Motomami
Motomami is the third studio album by Spanish singer-songwriter Rosalía, released on 18 March 2022 through Columbia Records.[1][2] The record represents an experimental fusion of genres, incorporating elements of reggaeton, flamenco, bachata, hip-hop, and electronic music, largely self-produced by Rosalía in collaboration with longtime partner el Guincho and engineer Noah Goldstein.[2][3] Recorded amid the COVID-19 pandemic, it explores themes of fame, identity, and relationships through a concept album structure divided into aggressive "moto" and introspective "mami" sides.[4] Motomami received widespread critical acclaim for its innovative sound and vocal performances, earning the Latin Grammy Award for Album of the Year in 2022.[5] Commercially, it debuted at number one on the Billboard Top Latin Pop Albums chart with 17,000 equivalent album units in the United States, driven primarily by streaming, and topped charts in Spain while achieving strong global performance.[6] Its success, however, ignited controversies regarding Rosalía's place in Latin music categories, as some critics and fans contended that her Spanish origin disqualifies her from "Latina" awards, highlighting tensions over cultural boundaries in the genre despite historical Iberian influences on Latin American sounds.[7][8]Background and Development
Conception and Inspirations
Following the success of her 2018 album El Mal Querer, which blended flamenco with contemporary pop, Rosalía sought to avoid repetition and pursue greater artistic freedom in her next project.[9] She reflected that while El Mal Querer aligned with her circumstances at the time, extending the same approach would not suit her evolving perspective.[9] The conception of Motomami emerged over three years, driven by a desire to infuse risk, excitement, and personal confession into her work, marking it as her most intimate self-portrait to date.[9] Rosalía's motivations included grappling with the transformative effects of fame, which she described as altering her life profoundly and prompting her to document its ambivalence and emptiness.[10] This introspection fueled a conceptual framework of a feminine figure constructing herself amid modern contradictions, emphasizing themes of transformation, sexuality, and self-respect.[9] She aimed to challenge expectations by rejecting formulaic pop structures while preserving elements of her Spanish heritage, such as language and subtle flamenco influences, in favor of experimental urban sounds.[9] Key inspirations stemmed from the women in her life, particularly her mother Pilar Tobella—the "OG motomami"—a Harley-riding business advisor whose independent spirit embodied the album's titular energy of bold, multifaceted femininity.[11] Her grandmother and sister also shaped the project, alongside early exposures to Latin rhythms like reggaeton, dembow, bachata, and bolero, which she encountered dancing with cousins and admired since age 11 through artists such as Ivy Queen and Don Omar.[10] In late 2021 interviews, Rosalía announced this stylistic pivot toward genre-blending playfulness and empowerment, signaling a departure from flamenco-centric roots toward broader global experimentation without commercial pressures.[9]Recording and Production Process
Recording for Motomami took place across multiple studios in Barcelona, Miami, Puerto Rico, the Dominican Republic, Los Angeles, and New York over approximately two years, with principal sessions concentrated in a North Hollywood studio in Los Angeles.[12][13] Rosalía initiated work on the album in January 2019, though initial efforts overlapped with promotion for her prior release El Mal Querer, and principal production concluded by August 2021, followed by an extended mixing phase exceeding nine months.[10][14] Rosalía executive-produced the album alongside key collaborators including longtime producer El Guincho (Pablo Díaz-Reixa), Noah Goldstein, Michael Uzowuru, Dylan Wiggins, Pharrell Williams, Tainy, and Frank Dukes, with her direct involvement shaping much of the sonic experimentation.[15][16] Sessions emphasized hands-on learning through trial and error, incorporating live flamenco elements like palmas and rumba rhythms with electronic reggaeton dembow patterns and digital drums, often sourced from direct immersion in Caribbean locales during travel.[12][13] A significant portion of the production focused on vocal refinement, with Rosalía dedicating a full year to recording and selecting raw takes to preserve emotional authenticity amid polished electronic layering, avoiding overproduction to retain diaristic intimacy.[10] This approach addressed challenges in fusing organic instrumentation—such as warped boleros and guajira motifs—with hyperpop and hip-hop influences, ensuring genre-blending coherence without diluting flamenco roots.[12][13] Extensive travel, while enriching cultural inputs, presented logistical hurdles including prolonged separation from family, yet facilitated on-site adaptations that informed the album's global sonic palette.[12]Musical Composition
