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March 9, 2026

Rosalía broke every branding rule and won – here’s what creatives can learn from her



I follow new music reasonably closely, and I like to think I have a decent sense of what’s out there. So it was a real shock to me when I stumbled across a song called Berghain in November last year… and spent the next three hours completely derailed from whatever I was supposed to be doing.

How had this artist been entirely off my radar? This incredible track – dramatic, operatic and utterly unlike anything I’d ever heard – turned out to be the lead single from Lux, the fourth album by Spanish singer Rosalía. If you haven’t heard it, do me a favour and (if you can) listen to a short blast in the video below. You’ll instantly get what I’m talking about. Also check out the album artwork (above).

ROSALÍA – Berghain (Official Video) feat. Björk & Yves Tumor – YouTube

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Lux arrived last November, and “revolutionary” doesn’t even cover it. Fifteen tracks sung across 14 languages, inspired by female Christian mystics, blending art pop with classical orchestration, opera, Portuguese fado, and the London Symphony Orchestra. It broke streaming records for a Spanish-speaking female artist and became the fourth highest-rated album in Metacritic’s history.

Each of these albums, in short, has been a completely different creative proposition. Not a variation on a theme; a genuine reinvention. And yet each one is unmistakably, recognisably her.

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Why? Because audience expectations are something you manage, not something you obey. Once you build enough trust through the quality of your work, people will always follow you, even if it’s somewhere they weren’t expecting to go.

Third – and this is the one I keep coming back to – there’s an enormous amount of space in the creative world for people willing to make something genuinely considered, rather than instantly legible. We’re currently drowning in content that’s been optimised to perform, and is forgotten within a week. The counter-move (slow down, go deeper, make something that asks something of the audience) is less crowded than it’s ever been. That’s an opening.

Rosalía didn’t pick a lane. She built her own road, using materials nobody else had ever thought to combine. And here’s the most important thing. If you choose to, so can you.



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