Everything You Need to Know About Berghain
Rosalía’s fourth album LUX is about to drop, and it might just be her most transcendent move yet. Out November 7, 2025, the record sees the Spanish icon trade Motomami’s revved-up chaos for orchestral ecstasy and a touch of divine drama.
On the album cover, Rosalía appears before a pale blue background, draped in pure white like a futuristic nun. Once again, she flirts with religious symbolism, but this time it’s woven into a lush fusion of spirituality, mysticism, and sacred pop theatrics. With the London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Daniel Bjarnason, LUX unfolds across 18 tracks in four acts, a cinematic odyssey through transformation and transcendence.
The lead single, “Berghain,” named after Berlin’s most infamous club, refuses to play by any pop rules. Pulsing electronics collide with orchestral swells and a near-liturgical choir. Joined by Björk and Yves Tumor, Rosalía crafts a multilingual fever dream in Spanish, English, and German, a trinity of tongues that turns club culture into cathedral worship.
And perhaps her recent connection to German actor Emilio Sakraya inspired her to dig deeper into the country’s pop and underground scenes, a gentle cultural crossover that now echoes through her music.
If Motomami was body, LUX is spirit. And Berghain? That’s the sermon you didn’t know you needed,