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Samba


 
 


Samba (

Etymology


The name samba most probably comes from the AngolaAngola

Angola is a country in south-west Africa bordering Namibia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Zambia, and with a wes...
n sembaSemba

Semba is a traditional type of music from the Southern-African country of Angola....
, a type of ritual music, but there are controversies. Portuguese ethnographer and folklorist Edmundo Correia Lopes talks about a dance from the Portuguese GuineaPortuguese Guinea

Portuguese Guinea was the name for what is today Guinea-Bissau from 1446 to September 10, 1974....
 to which Brazilian people gave the name of samba, which would be, according to him, a very close relative to Brazilian samba.

According to sambista and samba studies academic Nei LopesFacts About Nei Lopes

Nei Lopes is a singer, composer, lawyer, writer and historian, working primarily with the Brazilian genre of samba and Afri...
,


The origin of the term samba has always been connected to semba, a Congo-Angolan style of dance characterized by the bellybutton-bump with which the gentleman distinguishes the lady, gesture which was reenacted in old Afro-BrazilianAfro-Brazilian

Afro-Brazilian or African Brazilian is the term used to racially categorise Brazilian citizens of some or full Black African...
 dances. However, much more than bellybutton, the multilingual African term semba also means "pleasing, enchanting" (in KimbundoKimbundo language

Kimbundo, also known as Quimbundo, is an ethno-linguistic group which was heavily influenced by Portuguese who wielded...
), besides "honoring, revering" (in Kikongo). From semba originate disemba and masemba which then yes, mean bellybutton-bump, respectively in AngolanAngola

Angola is a country in south-west Africa bordering Namibia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Zambia, and with a wes...
 Kimbundo and in Kikongo.


Nei Lopes also points out it should be observed that the bellybutton-bumpy trump, much more than the "gross representation of the sexual act" as was pointed out by Portuguese missionaries of the colonial times, represented an affability, an act of seduction and a reverence from the man towards the woman.

"Samba" is also a surname among the people of the WolofWolof people

The Wolof are an ethnic group found in Senegal, The Gambia, and Mauritania....
 nation who primarily live in the SenegambiaSenegambia (geography)

The name Senegambia refers, even before the Senegambia Confederation, to the geographic region covering the present republic...
 

History


Samba origins

The origin of samba is from an Afro-American couple dance[including capouiera]; which was imported from certain circle dances that originated from Angola and the Congo. Characteristic of the umbigada or folk samba is the way the couples dance navel to navel. In its origins, singing always accompanied the dancing. Just as important is influence from PortugalPortugal

Portugal, officially the Portuguese Republic is located in southwestern Europe on the Iberian Peninsula, and is the w...
 and Europe, from where come samba's relatively intricate harmoniesHarmony

Harmony is the use and study of pitch simultaneity and chords, actual or implied, in music....
 and harmonic instrumentation.

Samba first appeared as a distinctive kind of music at the beginning of the 20th century in Rio de JaneiroRio de Janeiro

Rio de Janeiro pron. IPA ) is the name of both a state and a city in south-eastern Brazil....
 (then the capital of BrazilBrazil

Brazil, officially the Federative Republic of Brazil , is the largest and most populous country in South America, and ...
) under the strong influence of immigrant black people from the Brazilian state of BahiaBahia

Bahia|-| align=center colspan=2 |...
. The title "samba schoolSamba school

The Samba schools are samba clubs that started in the early half of the 20th century in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil....
" ("escola de samba") originates from samba's formative years. The term was adopted by larger groups of samba performers in an attempt to lend acceptance to samba and its performance; local campuses were often the practice/performance grounds for these musicians and "escola" gave early performers a sense of legitimacy and organization to offset samba's somewhat controversial social atmosphere. Despite some similarities, jazzJazz

Jazz is an original American musical art form originating around the start of the 20th century in New Orleans, rooted in Af...
 and samba have distinctively different origins and line of development - one of the factors which adds to this is that Brazilian slave owners allowed their slaves to continue their heritage of playing drums (unlike U.S. slave owners who feared use of the drum for communications).

"Pelo Telefone" (1917), by Donga and Mauro Almeida, is generally considered the first samba recording. Its great success carried the new genre outside the black favelaFavela

A favela is a Brazilian slum. Although the most "famous" ones are located in Rio de Janeiro and So Paulo, there are favelas ...
s. Who created the music is uncertain, but it was most probably the work of the group around Tia Ciata, among them PixinguinhaPixinguinha

Alfredo da Rocha Vianna Filho, better known as Pixinguinha, was a Choro composer, arranger, flutist and saxophonist bo...
 and João da Bahiana.

