Lux Tour

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Lux Tour
Tour by Rosalía
Promotional poster for the tour
Location
  • Europe
  • Latin America
  • North America
Associated albumLux
Start date16 March 2026 (2026-03-16)
End date16 September 2026 (2026-09-16)
Legs3
No. of shows57
Rosalía concert chronology

The Lux Tour is the fourth concert tour by Spanish singer Rosalía, in support of her fourth studio album, Lux (2025). The tour began on 16 March 2026 in Lyon, France and is scheduled to finish on 16 September 2026 in Miami, United States.

Background

In June 2025, Hits revealed that Rosalía would embark on an arena tour in 2026. It also confirmed that she had signed with September Management and that her new album was expected to be released before the end of the year.[1] On 7 November, 2025, Rosalía released her fourth studio album, Lux, marking her first major release since Motomami (2022). The album became a critical and commercial success, peaking at four on the UK Albums Chart and the Billboard 200. She would later reveal that she had three notebooks with sketches and ideas for the tour, intending for it to represent the "maximalist" and "brutalist" music.[2]

Rosalía announced the tour on 4 December, scheduling forty-two shows across seventeen countries in Europe, North America, and South America from March to September 2026. General sale tickets went on sale on 11 December 2025, with pre-sales available through Live Nation two days earlier.[3] Pre-access to tickets was also given to special cardholders, including Banco Santander, American Express, and Banamex. The tour marks her first ever all-arena tour, making it Rosalía's biggest headlining tour to date.[4][5]

Dancing rehearsals reportedly started in January 2026 in the Poblenou neighbourhood, in Barcelona.

Commercial performance

Ticket sales

Pre-sales for the North American leg began on 9 December 2025. That same day, an additional date was added in Inglewood, Miami, and New York City.[6][7] One day later, new dates were announced in Amsterdam, Mexico City, Guadalajara, London, Rio de Janeiro, and Santiago.[8][9][10] On December 10, two additional dates in Buenos Aires and one date each in Bogotá and Mexico City were added due to high demand.[11][12][13]

Stage design

The stage design of the Lux Tour reflects its maximalist and theatrical concept, in contrast to the minimal staging of her previous tour. The production features two connected performance areas: a main stage and a secondary B-stage. The main stage is semi-circular in shape and dominated by a large white canvas curtain positioned at its center, which opens and closes throughout the show to introduce different acts. This element functions both as a visual centerpiece and as a narrative device.[14] The main stage features a semicircular screen projecting the lyrics of the songs in the official language of the country Rosalía is performing in. She sings in eleven languages during the show, including Mandarin Chinese, Sicilian and Italian.

The secondary stage, positioned within the audience, is arranged in the shape of a Latin cross and houses the live orchestra. The two stages are connected by a long runway that divides the standing area, allowing Rosalía to move between spaces and engage different sections of the audience. This multi-stage layout marks a departure from her previous tours and enables a combination of large-scale and more intimate performances.

The staging incorporates a range of theatrical and religious-inspired elements, including a confessional booth, sculptural props, and a large botafumeiro—a silver incense burner suspended above the stage— which is used during the intermezzo. Additional set pieces include white stair structures and multiple screen displays integrated into the stage design.

Concert synopsis

Rosalía opening the show with "Sexo, Violencia y Llantas"

The Lux Tour is presented as a multi-act, theatrical performance in which the setlist unfolds through a series of visual and stylistic transformations. Its presented as a maximalist show, in contrast with the minimalism of the Motomami World Tour. It is a show "build for arenas". The show opens with an orchestral overture played by The Heritage Orchestra, which whilst conducted by Yudania Gómez Heredia accompanies the singer during the show, playing from Stage B, which is arranged in the shape of a Latin cross.[15] The Lux Tour is structured in four acts plus an intermezzo, each with distinct staging, costumes, and choreography by celebrated French dance collective (La) Horde, who brought ten dancers to accompany Rosalía throughout the show.[16] It is the first show of Rosalía to have more than one stage and to include costume changes.[17]

"Angel" by Jimi Hendrix backs the entrance of the orchestra. A white canvas opens to Rosalía emerging from a large box, dressed as a ballet dancer. Act I starts with "Sexo, Violencia y Llantas," —the opening track on Lux— followed by "Reliquia," and "Porcelana".[18] During the set, she maintains this ballet-inspired image, performing controlled, minimal choreography under soft lighting that evokes religious iconography. This tone becomes more overtly devotional in “Divinize”, in which the dancers adapt a 1941 performance by Ruth St. Denis. For "Mio Cristo Piange Diamanti," Rosalía covers her body with a white layer.[19]

