The Death and Rebirth of Natalia Lafourcade (2024)

Table of Contents
Editor’s picks Related Trending

New Beginnings

The singer-songwriter calls De Todas Las Flores, her first full LP of original music in seven years, "my salvation, my relief, the replanting of seeds"

Natalia Lafourcade received a standing ovation at Carnegie Hall before she uttered a single note.

The singer-songwriter filled the venue with her unmistakable voice during a dazzling performance on Oct. 27, appearing onstage in a shiny black dress with a long train, her loose hair a complement to the flow of the fabric. Shortly after the show began, David Byrne, dressed in a dapper black suit, joined her and recited an English translation of “Muerte,” a key track from De Todas Las Flores — Lafourcade’s first album of original music in seven years.

There were more guests later in the night, including Cuban son icon Omara Portuondo, a founding member of Buena Vista Social Club, who worked on Lafourcade’s 2017 album Musas, and longtime collaborator Jorge Drexler. Partway through, Lafourcade revealed that it was her first time on a major stage in four years. She seized the moment at Carnegie Hall and debuted De Todas Las Flores during the first half of her performance, sharing a tender collection of vulnerable tracks that contemplate life’s deeper mysteries in lyric and sound. The songs are built on sonic contrasts, with deceptively simple acoustic guitars backed by blooming orchestral arrangements. It’s extremely moving to hear: a juxtaposition as sharp as death and life, which lies at the heart of the album.

“The record is a sequence of moments: it begins with a broken heart — ‘Vine Solita,’ which starts the record, is me making a pact with my own life,” Lafourcade tells Rolling Stone a few days before her Carnegie Hall debut and the album’s release. “I came alone, and that’s how I’ll leave. Nothing can alter this reality. When ‘Muerte’ arrives, it’s a moment of ‘here we are.’ The music deconstructs, it unravels. Everything vanishes and is transmuted into joy.”

It wasn’t a quick path to this ambitious new album. Seven years and a global pandemic passed since her breakthrough effort Hasta La Raíz, when Lafourcade realized she needed to dig deeper. She spent lockdown in her isolated home in the countryside of Veracruz, tending to her garden and working on gorgeous tributes to Mexico and other Latin American folk traditions, releasing projects such as Un Canto Por México, Vol. 1, which won her a Grammy for Best Regional Mexican Album. But soon, she began to dust off old journals, pick up her guitar, and sit with her emotions in a tangible way.

Editor’s picks

Every Awful Thing Trump Has Promised to Do in a Second Term
The 250 Greatest Guitarists of All Time
The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time
25 Most Influential Creators of 2024

The Death and Rebirth of Natalia Lafourcade (1)

“It has been a wonderful trip, and I have a lot of love for this album,” she says. “This time, the process has been a years-long voyage. It’s an extremely personal musical diary, and it took me a while to realize how much I needed to be back in the studio, how much I needed to give myself space to make something that came out of me.”

Despite the grandiose conceit and experimental esotericism of the tracks, the songs on De Todas Las Flores feel at times as intimate as a bouquet: they bloom and often vanish just as quickly. It comes as no surprise that production was helmed by Franco-Mexican art rock musician Adán Jodorowsky, better known as Adanowsky. The album was recorded entirely on analog tape and mastered in Paris, where Lafourcade played a few songs to an anonymous crowd at a small bar.

“Adán and I had promised each other that we would work together many years ago. I love and admire him very much, and I wanted to bring his world into mine because his world is magical,” Lafourcade explains. “I also knew that working with Adán would push me in another direction and would shift me toward reinvention. I wanted to break the inertia to have another experience, to live and create another way.”

Related

Natalia Lafourcade, Tainy Win Big at Inaugural Rolling Stone En Español Awards
Latin Grammys 2022: Five Best Moments
How Jorge Drexler Beat Writer's Block to Make His Most Free-Wheeling Album Yet

The orchestral flourish that starts “Vine Solita” leads into the whisper of acoustic guitar and Lafourcade’s stunning soprano. “Llévame Viento” is a gentle gust, built off hushed, quickly plucked guitar and Lafourcade’s voice keeping pace with it. Some of these songs vanish in a burst of flame. On “Mi Manera de Querer,” a loose bossanova-esque track that Lafourcade calls “the synthesis of the record,” she reassures a lover that they are beings of light and that we all love uniquely no matter our gender or way of loving. “María La Curandera,” a cumbia created loosely off the mythos of Mazatec psilocybin curandera María Sabina — and her famous nature poem “Cúrate Mijita.” The song is a loud celebration of the elemental magic she conjures in the album, with Lafourcade stepping into the role of the famed Indigenous psychedelic shaman.

“Cumbia is music of the earth, of the plains, of the fields…this one wanted to come as a cumbia,” she says about the mystical track. On De Todas Las Flores, Lafourcade finds herself profoundly inspired by Mother Earth. The album shows it’s roots in ecopoetry throughout, from songs of the wind and sea to “Pajarito Colibrí,” a quiet track where she contemplates human experience as the life of a small hummingbird, our purpose being only to be, and be happy. It’s telling of where Lafourcade is creatively that she was moved by the life of a traditional healer and her surroundings enough to invoke her directly on this album.

