Remi Chauveau Notes
Rosalía’s Lux Tour unfolds as a breathtaking five‑act pop‑opera where baroque imagery, ballet‑like choreography, and cinematic staging merge into a future live experience so immersive and ambitious that Paris is already holding its breath for the moment she finally ignites the Accor Arena stage.
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✨ Rosalía Brings the Lux Tour to Paris Bercy This Week 🎤💅🗼

20 March 2026
@lehuffpostfr Rosalía a ravi ceux qui ne parlent pas espagnol pour le coup d’envoi de son "LUX TOUR" à la LDLC Arena de Lyon #rosalia #luxtour #lux ♬ son original - Le Huffpost

“Strings of Light: The La Perla Reverie”

Waxx and Pomme’s La Perla cover distills the essentials of their ten‑year artistic friendship into a single, intimate gesture: a one‑take acoustic performance released on YouTube to mark the decade since their very first video together. Filmed in their signature stripped‑down style and directed by Raphaël Guichard, the session feels like a quiet return to their beginnings—raw, warm, and unadorned. They present it as a thank‑you to the audience that has grown with them, a nostalgic and tender nod to shared time. Choosing La Perla, one of the most delicate songs from Rosalía’s LUX era, deepens the emotional resonance: their version pares the track down to its melodic core, offering a soft, luminous counterpoint to Rosalía’s more theatrical interpretation.

🎶 💃 🎤 ✨ 🌀 🌌 🎧 🏛️ 🥐🗼 🚇 🎨 🏙️ 🔊 La Perla ( Rosalìa cover ) - Waxx & Pomme




Before Rosalía arrives in Paris, the Lux Tour has already revealed the scale of her new artistic ambition.

What unfolded in Lyon was less a concert than a fully staged vision, confirming that LUX was conceived to live onstage as much as on record.

🌅 A Visionary Opening That Redefines Her Stage Presence

Rosalía opened her Lux Tour in Lyon on 16 March 2026 with a performance conceived as a contemporary opera, blending ballet, living tableaux, and monumental staging. This first show revealed an artist at the height of her creative maturity, capable of transforming an arena into a total theatre. The opening with Sexo, Violencia y Llantas, performed live for the first time, immediately set the tone: dramatic, visceral, and almost cinematic.

🎸 Reinvention at the Core of Rosalía’s Artistic Journey

Since El Mal Querer (2018) propelled her onto the global stage, Rosalía has continuously blurred the lines between flamenco, experimental pop, and electronic music. Motomami (2022) cemented her status as a radical innovator, while LUX—hailed by several outlets as one of the standout albums of 2025—marks a new chapter: more lyrical, more theatrical, and more focused on vocal performance. The Lux Tour offers audiences the first opportunity to experience most of these tracks live.

🎭 A Five‑Act Production Built Like a Contemporary Opera

The concert unfolds across five acts, each with its own aesthetic: baroque costumes, classical‑painting‑inspired tableaux, ballet‑infused choreography, and architectural projections. Rosalía appears alternately as a modern Marie‑Antoinette, a prima ballerina, or a near‑mythological figure. Her reinterpretation of Can’t Take My Eyes Off You, staged like a living portrait, perfectly illustrates this ambition to create a pop opera where each song becomes a scene.

🕺 A Setlist That Bridges New Material and Cult Favorites

The Lyon setlist—expected to be similar in Paris—alternates between LUX tracks (Divinize, Porcelana, La Perla) and fan favourites from Motomami (Saoko, Bizcochito, Despechá). One of the most anticipated moments remains Berghain, already iconic since her BRIT Awards performance, where Rosalía fuses operatic vocal runs with gabber‑techno intensity. A more intimate interlude includes Dios Es un Stalker and CUUUUuuuuuute, before an explosive final act leading to the encore Magnolias.

🌟 Paris Set for Two Nights of High‑Voltage Performance

The upcoming shows on 18 and 20 March 2026 at Accor Arena promise to be among the highlights of the Paris concert season. After a unanimously praised opening night, all signs point to Rosalía delivering performances in Paris that are as spectacular as they are meticulously crafted. For fans, it will be a rare chance to experience LUX in its full theatrical dimension—an evolving, living work shaped by movement, voice, and visual storytelling.

#RosaliaLuxTour 💫 #ParisConcerts 🎤 #LUXEra 🌌 #OperaPop 🩰 #LiveInParis 🔊

Rosalía in Paris

The Hidden Relics of LUX
One of the most intriguing elements of the Lux Tour is a detail almost no one notices on first viewing: each act is built around a different “sacred object” that Rosalía keeps hidden in the scenography, symbolic anchors she used during the album’s creation. In Act I, the white box she emerges from contains a fragment of a broken mirror she kept in her studio while writing LUX, a quiet metaphor for identity shattered and rebuilt. In Act III, the baroque tableau hides a small silver medallion, a discreet homage to her grandmother’s jewelry and the album’s fascination with lineage and inheritance. And in the final act, the spotlight during Focu ’ranni is calibrated to reveal a tiny embroidered motif on her costume, inspired by Catalan liturgical textiles she studied during her research. None of these objects are explained or highlighted; they form a private mythology woven into the show, grounding a high‑tech production in something intimate, tactile, and almost devotional.

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