The atmosphere shifts abruptly at the beginning of Act II. Starting with "Berghain," Rosalía adopts a darker persona, accompanied by harsher lighting, electronic arrangements, and horned costume that resembles El Aquelarre, the 1798 painting by Francisco de Goya. Her dancers wear a ruff around their neck, historically associated with Renaissance and Elizabethan fashion.[20] A part of the Conrad Taylor remix of "Berghain" plays at the end, similar to the Brit Awards performance.[21] Rosalía wear a Marie Antoniette-like wig during "Saoko", which is followed by two other Motomami songs: "La Fama" and "La Combi Versace". [22] She later performs an extended version of "De Madrugá", slightly revamping the choreography used during El Mal Querer Tour. The canvas closes again and premieres the following act.

Act III starts with an orchestral version of "El Redentor", the only song to be performed off her debut record Los Ángeles (2017). The show continues with a cover of Frankie Valli's "Can't Take My Eyes Off You", during which she invites a dozen previously-selected fans to join her onstage to admire her performance as she sings behind a painting frame. The cameras then follow the singer to a confessional in which a fan or celebrity tells her a story about an ex-partner, a practice that has been previously seen in shows like Sabrina Carpenter's 2022 tour. Rosalía returns onstage and dedicates "La Perla" to the person's ex-partner. During the performance, Rosalía dresses in white clothing and black evening gloves that contrast with the dancers'. Journalists saw resemblances in Eva Green's performances in Bernardo Bertolucci's The Dreamers (2003).[23] The performance is choreographed by Dimitris Papaioannou, the artistic director of the opening and closing Ceremonies of the 2004 Summer Olympics.[24] Rosalía interacts with the audience and drinks a glass of wine to perform "Sauvignon Blanc", performed at the piano with Llorenç Barceló. [25] She then performs "La Yugular" to a floor camera that sees her through a glass.

An intermezzo is performed alongside the orchestra at the show's B-Stage. It begins with "Dios Es Un Stalker", which is sung alongside the audience as Rosalía walks toward the B-Stage. This is followed by "La Rumba del Perdón" and "Cuuuuuuuuuute". During the performance of the latter one, a botafumeiro a giant thurible in the Santiago de Compostela Cathedral, deeply ingrained in Galician culture swings above the stage.[26]

Rosalía wears angel wings during Act IV, which starts with the dancy tracks "Bizcochito" and "Despechá". She goes on to perform the LP and CD-exclusive tracks "Novia Robot" and "Focu 'Ranni", running around the stage. During the end of "Focu 'Ranni", the singer climbs a stair, extends her arms and then falls backwards off the top of the structure. The canvas closes again to later reveal the encore, in which Rosalía sings "Magnolias" in a more stripped-back and reflective manner. She disappears into the dust and heaven lights and leaves the stage.

Critical reception

Europe

The European leg of the tour received positive reviews from critics. Attending the March 18 show at the Accor Arena, Violaine Schütz of Numéro magazine wrote that "Once again Rosalía succeeded in reinventing the pop concert, breaking new ground with a hybrid show blending theatre, opera, performance, mass, installation and contemporary dance. Using raw materials like white sheets, wood, cardboard, she managed to infuse poetry, humanity and craftsmanship into a large-scale performance. The orchestra, placed in the middle of the pit, added a lyrical dimension to the whole production".[27] The two concerts at London's O2 Arena in May were highly acclaimed, with numerous publications awarding 5/5-star reviews.[28] NME described the May 5 show as a "breathtakingly brilliant work of art", while Alexis Petridis of The Guardian proclaimed the tour as "one of the boldest, most highbrow arena shows in pop history" and wrote that "It's a remarkably visceral experience, partly down to the fact that the disruptive electronic elements of the songs’ arrangements bombard the audience at astonishing volume – you can literally feel them in your ribcage – but mostly down to Rosalía's voice. It’s not so much her way with an operatic flourish or ability to hit a high B flat, impressive though that is, but how emotionally powerful her vocals are: all the virtuosity in the world can’t account for her ability to break your heart with the fragility of "Divinize" or to send it soaring with the climax of "Mio Cristo Piange Diamanti"".[29]

Set list

This set list is from the 15 April 2026, concert in Barcelona, Spain.[30] It is not intended to represent all concerts for the tour.

