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Mon Laferte

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mon Laferte
Mon Laferte in 2020
Born
Norma Monserrat Bustamante Laferte

(1983-05-02) 2 May 1983 (age 41)
Other namesMonserrat Bustamante
Citizenship
  • Chile
  • Mexico
Occupations
  • Musician
  • singer
  • composer
  • painter
Years active2003–present
Spouse
Joel Orta
(m. 2022)
Children1
Musical career
Genres
Instruments
  • Vocals
  • guitar
Labels

Norma Monserrat Bustamante Laferte (born 2 May 1983) better known as Mon Laferte, is a Chilean and Mexican musician, singer, composer and painter. Her musical style is diverse, spanning across different genres such as pop, rock, bolero, cumbia, and salsa, showcasing her versatility and creativity.[2] Throughout the 2010s, she gained widespread recognition for her melodramatic style and "captivating stage persona".[3][4]

With over 1.5 million digital records sold in Latin America between albums and singles, she has established herself as the best-selling Chilean artist of the 21st century. Some of her hits include "Tormento", "Amor completo", "Si tú me quisieras", "Tu falta de querer", "Amárrame," and "Mi buen amor." Laferte has won four Latin Grammy Awards (the most for a Chilean artist), two MTV Europe Music Awards and has been nominated twice for the Grammy Awards. Her 2021-22 Latin America tour and first pregnancy were the subjects of a Netflix documentary, MON LAFERTE, te amo (translated to "Mon Laferte, I love you" in English) scheduled to premiere worldwide on August 1, 2024.[5]

Early life and education

[edit]

Laferte grew up with her mother Myriam Laferte Herrera, her maternal grandmother Norma, and her younger sister Solange, in their hometown of Viña del Mar, Chile.[6] In 1992, at the age of nine, she won first prize in a contest organized by Orlando Peña Carvajal school.[7] She was given a guitar, on which she first began to compose her own songs.[8] At the age of thirteen she got a scholarship to study music for a year and a half at the conservatory in her hometown, although she preferred the self-taught path to the academic one. She honed her skills by playing in bars in Viña del Mar and Valparaiso.[9][10][11]

In August 2007, Laferte emigrated to Veracruz, Mexico. In 2008, she began performing as Mon Laferte.[12] On November 30, 2022, after living and working in Mexico for more than 15 years, Laferte was granted Mexican citizenship.[13]

Career

[edit]

In 2003, Laferte, then known as Monserrat Bustamante, entered the Chilean reality competition series Rojo. That same year, she released her first studio album, La Chica de Rojo. The album had great success in Chile, receiving Gold and Platinum certifications. She became part of the Clan Rojo and was on the television series for four seasons.

In 2007, Laferte decided to start a new chapter in her musical career by moving from Chile to Mexico City, where she began singing in nightclubs and recording cover songs.[14] In 2009, she released a single titled "Lo mismo que yo", which was to be the lead single from an upcoming album.[15] The same year, Laferte was diagnosed with thyroid cancer, effectively putting a halt to her album.[16]

Around the time of her battle with cancer, she abandoned her original stage name and introduced the world to Mon Laferte, expressing that the name represented a new beginning for her:

"Mi cambio de nombre no es por querer ser otra persona, es que las circunstancias de la vida me han llevado a cambiar mucho y sentí que tenía que empezar de cero."[17]

Laferte decided to scrap the album she was recording in 2009, and returned two years later with her second studio album, titled Desechable. The next year, in 2012, she was invited to judge the second season of the Chilean version of The X Factor, called Factor X, along with Karen Doggenweiler, Tito Beltrán and José Luis Rodríguez.

It is also at this time her presentation at the beginning of 2012 as a vocalist of the Mexican heavy metal female band Mystica Girls, with whom in February 2014 she recorded the album titled Gates of Hell.[18][19]

In 2013, she released her third album, Tornasol. She received media attention in 2015 with her single "Tu falta de querer" from the album Mon Laferte, Vol.1. In 2016, she won a MTV Millennial Award for the "Latin Video of the Year"[20] and receiving two nominations on the Latin Grammy Awards of 2016 for Best New Artist and Best Alternative Music Album.