Brazil is the fifth largest country in the world and is the birth place of the Samba. Much of the music in the heavily populated coastal areas shows a remarkable combination of African, Native Indian, and Iberian influences.

Modern Samba was developed from an earlier Brazilian musical style called Choro. Both Samba the dance and music can take many forms, from the vivacious call response of samba de enredo, the music of Carnaval to samba-canção or song samba, a more relaxed guitar and rhythm variant. Bossa Nova, which translates to New Wave, hit America big time in the Sixties with "The Girl From Ipanema". This song by the legendary composer Antonio Carlos Jobim became a classic in jazz and elevator music.

In the 16th century, the Portuguese discovered on the east coast of South America, a place they called the January River (Rio de Janeiro). Colonists soon settled and as the colony prospered, slaves were brought from south-west Africa to work in the plantations of Bahia, in the north-east of what became Brazil.

To adherents of the Afro-Brazilian religion, CandombleCandomblé

Candombl is an African religion practiced chiefly in Brazil but also in adjacent countries....
, Samba means to pray, to invoke your personal orixa (god/saint). The African rhythms enveloped in Latino music came from the Yoruba, Congo and other West African people, who were transported to the New World as slaves. In their homeland the rhythms were used to call forth various gods. Candomble preserves these rhythms to this day! It is these rhythms that has heavily influenced Brazilian music making Samba a unique genre of music.

Samba from 1930 to 1960

In the 1930s, a group of musicians led by Ismael Silva founded the first Samba SchoolSamba school

The Samba schools are samba clubs that started in the early half of the 20th century in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil....
, Deixa Falar, in the neighborhood of Estácio de SáEstácio de Sá

Est?cio de S? was a Portuguese soldier and officer who came to Brazil on orders of the Portuguese crown to wage war on the ...
. They transformed the musical genre to make it fit better the carnival parade. In that decade, the radio spread the genre's popularity all around the country, and with the support of the nationalist dictatorship of Getúlio VargasGetúlio Vargas Summary

Getlio Dornelles Vargas was the president of Brazil from 1930 to 1945 and from 1951 to his suicide in 1954....
, samba became BrazilBrazil

Brazil, officially the Federative Republic of Brazil , is the largest and most populous country in South America, and ...
's "official music".

In the following years samba music developed in several directions, from the gentle samba-cançãoSamba-canção

Samba-can??o is a kind of slow samba music from Brazil....
 to the drum orchestras which accompany the carnivalCarnival

A carnival is a public celebration or parade combining some elements of a circus and public street party, generally during t...
 paradeParade

A parade is an organized procession of people along a street, often in costume, and often accompanied by floats or sometimes...
. One of these new styles was the bossa novaBossa nova

Bossa nova is a style of Brazilian music created by Antonio Carlos Jobim and Joo Gilberto and first introduced in Brazil by ...
, made primarily by middle class white people. Bossa nova gained worldwide popularity through the works of João GilbertoJoão Gilberto

Joo Gilberto is a Brazilian musician and considered one of the co-creators, with Tom Jobim, of bossa nova....
 and Antonio Carlos JobimAntônio Carlos Jobim

Antnio Carlos Brasileiro de Almeida Jobim, also known as Tom Jobim, was a Brazilian composer, arranger, singer, pianis...
, among others, and arrived in North America via Gilberto's albums with American jazzJazz

Jazz is an original American musical art form originating around the start of the 20th century in New Orleans, rooted in Af...
 saxophonSaxophone

The saxophone is a conical-bored instrument of the woodwind family, usually made of brass and played with a single-reed mou...
ist Stan GetzStan Getz

Stanley Gayetzky was an American jazz musician....
, and Jobim's soundtrack to the 1959 film Black OrpheusBlack Orpheus

Black Orpheus is a 1959 Brazilian film by French director Marcel Camus based on the play Orfeu da Conceição by poet ...
.