The Death and Rebirth of Natalia Lafourcade (2)

“One of my most profound inspirations was Mother Earth and her energy. I had never explored something like that in my music: the cadence of water, of wind, of a storm, of a wave, of fire, of the playfulness that exists in all the elements in balance. It’s something mystical that must be read between the lines.”

At Carnegie Hall, Lafourcade ended the first half of her concert by performing the slow-burning “Muerte” in full for the first time. Byrne joined her onstage once more, dancing as the track ended on a cacophonous storm of trumpets and piano and bass, an unraveling wall of sound. He played the psychopomp, guiding Lafourcade by the hand as she exited stage right through an ominous open door. It was clear that the evening for Lafourcade was a ritual of death — and, more importantly, rebirth.

Trending

Cedric Bixler-Zavala Slams Linkin Park's Emily Armstrong Over Alleged Danny Masterson Support
Dr Disrespect Knowingly Sent Explicit Messages to a Minor, Former Twitch Employee Says
So ... What's With This Rumor That J.D. Vance Had Sex With a Couch?
Trump Bashes His Lawyers During Wild E. Jean Carroll Rant

“Death is uncomfortable but it’s a part of life,” she says. “There’s a void and a pain and a shame. There’s mourning, but we humans will experience not one but several deaths in our lifetime. I crossed one, and this album was my salvation, my relief, the hug, the rebirth, the replanting of seeds. I find myself sitting in it now, in this garden I revisited, to see what it is inside. It’s from there that the beautiful metaphor of flowers bursts forth.”

That energy coursed through the second half of the show, when Lafourcade reemerged in a light green, flowing dress with white boots, the colors of new blooms in springtime. Though she started the night with death, she closed with a jubilant rendition of “Lo Que Construimos,” one of her signature songs about a stable foundation crumbling and the pieces one must pick up. Few, if any, people remained in their seats, instead choosing to dance in a defiant celebration of life.

The Death and Rebirth of Natalia Lafourcade (2024)
Top Articles
Thermo.fisher-scientific | Sigma-Aldrich
Class of 2024 celebrates high school graduation in Wisconsin
El Patron Mexican Restaurant New Ellenton Menu
Wal-Mart 2516 Directory
895 Area Code Time Zone
Poppers Goon
How to cancel subscriptions on your iPhone through the Settings app
Tinyzonehd
Join MileSplit to get access to the latest news, films, and events!
Lkq Pull-A-Part
Craigslist Holland Mi Pets
What Does Sybau Mean
24/7 Walmarts Near Me
Memphis Beauty 2084
Yogabella Babysitter
Getwush Com
Blackboard Utoledo
Amc Theatres Website
Busted Newspaper Randolph County Missouri
Caldwell Idaho Craigslist
Who is Ariana Grande? Everything You Need to Know
Paperless Guide: Workflow
Ella And David Steve Strange
Violent Night Showtimes Near The Grand 16 - Lafayette
Myzmanim Highland Park Nj
Promiseb Discontinued
Peak Gastroenterology Associates Briargate
Eotech Eflx Torque Specs
Carlitos Caribbean Bar & Grill Photos
My Fico Forums
The History Of Fujoshi, Male Shippers, And How Its Changed
Worldfree4U In
Chris Bailey Weather Forecast
German American Bank Owenton Ky
Back Doctor Near Me That Accept Medicaid
Timon Meaning In Swahili
When Is The Next Va Millionaire Raffle 2023
Phunextra
Stony Brook Citrix Login
Paola Iezzi, chi è il compagno. L’uomo in comune con la sorella Chiara e le nozze 'congelate'
Jodie Sweetin Breast Reduction
Rte Packaging Marugame
Point Click Care Cna Login Cna
Über 60 Prozent Rabatt auf E-Bikes: Aldi reduziert sämtliche Pedelecs stark im Preis - nur noch für kurze Zeit
Edye Ellis Obituary
Gatlinburg SkyBridge: Is It Worth the Trip? An In-Depth Review - Travel To Gatlinburg
Greenville Sc Greyhound
Olive Onyx Amora
Unit 8 Homework 3 Trigonometry
Ups Carrier Locations Near Me
Walmart Makes Its Fashion Week Debut
Farmers And Merchants Bank Broadway Va
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Mrs. Angelic Larkin

Last Updated:

Views: 5408

Rating: 4.7 / 5 (67 voted)

Reviews: 82% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Mrs. Angelic Larkin

Birthday: 1992-06-28

Address: Apt. 413 8275 Mueller Overpass, South Magnolia, IA 99527-6023

Phone: +6824704719725

Job: District Real-Estate Facilitator

Hobby: Letterboxing, Vacation, Poi, Homebrewing, Mountain biking, Slacklining, Cabaret

Introduction: My name is Mrs. Angelic Larkin, I am a cute, charming, funny, determined, inexpensive, joyous, cheerful person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.