Miguel ‘Caos’ Review

October 24, 2025
3,917 Views


On Caos, the adventurous R&B artist calls on his heritage as he processes our brutal reality

The cover of “RIP,” a recent single off Miguel’s fifth album, Caos, depicts the Danza de los Diablos, or Dance of the Devils, and the album it comes on finds the singer folding allusions to his Mexican roots into a moody, visceral version of his always-ambitious alternative R&B. Miguel kickstarted his career with his adventurous 2012 debut Kaleidoscope Dream, an LP that mixed rock, soul, and psychedelia into a freewheeling sound he’s been nuancing ever since, often in music that’s taken on a moodier, more anxious tone. As its title suggests, Caos is an album for our times. “Life is cold/Cold is pain/And pain, growth,” he says mater-of-factly against a distressed-sounding choir at the LP’s opening.

The album has a political edge that’s previously been present in his music. “El Pleito,” which translates to “the fight,” is one of several moments when he sings in Spanish, addressing the immigrant experience over subdued guitar and dramatic strings. “Government’s playing hunger games,” he sings in a forlorn falsetto on “Angel’s Song,” a meditation on his hopes and worries for his newborn son. Titles like “The Killing,” “New Martyrs,” and “Triggered” evoke our current landscape of fear and violence.

Trending Stories

The music is fittingly unsettled and often quite dire. “Nearsight [SID]” opens with a guitar that sounds like its being played at the bottom of the ocean as Miguel sings about facing up to (and trying to tune out) the challenges and realities of life; “salvation gets bleaker,” he sings, “so let’s make memories tonight,” before the song explodes into speedy, haried punk-rock, as if he’s heading for a cliff. “The Killing” starts in a Jimi Hendrix acid-rock implosion and turns into a creeping evocation of violent obsession. On the broodingly intense “New Martyrs,” he plays a gun-toting outlaw (in 2025, the line “I’ll put this mask on my face” evokes ICE raids as much as bank robbing).

Caos isn’t an easy listen, often fading into a bleary haze and not quite coherently fulfilling the implications of its concept. But coherence isn’t really the point here. This is album about searching for meaning as you try your best to process a world on fire — and it’s a mood that should resonate with any honest listener.



Source link

You may be interested

How the Secret Service is managing America 250 security: “We’re in a heightened threat environment”
Top Stories
shares3,838 views
Top Stories
shares3,838 views

How the Secret Service is managing America 250 security: “We’re in a heightened threat environment”

new admin - Jul 04, 2026

How the Secret Service is managing America 250 security: "We're in a heightened threat environment" - CBS News Watch CBS…

Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce Are Married: Wedding Ceremony at MSG
Music
shares3,561 views
Music
shares3,561 views

Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce Are Married: Wedding Ceremony at MSG

new admin - Jul 03, 2026

[ad_1] Speak now or forever hold your peace: Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce are married! The singer-songwriter and Kansas City…

Iran says millions expected at funeral for former supreme leader
World
shares2,610 views
World
shares2,610 views

Iran says millions expected at funeral for former supreme leader

new admin - Jul 03, 2026

IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.Great Americans: A conversation with Debbie…