“Typically I want I didn’t really feel a lot,” says Mon Laferte. “On a traditional day, I in all probability discover myself crying 10 totally different occasions. I get up, stroll into my backyard, and abruptly I really feel every thing: the sky, the clouds, a butterfly. I discover magnificence even in a rubbish dump. I begin making up tales: who threw that vacant bottle? What was he desirous about when he drank from it? I’m at all times romanticizing issues. And now that I’ve a child boy, my sense of marvel has elevated as a result of I get to see actuality via his eyes.”
It’s a stunning sunlit afternoon in Tepoztlán, one hour away from Mexico Metropolis, the place that the enduring Chilean chanteuse calls residence now that she’s a global star—some of the prestigious artists in Sony’s Latin roster. Via the Zoom connection, I see her smiling, surrounded by home windows and vegetation. At 42, Laferte seems to be beautiful sporting a darkish cap and rose-colored lipstick, a spider tattoo on her neck, her skinny wavy eyebrows the epitome of class. There’s a faint glimmer of disappointment in her eyes as she speaks in Spanish in regards to the exhausting depth that informs her days.

“I take a number of drugs,” she says. “Not too way back, I used to be recognized with bipolar dysfunction. The drugs have compressed my tendency to really feel, however they assist me focus. I nonetheless stay my life intensely. The medication helps me realign these forces. Issues are a bit extra orderly now.”
Connecting a temper dysfunction with distinctive creative acumen is much from revelatory, however Laferte’s newest album is the right instance of a phenomenally gifted girl who turns her obsessions and psychological wounds into artifacts of unfathomable magnificence.
Titled Femme Fatale, her tenth LP is a bonfire of melodrama—a gothic idea album in garish technicolor that fuses the torch track aesthetic of ’50s jazz with the gravitas of orchestral bolero, tawdry South American balada, a contact of Boris Vian decadence, and a touch of journey hop noir.
She has additionally taken just a few steps within the path of mainstream success. The engineering and manufacturing requirements on Femme Fatale are high notch, and the album consists of high-profile options by like-minded divas Nathy Peluso, Silvana Estrada and Natalia Lafourcade.
Surprisingly, the collaborations—together with one with Argentine pop-rock sensation Conociendo Rusia—pale compared to the solo tracks. Her voice is volcanic, sometimes berserk, but in addition soothing and intimate on the proper moments. Till she broke via in 2015 along with her majestic fourth album, Mon Laferte, Vol. 1, there merely wasn’t one other artist like her in Latin music—a cosmopolitan mashup of La Lupe and Lana del Rey.
“She’s such a drive of nature,” says Chilean guitarist Sebastián Aracena, a frequent collaborator. “Completely indomitable. Work along with her, and it’s a must to give up to the method. On this album, which is extremely autobiographical, she tried to deal with many of the course of herself. She addresses the daddy who deserted her, and the cases of sexual abuse that she suffered. Working along with her is an natural expertise. She’ll give me some notes, describe the sound that she needs, I’ll begin taking part in, we’ll do a loop, and she or he sings the melody on high.”

“I’ve discovered to search out pleasure and poetry in completely every thing, and there’s a hazard in that,” provides Laferte. “I could also be deep contained in the shittiest state of affairs, and I begin saying to myself: I may flip this into gold, like an alchemist. I may remodel the ache into music and snort at it, take a look at it from the surface such as you would a ravishing portray. I may even get to get pleasure from this. I’m no masochist, however my creative persona can spot a chance within the disaster.”
She has additionally made waves by her unflinching depiction of sexuality, daring to give attention to the sort of uncooked intimate particulars that make most individuals uncomfortable. On the slyly titled “Mi Hombre” (My Man), she describes with glee a poisonous relationship involving a lover who sleeps with three different girls when he’s not gaslighting or beating her up. The backdrop is all Blue Velvet perversion: Aracena’s lacerating electrical guitar set towards a mattress of brushed drums whereas Laferte luxuriates in her personal singing.
On “Las Flores Que Dejaste En La Mesa”—in all probability the report’s most devastating observe—she imagines her ex having intercourse with different individuals earlier than abruptly interpolating: “typically you remind me of my father.”
“Considering gives the last word diploma of freedom,” she laughs. “I bear in mind being mad at my mom once I was younger, and deciding to cuss at her in my thoughts, having fun with the truth that she would by no means discover out. I like being mischievous with my lyrics. I like writing the issues that we take into consideration however are by no means daring to vocalize. I think about individuals listening to my songs and blushing a bit of, or deciding to not play to them when different individuals are current, as a result of it will really feel too awkward.”
It’s the music, in fact, that amps up the acute nature of her lyrics. And Laferte is unquestionably a extremely educated listener. On the title observe, she sings a line (“llevo el caos de promesa con mis labios”), phrasing it similar to Billie Vacation would—a acutely aware tribute. “La Tirana,” her duet with Nathy Peluso, is a model new track, however it brings to thoughts the Tite Curet Alonso bolero of the identical title made well-known by Cuban powerhouse La Lupe in 1968. And the sultry spirit of “Cry Me A River” hitmaker Julie London permeates the album’s jazzier moments.
I ask her when it was that she found the luxurious terrain of James Bond film themes and Peggy Lee torch ballads.

“I grew up listening to music that was heavy on drama, like Edith Piaf and Lola Flores,” she remembers. “I bear in mind there was a radio present on Sundays, and my Mother would report it on her cassette deck. That’s how I received into Julie London and Brenda Lee. Their stuff was romantic and contemplative, however on the identical time you had these highly effective females with hearth of their voice. Later I listened to every thing, from Juan Gabriel to Radiohead.”
Laferte will spend most of 2026 touring the songs of Femme Fatale within the U.S. and Latin America. However don’t anticipate her to spend any time resting on her laurels.
“I don’t give myself the liberty to sit down down and revel in my accomplishments,” she says. “I get a bit of caught on the standard of the work. I don’t know precisely how I’m going to do that, however I anticipate my subsequent report to be a lot better than this one.”
