With LUX, Rosalía turns ambitiously towards the sacred, featuring orchestral colors, choral textures, and a rich tapestry of Catholic and mystical references. In interviews, she frames the album around feminine mysticism, a multilingual homage to historic women, and a personal quest for the divine. This article synthesizes these interviews and critical coverage to explore what LUX achieves musically, visually, and spiritually—and its significance for contemporary European pop.
What LUX Sets Out to Do
Rosalía describes LUX as the result of years spent reading about the lives of saints and examining various cultural conceptions of sanctity. At a press conference in México covered by El País, she said the record is “inspired by the feminine mystic,” blending classical and experimental forms with lyrics that grapple with the earthly and the divine. Spain’s public broadcaster calls it “a symphony for the mass of the future,” as detailed in RTVE’s launch guide which underscores themes of transformation, faith, and posterity.
International coverage aligns with this: Le Monde describes LUX as deeply spiritual and oratorio-like, featuring orchestras, choirs, and songs in multiple languages.
Religious Imagery and Feminine Mysticism—In Rosalía’s Own Words
“The feminine mystic is the guide”
In Spanish interviews, Rosalía ties each language and song to a female spiritual figure or tradition. Latin American press highlights how tracks reference saints and mystics beyond Catholicism—a focus noted by Spanish music media. Pre-release discussions noted the album’s inspirations, including Rabia al-Adawiyya and Simone Weil, as reported in Jenesaispop’s interview/Popcast preview. The interfaith perspective is central, treating sanctity as a universal human possibility.
“Earthly imperfection vs. divine perfection”
Rosalía frequently contrasts the imperfect, finite nature of human work with the perfect, unreachable divine. This tension drives songs that navigate grief, devotion, and doubt, allowing LUX to be heard as an album focused on striving rather than certainty.
Humor and provocation inside devotion
Her playful perspective in Dios es un stalker is intentionally tongue-in-cheek—writing “in the first person of God” as an absurd, poetic device. A Colombian interview captures this tone, as shown in El Tiempo’s Q&A, which also notes that listeners will interpret “who God is in LUX” individually.
The Visual Theology of LUX
The white habit in billboards and launch visuals isn’t cheap provocation, but a symbol of commitment, channeling the language of vows toward her craft. This symbolism was central at the Madrid and New York unveilings and in Spanish media’s launch-day coverage (El País video analysis).
Structure and Sound: How the Music Carries the Sacred
- Orchestral/choral palette: Large-scale arrangements with symphony and choir—liturgical colors within modern pop forms (RTVE’s guide).
- Multilingual devotion: LUX features multiple languages, each chosen for the woman or tradition evoked (Joan of Arc, St. Olga of Kyiv, Sufi and other influences—El País (México) and Jenesaispop).
- Texts that pray and play: Lyrics with sacred and secular registers, evident in tracks like De madrugá and Dios es un stalker; detailed in Europa FM’s song-by-song explainer.
Primary Interviews in Spanish (Video & Radio)
Below are key Spanish-language appearances revealing the album’s spiritual foundation, shared by our reader:
What Changes—From Motomami to LUX
While Motomami focused on pop spectacle and fragmentation, LUX embraces stamina, ceremony, and comparative spirituality. The risks include less obvious hooks and more refined textures, but the reward is a pop work meant to be experienced as a rite. Spanish coverage notes this shift explicitly (HuffPost España’s review).
Why It Matters (for Europe’s Cultural Conversation)
In the European context, LUX sits at the crossroads of memory and modernity: a secular public space revisiting religious language. By reframing sacred symbols through a female lens and contemporary composition, Rosalía demonstrates that pop can foster a plural discussion about devotion, doubt, and identity, without resorting to catechism or parody. For a broader insight into the intersection of popular music and belief, see our previous article on music and religion (The European Times).














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