Interview with Washington Post
Post: What were the difficulties making this album?
Shakira: When my record company asked, "Do you want to make
an album in English?" I said yeah, right then. But then I realized
I was in trouble.
Post: What trouble?
Shakira: I am a songwriter, exactly. To write my own songs for
an English album, I had to learn English. I accepted the challenge
, but I didn't know if I would be able to reach that goal.
Post: Spanish is a romance language; it expresses love beautifully.
What can you say about English?
Shakira: In Spanish you can go around the bushes, but English is
a much more direct language. That's why it is the language of business.
In English, with three words you can send a very powerful message;
in Spanish, you need to use more words. But really, you can be romantic
in both languages.
Post: So English is for lovers?
Shakira: To me, writing, expressing my emotions in English was
an adventure. I can think in English, true, but I feel in Spanish.
Post: What do you mean?
Shakira: I can talk to my lawyer or my manager in English, but
when I get mad, I get mad in Spanish, I cry in Spanish. That was
the challenge, to translate my emotions into English.
Post: You are one of the most famous singers in the world, but
you are not very well-known in the United States. Do you feel you've
already paid your dues?
Shakira: I have been singing since I was a child, but when I walked
into Sony with this record, it was like I was 13 years old again.
I had that feeling in my stomach.
Post: Butterflies?
Shakira: Yes, butterflies.
Post: You are just out of the studio and will start a world
tour. Which do you prefer?
Shakira: It depends. At first I like what I'm starting, but after
a while I want to do something else. After a few months in the studio,
I want to go back to the stage where it's magical. After six months
on the road, you are so tired you want to do anything else - you
need a break.
Post: Gabriel Garcia Marquez has written some very nice things
about you. I know he's a an old man, but he sounds as if he's a
little in love with you.
Shakira: Oh, don't say that.
Post: Could you imagine yourself in one of his books?
Shakira: [Marquez] has the power to make the really simple things
in life so special that they are magical, so, yes, I could be one
of his characters - so could you or anyone. I really admire him.
Post: Has his writing influenced you?
Shakira: Not in what I write about, but how he has had his writing
translated into so many languages. Do you remember when President
Clinton (news - web sites) said Gabriel Garcia Marquez's "One
Hundred Years of Solitude" was his favorite novel? I thought
if he didn't get his writing translated, Clinton would never had
read that book. I said to myself, "Shakira, you've been making
music for 14 years; it's time to share this with people who don't
speak your language."
Post: Was learning to speak English the hardest challenge you
ever taken on?
Shakira: Yeah, for sure. But learning a new language enlarged my
world. It made my field of action wider, and the process is still
growing for me. There was some suffering but many rewards.
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