Left & Right Open a New Era With the Infectious “Natural Rizz”

When Left & Right perform, they do it in English. Always have, even back in Bogotá, where English-language pop wasn’t the norm. That early, stubborn bet turned out to be the whole blueprint.

Linda and Karol Quevedo grew up in a household where music wasn’t background noise. Their parents built a 25-year career in the Colombian music industry against serious resistance and handed their daughters a lesson before they could articulate it: pursue the career regardless of the conditions. By age six, the sisters were already on stage. By their twenties, they were splitting time between Bogotá and New York, producing and writing music designed to travel.

It travels. Their audience stretches across Germany, France, Kazakhstan, Colombia, and the United States. A map that surprises people until the sisters explain it isn’t accidental. “We’ve always seen ourselves as very international,” they say. “No matter where we are, we’re all human beings with stories and emotions that connect us.”

The emotional architecture of their work is unusually deliberate for artists their age. Each EP carries its own universe. Yours explored self-esteem through the metaphor of fairy godmothers. Nostalgia documented their upbringing in full. Their 2025 single “Different Worlds” was inspired by a dog they rescued during a rainstorm mid-session, found abandoned in the rain while they were writing lyrics and brought home that same day.

Now comes V Acts of Love, a five-track EP that maps love from first attraction to its most uncertain depths. Lead single “Natural Rizz” is out now. Watch the video here.

Along the way, some unlikely validation. Carlos Vives, a Colombian music legend the sisters grew up idolizing, stopped his entire band mid-soundcheck just to listen to them sing. He told them they had truly special voices, then introduced them to legendary songwriter Gustavo Gutiérrez, who happened to be standing right there. “Two masters on stage at the same time,” they recall. They still keep in touch with his team.

The hardest thing to write on the new EP, they admit, is uncertainty. “That moment where you don’t know if what you’re feeling is real love or if your mind has made it up.” An honest thing to chase. And for Left & Right, honesty has always been the strategy.