Jump to content
celeb

Rosalía for Rolling Stone


Teletubby

Featured Posts

she looks so damn hot :firega::v:

 

trust is like a mirror, you can fix it if it's broken but you can still see the crack in that ************s reflection.
Link to post
Share on other sites

Suspiria

I mean the way they're describing this album, maybe I am hyped... praying that La Fama was just the 1 basic song they put on for commercial reasons.

They keep referring to it as a 'conceptual album' though but I'm not seeing what the concept is. I still don't know what motomami means? Has she explained the title?

Link to post
Share on other sites

Omg her nails, her face, her brows, her shoes :bradley:

I hope the album is more like La Fama and A Palé

We need to dance queen !

Yo X Ti Tu X Mi GIF by ROSALÍA

EDIT: Can't read the interview because Rolling Stone is fascist. Can anyone post what she said about the album? @Teletubby

 

discord.gg/hausofdelulu The #1 Lady Gaga Discord for Delusional Little Monsters!
Link to post
Share on other sites

alsemanche
11 minutes ago, WheresMy911Alice said:

Omg her nails, her face, her brows, her shoes :bradley:

I hope the album is more like La Fama and A Palé

We need to dance queen !

Yo X Ti Tu X Mi GIF by ROSALÍA

EDIT: Can't read the interview because Rolling Stone is fascist. Can anyone post what she said about the album? @Teletubby

 

I'll post snippets while reading:

-We plan to listen to her conceptual album MOTOMAMI for the first time there. It’s a project that has taken her more than three years to develop, but once it’s out in 2022, it will represent the creative path that’s led to her artistic emancipation.

-MOTOMAMI is a masterpiece full of dissonance, synthesizers, and saturated organs. It’s an innovative, avant-garde work that captures Rosalía’s roots and technical capabilities, leaving you with more questions than answers once you finish. She challenges commercial music as we know it. Catchy choruses or uniform beats? No. In fact, she takes apart the traditional structure of Spanish-language pop music, making the roots a melodic, not a rhythmic, accompaniment. Her drum triggers recall Trent Reznor’s, and she takes experimentation to new heights, evoking the lucky few who have managed to escape the commercial industry to make true art.

-MOTOMAMI‘s degree of lyrical, rhythmic, and sonic experimentation can be likened to experimental works like the Beastie Boys’ Ill Communication or Moby’s Play — albums that came from deconstruction and questioning. She can be sweet, warm, and innovative like Lorde on Pure Heroine, or rude and raw like Nine Inch Nails on The Downward Spiral. Across the album, Rosalía over-saturates and plays with her voice, pushing it to the limit without hesitation, deconstructing it to create samples and sounds that intertwine with the rhythm—if that’s what you can call the syncopated, out-of-time percussion that fires out according to the progression of each song. She rethinks structure, making music that can seem disharmonious and asymmetric, but this is one of the album’s most exciting qualities.

-Genres are a thing of the past; there’s room for everything here. Every element has been hand-sewn to form a skeleton of what modern music should be: art and flavor, dembow, champeta, flamenco, bachata, hip-hop, piano melodies.

-Meanwhile, MOTOMAMI feels like a freight train from the future, hurtling right at us at full speed and no brakes. Rosalía is the power source behind it all.

There's the actual Q&A next but I don't think I'll read it rn 

Soft, soothing, and succulent
Link to post
Share on other sites

3 minutes ago, alsemanche said:

I'll post snippets while reading:

-We plan to listen to her conceptual album MOTOMAMI for the first time there. It’s a project that has taken her more than three years to develop, but once it’s out in 2022, it will represent the creative path that’s led to her artistic emancipation.

-MOTOMAMI is a masterpiece full of dissonance, synthesizers, and saturated organs. It’s an innovative, avant-garde work that captures Rosalía’s roots and technical capabilities, leaving you with more questions than answers once you finish. She challenges commercial music as we know it. Catchy choruses or uniform beats? No. In fact, she takes apart the traditional structure of Spanish-language pop music, making the roots a melodic, not a rhythmic, accompaniment. Her drum triggers recall Trent Reznor’s, and she takes experimentation to new heights, evoking the lucky few who have managed to escape the commercial industry to make true art.

-MOTOMAMI‘s degree of lyrical, rhythmic, and sonic experimentation can be likened to experimental works like the Beastie Boys’ Ill Communication or Moby’s Play — albums that came from deconstruction and questioning. She can be sweet, warm, and innovative like Lorde on Pure Heroine, or rude and raw like Nine Inch Nails on The Downward Spiral. Across the album, Rosalía over-saturates and plays with her voice, pushing it to the limit without hesitation, deconstructing it to create samples and sounds that intertwine with the rhythm—if that’s what you can call the syncopated, out-of-time percussion that fires out according to the progression of each song. She rethinks structure, making music that can seem disharmonious and asymmetric, but this is one of the album’s most exciting qualities.

-Genres are a thing of the past; there’s room for everything here. Every element has been hand-sewn to form a skeleton of what modern music should be: art and flavor, dembow, champeta, flamenco, bachata, hip-hop, piano melodies.

-Meanwhile, MOTOMAMI feels like a freight train from the future, hurtling right at us at full speed and no brakes. Rosalía is the power source behind it all.

There's the actual Q&A next but I don't think I'll read it rn 

Omg truly her ARTPOP era :party:

Trent Reznor/NIN + Lorde's Pure Heroin + experimentation?! THIS IS GONNA SLAY

Ha MOTOMAMI could mean n e ting 

con altura GIF by ROSALÍA

 

discord.gg/hausofdelulu The #1 Lady Gaga Discord for Delusional Little Monsters!
Link to post
Share on other sites

alsemanche

I'm VERY intrigued by the way they're talking about this album... I really hope La Fama was just a one-off meh song, because the way they're talking about experimentation and deconstructing music sounds incredibly interesting. I mean... Nine Inch Nails and Lorde comparisons??? That's gotta mean something

Soft, soothing, and succulent
Link to post
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

×
×
  • Create New...