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Born in Pereira, Colombia,
Lucrecia Dalt has carved out a distinctive space in contemporary music. Her trajectory from civil engineer to sound artist began while working at a geotechnical company in Medellín, where she discovered computer-based music production—a revelation that completely redirected her life and creative focus.
After her first recordings appeared through Colombian collective
Series, Dalt contributed to
Monika Enterprise's 4 Women No Cry compilation in 2008, marking her entrance into the international music scene. Following moves from Medellín to Barcelona and finally to Berlin, her sound evolved through increasingly abstract territories. Her early solo albums
Commotus (2012) and
Syzygy (2013) released on
Human Ear Music explored surrealist tendencies through electronic foundations, while
Ou (2015) on
Care of Editions further refined her experimental approach through intricate sound worlds.
With
RVNG Intl., Dalt released a trilogy of works—
Anticlines (2018),
No era sólida (2020), and
¡Ay! (2022)—each expanding her sonic palette and conceptual depth.
¡Ay! particularly connected with critics and listeners, earning recognition from The Wire magazine as album of the year and top ten inclusions in Pitchfork, New York Times, and NPR’’s year’s best. During this period, Dalt also ventured into television film scoring, composing the original score for the HBO series
The Baby (2022), and more recently the critically acclaimed
On Becoming a Guinea Fowl (2024) and forthcoming psychological horror
The Rabbit Hole (2025), bringing her distinctive sound design to narrative contexts.
Now Dalt returns with
A Danger to Ourselves, her most personal and sonically ambitious work to date. While her past albums explored character-based narratives and outer world entanglements, this thirteen-track collection turns decisively inward. The album grew from fragmentary notes Dalt scribbled during tours and the early days of a new relationship—intimate thoughts later transformed into musical compositions in January 2024.
Working closely with percussionist
Alex Lázaro, Dalt built pieces that generate musicality through the interplay of bass lines, beats, and textural details rather than conventional melodic structures. Songs like "divina" move fluidly between Spanish and English through elastic soundscapes and mesmerizing sound collage, while "hasta el final" takes a different approach with its more direct string arrangements. Throughout the album, Dalt pushes beyond her earlier lo-fi approaches toward a newfound clarity where both voice and instrument emerge with greater presence and detail.
A Danger to Ourselves features a rich collaborative cast, with
David Sylvian joining as co-producer and guitarist on select tracks. Vocal contributions from
Juana Molina, Camille Mandoki, and
Eliana Joy appear throughout, while the instrumental landscape is shaped by
Cyrus Campbell on upright and electric bass and
Chris Jonas on saxophone.
The album title comes from Sylvian's lyrics in "cosa rara," reflecting themes of life's fragility, love's oscillations, and the desire for liberation from everyday patterns toward more meaningful inner experiences. Mastered by
Heba Kadry in NYC,
A Danger to Ourselves represents both a culmination of Dalt's previous work and a new direction—a space where her sonic explorations converge into something intimate yet expansive, personal yet universally resonant.