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	<title>Björk Archives - KIMU</title>
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		<title>ROSALÍA, Björk &#038; Yves Tumor take us on a cerebral orchestral trip, redefining pop music with epic new opus, Berghain</title>
		<link>https://karlismyunkle.com/2025/10/27/rosalia-bjork-yves-tumor-take-us-on-a-cerebral-orchestral-trip-redefining-pop-music-with-epic-new-opus-berghain/</link>
		
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		<pubDate>Mon, 27 Oct 2025 20:15:31 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[M U S I C + C U L T U R E]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Björk]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ROSALÍA]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Yves Tumor]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>ROSALÍA’s Berghain, featuring Björk and Yves Tumor, is an art ritual. Orchestrated with grandeur and intimacy, it fuses classical majesty with club sensuality. The track&#8230;</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://karlismyunkle.com/2025/10/27/rosalia-bjork-yves-tumor-take-us-on-a-cerebral-orchestral-trip-redefining-pop-music-with-epic-new-opus-berghain/">ROSALÍA, Björk &amp; Yves Tumor take us on a cerebral orchestral trip, redefining pop music with epic new opus, Berghain</a> appeared first on <a href="https://karlismyunkle.com">KIMU</a>.</p>
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<p><strong>ROSALÍA</strong>’s <strong><em>Berghain</em></strong>, featuring <strong>Björk</strong> and <strong>Yves Tumor</strong>, is an art ritual. Orchestrated with grandeur and intimacy, it fuses classical majesty with club sensuality. The track opens her upcoming album <strong>LUX</strong> (out November 7, 2025) and instantly signals a new, transcendent era for the Spanish visionary.</p>



<p>The production, conducted by <strong>Daníel Bjarnason</strong> with the London Symphony Orchestra, is sweeping yet deliberate. Strings swell like breath; choirs chant in German, evoking a liturgical rite:</p>



<p>“Seine Angst ist meine Angst,<br>Seine Liebe ist meine Liebe…”</p>



<p>The arrangement is cinematic &#8211; more requiem than pop single &#8211; where the silence between notes feels as heavy as the orchestral surges themselves. The choir acts as a congregation, grounding the song’s spiritual tone as <strong>ROSALÍA</strong> glides above it, her Spanish vocals cutting through with molten vulnerability.</p>



<p>Singing in Spanish, <strong>ROSALÍA</strong> channels both priestess and siren. Her phrasing moves between whispered reverence and operatic power. It’s emotional, tactile &#8211; her voice trembling against the vast orchestral mass. When <strong>Björk</strong> enters, her ghostly harmonies ripple through the mix like wind in stained glass, amplifying the sacred undertone. Together, they transform <strong><em>Berghain</em></strong> &#8211; the Berlin club of myth &#8211; into a cathedral of ecstasy.</p>



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<p>Then comes <strong>Yves Tumor,</strong> a dark counterweight to all this divinity. Their entrance shifts the song’s axis. Industrial bass pulses beneath Yves’ smoky, intimate growl as they repeat, mantra-like:</p>



<p>“I’ll fuck you till you love me…”</p>



<p>It’s jarring. Uncomfortable. Deliberately so. This raw intrusion fractures the song’s holiness, forcing the listener to confront the thin boundary between desire and devotion, the sacred and the profane. The repetition becomes hypnotic &#8211; less vulgarity, more exorcism.</p>



<p>The accompanying video, directed by<strong> Carlota Guerrero</strong>, visualizes this collision of purity and excess. It opens with <strong>ROSALÍA</strong> in an apartment with the entire orchestra, going to pawn a ring, taking a bus &#8211; again with the orchestra, returning to an almost Alice in Wonderland, Snow White vibe with cute animals, and then the animals crying black tears as <strong>ROSALÍA</strong> curls up in bed with Yves screamalogue. </p>



<p><strong><em>Berghain</em></strong> is not designed for comfort. It’s audacious, haunting, and original &#8211; a piece that stretches the boundaries of pop into something symphonic and unsettling. <strong>ROSALÍA</strong> proves again that she thrives in tension: between light and dark, tradition and chaos, prayer and pleasure. The result feels less like a track and more like a revelation, a three-minute opera for the post-club generation.</p>



<p>We have added <strong><em>Berghain</em></strong> to the top of our New Music Spotlight playlist. </p>



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<p>The post <a href="https://karlismyunkle.com/2025/10/27/rosalia-bjork-yves-tumor-take-us-on-a-cerebral-orchestral-trip-redefining-pop-music-with-epic-new-opus-berghain/">ROSALÍA, Björk &amp; Yves Tumor take us on a cerebral orchestral trip, redefining pop music with epic new opus, Berghain</a> appeared first on <a href="https://karlismyunkle.com">KIMU</a>.</p>
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