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Thursday, October 21, 2010

Shakira’s Hips Continue To Tell Truth on Latest Album











Columbian singer Shakira ditches the electro-pop edge of last year’s She Wolf and returns to her Latin roots on Sale el Sol (The Sun Comes Out). The new, bilingual album features 15 tracks, predominantly in Spanish with a few English-only numbers. Gone are the bizarre wolf howls and European dance influence of last year’s album, replaced by the horns and vibrant tropical beats. Her signature soft rock-infused Spanish tracks are back on this album, but in a more polished form.

No matter what language you speak, Sale el Sol translates into a solid listening experience. The best English track on the album is Shakira’s cover of British indie-pop group the The XX’s “Islands.” She speeds up the tempo and gives new meaning to the verses about finding a sense of belonging after long-term displacement. The context of the global superstar finding her place in the world converges with beautiful production to make it a standout album.

“Loca” and “Rabiosa,” tracks sung in English and Spanish, are the most Caribbean influenced, with Merengue beats and hints of electronic production. Shakira the seductress is out in full force alongside rappers Pitbull (“Loca”), Dizzee Rascal (“Rabiosa”) and El Cata (on the Spanish versions of both songs). The energy behind the tracks is reminiscent of a revved-up “Hips Don’t Lie,” taking Shakira to the musical next level.

“Mariposas” evokes classic Shakira with its slow, piano-driven rock. The track has an upbeat quality to it that will doubtlessly stick with the listener with its simple melody and positive lyrics. Her experimental side is also still alive and well on the hard rock number, “DevociĆ³n,” on which Shakira hits crazy-high notes near the track’s end and yells her way through the anthem-worthy chorus.

Aside from the unnecessary K-Mixes of her global hit “Waka Waka,” Sale el Sol is a refreshing, eclectic album showcasing Shakira’s versatility as an artist. Her global appeal is more apparent than ever on this album with its synthesis of many different music elements from around the world on each track. With Sale el Sol, Shakira proves that the sun won’t be setting on her music career anytime soon.

Friday, October 15, 2010

Shakira Conquers New Arenas













IT was just another day in New York City for Shakira, toggling between pop star and do-gooder. She spent the early morning of Sept. 23 at Rockefeller Center for a five-minute interview on “Today” to promote her new album, “Sale el Sol” (“The Sun Comes Out”). Asked how she gets her hips to move the way they do, she replied, with a giggle, “A magician doesn’t reveal the tricks.”
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Shakira performs at Madison Square Garden on September 21, 2010 in New York, New York.

That’s about as much guile as Shakira would ever show. Her greatest trick — if it is one — has little to do with her famous hips, which can move every which way without special effects. But it’s far more difficult to maintain Shakira’s air of transparency, the ease with which she leaps from culture to culture, role to role and language to language, all with bubbly girlishness and, behind it, a perfectionist’s attention to detail.

“Sale el Sol” (Epic) is Shakira’s latest shift of direction. Her 2009 album, “She Wolf,” aimed for the international common denominator of electronic dance music; Shakira produced most of it with the Neptunes, a team of prolific, and familiar, hip-hop and R&B hit makers. “Sale el Sol,” with songs primarily in Spanish, drops that mainstreaming strategy in favor of instinct, whim and glimmers of what Shakira, 33, calls nostalgia. It’s full of idiosyncratic crossovers and hybrids, often tied to very specific places.

“It’s like I found myself again,” Shakira said. “You get influenced by everything you hear on the radio, or maybe by what you feel that other people’s expectations are. But then you suddenly realize that everything you need to write about is what’s inside of you — to not look outside but inside.”

Pitbull, a Cuban-American rapper who appears on the album, said: “On the last album they tried to Americanize Shakira by giving her the big producers. Not that it was necessarily a bad thing, but it’s just not her.”

Moments after her “Today” appearance, Shakira ducked into a downstairs dressing room to finish writing a speech for her next stop: a conference room at the United Nations Development Program building. She emerged wearing a sleek black pantsuit with silvery trim, and climbed into a black S.U.V. for a long crawl crosstown, which gave her ample time for an interview. After being whisked through United Nations security, she touched up her lipstick and joined the president of her native Colombia, Juan Manuel Santos, to announce the formation of Colombians From Birth, a $25 million public-private initiative to improve early-childhood education.

“The only way to overcome poverty and inequality is changing the equation in which a child that is born poor will die poor,” she said in her speech, in Spanish, with President Santos at her side. “And that equation can best be solved during the first years of life.” President Santos embraced her warmly, and praised the Shakira concert he’d attended at Madison Square Garden two nights earlier as “emocionante” — thrilling.

After the officials left the conference room, Shakira said earnestly, “My work as an artist helps me get close to people that have an enormous influence on the lives and destinies of so many, like the president of my country, so I can discuss things that are far more important than myself.”