Laferte released her fifth album La Trenza, her most acclaimed album to date, in 2017. Her single with Colombian rock star Juanes, "Amárrame", won the Best Alternative Song award at the 18th Latin GRAMMYs,[21] in which she was also nominated for Best Alternative Music Album, Song of the Year, Album of the Year, and Record of the Year.[22] She also wins the category "Best North Latin Artist" in the 2017 MTV Europe Music Awards.[23][24][25]

In February 2018 she released the single "Antes de Ti" that was nominated to the 19th Annual Latin Grammy Awards as "Song of the Year". The video for the single was also Mon Laferte's directorial debut.[26] In June 2018, she co-hosted the 2018 MTV Millennial Awards in Mexico City at the Mexico City Arena along with the Venezuelan YouTube personality La Divaza.[27] During the year 2018, Mon worked on her sixth studio album, Norma , which was recorded in a single session in studio A of Capitol Studios of Los Angeles, the recording was made in one shot, without using the overdubbing technique of audio layers, but all the instruments playing simultaneously to give the material the feeling of live recording. In this recording 13 musicians participated. The production of this album was in charge of Omar Rodríguez-López, the recording engineer was Bruce Botnick. The album was released on 9 November 2018.

Mon Laferte in 2020

On 26 October, a collaboration was published for the new Christmas album of the American singer Gwen Stefani, in a version of the song "Feliz Navidad" by the Puerto Rican singer-songwriter José Feliciano. At the end of 2018, the international television network HTV nominated Mon Laferte in the "Best Southern Artist" category of the Heat Latin Music Awards 2019.

In January 2019, she was announced to participate in the American Music Festival Coachella. In February 2019, Mon Laferte received her first nomination at the Billboard Latin Music Awards in the Top Latin Albums Artist of the Year category, Female. Also the Album Norma received a Gold record in Mexico for 30,000 copies sold. In May 2019, the singer announced her U.S. tour, under the headline "La Gira de Norma". The first tour date is set for 10 August 2019, in Seattle's Neptune Theatre, following a European tour that same Summer.[28] On 14 November 2019, Mon Laferte made headlines with her act of political protest, exposing her breasts at the Latin Grammys to display the message "En Chile Torturan Violan y Matan" (English translation: In Chile they torture, rape and kill) on her bare chest.[29][30][31]

On 19 November 2019, Laferte was interviewed by Patricia Janiot from Univision. In that interview, Mon Laferte justified the looting and burning of numerous supermarkets and other buildings by saying that "they were only material goods". When asked if she condemned violence, she said, "I do not approve of any kind of violence. Now, if you ask me personally, if I have to go burn down a supermarket that has robbed from me my entire life to demand the basic rights I feel I deserve, I will do it!" She accused the police and armed forces of burning the dozens of subway stations that were burnt by rioters on 18 October 2019.[32]

On 30 November 2019, Laferte was subpoenaed by Chilean prosecutors to give a statement regarding the evidence she may or may not have to support her accusation that Chilean police and armed forces actively participated in the burning of subway stations. Chilean police announced that, depending upon her statement, they might press criminal charges against her.[33] The charges were later dropped.[30]

In 2021, Laferte contributed a cover of the Metallica song "Nothing Else Matters" to the charity tribute album The Metallica Blacklist.[34] In June 2022, she announced her Mexican citizenship during a press conference stating “Llevo 15 años en México, tengo un hijo mexicano, mi pareja es mexicana. Pero esto es hermoso, es la cereza del pastel!” The now Chilean Mexican singer stated that she was happy to have her new nationality since she has called Mexico her home for the past 15 years. During which time she built up and created her career as the persona we now know as Mon Laferte.

Visual arts

[edit]
Mon Laferte at her solo exhibition in Mexico City

On 11 March 2020, she debuted as a visual artist in the solo exhibit entitled Gestures at the Museum of the City of Mexico, containing 76 art pieces. Laferte commented she has painted for ten years as a self-taught artist with some lessons from her father, a painter himself.[35]

In January 2023, she performed for the first time at the Olmué Huaso Festival, returning to the Patagual stage, where she had performed when she was little. On the occasion she was accompanied by the traditional Oaxacan female group Mujeres del Viento Florido in the entirety of her show, playing her greatest hits.[36] At the concert she invited the singer Chabelita Fuentes, with whom she sang "La Enagüita", a classical Chilean tune.[37] She also took the opportunity to sing "Canción sin miedo" by the Mexican singer Vivir Quintana, provoking the admiration of the public.[38]

Personal Life

[edit]

She resided briefly in Los Angeles, CA in 2021. Her husband is musician, Joel Orta, who is a guitarist for the Mexican rock band, Celofán. She and Orta married in October 2022, eight months after the birth of their son. [39] Due to the radiation treatment she received in 2009 for thyroid cancer, she underwent fertility treatments in California in order to conceive her son. Although there are some English-language songs on her album, 1940 Carmen, she does not speak English fluently and instead used Google Translate to write them.[40] She is a feminist and an LGBTQ+ rights activist. [41]

Discography

[edit]

