Calambre is chaos through genius. Bold, explosive, and wildly eclectic, the album captures Nathy Peluso presenting herself as an unpredictable force, mixing theatricality, virtuosity, and attitude into one of the most daring debuts in Latin pop. It’s ambitious, creative, and unforgettable — even if emotionally uneven.
Sonically, the record blends Latin pop, salsa, jazz, hip hop, funk, R&B, trap, bolero, and experimental pop with frenetic, genre jumping production. Beats shift constantly, arrangements surprise, and melodies refuse to stay in one place. The sound is vibrant and fearless, though occasionally overwhelming and fragmented.
Lyrically, Calambre explores ambition, ego, sensuality, power, identity, fame, vulnerability, and artistic self assertion. The writing is theatrical and expressive, often prioritizing character and performance over emotional intimacy. Nathy delivers with virtuosic vocals, dramatic presence, and undeniable charisma.
The 3.5 rating reflects exceptional creativity and originality with moderate emotional cohesion. The album excels in vocal performance, genre fusion, personality, and artistic risk, but its lack of emotional continuity, abrupt tonal shifts, and theatrical excess slightly reduce narrative flow and long term replay comfort.
Calambre stands as one of the boldest debuts in modern Latin pop. Daring, chaotic, and artistically fearless, it introduces Nathy Peluso as a once in a generation performer — even if greater emotional focus could have elevated it into true masterpiece territory.
Favorite Track: Delito
Skip Track: Agarrate
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.









