Sofía Rei | Artists | GroundUP Music

Sofía Rei

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Sofía Rei Bio

Grammy-nominated vocalist, songwriter, and producer Sofía Rei is an artist whose work lives at the crossroads of tradition and experimentation. Her music is defined by a potent blend of folkloric roots, bold sonic exploration, and a singular vocal presence that moves effortlessly between nuanced intimacy and electrifying power. Drawing from the vast landscape of Latin American traditions and her own deeply personal creative instincts, Rei has forged an artistic identity that is at once timeless, contemporary, and fiercely original.

Born and raised in Buenos Aires, Argentina and based in New York City, Rei has long embraced a fluid artistic path. Her voice—praised by The New York Times, Rolling Stone, DownBeat Magazine, and other leading publications for its beauty and versatility—travels easily across genres. Her career has been shaped by classical training, South American folk music, punk, jazz, experimental music, and electronic soundscapes. A self-described “frog from another pond,” she follows an instinctive trajectory that has carried her from the musical underground of Buenos Aires to performing at prestigious venues and festivals in over 35 countries. Her two appearances on NPR's Tiny Desk series were described as “wildly eclectic” and “a nearly hallucinatory international mix” by The New York Times.

Sofía’s artistic range and curiosity are reflected in collaborations with John Zorn, Bobby McFerrin, Maria Schneider, Mark Ribot, The Klezmatics, Pedrito Martinez, and Susana Baca, among many others.

Her current work is rooted in Folk and Futurism, an expansive artistic vision that explores the relationship between ancestral traditions and forward-looking sonic innovation. This creative framework guides her upcoming album Antónima, to be released in Spring 2026, which continues her exploration of identity, mythology, and musical hybridity.

In addition to her creative practice, Sofía has helped build platforms that celebrate Latin American music and advocate for diversity in the arts, supporting the evolution and global visibility of these traditions. She co-founded collectives such as El Colectivo Sur and Ori-Gen, which brought together Latino artists in the diaspora to foster cultural exchange and expand the presence of South American art on the international stage. She also serves as a Professor at NYU’s Clive Davis Institute, where she teaches a range of courses, including two of her own design: New Perspectives in Latin Music, which explores rhythmic practice and the continent’s stylistic diversity, and The Creative Voice, a vocal improvisation and live looping course focused on experimentation and contemporary vocal performance.

Rei’s projects have received support from institutions including Creative Capital, the New York Foundation for the Arts, Chamber Music America, NALAC, New Music USA, and the Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation. Her work continues to bridge cultural traditions and contemporary innovation, offering audiences a rich, genre-defying musical experience.

Music

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Antónima (2026)

Antónima is the latest album from Grammy nominated vocalist, composer, and producer Sofía Rei, set for release on April 3, 2026 under GroundUp Music. Rooted in Folk and Futurism, the expansive artistic vision that defines her current work, the album explores the meeting point between folk-rooted Latin American traditions and forward looking sonic innovation.

Conceived as a follow up to her critically acclaimed album Umbral, Antónima brings together trailblazing collaborators who have become influential voices in the global Latin and Latin diaspora music scenes. The album features Gaby Moreno (Guatemala and United States), Daymé Arocena (Cuba), Mireya Ramos (Mexico, Dominican Republic, and Puerto Rico), Xenia Rubinos (Puerto Rico, Cuba, and United States), Las Áñez (Colombia), and the Argentine artists Mariana Baraj, Charo Bogarín, and Juana Luna. These musicians are not only celebrated performers but also community leaders, educators, and cultural advocates who embody a forward looking Pan American female identity.

Rooted in Sofía Rei’s deeply personal connection to Latin American traditions, the album combines alternative pop with folk styles, jazz and electronic textures to create a vibrant sound world. Its original songs delve into themes of female empowerment, solitude, migrant identity, political indifference, and the paradoxes of the digital world, a lyrical landscape where ancestral storytelling meets contemporary resonance.

Developed with support from Chamber Music America’s Artistic Projects, New Music USA’s Creators Fund, and the New York Foundation for the Arts Women’s Fund, Antónima stands as both a musical statement and a cultural manifesto. It spotlights a collective of visionary Latin American women creators and affirms their role in shaping the sound of the future.

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