Studio albums

Awards and nominations

[edit]
Award Year Category Nominated work Result Ref.
Billboard Latin Music Awards 2019 Top Latin Albums Artist of the Year, Female Mon Laferte Nominated [42]
Copihue de Oro 2007 Female Artist Monserrat Bustamante Won
2017 Popular/Tropical Group or Singer Mon Laferte Won [43]
Revelation Nominated
2021 Artist of the Decade Won [44]
Grammy Awards 2022 Best Regional Mexican Music Album (including Tejano) Seis Nominated [45]
2023 Best Latin Rock or Alternative Album 1940 Carmen Nominated [46]
2025 Autopoiética Pending [47]
Heat Latin Music Awards 2019 Best Artist Southern Region Mon Laferte Nominated [48]
2020 Nominated [49]
Best Rock Artist Nominated
2021 Nominated [50]
Latin Grammy Awards 2016 Best New Artist Mon Laferte Nominated [51]
Best Alternative Music Album Mon Laferte Vol.1 Nominated
2017 Album of the Year La Trenza Nominated
Best Alternative Music Album Nominated
Record of the Year "Amárrame" (with Juanes) Nominated
Song of the Year Nominated
Best Alternative Song Won
2018 Song of the Year "Antes de Ti" Nominated
2019 Best Alternative Music Album Norma Won
2020 Best Alternative Song "Chilango Blues" Nominated
Best Rock Song "Biutiful" Won
2021 Song of the Year "Que Se Sepa Nuestro Amor" (with Alejandro Fernández) Nominated
Best Regional Song Nominated
Best Pop Song "La Mujer" Nominated
Best Singer-Songwriter Album Seis Won
2022 Song of the Year "Algo es Mejor" Nominated
2023 Best Alternative Song "Traguito" (with iLe) Nominated
2024 Album of the Year Autopoiética Pending
Best Alternative Music Album Won
Record of the Year "Tenochtitlán" Pending
Luces Awards 2019 Concert of the Year Mon Laferte Nominated [52]
MTV Europe Music Awards 2016 Best Latin America North Act Mon Laferte Nominated [53]
2017 Won [54]
2018 Nominated [55]
2019 Won [56]
Musa Awards 2020 Artist of the Year Mon Laferte Won [57]
Song of the Year "Plata Ta Tá" Nominated
Collaboration of the Year "La Danza de las Libélulas" (with Manuel García) Nominated
"Que Se Sepa Nuestro Amor" (with Alejandro Fernández) Nominated
2021 Album of the Year Seis Nominated [58]
Collaboration of the Year "La Mujer" (with Gloria Trevi) Nominated
2023 Video of the Year "Tenochtitlán" Nominated [59]
Natida Awards 2019 Chileno de las Artes Mon Laferte Won [60]
Premios Gardel 2019 Collaboration of the Year "Amor (En Vivo)" (with Los Auténticos Decadentes) Nominated [61]
Premios Juventud 2021 Best Regional Mexican Fusion "Que Se Sepa Nuestro Amor" (with Alejandro Fernández) Nominated [62]
Girl Power "La Mujer" (with Gloria Trevi) Nominated
"Se Portaba Mal" (with Kany García) Nominated
Premios Lo Nuestro 2022 Pop Artist of the Year Mon Laferte Nominated [63]
Premios Pulsar 2018 Artist of the Year La Trenza Nominated [64]
Album of the Year Nominated
Best Pop Artist Won
Song of the Year "Amárrame" Won
Most Listened Song on Chilean Radios Won
2019 Artist of the Year Norma Nominated [65]
Album of the Year Won
Best Pop Artist Nominated
Song of the Year "El Beso" Won
Most Listened Song on Chilean Radios "Amárrame" Won
2020 "El Beso" Won [66]
2022 Album of the Year Seis Nominated [67]
Best Singer-Songwriter Nominated
Best Pop Artist 1940 Carmen Nominated
Artist of the Year Mon Laferte Nominated
Most Listened Song on Chilean Radios "Tu Falta de Querer" Won
2024 Album of the Year Autopoiética Won [68]
Best Singer-Songwriter Nominated
Song of the Year "Tenochtitlán" Nominated
Artist of the Year Mon Laferte Nominated
SHOCK Awards 2016 Best New Artist or Group Mon Laferte Won [69]
Spotify Awards 2020 Most Listened Pop Artist Mon Laferte Nominated [70]
Telehit Awards 2016 Best Rock Artist Mon Laferte Won [71]
2017 Best Pop/Rock Artist Won [72]
Best Act Won
MTV MIAW Awards 2016 Buzz Artist Mon Laferte Won [73]
Collaboration of the Year "Palmar" (with Caloncho) Nominated
Video of the Year "Tu Falta de Querer" Won
2017 Mexican Artist Mon Laferte Won [74]
#Instacrush Nominated
Collaboration of the Year "Amárrame" (with Juanes) Nominated
Video of the Year Nominated
2018 "Antes de Ti" Nominated [75]
Mexican Artist Mon Laferte Nominated
2019 UP WOMEN! Nominated [76]
Mexican Artist Nominated
Video of the Year "El Beso" Won
Music Ship "Amor" (with Los Auténticos Decadentes) Nominated
2021 Mexican Artist Mon Laferte Nominated [77]

