jorge ben jor - take it easy my brother charles (1969)
after the first man
wonderfully stepped on the moon,
i felt I had rights, principles,
and dignity
to liberate myself
because of this, without prejudice I sing,
i sing of fantasy,
i sing of love, I sing of happiness,
i sing of belief, I sing of peace,
i sing of suggestion,
i sing in the dawn.
take it easy, my brother Charlie,
because i sing to my love,
awaited, desired, adored.
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Novos Baianos - Acabou Chorare
(1972, full album)
[MPB, Samba, Samba-rock, Tropicália]
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Jorge Ben- Samba esquema novo
(Samba, Samba Rock, Bossa Nova)
Released: January 10, 1963 [Philips Records]
Producer(s): Armando Pittigliani
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Michael Jota
Musico e compositor independente
Brasileiro - Natural de São Paulo / SP
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Gosta de Música Brasileira? Ouça lá no youtube o DJ Set que toquei no evento RAIDERS OF THE LOST ART - “ALL VINYL - ALL CITY” - 14.06.23 - MOK GROOVE, que rola na twitch.tv. https://youtu.be/_jnQ9eU57tg via @YouTube - 100% vinyl - 7" e 12" vinyl
RAIDERS OF THE LOST ART - “ALL VINYL - ALL CITY” - 14.06.23 - MOK GROOVE
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hii, ive been stuck in a three caballeros/zé carioca loop recently and been trying to find active ppl in the fandom ANYWAY I *LOVE* YOUR ART IT GIVES ME *LIFE* ! So, do u think Zé would be into funk carioca? In one of his comics he was against the rise of disco (it was the 80s) and kept being a samba fan but i feel like maybe 2000s funk or even phonk would sound good to him, watcha think? Xoxo
Hi!!! First of all, omg, Thank you!! And second, I'm glad you've fallen into the 3 Cabs/Zé Carioca pit kdjdndkm It's always great to see more people coming in.
I don't think I have read this one comic you mentioned about Zé being against Disco but I'd love to read it if you have the name of it still!! This is also a thing I've come to notice on some Zé Carioca comics tho! Zé, and the narrative in general, tend to side against non-Brazilian genres of music... mainly Rock'n'Roll. Oh, so many jabs at rock and those noisy chords, hairy guitar players and those damn gringos trying to infiltrate our radios!!! It all reads as very boomeristic at times XD
I kinda get Zé as a "symbol" of Brazilian/carioca culture and him being protective of samba and wanting to praise it always, so I guess this was the take the writers chose for Zé to be ride or die for.
And, yeah, we all know that Funk is a genre that was greatly influenced by United Statesians genres, but I think there's no way that the writers would make Zé Carioca be against Funk Carioca. Like,,, imagine the absurd… the character that is supposed to represent your marginalized favela dweller everyman, hating on one of the most marginalized, favela born, Brazilian rythms ever!
There even is one story I remember reading where Zé goes to a Baile Funk and, admittedly, things don't really work out for him there, BUT there's no criticism of the music itself (differently from Rock...)!
I think it would be a great injustice to have a world where Zé Carioca didn't get to sing Bonde do Tigrão, Se Ela Dança Eu Danço, GLAMUROSA RAINHA DO FUNK, Tremendo Vacilão, Nosso Sonho and so many more funk hits we grew up with. So, sure Zé's main thing will aways be samba but, at the very least, I think he would be a fan of early 2000s Carioca Funk.
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A Tábua de Esmeralda, Jorge Ben (1974)
It makes sense that Jorge Ben was (maybe is) an alchemist; his music likewise concocts physical reactions out of natural sources, in the process eliciting some sort of understanding of the spirit.
Pick: ‘Os alquimistas estão chegando os alquimistas’
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Gal Costa - Cinema Olympia
From The Album: Gal (1969)
[Tropicália, Psychedelic Rock, Psychedelic Pop, Samba-rock, Acid Rock, Experimental Rock]
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