Genres and Influences
Motomami fuses flamenco traditions with urban Latin genres such as reggaeton, bachata, trap, and electronic pop, creating a hybrid sonic architecture that draws from Rosalía's Spanish roots and contemporary Caribbean influences.[17] This blend incorporates flamenco palos like bulerías, guajira, rumba, and milonga, layered over dembow rhythms and minimalistic beats derived from Dominican and Puerto Rican urban scenes.[10][18] The album's production emphasizes sparse arrangements, with sped-up vocal samples and austere electronic thumps reminiscent of experimental hip-hop, prioritizing rhythmic propulsion over dense orchestration to heighten percussive impact.[19] Influences extend to broader Latin American salsa references, including nods to Willie Colón and Fania Records, integrated into reggaeton frameworks for a referential yet forward-evolving sound.[20] Collaborations with artists like Tokischa underscore Dominican dembow and bachata derivations, while Bad Bunny's stylistic proximity informs the trap-infused reggaeton pivots, evidencing a causal synthesis where flamenco's modal scales modulate urban dembow's repetitive pulse into novel harmonic tensions.[13][21] This approach counters perceptions of derivativeness by demonstrating original genre mechanics—flamenco phrasing's microtonal inflections over trap's 808-driven minimalism generate emergent listener engagement through textural contrast, rather than superficial genre stacking.[20][22]Lyrics and Thematic Elements
The lyrics of Motomami employ a mix of Spanish, English, and urban slang, including the titular term "motomami," which Rosalía describes as embodying a duality of strength and femininity, akin to a "biker chick" navigating life's contrasts with confidence and vulnerability.[10] This linguistic approach allows for raw, unfiltered expression, drawing from Rosalía's Barcelona roots and global experiences to reject polished pop conventions in favor of direct emotional causality—where personal isolation breeds introspection, as seen in tracks reflecting pandemic-era solitude.[23] Central themes revolve around personal transformation and female autonomy, with Rosalía articulating a need for creative freedom as both cause and effect of her artistic output: "I need to feel free to create and I need to create in order to feel free."[23] Songs like "Saoko" explicitly explore metamorphosis, using imagery of shedding old selves to pursue change, grounded in her real-life shifts post-fame rather than abstract ideals.[10] This autonomy extends to countering traditional power imbalances, as in implicit feminist undertones that challenge macho narratives in Latin music, prioritizing women's desires and self-respect over deference.[9] Fame's dehumanizing impact emerges as a recurring motif, depicted not as glamour but as a causal force eroding intimacy—"fame is empty"—leading to oscillations between public exposure and private withdrawal.[10] In "La Fama," lyrics confront this void, pairing stark admissions of ambition's hollowness with familial anchors, illustrating how celebrity's hostility amplifies emotional ambivalence over sanitized success stories.[10] Relationships, often fleeting amid these pressures, are rendered with causal realism: love influences all but exposes vulnerabilities, as in "Hentai," where explicit desires reveal women's erotic agency without romantic idealization, stemming from unapologetic personal urges rather than performative narratives.[10][9] Such portrayals prioritize empirical emotional dynamics—heartbreak as one thread among diverse experiences, not a dominant trope—fostering a self-portrait of resilience forged through lived contradictions.[9]Song Structures and Innovations
