Natalia Lafourcade's alter ego takes center stage in ‘Cancionera'
She had always worn her heart on her sleeve through her lauded career, but with 'Cancionera,' Lafourcade finally felt she was able to stop holding back, lean into the 'spirit of play' and showcase all her multitudes on her 12th studio album, out Thursday.
'Cancionera (the character) challenged me and asked, 'Who are you, really?' 'Who do you think you are?' and 'Are you much more than what you tell yourself? I mean, if you are who you think you are, because, in reality, you are many different things. So it opened up huge possibilities,' said Lafourcade, whose answers have been translated from Spanish. 'Cancionera' translates to 'singer' in English.
Lafourcade, who has four Grammys and 18 Latin Grammys to her name, felt it was time to step into Cancionera's duality and the varied energies: 'earthly energy, volatile energy, romantic energy … they all became a part of her world, and I didn't want to interrupt as they began to manifest,' she said.
The 14-track album transports listeners within the trifold theatrical walls of the Golden Age of Mexican cinema — an era spanning the 1930s to the 1950s when the Mexican film industry cemented its role as a dominant force across Latin America and received international acclaim, creating stars like Pedro Infante and Maria Félix and introducing surrealist styles of filmmaking.
'This album is full of symbolism, inspired by the surrealism of Mexico and the values of our tradition and iconography. I wanted to honor the songs and the path of the cancioneras and cancioneros of life,' said Lafourcade via email.
From the very beginning, with the inviting complex string arrangement of 'Apertura Cancionera' ('Opening'), the album sends listeners on their own cinematic journeys as the jewel-toned red curtain ascends to reveal the black-and-white screen.
'It led me to think of characters, like the ones we saw in the movies, like (Mexican actor) Tin Tan, and these surreal worlds of lots of tropicality, music crafted by Agustín Lara,' said Lafourcade. But she says this is her own interpretation of those characters, inspired by the language and stories of everyday life in Mexico.
Lafourcade has paid homage to Lara in the past: She recorded her own interpretation of the Mexican composer's most notable works on her 2012 album 'Mujer Divina: Homenaje a Agustín Lara' ('Divine Woman: An Homage to Agustín Lara'). 'Cancionera' revisits some of Lafourcade's past stripped-down work as a singer-songwriter with acoustic tracks like 'Como Quisiera Quererte' ('How I Would Like to Love You'), featuring El David Aguilar.
The album was coproduced by Adan Jodorowsky, who also produced Lafourcade's Grammy-winning 'De Todas Las Flores' ('Of All the Flowers'). Lafourcade recorded the album in one take on analog tape alongside collaborators like Aguilar, Hermanos Gutiérrez, Israel Fernández, Diego Del Morao, Gordon Hamilton and Soundwalk Collective.
This was Lafourcade's chance to explore the duality of her artistic self and her alter ego. She created the visual assets for the album in tandem with her unique recording process, which pushed her to express herself through other creative media, like painting and movement.
'This opened my view and my heart to be more sensitive to the things around me. I began to understand the story behind 'Cancionera,'' said Lafourcade. 'Things started to happen, like I started to paint. It unblocked a lot at a creative and imaginative level'.
A constant throughout Lafourcade's music is her roots in Veracruz, the same Mexican state Lara was from. Veracruz, known for its thriving arts and culture scene, infuses the entire album and naturally evokes itself through songs like 'Cocos en la Playa' and 'La Bruja' ('The Witch'), a reimagined version of a folk song made popular in the region.
'I love everyday life in Mexico. I love the markets and the streets; I love its nights. I love its clandestine spaces and its characters … Mexico is full of beautiful things. Strong things, dark things and luminous things. There's so much duality,' said Lafourcade. 'It's all reflected in the lyrics, in the music.'