Samba in the 1960's

In the 1960s, Brazil became politically divided with the arrival of a military dictatorshipMilitary dictatorship

A military dictatorship is a form of government wherein the political power resides with the military; it is similar but not...
, and the leftist musicians of bossa nova started to gather attention to the music made in the favelaFavela

A favela is a Brazilian slum. Although the most "famous" ones are located in Rio de Janeiro and So Paulo, there are favelas ...
s. Many popular artists were discovered at this time. Names like CartolaCartola

Angenor de Oliveira, known as Cartola,...
, Nelson CavaquinhoNelson Cavaquinho

Nelson Cavaquinho was one of the most important singer/composers of samba....
 & Guilherme de BritoGuilherme de Brito

Guilherme de Brito was an important brazilian sambista, singer, songwriter, and painter. ...
, Velha Guarda da Portela, Zé Keti, and Clementina de JesusClementina de Jesus Summary

Clementina de Jesus was born on February 7, 1901, in the State of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil....
 recorded their first albums.

Samba in the 1970's

In the 1970s, samba returned strongly to the air waves with composers and singers like Paulinho da ViolaPaulinho da Viola

Paulinho da Viola is a Brazilian guitar, cavaquinho and mandolin player, known for his sophisticated harmonies and soft, gen...
, Martinho da VilaMartinho da Vila

Martinho da Vila, a Brazilian musician, is one of the most prominent samba musicians....
, Clara NunesClara Nunes

Clara Nunes was a popular samba artist in Brazil....
, and Beth CarvalhoBeth Carvalho

Elizabeth Santos Leal de Carvalho is a Brazilian samba singer, guitarist, cavaquinist and composer. ...
 dominating the hit parade. Great samba lyricists like Paulo César Pinheiro (especially in the praised partnership with João NogueiraJoão Nogueira

Jo?o Nogueira was a Brazilian singer and composer, famous for his samba compositions....
) and Aldir BlancAldir Blanc

Aldir Blanc is a famous Brazilian letrist, composing many songs with João Bosco, Guinga, and others....
 started to appear around that time.

Samba from 1980 to present


In the early 1980s, after having been eclipsed by the popularity of discoDisco

Disco is a genre of music that originated in discothques....
 and Brazilian rockBrazilian rock Summary

Rock entered the Brazilian scene in 1956, with the release of a Portuguese version of Bill Haley's "Rock Around the Clock"....
, Samba reappeared in the media with a musical movement created in the suburbs of Rio de Janeiro. It was the pagodePagode

Pagode is a Brazilian style of music which originated in the Rio de Janeiro region as a subgenre of Samba....
, a renewed samba, with new instruments – like the banjoBanjo (samba)

The samba banjo is a brazilian instrument which is derived from the cavaquinho, especially associated with a samba s...
 and the tan-tanTan-Tan

Tan-Tan is a city in southern Morocco....
 – and a new language that reflected the way that many people actually spoke with the inclusion of heavy gíria. The most popular artists were Zeca PagodinhoZeca Pagodinho

Zeca Pagodinho is a Brazilian singer and songwriter working primarily in the genre of pagode, a type of samba....
, Almir GuinetoFacts About Almir Guineto

Almir Guineto is a brazilian sambista, musician, singer and composer....
, Grupo Fundo de QuintalGrupo Fundo de Quintal

Grupo Fundo de Quintal or simply Fundo de Quintal is the name of an influential samba group and movement which appear...
, Jorge AragãoJorge Aragão

Jorge Arag?o is a Brazilian musician, singer/songwriter working in the genres of samba and pagode....
, and Jovelina Pérola Negra..

Samba, as a result, morphed during this period, embracing types of music that were growing popular in the CaribbeanCaribbean

The Caribbean is a region of the Americas consisting of the Caribbean Sea, its islands , and the surrounding coasts....
. Examples of Samba fusions with popular Caribbean music is samba-rap, samba-rock and samba-reggae, all of which were efforts to not only entertain, but to unify all Blacks throughout the Americas culturally and politically, through song. In other words, samba-rap and the like, often carried lyrics that encouraged Black pride, and speak out against social injustices. Samba, however, is not accepted by all as the national music of Brazil, or as a valuable art form. What appears to be new is the local response flow, in that instead of simply assimilating outside influences into a local genre or movement, the presence of foreign genres is acknowledged as part of the local scene: samba-rock, samba-rap.But this acknowledgment does not imply mere imitation of the foreign models or, for that matter, passive consumption by national audiences. Light-skinned, "upper-class," Brazilians often associated Samba with dark-skinned blacks because of its arrival from West AfricaWest Africa

West Africa or Western Africa is the westernmost region of the African continent....
. As a result, there are some light-skinned Brazilians who claim that samba is the music of low-class, dark-skinned, Brazilians and, therefore, is a "...thing of bums and bandits."

