Alt Folk / musique du monde / musique traditionnelle mexicaine

FIJM | Natalia Lafourcade Ignites a Place des Arts Gone Mexican

by Michel Labrecque

It’s become a cliché, but sometimes clichés just come to life. All you had to do was stroll through the corridors of Salle Wilfrid-Pelletier to understand and hear that the majority of the 3,000 spectators were Spanish-speaking, most of them Mexicans, who had come to listen to one of their artists who best embodies the soul of this great country.

Natalia Lafourcade was back at FIJM for the second year running, but with a radically different concert. In 2024, she presented her album De Todas Las Flores, accompanied by a group of brilliant musicians. This time, for her Cancionera tour, the title of her most recent album, she presented herself alone, with an amplified classical guitar and a bottle of Mezcal on a small table—just to be a singer.

Natalia Lafourcade is an exceptional artist. She always takes unpredictable paths. The album Cancionera, which I reviewed in our pages, is a highly polished album, with some fifteen musicians, which modernizes traditional Mexican and Latin styles in a very subtle way. But, in this ultra-intimate concert, Lafourcade largely abandons this album, keeping at most two pieces, and offers us in exchange a mix of songs that sum up her career, as well as traditional songs from her country.

I confess: at first, I was surprised, as I love the highly sophisticated arrangements that Lafourcade and her director, Adan Jodorowsky, make as a group. But, like the vast majority of the audience, I was won over by this stripped-down concert, which gave way to the voice, soul and emotions of this extraordinary artist, who was awarded the Jazz Festival’s Antonio-Carlos Jobim Prize for her contribution to “world” music at the end of the concert.

Whether with the songs “De Todas Las Flores,” “Pajarito Colibri,” “La Soledad y el Mar,” “Mexicana Hermosa,” or with her reinterpretations of “La Llorona,” “La Bamba” and “Cucurucu Paloma,” Natalia Lafourcade took us deep into Mexican culture and her home region of Veracruz, and shared it with the crowd, encouraging everyone to sing along. The longer the concert went on, the more people sang around me.

Her classical guitar playing sometimes reminded me of Texan Willie Nelson or Uruguayan Jorge Drexler, with whom she often collaborated. Her playing filled the musical space very well. And that voice! It seems to me that it’s becoming more confident, more assertive, more emotional.

Natalia Lafourcade also spoke to us, largely in Spanish, about her love for Mexico, the sea and solitude, “which sometimes gives great ideas, but also terrible thoughts.” This tour is also a way for her to celebrate her 40th birthday, a sort of time for taking stock.

Natalia Lafourcade loves her country, its culture and landscapes, but she’s also aware of its problems and inequalities. She reminded us of this when she finished her concert with “El Derecho de Nacimiento,” a song written in 2012 in support of a student movement for greater social justice.

Natalia Lafourcade is whole and complete. A concentrate of soul! And the audience returned the favour.

We’ll be back tonight for a second concert.

Photo credit: Émanuel Novak-Bélanger

Publicité panam

Latest 360 Content

Steve Reich – Traveler’s Prayer

Steve Reich – Traveler’s Prayer

London Philharmonic Orchestra – Tania Leon : Horizons; Raices (Origins); Stride; Paisajes

London Philharmonic Orchestra – Tania Leon : Horizons; Raices (Origins); Stride; Paisajes

Andrew Staniland – The Laws of Nature

Andrew Staniland – The Laws of Nature

Cyrille Dubois, etc. – Bizet : les mélodies

Cyrille Dubois, etc. – Bizet : les mélodies

Presence autochtone 2025 | Whales Without Borders

Presence autochtone 2025 | Whales Without Borders

Présence autochtone | Maori, Aboriginal, and Inuit incantations for whales

Présence autochtone | Maori, Aboriginal, and Inuit incantations for whales

Osheaga 2025 | Inji? A Bombshell!

Osheaga 2025 | Inji? A Bombshell!

Festival de Lanaudière | Tristan and Isolde as the finale… transcendental!

Festival de Lanaudière | Tristan and Isolde as the finale… transcendental!

Osheaga 2025 | Ears Tuned in to Mark Ambor

Osheaga 2025 | Ears Tuned in to Mark Ambor

Osheaga 2025 | Royel and Otis, Australia’s new darlings

Osheaga 2025 | Royel and Otis, Australia’s new darlings

Osheaga 2025 | The Beaches, The Beaches, everyone on the beach at the foot of the… Mountain

Osheaga 2025 | The Beaches, The Beaches, everyone on the beach at the foot of the… Mountain

Osheaga 2025 | Cage the Elephant Unleashed

Osheaga 2025 | Cage the Elephant Unleashed

Osheaga 2025 | Olivia Rodrigo, glitter and pop-rock to close the show

Osheaga 2025 | Olivia Rodrigo, glitter and pop-rock to close the show

Osheaga 2025 | Jamie xx is Making Waves

Osheaga 2025 | Jamie xx is Making Waves

Osheaga 2025 | Suit and tie, dance punk, British rock… The Dare

Osheaga 2025 | Suit and tie, dance punk, British rock… The Dare

Osheaga 2025 | Amaarae, Ghana/USA Universal

Osheaga 2025 | Amaarae, Ghana/USA Universal

Festival de Lanaudière | A Lanaudière magic named Nagano

Festival de Lanaudière | A Lanaudière magic named Nagano

Osheaga 2025 I Tyler, The Creator, Imperial despite the rain and fatigue

Osheaga 2025 I Tyler, The Creator, Imperial despite the rain and fatigue

Osheaga 2025 I Kaleo, Nordic Power

Osheaga 2025 I Kaleo, Nordic Power

Osheaga 2025 I PyPy is Weapons-Grade Synth Punk

Osheaga 2025 I PyPy is Weapons-Grade Synth Punk

Osheaga 2025 I Doechii: Queen of the Swamp

Osheaga 2025 I Doechii: Queen of the Swamp

Osheaga 2025 I An Invitation from Lucy Dacus

Osheaga 2025 I An Invitation from Lucy Dacus

Osheaga 2025 I The Alex Warren phenomenon arrives in town

Osheaga 2025 I The Alex Warren phenomenon arrives in town

Osheaga 2025 I Good Neighbours, these ideal neighbours

Osheaga 2025 I Good Neighbours, these ideal neighbours

Subscribe to our newsletter