Act I

  1. "Sexo, Violencia y Llantas"
  2. "Reliquia"
  3. "Porcelana"
  4. "Divinize"
  5. "Mio Cristo Piange Diamanti"

Act II

  1. "Berghain"
  2. "Saoko"
  3. "La Fama"
  4. "La Combi Versace"
  5. "De Madrugá"

Act III

  1. "El Redentor"
  2. "Can't Take My Eyes Off You"
  3. "La Perla"
  4. "Sauvignon Blanc"
  5. "La Yugular"

Intermezzo

  1. "Dios Es un Stalker"
  2. "La Rumba del Perdón"
  3. "CUUUUuuuuuute"

Act IV

  1. "Bizcochito"
  2. "Despechá"
  3. "Focu 'Ranni"

Encore

  1. "Magnolias"

Notes

  • During the show in Lyon, Rosalía performed "La Noche de Anoche" between "CUUUUuuuuuute" and "Bizcochito".[31]
  • Rosalía ended the show in Milan after "De Madrugá" due to food poisoning.[32]
  • During the shows in Lisbon, Rosalía performed "Memória" alongside Carminho between "La Rumba del Perdón" and "CUUUUuuuuuute".[33]
  • Until the second show in Barcelona, "Novia Robot" was performed between "Despechá" and "Focu 'Ranni".[34]

Confessional segment

During Act III, Rosalía incorporates a recurring confessional segment before "La Perla". In the segment, the singer enters a confessional booth and speaks with a selected guest, who takes the role of a penitent and recounts a humorous or chaotic story about love, dating, or an ex-partner. The exchange leads into the performance of "La Perla", which Rosalía dedicates to the person described in the confession. The segment extends the tour's religious and theatrical imagery while adding an improvised, city-specific element to each show.[35][36] As of 18 June 2026, the following guests had appeared during the confessional segment. Guests for future shows have not been announced.[37]

Date City Guest
16 March 2026 Décines-Charpieu Unidentified fan[38]
18 March 2026 Paris LYAS[a][39]
20 March 2026 Paris Salome Topuria[40]
30 March 2026 Madrid Esty Quesada[41]
1 April 2026 Madrid Métrika[42]
3 April 2026 Madrid Aitana[43]
4 April 2026 Madrid Shannis[44]
8 April 2026 Lisbon Marcelo Wang[45]
9 April 2026 Lisbon Kika Nazareth[46]
13 April 2026 Barcelona Yolanda Ramos[47]
15 April 2026 Barcelona Guitarricadelafuente[48]
17 April 2026 Barcelona Bad Gyal[49]
18 April 2026 Barcelona Rojuu[50]
22 April 2026 Amsterdam Giulia Stabile[51]
27 April 2026 Antwerp Jennifer Heylen[52]
29 April 2026 Cologne Rachel Marx[53]
1 May 2026 Berlin Najwa Nimri[54]
5 May 2026 London Lola Young[55]
6 May 2026 London Cara Delevingne[56]
13 June 2026 Toronto Benito Skinner[57]
16 June 2026 New York City Maggie Rogers[58]
17 June 2026 New York City Marcello Hernández[59]
20 June 2026 Chicago Jocelyn Zamudio[60][61]
23 June 2026 Houston Harper Watters[62]
27 June 2026 Paradise TBD
29 June 2026 Inglewood TBD
1 July 2026 Inglewood TBD
3 July 2026 San Diego TBD
6 July 2026 Oakland TBD
16 July 2026 Bogotá TBD
18 July 2026 Bogotá TBD
24 July 2026 Santiago TBD
25 July 2026 Santiago TBD
27 July 2026 Santiago TBD
29 July 2026 Santiago TBD
1 August 2026 Buenos Aires TBD
2 August 2026 Buenos Aires TBD
4 August 2026 Buenos Aires TBD
6 August 2026 Buenos Aires TBD
10 August 2026 Rio de Janeiro TBD
11 August 2026 Rio de Janeiro TBD
15 August 2026 Tlajomulco de Zúñiga TBD
16 August 2026 Tlajomulco de Zúñiga TBD
19 August 2026 Monterrey TBD
22 August 2026 Mexico City TBD
24 August 2026 Mexico City TBD
26 August 2026 Mexico City TBD
28 August 2026 Mexico City TBD
29 August 2026 Mexico City TBD
3 September 2026 San Juan TBD
9 September 2026 Orlando TBD
14 September 2026 Miami TBD
16 September 2026 Miami TBD

