
On Wednesday, the singer spoke with Zane Lowe of Apple Music 1 about the song's creation.
Shakira won't be writing any more songs about a certain ex.
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"The people at Sony were like, 'No, no, no, no, there's no more time. This needs to be shipped, otherwise we're not going to make it to have the vinyls ready. You can't do anything else with this album,'" the "She Wolf" performer recalls of trying to convince her record label to release it. "Because I can endlessly continue working on the album, tweaking stuff, mixing, and never let it go. So they were like, 'It's time to, it's time to let it go, Shakira let it go.' Now I'm like, 'No, no, no, no. But there's one more, there's one more.'"
"What's amazing about music is how people can connect to the same experience or to the same feeling, or even if they're not going through the same experience, just the empathy and the the mirror neurons that we all have that make us see our own reflection in, in this music," she begins. "So when I play this song to the head of marketing at Sony, he came, he started to cry. I have never seen a man cry in my studio before. I've seen many women cry in my studio, but no man. Uh, but he's a big softie."
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She continues: "He started to cry with this song and I'm like, 'OK, I get it.' It's not only about me. This song is not about me only, or him or. But I'm glad I was able to include it in the album, even if it's the last song, the last song that I write to him."