Samba continued to act as a unifying agent during the 1990s, when Rio stood as a national Brazilian symbol. Even though it was not the capital city, Rio acted as a Brazilian unifier, and the fact that samba originated in Rio helped the unification process. In 1994, the World Cup had its own samba composed for the occasion, "Copa 94." The 1994 World Cup, in which samba played a major cultural role, holds the record for highest attendance in World Cup history . Samba is thought to be able to unify because individuals participate in it regardless of social or ethnic group. Today samba is viewed as perhaps the only uniting factor in a country fragmented by political division

The Afro-Brazilians played a significant role in the development of the samba over time. This change in the samba was an integral part of Brazilian nationalism, which was called "Brazilianism".
"What appears to be new is the local response
to that flow, in that instead of simply assimilating outside influences
into a local genre or movement, the presence of foreign genres is acknowledged
as part of the local scene: samba-rock, samba-reggae, samba-rap.
But this acknowledgment does not imply mere imitation of the foreign
models or, for that matter, passive consumption by national audiences." Gerard Béhague
Selected Reports in Ethnomusicology ) Pg. 84

Samba in Japan

Samba is extremely popular in Japan, especially in its more traditional forms; so much that some sambistas like Nelson Sargento, Monarco, and Wilson MoreiraWilson Moreira

Wilson Moreira is a brazilian sambista, singer/songwriter, especially known for his exquisite and intricate melody line...
 have recorded specifically for the Japanese market and frequently tour the country.

Subgenres


Common Samba

Samba is characterized by a syncopated 2/4 rhythm with a muted beat and a main beat, usually played by a surdoSurdo

The Surdo is a large bass drum used in many kinds of Brazilian music, most notably samba....
 (bass drum) or tan-tanTan-Tan Summary

Tan-Tan is a city in southern Morocco....
. Another important element is the cavaquinhoCavaquinho

The cavaquinho is a small string instrument of the European guitar family with four wires or gut strings....
, also known as cavaco (a small, four-stringed instrument of the guitarGuitar

The guitar is a fretted and stringed musical instrument, used in a wide variety of musical styles, and is also widely known ...
 family, brought by the Portuguese; Hawaiian ukuleleUkulele

The ukulele , or uke, is a fretted string instrument which is, in its construction, essentially a smaller, four-string...
 is a derivative). The cavaquinho is the connection between the harmony section and the rhythm section; its presence usually differentiates real samba from softer variations such as Bossa NovaBossa nova

Bossa nova is a style of Brazilian music created by Antonio Carlos Jobim and Joo Gilberto and first introduced in Brazil by ...
 (although some samba recordings do not use the cavaquinho, including many by Chico BuarqueChico Buarque

Chico Buarque is a Brazilian singer, composer, dramatist and writer....
). The pandeiroPandeiro

The pandeiro, is a type of hand frame drum....
 is the most present percussive instrument, the one whose beat is the most "complete". A violãoGuitar

The guitar is a fretted and stringed musical instrument, used in a wide variety of musical styles, and is also widely known ...
(acoustic guitar) is usually present, and its presence in samba popularized the 7-string variationSeven-string guitar Summary

A seven-string guitar is a guitar with seven strings instead of the usual six....
, because of the highly sophisticated counterpoint lines used in the genre in the lower pitched strings. Samba lyrics range from love songs, through futebolFootball (soccer)

Football is a team sport played between two teams, of 11 players each, and is widely considered to be the most popular spor...
(soccer), to politics and many other subjects. This subgenre supersets all others.

Famous artists who play "common samba" include Beth CarvalhoBeth Carvalho

Elizabeth Santos Leal de Carvalho is a Brazilian samba singer, guitarist, cavaquinist and composer. ...
, Paulinho da ViolaPaulinho da Viola

Paulinho da Viola is a Brazilian guitar, cavaquinho and mandolin player, known for his sophisticated harmonies and soft, gen...
, Zeca PagodinhoZeca Pagodinho

Zeca Pagodinho is a Brazilian singer and songwriter working primarily in the genre of pagode, a type of samba....
, Wilson MoreiraWilson Moreira

Wilson Moreira is a brazilian sambista, singer/songwriter, especially known for his exquisite and intricate melody line...
, Teresa Cristina & Grupo Semente.