"Saoko," the album's opening track, exemplifies abrupt genre shifts through its transition from a skeletal reggaeton pulse to a jazz piano breakdown and an experimental bassline reminiscent of producer Arca's style, creating a disorienting yet propulsive structure that Rosalía described as blending reggaeton inspiration with jazz details.[24][25] This two-minute track modulates tempo and texture rapidly, prioritizing fragmentation over linear progression to evoke emotional volatility, a technique that recurs across Motomami's 16 songs, most of which clock under three minutes to enhance replayability.[26] In "Bizcochito," rhythmic experimentation manifests in its dembow-infused perreo beat layered with vocal distortions and abrupt percussive drops, innovating on traditional reggaeton by compressing high-energy hooks into 1:51 of dense, loop-friendly phrasing that emphasizes brevity as a structural virtue.[26] The song's innovation lies in its modulation of rhythm to mimic conversational cadences, shifting from sparse kicks to frenetic fills without resolving into conventional choruses, which fosters an improvisational feel akin to flamenco palos but adapted to electronic urban sounds. The Weeknd's feature on "La Fama" integrates as a causal enhancer of thematic depth, structuring the bachata ballad around vanishing beats and bilingual verses that alternate between Rosalía's introspective delivery and his falsetto harmonies, maintaining the album's core identity through shared motifs of fame's seduction rather than stylistic dilution.[27] This collaboration employs tempo deceleration in interludes to heighten tension, an innovation that underscores duality without compromising the track's concise 3:06 runtime.[28] While these elements achieve replay value through structural concision and modulation, critics note uneven cohesion in transitions, such as abrasive shifts from industrial grinds to melodic reprieves that can feel disjointed rather than organically fused, prioritizing experimentation over seamless flow in some sequences.[29][30] This approach, though innovative in defying pop conventions, occasionally sacrifices album-wide unity for individual track autonomy.[26]Release and Promotion
Singles and Music Videos
"La Fama", featuring The Weeknd, served as the lead single from Motomami, released on November 11, 2021.[31] The track, influenced by Dominican bachata, explores fame as a seductive yet destructive force, with lyrics warning of its isolating consequences.[32] Its music video portrays Rosalía embodying "La Fama" in a nightclub, luring and metaphorically betraying The Weeknd to illustrate ambition's duality.[33] The single debuted and peaked at number 2 on the Billboard Hot Latin Songs chart.[6] "Saoko" followed as the second single on February 4, 2022, introducing experimental reggaeton elements with industrial and avant-jazz influences.[34] The music video features Rosalía in transformative, surreal sequences emphasizing reinvention and raw energy.[35] The third single, "Chicken Teriyaki", arrived on February 24, 2022, blending reggaeton with playful, TikTok-oriented rhythms.[36] Its dance-centric video, directed by Tanu Muino, showcases choreographed movements in vibrant, camp aesthetics highlighting sensuality and whimsy.[37] "Candy", released as a subsequent single on March 18, 2022, adopts mid-tempo reggaeton to delve into love, lust, and relational fracture over shimmering production.[38] The video amplifies these themes through intimate, stylized visuals. Promotional efforts for the singles encountered content restrictions; on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon on March 10, 2022, the Motomami album cover—depicting Rosalía nude and partially obscured by a helmet—was censored during display due to broadcast standards on nudity.[39][40] This occurred amid discussions tying back to the provocative visuals in singles like "Chicken Teriyaki".[36]Marketing Strategies
Promotional efforts for Motomami commenced prior to its March 18, 2022, release through Columbia Records, incorporating digital integrations to build anticipation. A notable initiative was the launch of the MOTOMAMI Los Santos radio station in Grand Theft Auto Online's "The Contract" update on December 15, 2021, hosted by Rosalía alongside producer Arca, featuring tracks from the forthcoming album alongside selections from artists like Bad Bunny and Caroline Polachek.[41][42] This collaboration targeted gaming communities, immersing players in a curated sonic experience that previewed the album's eclectic sound, thereby extending reach beyond traditional music platforms.[41] Social media campaigns amplified virality through teasers on platforms like Instagram and TikTok, where Rosalía shared cryptic visuals and snippets emphasizing the "motomami" aesthetic of bold femininity and urban edge.[43] These efforts correlated with substantial initial streaming performance, as Motomami achieved 19.37 million on-demand streams in its first week, debuting at number one on Spotify's Global Album Chart and setting records for the biggest debut by a female Spanish-language album.[6] Merchandise tie-ins, including apparel and accessories embodying the album's ethos, were made available via official channels, further embedding the brand in fan culture and contributing to sustained engagement post-release.