Tracklist

  • 1
    La niña de la escuela
    Lola Indigo, Tini & Belinda
    3:24
    4.8 ★
  • 2
    Culo
    Lola Indigo & KHEA
    3:51
    3.5 ★
  • 3
    Tamagochi
    2:46
    4.0 ★
  • 4
    Spice Girls
    3:30
    3.5 ★
  • 5
    Nada a nadie
    Lola Indigo & Mala Rodríguez
    3:02
    3.5 ★
  • 6
    Calle
    Lola Indigo, Guaynaa & Cauty
    3:42
    3.0 ★
  • 7
    Killa (ring ring)
    3:32
    3.5 ★
  • 8
    Cómo te va
    Lola Indigo & Beret
    3:37
    5.0 ★
  • 9
    Mala cara
    2:48
    4.5 ★
  • 10
    Tú y yo
    2:43
    3.0 ★
  • 11
    La llorera
    2:34
    3.0 ★
  • 12
    Cash
    Lola Indigo & Lyanno
    3:49
    4.0 ★
  • 13
    No sé que decir
    Lola Indigo & Roy Borland
    2:19
    3.0 ★
  • 14
    4 besos
    Lola Indigo, Lalo Ebratt & Rauw Alejandro
    3:51
    4.5 ★
  • 15
    Lola Bunny
    Lola Indigo & Don Patricio
    3:07
    4.5 ★

Recent reviews

La Niña is tradition through reinvention. Colorful, energetic, and culturally proud, the album captures Lola Índigo embracing her Andalusian roots while refining her pop identity with confidence, warmth, and personality. It’s joyful, cohesive, and artistically more mature than her debut.


Sonically, the record blends pop, dance-pop, flamenco-pop, reggaeton, Latin rhythms, urban influences, and folkloric touches with bright, vibrant production. Guitars, claps, beats, and synths coexist fluidly, creating a lively and distinctly Spanish atmosphere. The sound feels cohesive, dynamic, and culturally expressive.


Lyrically, La Niña explores identity, roots, confidence, love, heartbreak, empowerment, nostalgia, and self-acceptance. The writing feels warmer and more personal than in her debut, balancing attitude with sincerity. Lola shows growth not only as a performer, but also as an artist shaping her own narrative.


The 3.8 rating reflects strong artistic evolution, cohesion, and cultural identity with minor structural limits. The album excels in concept, mood, and personality, but its occasional stylistic repetition and reliance on mid-tempo formulas slightly reduce impact and long-term memorability.


La Niña stands as a beautiful turning point in Lola Índigo’s career. Radiant, culturally rich, and emotionally balanced, it confirms her versatility and growth, paving the way for her most ambitious eras.


Favorite Track: Toy Story

Skip Track: La Llorera


Disclaimer: This Is my opinion based on personal taste and emotions.

The skip tracks are not bad songs but just songs that are less memorable.

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