Rosalia, a Spanish singer, launched her first world tour on Monday, the 'Motomami World Tour,' which will begin on July 6 in Almera and will take her around Spain before heading to Latin America, the United States, and Europe. Tickets for each of the 46 gigs on tour will go on sale this Friday, April 22, at 10:00 a.m. local time on her website in each of the countries she will visit.
Since the dates of some gigs were accidentally revealed, fans have been waiting to watch how the singer adapts her unique and humorous 'Motomami' to the live stage, which has generated a lot of excitement on social media.
Rosalia's new show, which will premiere on July 6 at the Recinto Ferial, will be the first to be seen in Almeria. She will next tour around Spain, stopping in Madrid and Barcelona on July 19 and 20 at the WiZink Center and July 23 and 24 at the Palau Sant Jordi, respectively. The trip will stop in Seville on July 9, Granada on July 12, Malaga on July 14, and Valencia on July 15 (16). The race will then end in Bilbao (July 27), La Coruna (29), and Palma de Mallorca (July 31) (August 1).
Rosalia will also perform three concerts in Mexico: one in Mexico City on August 14, one in Guadalajara on August 17, and one in Monterrey on August 18. (19). She'll also travel to Argentina, Chile, Colombia, the Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico, and Canada. She will perform in a dozen cities across the United States, including Boston, Washington, San Francisco, and Atlanta, as well as a double recital at New York's Radio City Music Hall and Los Angeles' YouTube Theater.
Finally, she will travel to Europe in the final months of the year, where he will perform in Portugal, Italy, Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium, and the United Kingdom before wrapping up the tour in France on December 18.
Rosalia aims to fill venues like the Auditorio Nacional in Mexico City and the Movistar Arena in Bogotá, each of which can house more than 10,000 people, during her tour.
The singer from San Cugat del Vallés has great expectations for her concerts, thanks to the positive response to her experimental album 'Motomami,' in which she blends everything from classic reggaeton to flamenco, boleros, and the rapid-fire manner of American rappers with jazz interludes.
It has topped the charts on platforms like Spotify since its March 18 release, and it has won plaudits from the music press, including the English-speaking press, which has given her album one of the highest average scores of the decade.