[44][6] Additional tactics included Spotify-specific promotions, such as a directed video by Daniel Sannwald and glowing billboards in select cities to heighten visibility.[45] These strategies capitalized on Rosalía's established global appeal, blending Latin roots with international pop sensibilities, though empirical data indicates varying reception across markets, with stronger uptake in urban and youth demographics driving the album's early commercial momentum.[6] The approach's effectiveness is evidenced by the album surpassing one billion Spotify streams within months, underscoring the success of multi-platform immersion in fostering buzz without relying solely on conventional advertising.[46]Associated Media and Tour
To complement the album's release on March 18, 2022, Rosalía hosted Motomami Live, a virtual concert streamed exclusively on TikTok on March 17, 2022, featuring live performances of 14 tracks from Motomami filmed in a London studio with custom staging and multi-camera setups using iPhone 13 ProRes technology.[47] The event, directed by Stillz and Rosalía's collaborators, drew approximately 4 million unique viewers and generated 84 million impressions primarily in Latin America, boosting her TikTok followers by 1.5 million while previewing the album's raw, performative energy ahead of its physical launch.[48] The Motomami World Tour, Rosalía's first major arena headline run, commenced on July 7, 2022, in Almería, Spain, and concluded on July 22, 2023, at Lollapalooza Paris, spanning 68 dates across Europe, Latin America, and North America, including sold-out shows at venues like London's O2 Arena, New York's Radio City Music Hall, and Buenos Aires' Movistar Arena.[49][50] The tour's reported arena and theater dates alone sold 443,000 tickets and grossed $33.7 million, marking her highest-earning outing to date and ranking 65th among the year's top global tours by revenue.[51] Setlists centered on Motomami material, opening with "Saoko" and "Candy" before progressing through tracks like "Bizcochito," "La Fama," and "Bulerías" (often medleyed with "De Aquí No Sales"), with occasional evolutions such as live debuts of "Dolerme" early in the run and guest covers like "Alfonsina y el Mar" in select Latin American stops to adapt to regional audiences.[52][53] These extensions captured unpolished, high-energy renditions via official YouTube uploads from key dates, such as Radio City Music Hall, extending the album's promotional lifecycle through documented live interpretations that emphasized its experimental production in a concert format.[54]Reception and Analysis
Critical Acclaim and Praise
Motomami received universal acclaim from music critics, earning a Metascore of 94 out of 100 on Metacritic based on 17 reviews, indicating widespread praise for its artistic ambition and execution.[55] Reviewers highlighted Rosalía's bold genre-blending, fusing flamenco roots with reggaeton, trap, and electronic elements to create a cohesive yet experimental soundscape that challenges Latin pop conventions.[20] This innovation was attributed to her meticulous production choices, such as layering raw vocal takes and unconventional instrumentation, which imparted emotional depth and authenticity to tracks exploring themes of fame and vulnerability.[21] Pitchfork awarded the album 8.4 out of 10, designating it "Best New Music" and commending Rosalía's "exceptional range" in stretching across genres while playing with form, resulting in a work that feels both intimate and expansive.[20] Similarly, Variety described it as marking Rosalía's "true arrival" at the forefront of musical innovators, praising the album's structural risks—like abrupt shifts and spoken-word interludes—as evidence of her command over global influences without diluting her Catalan heritage.[15] Critics noted the causal authenticity in this fusion, where traditional palmas and guitar motifs causally underpin modern beats, yielding resonant emotional payoffs in songs like "Saoko" and "Chicken Teriyaki," which demonstrate her ability to evoke personal introspection amid sonic chaos.[17] The album's praise extended to its lyrical vulnerability, with NPR lauding it as a "complex treatise on fame" that uses fragmented narratives to mirror the disorientation of celebrity, grounded in Rosalía's lived experiences rather than contrived personas.[56] Atwood Magazine emphasized the avant-garde sampling and contrapuntal interpretations as a brilliant reflection of global cultural synthesis, pushing boundaries in a manner empirically validated by subsequent Grammy recognition for Best Latin Rock or Alternative Album on February 5, 2023.[57][58] This acclaim underscores Motomami's merits in prioritizing artistic integrity over commercial conformity, with reviewers consistently citing its replay value and influence on emerging hybrid styles in Latin music.[59]Criticisms and Shortcomings
