New York — A rising Puerto Rican star who struck a chord with a song lambasting US oppression of her homeland is back with a provocative track tackling rape culture and society's machismo.
The singer iLe (pronounced EEE-Lay) -- whose career kicked off as a singer for her brothers' renowned reggaeton rap band Calle 13 -- imbues the traditional Latin bolero style that's often reserved for romance yet with dark, poignant lyrics, calling attention to sensitive issues she says society prefers to ignore.
Speaking in New York ahead of her performance at the festival "Migrations: The Making of America" -- put on by the acclaimed Carnegie Hall -- the edgy balladeer said news of the sexual assault and murder of a Puerto Rican woman inspired her to pen the vulnerable "Temes," which unravels the emotional aftermath of a rape.
It's "a song trying to portray so many things that we go through as women that are very unfortunate," iLe, real name Ileana Cabra, told AFP of the song, whose title translates in English to "You're Afraid."
"It's a struggle that I can't believe that we're still going through -- but it's important to talk about," she said.
"My best way of speaking about it is through music."
The 29-year-old singer who began performing with her superstar brothers as a teenager has since stepped into her own, winning a Grammy for her debut solo album "Ilevitable" that saw her riff on Latin standards.
Now she's repurposing her old-school sultry voice to take on contemporary affairs, first with 2018's "Odio" ("Hate"), which unpacks the colonial relationship between the US and Puerto Rico, and now with the striking "Temes."
The disturbing-yet-dreamlike video for the song opens with the shoes of a man leaving a room as a woman, played by iLe, slowly composes herself, pulling up her underwear and removing ropes from her neck and wrists to reveal raw wounds. — AFP