
Rosalía has released “Berghain,” the lead single from her forthcoming album LUX, marking a daring new era for the Spanish artist. The track sees her join forces with Icelandic icon Björk and American experimentalist Yves Tumor in a composition that turns chaos into symphony. Produced alongside the London Symphony Orchestra under the direction of Daníel Bjarnason, “Berghain” transforms club mythology into something sacred, a feverish ceremony rendered in orchestral form.
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The single’s title references Berlin’s most infamous nightclub, long regarded as a temple of electronic freedom. Yet Rosalía inverts that narrative. Her version of “Berghain” is about transcendence, a reimagining of ecstasy through strings, brass, and breathless vocals. As the orchestration swells, Rosalía’s voice cuts through with almost religious intensity, while Björk’s arrival mid-song introduces a surreal cry that feels both alien and divine. Yves Tumor closes with a spoken passage that collapses the track into silence, leaving a lingering sense of ritual and rupture.
“Berghain” belongs to the second movement of LUX, an album described as tracing “a widescreen emotional arc of feminine mystique, transformation, and transcendence.” It builds on the conceptual ambition Rosalía has nurtured since Motomami, pushing beyond reggaeton and electronic experimentation into an orchestral, cinematic realm. Where Motomami fused the digital with the visceral, LUX appears to aim for the monumental, presenting pop as symphonic performance art.
The collaboration with Björk and Yves Tumor underscores Rosalía’s growing position as a global shapeshifter, unbound by genre or tradition. The production moves from intimate chamber passages to full orchestral crescendos, marrying her classical training with avant-pop precision. Every note feels deliberate, heavy with symbolism, yet alive with risk, a rare quality in today’s polished pop landscape.
As the first glimpse into LUX, “Berghain” positions Rosalía as a conductor of her own world. If Motomami was the engine, LUX looks to be the cathedral, an intricate structure built from noise, devotion, and discipline.


















i would prefer her having guts to talk about Gaza