Tour dates

List of 2026 concerts
Date (2026) City Country Venue Attendance Revenue
16 March Décines-Charpieu[b] France LDLC Arena 13,831 / 13,831 $1,329,053
18 March Paris Accor Arena
20 March
22 March Zurich Switzerland Hallenstadion 13,862 / 13,862 $1,854,655
25 March Assago[c][d] Italy Unipol Forum
30 March Madrid Spain Movistar Arena
1 April
3 April
4 April
8 April Lisbon Portugal MEO Arena
9 April
13 April Barcelona Spain Palau Sant Jordi
15 April
17 April
18 April
22 April Amsterdam Netherlands Ziggo Dome
23 April
27 April Antwerp Belgium AFAS Dome
29 April Cologne Germany Lanxess Arena
1 May Berlin Uber Arena
5 May London England The O2 Arena
6 May
11 June Boston United States TD Garden
13 June Toronto Canada Scotiabank Arena
16 June[e] New York City United States Madison Square Garden
17 June
20 June Chicago United Center
23 June Houston Toyota Center
27 June Paradise[f] T-Mobile Arena
29 June Inglewood[g] Kia Forum
1 July
3 July San Diego Pechanga Arena
6 July Oakland Oakland Arena
16 July Bogotá Colombia Movistar Arena
18 July
24 July Santiago Chile Movistar Arena
25 July
27 July
29 July
1 August Buenos Aires Argentina Movistar Arena
2 August
4 August
6 August
10 August Rio de Janeiro Brazil Farmasi Arena
11 August
15 August Tlajomulco de Zúñiga[h] Mexico Arena VFG
16 August
19 August Monterrey Arena Monterrey
22 August Mexico City Palacio de los Deportes
24 August
26 August
28 August
29 August
3 September San Juan Puerto Rico José Miguel Agrelot Coliseum
9 September [i] Orlando United States Kia Center
14 September [j] Miami Kaseya Center
16 September [k]

Personnel

Credits adapted from the tour book.

Show
  • Rosalia Vila – lead vocals
  • Claudia Lachispa – backup vocals
  • Aroa Fernández – backup vocals
  • The Heritage Orchestra – orchestra
  • Yudania Gómez – orchestra conductor
  • Llorenç Barceló – piano
  • Paula Tato – dancer
  • Antonie Van der Linen – dancer
  • Ibai Jiménez – dancer
  • Jal Joshua – dancer
  • Donnie Duncan – dancer
  • Luca-Andrea Lino – dancer
  • Toon Lobach – dancer
  • Giulia Stabile – dancer
  • Fatoubah – dancer
  • Juan Vicente – dancer
  • Joaquín Ruiz – dancer

Didde-mie Lykke – dancer

  • Celeste Cancel – dancer

Crew

  • Rosalia Vila – creative direction
  • Pilar Vila – creative direction, tour management
  • (La)Horde – choreography direction
  • Charm La'Donna – choreography direction
  • Dimitris Papaioannou – choreography on "La Perla"
  • Vito Giotta – choreography assistant
  • Samuel Vázquez – choreohraphy assistant
  • José Maya – flamenco consultant
  • Pilar Tobella – tour management
  • Diana Lizalde – tour management
  • Nuria Tobella – tour management
  • Terrivle Studio – stage direction
  • Studios Dennis Vanderbroeck – stage design consultant
  • Ann Demeulemeester – clothing
  • Antonio Velasco – clothing
  • Maison Vivascarrion – clothing
  • Les Fleurs Studio – clothing

Notes

  1. Identified by LOS40 as Elias Medini.
  2. Labelled as Lyon in promotion material.
  3. Labelled as Milan in promotion material.
  4. Rosalía ended the show mid-setlist due to food poisoning.[63]
  5. The 16 June 2026 concert in New York City was originally rescheduled for 18 June 2026 due to New York Knicks possibly contesting 2026 NBA Finals game 6. It was lated rescheduled again, back to its original date
  6. Labelled as Las Vegas in promotion material.
  7. Labelled as Los Angeles in promotion material.
  8. Labelled as Guadalajara in promotion material.
  9. The 9 September 2026 concert in Orlando was originally scheduled for 8 June 2026, but was rescheduled due to due a family emergency.
  10. The 14 and 16 September 2026 concerts in Miami were originally scheduled for 4 and 6 June 2026, but were rescheduled due to due a family emergency.
  11. The 14 and 16 September 2026 concerts in Miami were originally scheduled for 4 and 6 June 2026, but were rescheduled due to due a family emergency.

