show itself is far wittier and more entertaining than you might expect, given the furrowed-brow reception it provoked. Between songs, Rosalía cuts a noticeably funnier and more raucous figure than the woman earnestly quoting Roland Barthes to interviewers: she demands the crowd stop being so reverential, guzzles a glass of wine before Sauvignon Blanc, attempts a British accent, and dances when she shifts into songs from 2022’s reggaeton-fuelled Motomami.. Lola Young makes a guest appearance, not to sing, but to appear in a mock-confessional, telling Rosalía an extended story about sleeping with a man she subsequently discovered was married with a child (“what a piece of shit,” nods Rosalía sympathetically); there’s a section where cameras alight on audience members, who are then encouraged to pose in the style of a succession of celebrated paintings (you’ll have to take my word for it that seeing someone attempt to imitate the posture of the model in Rossetti’s Beata Beatrix is a lot funnier in real life than it looks on paper).
Funny, intelligent, musically adventurous, visually stunning, emotionally impactful: Rosalia’s live show is a triomf, as they say back in Barcelona. It’s also incredibly heartening that it’s playing the world’s arenas: evidence both that pop fans are nowhere near as dumb as they’re frequently taken for, and that the woman at its centre is a pop star entirely unlike anyone else”.
There are a couple of other reviews I want to cover off. Five-star raves about a live experience, the likes of which we may never witness again. Rolling Stone UK attended a transformative and triumphant live show. One that must have been so affecting to everyone who was in attendance. We are witnessing an artist who an icon. We will be talking about ROSALÍA for decades more:
“The beauty of the show’s opening is then punctured by brawn in a beefed up second act. Rosalía changes outfit from white to black and sings the frenzied ‘Berghain’ (complete with a thumping techno outro) and highlights from 2022’s pop-leaning MOTOMAMI album while a swirling mass of dancers sway with her.
In the final section, a speaker billows smoke as it pendulums back and forth like incense at church, all to the chaotic soundtrack of ‘CUUUUuuuuuute’. To end the show, Rosalía ascends to heaven at the climax of final song ‘Magnolias’, then falling backwards to meet her end.
It all sounds – and is – pretty weighty stuff, high on drama and concept. What makes the show remarkable, though, is how inclusive she makes it. Every lyric is translated into English for the big screen, along with a note of which language she is singing in, adding context and weight to her consistently beautiful lyrics. “It’s a talent I was born with / I am the queen of chaos,” she sings in Japanese on ‘Porcelana’. “Because that’s what God decided.”
She is also disarmingly funny throughout, bringing levity and lightness to a show that could otherwise crumble under its own weight. After ‘Divinize’, in which she covers a portion of Dido’s ‘Thank You’, she threatens to throw water over the front rows before cackling at the idea. To feel like you’re laughing away with a friend seconds after she was setting fire to the earth with a world-beating performance is a triumph in itself.
Elsewhere, she tries to improve her English with help from the crowd, instead hilariously getting useless advice from an Italian fan, while a between acts video sees her backing dancers overdramatically mocking the performance of ‘Mio Cristo Piange Diamanti’ she just made. Later, she sings inside a picture frame while tourists gawp at her for a rendition of Frankie Valli’s ‘Can’t Take My Eyes Off You’.
Before ‘La Perla’ – her unlikely hit that sees her eviscerating a “walking red flag” of an ex – she welcomes surprise guest Lola Young to the stage to share a secret in a confession booth. Young reveals that she slept with a married man, and innocently introduces Rosalía to the phrase “doing the deed”.
To exist in both of these modes across a show like this explains why Rosalía skipped the Royal Albert Hall and found her place in arenas. “I chose this path long ago, when I didn’t even know what the fuck it means,” she says of her career towards the start of the show. “I had no idea what I was getting into.” The “nomadic life” she has chosen “can be too chaotic, and even a little discouraging,” she says, “but I chose this, and I’ll choose it again and again and again.” That choice is our continued gift”.
NME were also in attendance when ROSALÍA played in London. Noting that it was a breathtaking masterpiece and this museum piece, I wish I was there! I think that ROSALÍA will keep releasing these phenomenal albums and continue to raise the bar when it comes to her shows. Though I think that we have just seen one of the most compelling and extraordinary live shows ever:
“This is a breathtaking show through and through. An orchestra guides the songs from the centre of the arena floor, but that doesn’t stop the intense bass and beats on songs like ‘Divinize’ from thumping through your chest. Each track is given the treatment it needs to really land – ‘Mio Cristo Piange Diamanti’ has Rosalía on stage alone, shrouded in a white robe, the diamond tears she sings of twinkling in her eyes; ‘Berghain’ begins with her in a pile of bodies, moving as one, before an industrial dance break outro turns this faux-museum into a club. A cover of Frankie Valli’s ‘Can’t Take My Eyes Off You’ seems slightly random on Setlist.fm, but the 33-year-old uses it to position herself as the art, standing in a picture frame to perform it as a group of “tourists” gawps.
As poignant and powerful as this performance is, there is also plenty of levity. Before ‘Sauvignon Blanc’, Rosalía sits on top of a grand piano and asks the audience to teach her how to do an English accent. When she accidentally chooses a fan from Rome who wants to teach her Italian instead, she rolls with it, then downs the contents of a large wine glass. Moments earlier, she invites Lola Young on stage to join her in a confession booth. When the British musician dishes about finding out the man she was sleeping with was married with kids, Rosalía’s reactions are gold – shocked facial expressions delivered to camera as if she’s in her own episode of The Office.
Although tonight is largely focused on ‘Lux’, a few songs from the rest of Rosalía’s discography sneak into the setlist too, to make this a slightly broader retrospective. The Spanish guitars of ‘Los Angeles’’ ‘El redentor’ get a rocky makeover, its creator’s vocals storming over the top. ‘CUUUUuuuuuute’ closes out a section where she performs from among the orchestra, a speaker adorned with flashing lights and billowing with smoke swinging over her head as the experimental, club-ready song takes the set into brasher territory.
The final two-song act takes the beauty of the night, if possible, even higher. In ‘Focu ‘Ranni’, she matches lyrics about maintaining your freedom (“I will not be your other half / Never your property”) with dashing dancers, liberated and uncontrolled. As it reaches its end, she climbs to the top of a block of stairs, and still wearing white angel wings, falls off the back into nothingness. Moments later, she reappears for a gorgeous, concluding ‘Magnolias’, backing into a bright white light that adds a holy touch. A true masterpiece”.
Even if you are not familiar with ROSALÍA’s work or have seen her live, you can appreciate that the LUX TOUR is rightfully being hailed as a work of art. Not that there is anything wrong with a straight concert or somewhat that is quite basic. However, ROSALÍA has just changed the game and is on a tour that will go down in the history books. So fortunate that we have an artist in our midst as talented and visionary as her. By all accounts, it seems that the LUX TOUR is…
A mesmeric experience.
