
Three albums. Three milestones. One legacy.
Listen here:
This year, Thalia, the undisputed queen of Latin pop, is revisiting her most career-defining eras by releasing remastered editions of En Éxtasis (1995), Arrasando (2000), and El Sexto Sentido (2005). Whether you're a longtime fan or a new listener, this trio of albums is more than a greatest-hits moment—it’s a celebration of everything that made Thalia a global icon and cultural force.
When Latin Pop Went Global—and Stayed There
En Éxtasis dropped 30 years ago and cracked open the international market for Thalia. From “Piel Morena” to the forever-viral “María la del Barrio,” the album was a mix of passion, power, and pop innovation. Produced in part by Emilio Estefan and Kike Santander, it turned radio waves into altars of worship. The numbers? Millions of sales, chart-toppers across Billboard, and over 300 million streams to date.
It was more than music. It was a visual era too. The music videos? Loud, glamorous, boundary-pushing—just like Thalia herself.
The Reign of “Arrasando”
Five years later, Thalia wasn’t just performing—she was creating, co-writing most of the tracks on Arrasando, stepping fully into her power as a producer. The title track became a war cry for a generation, followed by hits like “Rosalinda” and “Entre el Mar y una Estrella.”
The album dominated charts, won certifications across the globe, and took Thalia on a whirlwind world tour. It wasn’t just about music—it was about movement. From Latin America to Asia to Europe, Arrasando wasn’t an album title. It was a prophecy.
The Sixth Sense: Personal, Polished, and Powerful
By 2005, with El Sexto Sentido, Thalia was in her introspective, refined pop era. The sound? A mix of ballads, bachata, electronic edges, and signature drama. Executive produced by Thalia and featuring hitmakers like Estéfano and Cory Rooney, this album wasn’t just experimental—it was expensive. Literally the most costly Latin American album made that year.
“Amar Sin Ser Amada” and “No, No, No” (with Romeo Santos) made it a fan favorite, racking up awards, charting high, and proving that emotional depth and studio precision could coexist beautifully.
A Legacy That Only Grows Stronger
“These albums not only marked an era for my fans,” Thalia says, “they shaped my life completely.” Her music has been a constant—through evolving fashion, digital shifts, and global changes, Thalia has remained her.
Today, she’s still creating, still teasing studio sessions on social, and still one of the most influential voices in Latin music. The new remastered editions are streaming now, a nostalgic-but-fresh invitation to reconnect with a catalog that continues to shape Latin pop.
