Remi Chauveau Notes
Rosalía’s early work with Kejaleo on Alaire captured flamenco’s duende colliding with jazz fusion, revealing the roots of her boundary‑breaking artistry.
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Kejaleo – Alaire: Rosalía’s Early Flamenco-Jazz Project

20 December 2025
@bailafm Esta es RosalĂ­a en 2012 con el grupo 'Kejaleo', del que formĂł parte durante un tiempo como vocalista. ÂżSabĂ­ais que asĂ­ empezĂł a ganar experiencia en el mundo de la mĂșsica? #rosalia #kejaleo #curiosidadesmusicales ♬ sonido original - baila.fm

On the Edge of Fusion: RosalĂ­a Before the Storm

The song “Al Filo” stands as a vivid emblem of that formative moment, where flamenco’s raw duende collided with jazz’s improvisational freedom. Performed by ROSALÍA’s youthful voice alongside Jordi Franco, Roger Blavia, Cristo Fontecilla, Diego CortĂ©s, and Xavi Turull, the track captures the sensation of living “on the edge”—both musically and emotionally. It shows how RosalĂ­a’s artistry was already stretching tradition into new shapes, foreshadowing the global fusion experiments that would later define her career.

đŸŽ¶ đŸŒŸđŸŽ€đŸ’ƒđŸŽžđŸ„đŸŒ¶ïžđŸ”„âœšđŸŒđŸš€đŸŒčđŸ‡Ș🇾 🔊 Al filo - Kejaleo, ROSALÍA, Jordi Franco, Roger Blavia, Cristo Fontecilla, Diego CortĂ©s, Xavi Turull



Before Rosalía became a global icon, she lent her voice to Kejaleo, a daring flamenco‑jazz collective.

Their 2013 album Alaire is a hidden gem, weaving tradition and experimentation into a vibrant musical tapestry. đŸŒ¶ïž Origins of Kejaleo

Kejaleo was born from the vision of percussionist Xavi Turull (ex‑Ojos de Brujo), guitarist Diego CortĂ©s, and multi‑instrumentalist Cristo Fontecilla. Their goal was to create a project that honored flamenco’s duende while opening it to jazz improvisation and world rhythms. Soon, bassist Jordi Franco, drummer Roger Blavia, and a young RosalĂ­a joined, completing a lineup that embodied both mastery and risk‑taking. 🌍 The Sound of Fusion

The album Alaire is a sonic journey where flamenco palos meet jazz harmonies, funk grooves, and Latin percussion. Tracks like “Al Filo” showcase RosalĂ­a’s raw, youthful voice soaring over intricate guitar riffs and polyrhythmic beats, capturing the sensation of living “on the edge.” This fusion was not about diluting flamenco but expanding its expressive range, inviting listeners into a dialogue between tradition and modernity. đŸ”„ RosalĂ­a’s Early Footprint

For RosalĂ­a, Kejaleo was a formative stage. Long before El Mal Querer or her reggaeton‑flamenco experiments, she was already testing boundaries, learning to navigate ensemble dynamics, and discovering how her voice could bridge genres. Her presence in Alaire foreshadows the boldness and versatility that would later define her international career. đŸŽ€ Why It Matters Today

Listening to Alaire now feels like uncovering a secret chapter in Spanish music. It’s a reminder that innovation often begins in small collectives, with artists daring to cross lines before fame arrives. For fans of Rosalía, Kejaleo offers a glimpse into her roots; for jazz and flamenco lovers, it’s a thrilling experiment that proves how cultural traditions can evolve without losing their soul.

#Voice đŸŽ€ #Flamenco 💃 #Fusion 🎾 #Passion đŸ”„ #Origins 🚀

Flamenco Fusion Roots

The Raw Duende Insight
When the group recorded “Al Filo”, RosalĂ­a was still a student at the Taller de MĂșsics in Barcelona. She wasn’t yet the front‑and‑center star we know today, but rather part of an ensemble where her voice had to weave into the collective rather than dominate it. That experience shaped her later ability to balance tradition with experimentation—because she learned early on how to listen as much as she sang. In fact, insiders note that her vocal takes on Alaire were deliberately left raw and unpolished to preserve the duende of flamenco, a choice that foreshadowed her later insistence on emotional authenticity even in highly produced pop tracks. This means Alaire isn’t just an early project—it’s a training ground in restraint and collaboration, a side of RosalĂ­a’s artistry that rarely gets mentioned but explains why her later fusion experiments feel so natural.

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