Fans of Lafourcade will be able to experience the recording artist's alter ego on the 'Cancionera' tour, which kicks off Thursday in Xalapa, Mexico, and runs through October. The recording artist will tour throughout the United States, Canada and Latin America, along with stops in Spain.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Post
an hour ago
- New York Post
Adam Sandler reveals ‘painful' reason why he had to rewrite ‘Happy Gilmore 2'
We'll miss you, Chubbs. Carl Weathers was set to reprise his role as Derick 'Chubbs' Peterson in the upcoming sequel to 'Happy Gilmore' before he died at age 76. 'We had a painful change. Carl Weathers had a massive part,' Adam Sandler, 58, revealed in a new interview with Collider. 'I would talk to Carl, and we were excited, and then Carl passed away.' 8 Carl Weathers, Adam Sandler in 'Happy Gilmore.' Getty Images 'We had to rewrite a lot of the stuff, and even what the story was,' the comedy actor continued. 'We made a lot of nice references to how great Chubbs was in the movie. That was the biggest change.' In 1996's 'Happy Gilmore,' Weathers played the golf mentor to Sandler's Happy Gilmore. Sandler told Collider that Chubbs had a bigger part in the sequel when they were drafting the initial scripts. 8 Adam Sandler in 'Happy Gilmore 2.' AP 'In the first version that we came up with, he had a son,' Sandler revealed of Weathers' character. 'He was coming back to me a lot in my dreams, and he had a son who was mad at Happy for causing the death of daddy.' 8 Adam Sandler, Julie Bowen, Christopher McDonald, and Rich Eisen promote 'Happy Gilmore 2' at Netflix Tudum 2025. Getty Images for Netflix 8 Christopher McDonald and Adam Sandler in 'Happy Gilmore 2.' AP Weathers died of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease in Feb. 2024, seven months before the sequel started shooting. 'A true great man. Great dad. Great actor. Great athlete,' Sandler wrote on Instagram in his tribute to Weathers at the time. 8 Adam Sandler as Happy Gilmore and Carl Weathers as Happy's coach, 'Chubbs' Peterson, in 'Happy Gilmore.' 'So much fun to be around always. Smart as hell. Loyal as hell. Funny as hell,' Sandler continued. 'Loved his sons more than anything. What a guy!! Everyone loved him. My wife and I had the best times with him every time we saw him. Love to his entire family and Carl will always be known as a true legend.' Earlier this year, 'Happy Gilmore 2' director Kyle Newacheck acknowledged the sequel wouldn't be the same without Weathers. 8 Carl Weathers at the NBC Universal winter press tour in 2017. AFP via Getty Images 'You can't make Happy Gilmore without Chubbs Peterson, it doesn't exist,' Newacheck, 41, told Collider. 'You can be assured his spirit is throughout the film. He may not be by Happy's side anymore, but he's on his shoulder.' 8 Adam Sandler in 'Happy Gilmore.' ©Universal/courtesy Everett While filming 'Happy Gilmore,' Weathers suffered a serious injury that caused him back pains for the rest of his life. 'I didn't tell anyone because, you know, I'm tough, man,' he recalled to GQ in 2020. 'Yeah I hurt my back and actually, to this day, it still really bothers me, because it was right on the spine.' 8 Carl Weathers attends 'The Mandalorian' premiere in LA in 2019. The 'Rocky' star explained that he got hurt during a 'blind fall' stunt and his body 'got trapped' by two stunt bags that crushed on his spine. 'I felt the pain and the burning sensation immediately,' he said. 'But again, I'm an athlete, I'm tough, I'm an actor, let's keep going.' Netflix's 'Happy Gilmore 2,' also starring Julie Bowen, Christopher McDonald, Ben Stiller, Bad Bunny and Benny Safdie, debuts Friday.


USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
Ellen DeGeneres confirms Trump provoked UK move: It's 'just better'
Ellen DeGeneres is making a rare political comment regarding the motivation behind her move from the United States – and it's about President Donald Trump. The former talk show host, in her first public event since leaving the U.S., confirmed Trump was the catalyst for her move with wife Portia de Rossi to the English countryside, according to the BBC and the Guardian. "We got here the day before the election and woke up to lots of texts from our friends with crying emojis, and I was like, '(Trump) got in,'" DeGeneres said during a conversation event in South West England on Sunday, July 20. "And we're like, 'We're staying here.'" DeGeneres and de Rossi bought a house in Cotswolds, England, in 2024, following her Last Stand…Up Tour, according to the outlets. The couple had originally planned for the home to be a "part-time house" where they would spend three to four months out of the year, but made the move permanent after the 2024 election. "It's clean. Everything here is just better – the way animals are treated, people are polite. I just love it here," she added. DeGeneres joined fellow comedian Rosie O'Donnell in a move from the U.S. post-Trump election. O'Donnell announced in late 2024 that she had moved to Ireland, and her comments regarding her exit have reignited her longstanding feud with Trump. Donald Trump threatens to revoke longtime foe Rosie O'Donnell's US citizenship In a Truth Social post July 12, Trump said that "because of the fact that Rosie O'Donnell is not in the best interests of our Great Country, I am giving serious consideration to taking away her Citizenship." The president does not have constitutional power to revoke citizenship. In response, O'Donnell posted a picture of Trump and convicted pedophile Jeffrey Epstein, asking if he is "rattled again? 18 years later and I still live rent-free in that collapsing brain of yours." Rosie O'Donnell slams Donald Trump as 'tangerine Mussolini' as feud escalates And in November, Eva Longoria revealed she no longer lives in America full-time, telling Marie Claire in an interview: "I'm privileged. I get to escape and go somewhere. Most Americans aren't so lucky. They're going to be stuck in this dystopian country, and my anxiety and sadness is for them." Contributing: Jay Stahl, Edward Segarra and Anna Kaufman


USA Today
2 hours ago
- USA Today
The Coldplay concert affair captivated the internet. But is it time to move on?