References

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  2. Sancho, Xavi (9 November 2025). "Rosalía: 'I've been preparing for this all my life'". El País English. ISSN 0213-4608. Retrieved 10 December 2025.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
  3. Rojas, Ana (4 December 2025). "Rosalía Announces LUX World Tour 2026: USA Dates and How to Buy Tickets". Los 40. United States: PRISA. Retrieved 4 December 2025.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
  4. Skinner, Tom (4 December 2025). "Rosalía announces massive 'LUX' 2026 world tour with dates in UK, Europe, North and South America". NME. United Kingdom: NME Networks. Retrieved 4 December 2025.{{cite magazine}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
  5. Harrison, Scoop (4 December 2025). "Rosalía Announces "LUX Tour 2026"". Consequence. United States: Consequence Media. Retrieved 4 December 2025.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
  6. Almeida, Celia (9 December 2025). "Rosalía Adds Second Miami Date to Her Lux Tour". Miami New Times. Retrieved 10 December 2025.
  7. "Rosalía's Lux World Tour Tickets Are on Sale Now—Here's How to Purchase". ELLE. 11 December 2025. Retrieved 12 December 2025.
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  9. González, Sara (10 December 2025). "Rosalía anuncia nuevas fechas en México: ciudades, fechas y detalles de la venta de boletos de la gira 'Lux'". El País México (in Mexican Spanish). Retrieved 10 December 2025.
  10. Soares (@soareskaa), Kadu (10 December 2025). "Rosalía anuncia data extra da turnê no Rio de Janeiro". Rolling Stone Brasil (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 10 December 2025.
  11. STONE, ROLLING (11 December 2025). "Rosalía agotó tres Movistar Arena en 45 minutos: ¿cuándo es el cuarto y último show?". Rolling Stone en Español (in Spanish). Retrieved 11 December 2025.
  12. Torres, Tania Alejandra Hernández (11 December 2025). "Rosalía agotó la primera fecha en el Movistar Arena de Bogotá y anunció un segundo concierto de su gira 'Lux Tour 2026'". El Tiempo (in Spanish). Retrieved 11 December 2025.
  13. Hernández, Por Xhanat (11 December 2025). "Rosalía anuncia nueva fecha en CDMX tras el éxito de su gira 'Lux Tour'". Publimetro México (in Spanish). Retrieved 12 December 2025.
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  15. Meléndez-Haddad, Pablo (17 March 2026). "Rosalía acerca al gran público la música clásica en el 'Lux tour': tradición y materia contemporánea". El Correo Gallego (in Spanish). Retrieved 17 March 2026.
  16. Baudoin, Nicolas; Hennessy, Ulysse; Lakhal, Abderahman (17 March 2026). "Rosalía's Lux Tour Kickoff: Here's the Full Setlist". Billboard. Retrieved 17 March 2026.
  17. "The 8 Best Moments From Rosalía's Lux Tour Kickoff". Billboard. 17 March 2026. Retrieved 17 March 2026.
  18. Georgi, Maya (17 March 2026). "Rosalía Delivers Stunning Visual Storytelling in 'Lux' Tour Opener". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 17 March 2026.
  19. Cervera, Marta (17 March 2026). "Rosalía, el baile y la puesta en escena del 'Lux tour': de la pureza del ballet al nervio de la danza urbana y contemporánea". El Periódico (in Spanish). Retrieved 17 March 2026.
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  24. Ventura, Alejandro (18 March 2026). "Estos son todos los creadores que participan en el LUX TOUR de Rosalía y tienes que conocer". HIGHXTAR. (in European Spanish). Retrieved 21 March 2026.
  25. Vicente, Álex (17 March 2026). "From saint to raver: Rosalía opens 'Lux' world tour by exploring all her incarnations". EL PAÍS English. Retrieved 17 March 2026.
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  27. Schutz, Violaine (19 March 2026). "Numéro went to Rosalía's unhinged and grandiose opera in Paris". Numéro. Retrieved 3 June 2026.
  28. Daly, Rhian (6 May 2026). "Rosalía live in London: a breathtakingly brilliant work of art". NME. Retrieved 3 June 2026.