Some reviewers critiqued Motomami for its lack of structural cohesion, arguing that the album's eclectic genre shifts—spanning reggaeton, bachata, trap, and electronic elements—create a fragmented listening experience that prioritizes experimentation over unified narrative flow. Music critic Anthony Fantano described this as the album's "fragmentary nature occasionally work[ing] against it," suggesting that abrupt transitions disrupt momentum despite individual track strengths.[60] Pitchfork echoed this by noting that the "collage of styles" underpinning the 16 tracks risks appearing "messy" on paper, potentially undermining deeper emotional resonance for audiences expecting tighter integration akin to Rosalía's prior releases.[20] Others pointed to an over-reliance on contemporary urban trends, such as dembow rhythms and Latin trap beats, as diluting originality in favor of market-driven eclecticism. A review in Klang Magazine characterized the project as a "self-indulgent postmodern exercise in transcultural music making" that achieves "superficially authentic" results through ironic borrowing, rather than pioneering synthesis.[29] Tracks like "Bizcochito" and "Chicken Teriyaki" drew specific ire for lacking substantive depth amid their high-energy production, functioning more as fleeting "bangers" than integral components.[20] In Spain, regional detractors, including flamenco traditionalists, expressed concerns that Motomami's pivot toward global pop idioms dilutes the cultural purity of Rosalía's flamenco-rooted origins, interpreting the shift as a concession to international trends over heritage preservation. This backlash, documented in outlets like The Guardian, reflects resistance to artistic evolution, even as Rosalía's documented training at flamenco academies and collaborations with purists like Chiqui de la Línea substantiate her foundational expertise in the form.[8][61]Commercial Performance
Motomami debuted at number 33 on the Billboard 200 chart in the United States, accumulating 17,000 equivalent album units during its first tracking week ending March 24, 2022, comprising primarily 14,000 streaming equivalent albums from 19.37 million on-demand streams of its tracks.[6] The album simultaneously entered at number one on the Billboard Top Latin Albums and Latin Pop Albums charts, reflecting strong performance within Latin music metrics despite modest overall crossover appeal.[6] Internationally, Motomami achieved number-one positions on charts in Spain and Italy, while reaching the top ten in seven countries across 22 chart entries in 19 territories.[62] In Spain, it topped the PROMUSICAE albums chart for six consecutive weeks, bolstered by Rosalía's domestic fanbase and promotional efforts.[63] On streaming platforms, the expanded edition MOTOMAMI + has surpassed 3.2 billion total streams on Spotify as of October 2025, driven significantly by viral singles such as "Despechá," which contributed to heightened global listenership in Latin markets.[64] Pure album sales totaled over 155,000 units worldwide, with equivalent units emphasizing streaming dominance over physical or download formats.[63] This performance underscores reliance on pre-release hype from Rosalía's prior success with El Mal Querer and social media virality, though it lagged behind contemporaneous Latin releases like Bad Bunny's Un Verano Sin Ti in U.S. mainstream penetration.[65]Accolades and Recognition
Major Awards Won
Motomami won Album of the Year at the 23rd Annual Latin Grammy Awards on November 17, 2022, marking the first time a woman secured the category twice.[5] The album also claimed Best Alternative Music Album, Best Engineered Album (credited to engineers Chris Gehringer, Jeremie Inhaber, and Manny Marroquín), and Best Recording Package at the same event, reflecting peer recognition for its sonic innovation and production quality amid entries from artists like Bad Bunny and Jorge Drexler.[5] At the 65th Annual Grammy Awards on February 5, 2023, Motomami received the award for Best Latin Rock or Alternative Album, outperforming competitors including Gaby Moreno's X Mí (Vol. 1) and Iseo & Dodosound's Roots.[66] In the 2022 Billboard Latin Music Awards, held on September 29, 2022, Motomami took Latin Pop Album of the Year, surpassing nominees such as Sebastián Yatra's Dharma.[67] These victories, drawn from voter-driven processes by the Latin Recording Academy and Billboard's chart-based criteria, affirm the album's technical and commercial standing in Latin music genres.[67][5]Year-End and Retrospective Lists
