No Creo

"No Creo"
Austrian CD commercial edition
Single by Shakira
from the album Dónde Están los Ladrones?
Released February 17, 1999 (1999-02-17)
Format
Recorded 1998; Crescent Moon Studios
(Miami, Florida)
Genre Rock en español
Length 3:50
Label Sony Latin
Songwriter(s)
  • Shakira Mebarak
  • Luis F. Ochoa[1]
Producer(s)
  • Shakira
  • Luis Fernando Ochoa
Shakira singles chronology
" Inevitable"
(1998)
"No Creo"
(1999)
"Ojos Así"
(1999)

" Inevitable"
(1998)
"No Creo"
(1999)
"Ojos Así"
(1999)
Dónde Están los Ladrones? track listing
MTV Unplugged track listing
11 tracks
  1. "Intro/Octavo Día"
  2. "Si Te Vas"
  3. "Dónde Están Los Ladrones?"
  4. "Moscas en la Casa"
  5. "Ciega, Sordomuda"
  6. "Inevitable"
  7. "Estoy Aquí"
  8. ""
  9. "Sombra de Ti"
  10. "No Creo"
  11. "Ojos Así"

"No Creo" (English: I don't believe) is a song written and performed by the Colombian singer-songwriter Shakira. The song was released as the fourth single from her multi-platinum album Dónde Están los Ladrones? (1998) and later from her acoustic performance of the song on the MTV show Unplugged (2000). In the song, the singer expresses how she believes in nothing and nobody except her lover. The song references popular socially accepted or non-accepted norms such as herself, luck, Karl Marx, Jean-Paul Sartre, Mars and Venus, and Brian Weiss.

Music video

The video begins in a room, where Shakira jumps out of a window into a grassland where eccentric people are present. She scratches the ceiling of a room, goes through dark rooms, riots, swims through a washing room. The video is also present in her hit, "Ciega, Sordomuda", which therefore sparked rumors some scenes were shot back-to-back with "Ciega, Sordomuda".

Charts

Chart (1999-2000) Peak
position
US Hot Latin Songs (Billboard)[2] 9
US Latin Pop Songs (Billboard)[3] 2

References

  1. "Shakira songs - No Creo". Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. Retrieved 2009-11-19.
  2. "Shakira Chart History (Hot Latin Songs)". Billboard. Retrieved 8 August 2010.
  3. "Shakira Chart History (Latin Pop Songs)". Billboard. Retrieved 8 August 2010.
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