Recent reviews

Shakira is versatility over cohesion. Energetic, bilingual, and outward-facing, the album captures Shakira balancing global pop appeal with personal momentum. It’s less about a single narrative and more about showcasing range, confidence, and adaptability.


Sonically, the record moves between pop-rock, dance-pop, Latin pop, and radio-driven collaborations. The production is glossy and accessible, designed for broad appeal rather than conceptual depth. While the sound shifts often, the energy remains consistently upbeat and assertive.


Lyrically, the album explores desire, nostalgia, confidence, and emotional release. The writing prioritizes immediacy and hook-driven moments over introspection. Shakira sounds assured and playful, leaning into performance and chemistry rather than vulnerability.


The 3.96 rating reflects near-4 strength with small reservations. The album delivers several standout moments and undeniable charisma, but its lack of tight cohesion and thematic focus keeps it just shy of fully solid territory. It feels curated more than authored.


Shakira works as a high-energy snapshot of her global pop era. Vibrant, flexible, and confident, it may not be her most artistically unified project, but it succeeds in showcasing her star power and versatility.


Favorite Track: Can’t Remember To Forget

You

Skip Track: Broken Record /

23


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.