Motomami topped Rolling Stone's list of the 50 best Spanish-language albums of 2022.[68] It ranked third on NPR Music's 50 best albums of the year, behind Beyoncé's Renaissance and Bad Bunny's Un Verano Sin Ti.[69] The album also placed first on Variety's best albums of 2022.[70] Pitchfork included Motomami in its 50 best albums of 2022, praising its genre-spanning intimacy and form experimentation, though it did not secure the top spot amid competition from acts like The Smile and Big Thief.[71] Aggregated year-end list rankings positioned it highly, with first-place finishes in outlets like Gaffa (Sweden) and Les Inrockuptibles, reflecting broad critical validation of its innovative fusion of reggaeton, bachata, and electronic elements.[72] However, some reviewers noted its fragmentary structure occasionally diluted cohesion, tempering perceptions of it as an unqualified masterpiece.[60] In 2025 retrospectives, Motomami continued to receive acclaim for redefining pop through personal themes of transformation and sexuality, as highlighted in analyses marking its influence ahead of Rosalía's subsequent Lux project.[73] Sustained streaming data underscored this regard, with the album surpassing 3.2 billion Spotify streams by July 2025 and accumulating over 3.26 billion total by October, maintaining daily plays exceeding 1 million.[65] These metrics, alongside placements like eighth on Pitchfork's best albums of the 2020s so far, affirm its enduring critical and commercial traction despite initial debates over hype versus substance.[74]| Publication | Year-End Ranking (2022) |
|---|---|
| Rolling Stone (Spanish-Language) | 1[68] |
| NPR Music | 3[69] |
| Variety | 1[70] |
| Pitchfork | Included in top 50[71] |
Controversies
Cultural Appropriation Claims
Critics accused Rosalía, a white Catalan from Spain, of cultural appropriation in Motomami for incorporating elements of reggaeton, dembow, and Dominican slang, genres originating in Latin American contexts like Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic, without lived experience in those communities.[75][76] The track "Saoko," which opens the album with the phrase "saoko, papi, saoko" derived from Dominican dembow rhythms, drew particular ire for allegedly commodifying working-class Black and Latino urban traditions for a global audience, echoing broader debates on European artists profiting from postcolonial genres.[76][77] Latin American commentators, including some Puerto Rican reggaeton enthusiasts, framed this as a form of neocolonialism, arguing that Spain's historical role in Latin America's colonization disqualifies Rosalía from authentically claiming these sounds, regardless of linguistic overlap.[75][78] Defenders countered that such claims overlook the pan-Hispanic continuum, where Spain shares the Spanish language and mutual musical influences with Latin America, including reggaeton's early adoption in Spain via migration and media since the 2000s.[75] Rosalía's production involved custom beats crafted with collaborators like El Guincho and Latin-origin producers, rather than untransformed copies, and her flamenco training—rooted in a genre itself blending Romani, Moorish, and Andalusian elements—demonstrates a history of hybridity rather than exploitation.[79][13] In a March 2022 press conference, Rosalía described cultural mixing as a natural evolution, citing her childhood exposure to Latin rhythms through family and asserting that rigid boundaries hinder artistic progress across shared linguistic spaces.[80] These arguments emphasize empirical exchange—evidenced by reggaeton's global spread and cross-pollination with Spanish trap—over ideological gatekeeping, noting that similar fusions by Latin artists in Europe face less scrutiny.[75] The debate subsided without formal repercussions, but it highlighted tensions in Hispanic music markets, where European Spaniards like Rosalía achieved commercial dominance—Motomami topping charts in Spain and Latin America—prompting questions about privilege without disproving the validity of transnational borrowing in genres defined by adaptation.[75][79] Critics' focus on her whiteness often ignored verifiable originals, such as bespoke dembow patterns not lifted intact from source material, suggesting the accusations prioritize identity politics over causal analysis of innovation.[78]Authenticity and Regional Backlash
