In a year with no shortage of showgirls in pop music, there’s been a distinct lack of actual drama: the stuff that sends you over the edge, spiraling over a person or memory, whether real or imagined. In Cabaret, Sally Bowles exalts this quality as “divine decadence.” In Spanish, it’s referred to as cortavenas. Mon Laferte now explores the concept with Femme Fatale, a diary of the tortured, fabulous archetype she’s embodied across nine albums. (Laferte even played the role of Sally Bowles in Mexico City this summer.) From her past life as a metal singer turned folkloric, rockabilly solo artist through 2023’s experimental Autopoiética, Laferte’s music has been defined by the extreme. On her latest album, she takes the stage as a jazz singer with a renewed terror for love and hunger for life.
The languorous title track sets the stage, a standard of the old-school jazz mode in which she operates throughout the album. Laferte introduces her passion play, her skill in the art of self-sabotage, and her latest persona as “un poema en letal revolución” (“a poem in lethal revolution”). Her voice cuts through the smoky atmosphere, capable of transforming on a dime from a plea to a snarl. “Tantos años intentando descifrar quién soy/Tal vez soy esa femme fatale” (“So many years trying to determine who I am/Maybe I am that femme fatale.”) Explosive as her emotions are, this particular femme fatale spends a lot of time doing nothing, as on “Otra Noche de Llorar”: She’s bored, smoking a pack a day, spending another night crying. It’s a bouncy, nostalgic arrangement that could land as schmaltz. But in Laferte’s hands, it’s absolutely unhinged, her voice stretching toward a scream as she contemplates what it might be like to get bored of this grief.