Partido Alto

This phrase is used to name a type of samba which is characterized by a highly percussive pandeiroPandeiro

The pandeiro, is a type of hand frame drum....
 beat, with use of the palm of the hand in the center of the instrument for snaps. Partido alto harmony is always in a major key. Usually played by a set of percussion instruments and accompanied by cavaquinhoCavaquinho

The cavaquinho is a small string instrument of the European guitar family with four wires or gut strings....
 and/or violãoGuitar Overview

The guitar is a fretted and stringed musical instrument, used in a wide variety of musical styles, and is also widely known ...
, partido alto is commonly divided in two parts, a chorus and the verses. Partideiros (partido alto musicians) often improvise on the verses, with disputes being common, and highly skilled improvisors have made their fame and career on samba, as Zeca PagodinhoZeca Pagodinho

Zeca Pagodinho is a Brazilian singer and songwriter working primarily in the genre of pagode, a type of samba....
, who is not only a great overall sambista but one of the best improvisors.

Famous partido alto artists include Candeia, Jovelina Pérola Negra, Grupo Fundo de QuintalGrupo Fundo de Quintal

Grupo Fundo de Quintal or simply Fundo de Quintal is the name of an influential samba group and movement which appear...
, Zeca PagodinhoZeca Pagodinho

Zeca Pagodinho is a Brazilian singer and songwriter working primarily in the genre of pagode, a type of samba....
, and Bezerra da SilvaBezerra da Silva

Jos? Bezerra da Silva was a Brazilian samba musician of the partido alto style....
.

Pagode

This is the most widespread form of samba in Brazil. It started as a movement in the 1980s when three new instruments were introduced with Grupo Fundo de QuintalGrupo Fundo de Quintal

Grupo Fundo de Quintal or simply Fundo de Quintal is the name of an influential samba group and movement which appear...
 and others at Cacique de Ramos: the tan-tanTan-Tan

Tan-Tan is a city in southern Morocco....
 - a more dynamic surdoSurdo

The Surdo is a large bass drum used in many kinds of Brazilian music, most notably samba....
; the banjo (samba)Banjo (samba)

The samba banjo is a brazilian instrument which is derived from the cavaquinho, especially associated with a samba s...
 (with the same dimensions and tuning as the cavaquinhoCavaquinho

The cavaquinho is a small string instrument of the European guitar family with four wires or gut strings....
); and the repique de mão ("ringing of the hands") - an instrument derived from the repique de anel, based on the samba enredo repiniques, and commonly used for percussive turnarounds. Usually sung by one singer and accompanied by cavacoCavaquinho

The cavaquinho is a small string instrument of the European guitar family with four wires or gut strings....
, violãoGuitar

The guitar is a fretted and stringed musical instrument, used in a wide variety of musical styles, and is also widely known ...
 and at least one pandeiroPandeiro

The pandeiro, is a type of hand frame drum....
, pagode is sung at most parties and informal meetings, being universally found at open-air bars and cafés. Lyrics are playful, usually around love engagement or some funny stunt.

Famous pagode artists include Grupo Fundo de QuintalGrupo Fundo de Quintal

Grupo Fundo de Quintal or simply Fundo de Quintal is the name of an influential samba group and movement which appear...
, Leci BrandãoLeci Brandão

Leci Brand?o da Silva is a Brazilian singer and composer of Brazilian Popular Music She is the daughter of P?rola Negra, o...
, Jorge AragãoJorge Aragão

Jorge Arag?o is a Brazilian musician, singer/songwriter working in the genres of samba and pagode....
, Almir GuinetoFacts About Almir Guineto

Almir Guineto is a brazilian sambista, musician, singer and composer....
 and Zeca PagodinhoZeca Pagodinho

Zeca Pagodinho is a Brazilian singer and songwriter working primarily in the genre of pagode, a type of samba....
.
Pagode Romântico
This is a newer manifestation of pagode, that keep the same rhythm of the traditional Pagode but includes a little of romantic melody, often frowned upon by the most serious sambistas, and considered to have started gaining force in São PauloSão Paulo

So Paulo is the capital of the state of So Paulo in southeastern Brazil....
. It has strong use of what many consider apelative love lyrics, and the way of singing changed to a more delicate, sensually appealing tone, although artists who perform these songs sometimes sing some more traditional sambas in between too. It became very popular among lower classes and somewhat popular among the urban middle classes in Brazil. In the new millennium also neo-pagode has diminished in popularity, though it still receives some airplay. Today both styles of Pagode are popular together.


Famous artists associated with pagode romântico include Exaltasamba, Raça NegraRaça Negra

Ra?a Negra is a Brazilian pagode group from S?o Paulo....
, Katinguelê, Turma do Pagode, Karametade and Kiloucura.

