"Di mi nombre" is a song by Spanish singer RosalÃÂa. It was released on 30 October 2018 by Columbia Records as the third single from her second studio album, El mal querer (2018). It was written by the singer herself and C. Tangana with a part inspired by a Spanish song used in gypsy weddings. The track was produced by El Guincho and co-produced by RosalÃÂa herself. It reached number one in Spain the same week the album was released, becoming RosalÃÂa's first number-one song in the country, and also making RosalÃÂa the first artist to reach, at the same time, the top position of singles, album sales and album streamings, with Aitana being the second artist to do so weeks later.
In September 2018, the singer was asked by Spanish actor and internet personality Brays Efe about the album's third single in an interview with Cosmopolitan magazine. Rosalia responded that "it can not be revealed yet, I can't say anything by now." On 29 October, the singer finally revealed its name alongside the video's concept on her social media.
The song begins with "gypsy-inspired choirs", which forms a hook throughout the song, and a simple backing of claps.
Following the release of the song and its video, several listeners accused RosalÃÂa of appropriating the culture of Gitanos (Spanish Roma), believing she sings "el yeli" in the song, which is traditionally sung to brides at Gitano weddings. RosalÃÂa later clarified on social media that she is actually singing "ay ali", and said she based the song on the tangos of the 1950s Spanish gypsy cantaora .
Tom Breihan of Stereogum called the song "gorgeously thrumming". Salvatore Maicki of The Fader described the song as "intoxicating and gritty", saying RosalÃÂa "whisks the deceptively simple production into a universe of her own with syrupy autotune and uncoy demands".
The video was directed by Henry Scholfield and is presented as a single take. It features RosalÃÂa dancing in various rooms with colorful lighting. Stereogum called the video another of RosalÃÂa's "gorgeously produced freaked-out fantasias that do fascinating things with symbols of Spanish identity" and likened its lighting to a 1970s Italian horror film. Quinn Moreland of Pitchfork compared the opening shot of RosalÃÂa lying in bed to Francisco Goya's painting La maja desnuda/La maja vestida (The Naked Maja/The Clothed Maja) and named it one of the six best music videos of October 2018. This was also noted by Celia Cuervo of Harper's Bazaar, who treated it as a deliberate homage due to the choice of clothing.