Her day had only begun. Back in pop-star mode, Shakira would preview “Sale el Sol” for the Latin press, summing it up for sound bites as part rock, part romantic, part Latin. Then she was off to “The Late Show With David Letterman,” where she and her dancers shimmied through her new single, the distinctly Latin “Loca,” a merengue with rapping. Afterward Shakira flew to Florida to continue her arena tour: another night of glitter, hip swiveling and bilingual singalongs.

Shakira Isabel Mebarak Ripoll has been working like that for most of her life: first in Colombia, where she emerged from the Caribbean coastal city of Barranquilla as a teenage “rockera” — she translates it as “rock chick” — and eventually as the globe-hopping star who may well be Latin America’s most famous performer. She’s a brand name; she just introduced her own fragrance, the vanilla-and-sandalwood S by Shakira. Yet she hasn’t forgotten her origins. With sweet determination she has continually mixed the local and the global. “Hips Don’t Lie,” her ubiquitous 2006 hit, included a line in Spanish — “Look, in Barranquilla we dance like this” — as the video showed dance moves from Barranquilla’s Carnaval.

Source:http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/17/arts/music/17shakira.html?_r=1

Shakira rocks Mexico in free concert

Mexico City: As many as 210,000 people gathered on Mexico City's central Zocalo square for a free concert by Colombian pop star Shakira.

The square, which according to official estimates fits about 100,000 people, was full for the duration of the concert late Sunday.

Hundreds Shakira fans had camped in the areas near the Zocalo the previous night, while the square itself was kept closed, in an effort to get a good place.

The concert was one of the last in Shakira's current world tour Oral Fixation. The tour is set to end Wednesday in the northern Mexican city of Monterrey.

"This has been a month of absolute joy. I have fed off you, and I leave with my heart full," Shakira told the crowd.

The Colombian singer of Hips Don't Lie fame claims she has a long-standing "love story" with Mexico.

Source:http://ibnlive.in.com/news/shakira-rocks-mexico-in-free-concert/41575-8.html?xml

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Shakira performs during her Tour of Earthly Delights at the ATT Center on Saturday

The show: International pop sensation Shakira danced her way into the AT&T Center on Saturday, promoting her new album, “Sale el Sol,” which drops Oct. 19. Puerto Rican a cappella band Nota, winners of NBC's “The Sing-Off,” opened.

Attendance: Fans of all ages came out in force for the concert. Longtime Shakira fan Lupe Ramirez, 25, drove in from Brownsville.

“I'm excited about seeing such an established artist (that) doesn't forget about her true fans,” Ramirez said. “I can't wait for her throwback hits — all in Spanish.”

First Take: Nota started off the night with an a cappella rendition of Jay Sean's “Down” that led into a salsa medley of several pop songs, including “I'm Yours” by Jason Mraz and a jazzed-up version of Maroon 5's “This Love.” But the highlight was their Shakira warm-up of “La Tortura” that capped off their 30-minute set.

Hip Action: The theme of the night was fun as Shakira danced her way around the stage using her mic stand as a pole vault and stayed true to her infamous and constantly swiveling hips during hits like “La Tortura,” “Gypsy” and “Si Te Vas.” The crossover phenom even dabbled in hard rock with a drum-heavy cover of Metallica's “Nothing Else Matters.”

Shakira spent most of the evening connecting with her fans. The Colombian-born artist pulled seven female audience members onstage for an impromptu dance lesson to “Whenever,” and handed out yellow long-stemmed roses to her admirers.

Shakira's outfits were another highlight of the night: She started the concert in a hot pink tulle hooded wedding gown, followed by shiny Lycra leggings and several sequined halter tank tops and a maroon flowing gypsy skirt.

Friday, October 1, 2010

Shakira Shows Off Ripped Abs In 'Loca' VIDEO






Source:http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/09/30/shakira-shows-off-ripped-_n_745310.html

Lea Michele Or Shakira: Who Wore Roberto Cavalli Best?



















Lea Michele of Glee posed semi-topless for the November issue of British Marie Claire. Though, we must point out, that she actually posed WITH CLOTHES ON for most of her editorial, and that's the best part, despite what the boys may think! And the Roberto Cavalli dress Lea Michele wore on the cover of the magazine looked particularly amazing on the 24-year-old. We've seen this dress ($6,695, RobertoCavalli.com) before — Shakira wore this same exact look to the Univision Premios Juventud Awards in Miami on July 15. Both ladies even styled their hair in the same loose, wavy way. Though, if we had to pick a favorite, we'd go with Lea Michele, simply because she gives this dress a fiery attitude, and being topless has nothing to do with it. But what do you think?

Source:http://style.mtv.com/2010/10/01/lea-michele-topless-marie-claire-uk-shakira-roberto-cavalli/
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