Unless you are living under a rock, you've likely heard the news about that recent Coldplay concert. When a kiss-cam panned to two concert-goers in a loving embrace, only for them to try and quickly conceal their identities. The internet (and journalists) found them quickly – employees at data tech company Astronomer, one whom is the CEO and has since resigned. The incident sparked many online and offline conversations and memes. Were the two having an affair? Didn't they know they'd eventually get caught? Why would they risk going out in public together? Is this the first time a jumbotron exposed an affair, let alone at a Coldplay concert? Posts on X included: "Sorry I can't, I'm busy liking all the Coldplay affair tweets I missed today because I was at my stupid job." "The seemingly infinite unfolding lore of the Coldplay affair couple has kept me entertained for an entire morning." Then again, others noted that these are real people. They have real lives and face real consequences. The CEO resigned over this, after all. Maybe it's time to move on. Media and psychology experts say it's not uncommon to obsess over others' cringey moments and mistakes because it makes us feel better about ourselves. It's a phenomenon called schadenfreude − when we find pleasure, joy and satisfaction in others' troubles, failures or pain − that ultimately reveals more about us than them. "There seems to be a narrative thread that we like watching people make this climb to wealth and status," Robert Thompson, founding director of the Bleier Center for Television and Popular Culture at the Newhouse School of Public Communications Syracuse University, previously told USA TODAY. "But once they actually get there, one of the only narrative threads left is to watch them fall. And we do get a lot of schadenfreude pleasure out of that if you look at a lot of the examples of stories we tell." But it's worth pausing and reflecting before letting your gossip session spiral too far. More details: Astronomer CEO Andy Byron resigns after viral Coldplay concert 'Kiss Cam' video 'Endless repeating cycle of controversy' There's another psychological theory beyond schadenfreude, called "social comparison," that can explain our love for this drama, Elizabeth Cohen, associate professor at West Virginia University, previously told USA TODAY. Downward social comparison is when you consume media solely to look down on others, a behavior that tends to dominate the social media landscape. 'Social media activity is an endless repeating cycle of controversy, outrage and our sacred right to say whatever we want about whoever we want with no consequences,' David Schmid, an associate professor of English at the University at Buffalo, previously told USA TODAY. 'Once we've chewed (a person) up and spat them out, we'll move to someone else, and so it goes on, ad nauseam, at a pace dictated by our ever-shrinking attention span.' In case you missed: TikTok of couple caught on camera at Coldplay concert goes viral. The internet is determined to find 'cheaters.' Why? 'Our desire and hunger for [celebrity culture] never ends' Some gossip is inevitable. Everyone spends part of their day being unproductive – it's OK if yours involves gossiping about celebrities, even the social media kind. When it comes to celebrity culture, "our desire and hunger for it never ends," said Erica Chito Childs, the Interim Ruth and Harold Newman Dean of the School of Arts and Sciences at Hunter College. But people are better off focusing their energy on positive rather than negative messaging. "When you're engaging more of this hypercritical speculation on people's lives, who you don't even know, whether it's celebrities, or it's your neighbors, it's having the same impact," Chito Childs explained. "It's a negative thing." But this type of speculation won't stop as long as social media and celebrity culture remains intact. The same goes for those who turn into celebrities overnight in viral videos. "Being a celebrity means carrying a giant target on your back for people's psychological projections," W. Keith Campbell, an expert on narcissism, personality, and cultural change, previously told USA TODAY. "Sometimes those can be great but sometimes those can be really negative." Contributing: Katie Camero