  29. Petridis, Alexis (6 May 2026). "Rosalía review – ribcage-rattling riot is one of the boldest, most highbrow arena shows in pop history". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 3 June 2026.
  30. "¿Cuántas canciones ha quitado Rosalía oficialmente del setlist del 'LUX TOUR'?". EuropaFM (in Spanish). 23 April 2026. Retrieved 24 April 2026.
  31. "Setlist del cuarto concierto de Rosalía en Madrid: todas las canciones". EuropaFM (in Spanish). 4 April 2026. Retrieved 6 April 2026.
  32. Guim, Franchesca (26 March 2026). "Rosalía Pulls Plug on Milan Concert Halfway Through Due to 'Food Poisoning': 'I'm Feeling Extremely Sick'". Billboard. Retrieved 6 April 2026.
  33. LOS40 (8 April 2026). "¡Por primera vez en vivo! Rosalía canta "Memória" junto a Carminho y así sonó | Música | LOS40 Chile". LOS40 (in Spanish). Retrieved 9 April 2026.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
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  35. Munsuri, María (17 March 2026). "Rosalía abre su 'LUX TOUR' con una escenografía monumental y un imaginario cargado de referencias históricas". Vogue España (in European Spanish). Retrieved 17 March 2026.
  36. "De un aquelarre al confesionario de 'La Perla': los mejores momentos del primer concierto del 'LUX TOUR' de Rosalía". EuropaFM (in Spanish). 17 March 2026. Retrieved 17 March 2026.
  37. "ROSALÍA Tickets, Tour and Concert Dates". Live Nation. Retrieved 18 June 2026.
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  39. "El confesionario de Rosalía en LUX Tour: todos los famosos que han pasado y sus declaraciones más sorprendentes". LOS40 (in European Spanish). 6 April 2026. Retrieved 18 June 2026.
  40. "De Aitana a Lola Young: Todos los famosos que han pasado por el confesionario de Rosalía en Europa". EuropaFM (in Spanish). 7 May 2026. Retrieved 18 June 2026.
  41. Escartín, Abel Cuartero (31 March 2026). "'Soy una pringada' irrumpe en el confesionario de Rosalía: la surrealista charla que paralizó su concierto en Madrid". La Vanguardia (in Spanish). Retrieved 6 April 2026.
  42. 20minutos | (2 April 2026). "Métrika pasa por el confesionario de Rosalía en el segundo concierto de 'Lux Tour' en Madrid: "Era una perlita"". www.20minutos.es - Últimas Noticia (in Spanish). Retrieved 6 April 2026.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  43. Guim, Franchesca (4 April 2026). "Aitana Joins Rosalía's 'Confessional' to Talk About a Past Love: 'That's Not It, Sister'". Billboard. Retrieved 6 April 2026.
  44. "La confesión de Shannis a Rosalía: "Es mejor irse con una mujer que con un hombre"". EuropaFM (in Spanish). 5 April 2026. Retrieved 6 April 2026.
  45. LOS40 (9 April 2026). "Rosalía interpreta fado con Carminho en su concierto de Lisboa y habla chino en el confesionario con un conocido creador de contenido | Música". LOS40 (in European Spanish). Retrieved 9 April 2026.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  46. "VÍDEO: Kika Nazareth sobe a palco e participa no concerto de Rosalía". Maisfutebol. Retrieved 10 April 2026.
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  48. Medina, Eva Blanco (16 April 2026). "Guitarricadelafuente pasa por el confesionario de Rosalía en la segunda noche del 'LUX Tour' en Barcelona". Vogue España (in European Spanish). Retrieved 3 May 2026.
  49. Pantaleoni, Ana (18 April 2026). "Bad Gyal se confiesa con Rosalía un viernes cualquiera en Barcelona". El País (in Spanish). Retrieved 3 May 2026.
  50. Sánchez, Inés (18 April 2026). "'Rojuu', el primer hombre hetero en el confesionario de Rosalía: 'Yo soy la Perla, conocí al amor de mi vida y ella me quedó grande'". El Periódico (in Spanish). Retrieved 3 May 2026.
  51. "Rosalía sube a una conocida bailarina italiana al confesionario de su concierto en Ámsterdam". EuropaFM (in Spanish). 23 April 2026. Retrieved 3 May 2026.
  52. NWS, VRT (28 April 2026). "Hoe actrice Jennifer Heylen (niet zo toevallig) in de biechtstoel van Rosalía belandde: "Ze ruikt naar de hemel en rozen" | VRT NWS Nieuws". VRTNWS (in Dutch). Retrieved 3 May 2026.
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