EE2 Contemporary Singers and Musicians | Brazil
Travelingo Travel Guides
HomeSouth AmericaBrazil

Brazil Contemporary Singers and Musicians



Contemporary Singers and Musicians

The number of high-quality singers and musicians in Brazilian music besides these leading figures is enormous. Milton Nascimento has a talent that can only be compared with the founders of tropicalismo, a remarkable soaring voice, a genius for composing stirring anthems and a passion for charting and celebrating the experience of blacks in Brazil. Since his emergence from Minas Gerais in the 1960s, he has become a prominent spokesperson of black Brazilians. Fagner and Alceu Valenca are modern interpreters of Northeastern music, and strikingly original singers. The latter is the creator of what has been termed " forro rock ". Elba Ramalho is a Northeastern woman with an excellent voice, which she too often wastes on banal rock rather than the more traditional material she excels at. Renato Borghetti , from Rio Grande do Sul, has done much to popularize gaucho -influenced music through his skill on the accordion and his adaptations of traditional tunes. Ney Matogrosso has a striking falsetto voice which sounds female, but he is a man - although sometimes self-indulgent, he can be very good. Jorge Ben is a fine Rio singer who wrote the definitive Rio verse in his classic Pais Tropical :

I live in a tropical country
Blessed by God with natural beauty
In February there's Carnaval
I own a guitar and drive a Beetle
I support Flamengo and have a black girlfriend called Tereza

Vinicius de Moraes and Toquinho are (or were in the case of Vinicius) a good singer and guitarist team, and Dorival Caymmi at over seventy is the doyen of Bahian musicians. Whilst all these figures have been going strongly for decades now, an artist to look out for is Zeca Baleiro from Maranhao who, with his bumba-meu-boi - and reggae-influenced style, has been described as one of the most innovative performers to have emerged in Brazil in the 1990s.

Too many musicians these days, though, waste their time attempting to fuse Brazilian genres with rock-based formats. It's not that it can't be done - tropicalismo pulled it off several times in the 1960s - but the type of rock music currently most popular in Brazil, appalling heavy metal and stadium rock, is completely incompatible with the subtle, versatile musical imagination of Brazilians. National radio and the dominant Sao Paulo radio stations pump out the worst kind of British and US FM blandness, and this has spawned a host of Brazilian imitations, almost all of them embarrassingly bad.

The other possible

© 2003 by Rough Guides Ltd. as trustee for its Authors. Published by Rough Guides. All rights reserved. Rough Guides name is a trademark of Rough Guides Ltd. Buy the book here! The Rough Guide to Brazil

criticism of Brazilian music is that, while its popular roots are healthier than ever, nobody of similar stature has come up to succeed the towering figures of the 1960s and 1970s. Elis is dead, Gil, Caetano, Chico and Milton are still producing but are no longer young, and, while younger talent abounds, there's nothing at the moment which could be called genius - a lot to demand of anyone, but it's a tribute to Brazilian music that its pedigree allows us to judge it by the highest standards


Fun Tips

mary says "Bring your inhaler if you have asma."

tips for Brazil

Robyn says "Dont go it so boring,so dont go "

travelling

ayanda says "can anyone tell me about cheap accomodation in brazil?"

Tour Brazil and Argentina On Line (Video + Stills)

David Mundstock says "My recent movie, “Tango and Samba Falls”, presents highlights of Argentina and Brazil, starring Buenos Aires, Rio de Janeiro, and Iguazu Falls.

Tango in Buenos Aires, meet Evita, enjoy Gaucho dancing from the Pampas; and then north to the Argentina side of massive Iguazu Falls, featuring “The Devil’s Throat”.

Across the border to Brazil, for a close-up of the falls from below. In Rio, gaze at the views from famous mountain tops, and look for the Girl from Ipanema at Rio’s beaches. Take in a Samba show, featuring costumes that range from almost nothing to extremely elaborate and colorful. With digital effects.

“Tango and Samba Falls” can be seen on the web, if you have a high speed internet connection. This is a free, non-commercial, streaming video on the Windows Media Player. No ads and no strings attached. I sell absolutely nothing.

With any modem you can view a gallery of Argentina/Brazil still pictures.

There are over 30 of my other amateur travel videos on-line including trips to China, Russia, Antarctica, Italy, Britain, Hawaii, Australia, Bali, American National Parks, Africa, Greece, and Turkey; see lions, whales, elephants, or penguins.

The planet is yours, including my Home Page giant galaxy of still pictures from every continent.

To watch videos or look at the stills, please ask a search engine for: Intrepid Berkeley Explorer"

hello

meiden bantugan says "cn u v my chatmate"


Your Tip for Brazil

Help other backpackers! Write your own guides and backpacking tips to Brazil - they will appear instantly on this page - Please only write a tip/guide to Brazil - visit the main Brazil forum to ask a question!

Please do not post links to your site here (they won't work) - please use the Brazil webguide section below! Thanks.

Your Name
A short title
Your guide/tip

Flag of Brazil

Search places

Search hotels

Search flights











World Map North America Central America Caribbean South America Africa Europe Europe Asia Oceania

Brazil

Amazon
Espirito Santo
Goias and Tocantins
Mato Grosso region
Minas Gerais
Northeast
Rio
South
Sao Paulo

All other countries in South America

Regions

Europe
Asia
Africa
North America
Caribbean
Central America
South America
Oceania
Antarctica

 

Copyright © 2008 travelingo.org. All Rights Reserved.

About Us •  Privacy Policy •  T&Cs •  SiteMap •  Webguide  •  Add Your Site
European Football • Lager • Searches 2 3 4 5 6

Travelingo.org is not a booking agent and does not charge any service fees to users of our site.
Travelingo.org is not responsible for content on external web sites.

11/22/2008 6:38:34 AM