Flamenco traditionalists have criticized Rosalía's evolution in Motomami toward urban genres like reggaeton and trap as a dilution of flamenco's core authenticity, viewing the album's eclectic fusions as disconnected from the art form's historical Romany (gitano) roots in Andalusia.[81][17] Despite Rosalía's training in flamenco and her Catalan origins—outside the genre's primary geographic and ethnic associations—purists argued that her commercial pivot prioritized global pop appeal over preservation of unadulterated cante jondo traditions.[82] This perspective frames her work as an outsider's commodification, echoing earlier debates on whether non-Romany artists can legitimately innovate within flamenco without eroding its cultural specificity.[8] In Spain, media and public discourse amplified regional tensions, with some outlets portraying Motomami's stylistic departure as Rosalía abandoning her Iberian heritage for Latin American urban sounds, accusing her of cultural rootlessness amid her international success.[83] Catalan language advocates, already sensitive to linguistic purity, extended prior criticisms of her "Spanishisms" in vernacular expressions to the album's multilingual slang, interpreting it as a concession to broader Spanish nationalism over distinct regional identity.[84] These reactions often intertwined artistic choices with political undercurrents, such as Rosalía's perceived ambiguity on Catalan independence, fueling narratives that prioritized nationalistic conformity over experimental freedom.[85] Such backlash overlooks flamenco's own history of adaptive evolution, incorporating jazz, rock, and other influences since the 20th century to sustain vitality, suggesting Motomami's hybrids represent continuity rather than rupture. Empirical indicators of acceptance include the album's number-one debut on Spanish charts and platinum certification, reflecting widespread domestic embrace despite vocal purist dissent.[86][87] This commercial dominance underscores that audience preferences, driven by accessible innovation, prevail over gatekept orthodoxy in assessing cultural legitimacy.Legacy
Influence on Music and Artists
Motomami's innovative fusion of flamenco roots with reggaeton, hyperpop, hip-hop, and electronic production techniques exemplified a hybrid style that gained traction in Latin pop, encouraging broader genre experimentation among Spanish-speaking artists post-2022.[12][73] The album's emphasis on transcultural elements, such as integrating Caribbean rhythms with ambient electronics, aligned with a rising trend in Latin music toward defying rigid genre boundaries, as observed in the modernization of traditional sounds by subsequent releases.[29] Its commercial metrics further amplified this shift, with Motomami+ becoming the first album by a Spanish artist to exceed 3 billion Spotify streams by early 2024, and accumulating over 4 billion global streams within two years of release, demonstrating sustained demand for experimental non-Anglo pop.[88] This success coincided with a 16% increase in global royalties from Spanish-language music in 2025, highlighting the album's contribution to the globalization of Latin genres beyond reggaeton and trap dominance.[89] Critics have noted that while Motomami's influence on hybrid styles is evident in its award precedents for innovative Latin works, claims of direct causation on peers may be overstated amid concurrent rises by artists like Bad Bunny and Karol G, whose trajectories emphasized urban fusions independently.[90] Nonetheless, its pre-Lux era role in validating electronic experimentation in Spanish-language production provided a blueprint for boundary-pushing, with ongoing streaming plays reflecting enduring ripples in the genre.[4][91]Impact on Rosalía's Career Trajectory
Motomami, released on March 18, 2022, marked a pivotal escalation in Rosalía's ascent to global superstardom, transitioning her from a flamenco-influenced innovator to a multifaceted pop force capable of headline international tours and major award contention.[92] The album's blend of reggaeton, bachata, and experimental production not only garnered widespread critical praise but also secured victories at the 23rd Latin Grammy Awards, including Album of the Year and Best Alternative Music Album, affirming her production prowess and artistic evolution.[5] This recognition, coupled with two Grammy nominations—including a win for Best Latin Rock or Alternative Album at the 65th Annual Grammy Awards in 2023—bolstered her credentials in competitive global markets.[93][58] The ensuing Motomami World Tour, spanning July to December 2022 across Europe and the Americas, underscored her commercial viability, grossing $30.4 million from 440,703 tickets sold over 45 reported shows and reaching a cumulative audience of nearly two million.