Rosalía’s fourth studio album, LUX, has claimed a historic milestone by achieving the biggest streaming debut ever for a female Spanish-language artist on Spotify, surpassing 42.1 million streams in its first 24 hours. This triumph underscores the Barcelona-born artist’s evolving influence in global music, blending her flamenco roots with symphonic and multilingual innovation.
Released on November 7, 2025, the album not only broke the previous record set by Karol G’s Mañana Será Bonito (Bichota Season) in 2023—which tallied 35.7 million opening-day streams—but also highlighted Rosalía’s artistic risks paying off amid a fiercely competitive streaming landscape.
A Symphonic Evolution in Sound
At its core, LUX represents Rosalía’s boldest departure yet, incorporating operatic elements and classical influences across 15 tracks sung in 14 different languages. This multilingual approach marks a significant shift from her earlier works, like the reggaeton-infused Motomami in 2022, and showcases her vocal range in a symphonic format produced in collaboration with the London Symphony Orchestra’s conductor, Daníel Bjarnason. The album’s production pushed boundaries, with Rosalía enlisting both Google Translate and professional linguists to nail phonetics, admitting in interviews that perfecting the sounds involved “a lot of trying to understand how languages work”.
What sets LUX apart is its pioneering use of live translations via Spotify’s MusixMatch feature, allowing fans to follow lyrics in real-time as they stream. Tracks like the lead single “Berghain,” featuring El Guincho, and “La Perla” with Rauw Alejandro, fuse electronic pulses with orchestral swells, creating a sound that’s been hailed as “like absolutely nothing else in pop right now” by critics. Rolling Stone awarded it a perfect five-star review, praising how no other artist could have pulled off such an ambitious vision.
Breaking Barriers on Global Charts
The album’s explosive debut propelled 12 of its tracks into Spotify’s global Top 50 within days, a feat that vaulted Rosalía into the platform’s top three artists worldwide. Standouts include “La Perla” with nearly 4.5 million streams, ranking fifth globally, followed closely by “Berghain” at fourth place with 4 million plays and “Reliquia” at 3.7 million. Other risers like “Sexo, Violencia y Llantas” (3.6 million, 11th place) and “Divinize” (3.1 million, 14th) reflect the album’s broad appeal, even as some fans on social platforms noted its less commercial edge compared to Motomami—yet it still doubled those numbers at launch.
This surge isn’t isolated to Spotify; LUX has echoed across platforms, with Instagram and X buzzing about its record-breaking potential. Netizens have called it a “true no-skip album,” emphasizing its replay value and the way it challenges Latin music norms by weaving in non-Spanish elements without losing authenticity. For Rosalía, who has long navigated the tension between her Catalan heritage and international stardom, this debut affirms her as a trailblazer for Spanish-speaking women in a male-dominated streaming era.
Challenges and Cultural Impact
LUX wasn’t without hurdles; the album leaked online two days before its official release, shared across fan forums and drawing thousands of early listeners despite pleas from Rosalía’s team to wait. Yet, this piracy buzz may have amplified anticipation, contributing to the record streams upon launch. In a broader context, the success spotlights the growing power of female Latin artists on global stages—Rosalía’s feat eclipses not just Karol G but sets a new benchmark, with streams reported as high as 42.6 million in some early tallies.
Critics and fans alike see LUX as a cultural pivot, blending high art with pop accessibility to reach diverse audiences. As one BBC review put it, the album is “radical and riveting,” potentially positioning it as a contender for the year’s best. For Rosalía, whose career has evolved from flamenco revivalist to genre-bending icon, this moment cements her legacy while inspiring a new wave of multilingual experimentation in music. With the album still climbing charts, its full impact on the industry—and Rosalía’s next moves—remains eagerly watchedd.






