Shakira wrapped a two-night run in Boston this weekend and had plenty to say about it. On Instagram, the Colombian pop star thanked the city with real warmth: “Boston, you were unreal!!! Thank you for these two unforgettable nights. I had the BEST time!” She closed with a quick tease for the next stop: “Jersey! you’re next!”
Short message. Big energy. She’s been performing since the mid-1990s and shows no sign of letting that post-show rush get old.
Two consecutive nights in the same city is no small thing. Pulling both off at her level means full houses, a tight set, and a crowd that stays locked in from start to finish. Boston did that – twice.
Shakira has been one of the most dependable live acts in pop music for decades. Her Colombian roots, bilingual songwriting, and signature dance intensity give her concerts a texture that’s hard to describe ahead of time. She performed at the Super Bowl halftime show in 2020 alongside Jennifer Lopez and has since played world tours across multiple continents. Boston isn’t unfamiliar territory for an artist at her level. Her reaction suggests it still felt worth shouting about.
Her 2024 album “Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran” was a worldwide success. It connected with people well beyond her core audience. A collaboration with producer Bizarrap drove a lot of that momentum, with the track spending weeks at the top of global charts. The album gave her current tour real emotional weight, and audiences have responded city after city. Boston was the latest proof.
Two nights in on a long stretch, and she’s still posting with multiple exclamation marks. That’s a good sign for every city still on the schedule.
New Jersey is next. Tour momentum can shift quickly, but nothing in Shakira’s recent form suggests a slowdown is coming. She’s known for bringing the same intensity to every stop. Night one or night ten, the approach doesn’t change much. Boston seems to have sent her off happy, and that’s probably the best thing Jersey fans could hear right now.
Fans who first heard her in the early 2000s have spent more than two decades watching her career evolve. That kind of longevity is rare, and it doesn’t happen without a lot of nights like the ones she delivered in Boston.
The “Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran” era has been one of the stronger stretches of her career, both commercially and creatively. The North American leg seems to be matching the energy she built during earlier stops on the run. Cities keep delivering.
She doesn’t have many gears below full speed. That was true when she was a teenager performing in Colombia. It’s still true now. Jersey should be ready.
This story originally appeared on Celebrityinsider