Filmography

[edit]
Films
Year Film Role Notes
2006 Rojo, La Pelicula Belén Chilean film
2013 Japy Ending Eli Peruvian film
2024 Mon Laferte, te amo Self Documentary
Television
Year TV series Role
2003–2007 Rojo Fama Contrafama Contestant
2006–2007 El Baile en TVN Singer
2012 Factor X Judge and mentor

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
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  2. ^ Agarzábal, Nicolás (12 August 2018). "Mon Laferte, la chilena que quiere desbancar a Shakira". Clarín.com. Retrieved 16 May 2021.
  3. ^ "Mon Laferte". Musicapopular.cl. Retrieved 10 November 2023.
  4. ^ "Mon Laferte Songs, Albums, Reviews, Bio & More". AllMusic. Retrieved 10 November 2023.
  5. ^ "Mon Laferte and Netflix Announce Their Upcoming Documentary and Premiere Date". About Netflix. Retrieved 17 July 2024.
  6. ^ "La vida antes de Mon Laferte: El largo camino que recorrió Monserrat Bustamante para convertirse en la estrella que es ahora". Theclinic.cl. Retrieved 5 December 2019.
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  8. ^ "El ritmo latino de Mon Laferte". Vogue.mx. 9 June 2017.
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  10. ^ Muñoz, Elisa (29 November 2019). "Mon Laferte: topless y reguetón para que el mundo mire a Chile". Cadena.com (in European Spanish). Retrieved 27 July 2023.
  11. ^ Interview in Dulce Patria. 13 May 2016. Radio Cooperativa.
  12. ^ "El Mercurio | SABADO| Página 9 | sábado, 08 de abril de 2017". 9 September 2018. Archived from the original on 9 September 2018. Retrieved 27 July 2023.
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  18. ^ Valle, Luis Del (15 November 2017). "Tenemos que hablar del no tan oscuro pasado metalero de Mon Laferte". BuzzFeed.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 8 February 2020.
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  27. ^ "Mon Laferte co-host 2018 MTV Millenial Awards". 24Horas.cl. 24 Horas. 2 June 2018. Retrieved 6 June 2018.
  28. ^ Exposito, Suzy (28 May 2019). "Mon Laferte Announces U.S. Headlining Tour". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 28 June 2019.
  29. ^ "Chile protests: Government bows to demands for referendum". Bbc.com. 15 November 2019. Retrieved 9 April 2021.
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  31. ^ Cepeda, Eduardo (15 November 2019). "Mon Laferte Poses Topless on Grammy's Red Carpet in Support of Chile". Remezcla.com. Retrieved 19 March 2022.
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  33. ^ "Carabineros anuncia "acciones civiles y penales" contra Mon Laferte y pide a Fiscalía que cite a cantante tras dichos sobre quema de estaciones de Metro - La Tercera". Latercera.com. Retrieved 9 April 2021.
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  37. ^ "Con guiños a la cárcel de mujeres, a las mamás y homenajes varios: Mon Laferte se luce con emocionante show en el Festival de Olmué". Adnradio.cl (in Spanish). 19 January 2023. Retrieved 27 July 2023.
  38. ^ ""¡Emocionante!": Mon Laferte destacó en Olmué con interpretación de "Canción sin miedo" junto a la agrupación Mujeres del Viento Florido".
  39. ^ "Mon Laferte se casó con Joel Orta, el padre de su hijo: "Hasta el infinito y más allá"". infobae (in European Spanish). 22 October 2022. Retrieved 17 July 2024.
  40. ^ Lopez, Julyssa (29 October 2021). "How Mon Laferte Unlocked a New Honesty in Her Songwriting". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 17 July 2024.
  41. ^ Abache, Melina (15 July 2021). "Mon Laferte que conquistó al mundo con sus canciones para corazones rotos". Vogue (in Mexican Spanish). Retrieved 17 July 2024.
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  65. ^ "Premios Pulsar 2019 ya tienen fecha de entrega: serán en julio". Rock & Pop (in Spanish). 17 June 2019. Retrieved 18 September 2023.
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  77. ^ "Estos son los nominados a los MTV MIAW 2021". Billboard Argentina. Retrieved 7 June 2021.
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