[94][95] These financial and logistical successes provided resources for heightened creative autonomy, enabling risks like self-production and genre fusion that defined the album's raw, introspective core—elements rooted in her processing of fame's isolating effects.[9] This momentum directly facilitated a mature pivot, as Motomami's exposure of personal fragilities—evident in tracks interrogating vulnerability amid stardom—informed the conceptual groundwork for her subsequent work.[96] By October 20, 2025, Rosalía announced Lux, her fourth studio album set for November 7, 2025, via Columbia Records, featuring orchestral collaborations with the London Symphony Orchestra, Björk, and others, signaling a shift toward symphonic experimentation and thematic depth.[97][98] While Motomami amplified her peak visibility, its stylistic boldness drew scrutiny in traditionalist sectors, including Spanish regional purists, occasionally tempering universal acclaim but ultimately reinforcing her trajectory as an uncompromised boundary-pusher rather than constraining it.[99]Track Listing
All tracks are written by Rosalía, except where noted, and produced primarily by Rosalía, El Guincho, and Tainy.[3]| No. | Title | Featured artist(s) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | "Saoko" | |
| 2 | "Candy" | |
| 3 | "La fama" | The Weeknd |
| 4 | "Bulerías" | |
| 5 | "Chicken teriyaki" | |
| 6 | "Hentai" | |
| 7 | "Bizcochito" | Tokischa |
| 8 | "G3 N15" | |
| 9 | "Motomami" | |
| 10 | "Sola" | |
| 11 | "Cúúúuate" | |
| 12 | "La Tocma" |
Personnel
Rosalía provided lead vocals, background vocals, and served as a producer and arranger across all tracks of Motomami.[103] [3] Her primary collaborator, El Guincho (Pablo Díaz-Reixa), co-produced every track and contributed to writing, instrumentation including bass, drums, keyboards, and synthesizers.[103] [3] Additional producers included Noah Goldstein (bass, synthesizer, drums), Michael Uzowuru (drums, drum machine), Dylan Wiggins (bass, drums, keyboards, synthesizer, piano), Pharrell Williams (drums, percussion, drum machine), Sky Rompiendo (drums), Tainy (bass, drums), and James Blake (background vocals, drums, keyboards, synthesizer, piano).[103] Guest vocalists featured The Weeknd on "La Noche de Anoche" and Tokischa on "Chicken Teriyaki."[103] Other contributors encompassed background vocalists such as Caroline Shaw, Q-Tip, and Samueliyo Baby; instrumentalists including Cory Henry (organ), Roland Gajate Garcia (drums, percussion), and Larry Gold (strings); and a choir from LA Session Singers.[103]| Role | Key Personnel |
|---|---|
| Lead Vocals, Production | Rosalía |
| Co-Production | El Guincho, Noah Goldstein, Michael Uzowuru |
| Featured Vocals | The Weeknd, Tokischa |
| Instrumentation | Dylan Wiggins, Pharrell Williams, James Blake, Tainy |
Charts
Weekly Charts
Motomami topped the Spanish PROMUSICAE albums chart upon release, maintaining the number-one position for six consecutive weeks.[104] In the United States, it debuted at number 33 on the Billboard 200, marking Rosalía's first entry on that ranking. The album reached number 3 on the Billboard Top Latin Albums chart.[6] It also debuted at number 1 on the Billboard Latin Pop Albums chart, where it remained in the top 5 throughout its run and accumulated 175 weeks by late 2024, surpassing many comparable Latin pop releases in longevity.[105][6]| Chart (2022–present) | Peak position | Weeks charted |
|---|---|---|
| Spain (PROMUSICAE) | 1 | — |
| US Billboard 200 | 33 | — |
| US Top Latin Albums (Billboard) | 3 | — |
| US Latin Pop Albums (Billboard) | 1 | 175 |
| Portugal (AFP) | 1 | — |
Year-End Charts
In Spain, Motomami ranked second on Promusicae's annual albums chart for 2022, based on combined physical and digital sales data.[106] It also topped the vinyl albums year-end list in the same market, underscoring strong format-specific demand amid a 12% overall growth in recorded music revenues.[107] The album's sustained appeal persisted into 2023, securing second place on Promusicae's vinyl year-end chart, as streaming and physical formats continued to drive consumption.[108] Globally, Motomami contributed to Rosalía's status as the most-streamed Spanish-language artist on Spotify in 2022, with her overall streams increasing over 110% year-over-year, though specific album rankings in platforms like Spotify Wrapped emphasized individual tracks over full releases.[109] This longevity highlighted the record's enduring streaming performance beyond initial release peaks, with tracks maintaining playlist traction into subsequent years.Certifications
| Region | Certification | Certified units/sales | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mexico (AMPROFON) | Platinum + Gold | 210,000 | [110] |
| United States (RIAA) | Gold | 500,000 | [111] |