Category: Music

  • The Top 10 Brazilian Songs

    1. La garota de Ipanema – ? (BOSSA)

    2. Samba de Benaco – bebel gilberto ?

    3. samba de orly – ?

    4. LERO-LERO – Luisa Maita

    5. Mais que Nada –

    6. ‘One Note Samba’ – Stan Getz & Charlie Byrd / Raffinata e jazzata. Composed by Jobim, Jon Hendricks and Newton Mendonca. Bella versione Getz. (BOSSA)

    7. ‘Insensatez’ (‘How Insensitive’). Composed by Jobim and de Moraes

    8. Aguas de Março (Waters of Mach) by Elis Regina & Tom Jobim

     

  • Bossanova: the new way of playing Samba

    Bossanova: the new way of playing Samba

    Bossa Nova means“New Trend”: it is a new way of playing Samba. It happened in the 50’s, when a more intimate and less percussive kind of sound begun to circulate, thanks to musicians as Antonio Carlos Jobim, João Gilberto (his Bim-Bom is considered to be one of the first Bossa Nova songs) and Vinicius de Moraes. If Samba came from the favelas of Rio de Janeiro, Bossa Nova was born in its sophisticated beachside neighborhoods. From Rio Zona Sul through the United States, where it mixed with Jazz, it reached worldwide success. The Festival of Carnegie Hall held in New York in 1962 has been a the international milestone of Bossa Nova, as the recordings of Jazz musician Stan Getz with João Gilberto (1963). But the big boom arrived 1 year later, with the Getz/Gilberto recording “The Girl From Ipanema”, the most popular Bossa Nova song ever. After this peak and after many many masterpieces (listen for exemple Chico Buarque), Bossa Nova is going through an experimental phase, mixing with electronic music.

  • Samba: The music coming from Africa

    Samba: The music coming from Africa

    Syncopated rhythm, hip movements, black roots: this is samba, the legendary music from Rio de Janeiro. Samba was born in “Little Africa”, a poor area of Rio, between the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th century. Here the descendants of the black slaves coming from the north, especially Bahia, carried with them a unique cultural heritage: the Candomblé– an African religion where drums and handclaps have a ritual importance. All this has been translated into music by brilliant musicians as Pixinguinha, a pioneer of Samba.

    The first official samba song is considered to be Pelo Telefone (“By Phone”), recorded in 1917 and composed by a collective of musicians. But only in the roaring 30’s samba literally blew up, thanks to the radio. Samba became more melodic, under the name of samba-canção (“samba song”). It is the time of Noel Rosa and Ary Barroso; Carmen Miranda made known to the world the samba, thanks to her Hollywood films.

    Another big revolution comes in the 50’s, when samba-canção meets Jazz. Artists such Antonio Carlos Jobim and João Gilberto renovated the tradition and created the Bossa Nova. But this is another story (an inspiring one). In the same period samba was also revitalized by Rio communities (favelas): their samba de morro (“samba from the hill”), focusing on the beat, finally became the official music of Brazilian carnival.

    Samba de Roda, a samba danced in circle typical of Bahia, became a UNESCO Heritage of Humanity (category “Oral and intangible expressions”) in 2005.