• USA Rosalía wins for the second time the Grammy for best alternative Latin album thanks to Motomami
  • Tour The motomami army, Rosalía's fan phenomenon: from spending 4,000 euros on the tour to getting out of depression thanks to her
  • Grammy Awards Rosalía: "If a song with sexual content still creates conversation, it is that you have to keep making more songs like that"

Three songs for their fans, that's the idea of the EP that Rosalía and Rauw Alejandro publish this Friday with the title of RR. In less than 10 minutes of music, the union of the double erre only serves to reaffirm their styles and satisfy the devotees, who are already fibrillating on social networks with the last seconds of the video of Beso, in which Rosalía shows a wedding ring, which really is the only news of the album: both singers are getting married, as our colleagues at LOC will be able to tell you with more details.

Beso is the central song of the trio, a mellow reggaeton that turns into music the video of home recordings of the couple giving each other affection. Kisses, hugs, little hands, cuddles, carantoñas, miraditas: the complete repertoire.

It is music made by and for love, which melts in the mouth like a spoonful of vanilla flan, a romantic ecstasy that glides over a syncopated reggaeton rhythm that fluctuates and culminates in a very resultón chorus, reasonably choreographable in a concert.

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Music.

Rosalía and Rauw Alejandro tell Ibai their couple secrets

  • Writing: TRESB

Rosalía and Rauw Alejandro tell Ibai their couple secrets

Music.

This is how Beso sounds, the new song by Rosalía and Rauw Alejandro

  • Writing: TRESB

This is how Beso sounds, the new song by Rosalía and Rauw Alejandro

Vampiros is a song closer to the style of Rauw Alejandro, a more rogue reggaeton to perrear in the disco that in the case of Rosalía reminds of Linda, her volcanic collaboration with Tokischa of 2021. In any case, it is noticeable that the sound design is more the responsibility of the Spanish singer: the synthesizer that squeaks in the background has a point to Saoko, her flagship song of Motomami.

RR closes with a bolero called Promesa, which is what boleros are called, although it sounds like fluffy electronics: the drum machine is soft like a grandmother's cushion; then it disappears and the electronics acquire a more abstract texture, an unexpected twist and the most interesting moment of the whole EP, especially because in that section, in a composition of classic works, Rosalía intones with more depth.

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  • Rosalia
  • music
  • Latin music
  • Reggaeton