Neo-pagode
The now umbrella term pagode is also used to label a derivative developed in the northeastern state of BahiaBahia

Bahia|-| align=center colspan=2 |...
 in the 90s. This newer music uses either stronger sexually appealing lyrics or childish lyrics. Some groups were considered a sign of decadence for brazilian music by many. This third style presents some other influences such as Samba duro, Samba-de-roda,.


Famous neo-pagode artists include: É o TchanÉ o Tchan

? o Tchan! is a popular pagode group from Salvador, Bahia, Brasil that started in 1992. ...
, Gera Samba, Harmonia do Samba, Swing e Simpatia, Terra Samba.

Samba de breque

A now defunct type of samba that had as a distinctive feature being interpolated with spoken parts,
often dialogues. Singers had to have an excellent vocal gift, as well as ability to make different voices. Lyrics usually told stories and were funny. Breque does not mean "to break": it was the old Brazilian slang for "brakeBrake

----A brake is a device for slowing or stopping the motion of a machine or vehicle, and to keep it from starting to move ag...
" because the songs featured many "stops".

Famous artists: Moreira da Silva

Samba-canção

Radio-friendly romantic and slower variation of the rhythm, samba-canção was mostly the Brazilian counterpart to popular Latin American rhythms like TangoTango music Summary

Tango music is traditionally played by an orquesta tpica, a sextet which includes two violins, piano, doublebass, and two ...
 or BoleroBolero

The bolero is a type of dance and musical form. ...
, both very popular in Brazil until the 1960s. This style of samba also received a lot the influences of American Ballad from 1950 to 1990. Themes ranged from lyrical to tragical.

Famous artists: Ângela Maria, Maysa, Nélson GonçalvesNelson Gonçalves

Nelson Gon?alves was a Brazilian singer and songwriter....
, Cauby Peixoto, Lindomar Castilho, JamelãoJamelão Summary

Jos? Bispo Clementino dos Santos was a Brazilian samba singer known as Jamel?o....
 and Agnaldo Rayol.

Samba de Gafieira


Samba de Gafieira is a lively, big band-influenced dance jazz of the pre-bossa nova nightclubs, and is one of Brazil's least well-known styles because it was eclipsed by the suave glamour of the bossa crowd and the various waves of rock and samba crossovers that followed. Gafieiras were dancehalls, homes to dancers and dance bands, and (in the best Brazilian tradition) many of the best bandleaders, such as Severino Araujo, Radames Gnattali and Zacharias, drew on many sources to craft their music. They played the kinetic frevo and choro styles, incorporated the muscularity and elegance of North American swing, and eventually gave in to the wave of mellower pop instrumentals and vocal music of the so-called "radio singers" era.

Other variants

  • Bossa novaBossa nova

    Bossa nova is a style of Brazilian music created by Antonio Carlos Jobim and Joo Gilberto and first introduced in Brazil by ...
     ("new beat") is essentially a type of samba, played with jazz instruments and sung with softer voices.
  • Samba-ReggaeSamba reggae

    Samba-reggae is a music genre from Bahia, Brazil....
    , also known is a new poppish type of samba from Bahia (from 2001 onwards). The rhythm is influenced by ReggaetonFacts About Reggaeton

    Reggaeton is a form of dance music which became popular with Latin American youth during the early 1990s and spread to North...
    , CalypsoCalypso Summary

    Calypso may refer to:*Calypso , the name of a sea nymph in Greek mythology...
     and Latin melodies.
  • Samba de Roda is a ritual dance preserved in some Bahian towns. It usually refers to Samba being performed in a CapoeiraCapoeira Summary

    Capoeira is a Brazilian martial art developed initially by African slaves in Brazil, starting in the colonial period....
     roda (roda refers to the formation of the capoeiristas (capoeira players) in a circle)
  • Samba-exaltação ("Exaltation Samba") is a subgenre inaugurated by Ary BarrosoAry Barroso

    Ary Barroso was a Brazilian composer....
    's popular song "Aquarela do BrasilAquarela do Brasil

    "Aquarela do Brasil" is one of the most noted Brazilian patriotic songs, written by Ary Barroso on a rainy night in 1939....
    ".

Other forms

Many Brazilian singers eventually recorded samba, though they were not faithful to the original character of the genre. Jorge Ben JorJorge Ben Jor

Jorge Ben Jor is a Brazilian popular musician, born in Rio de Janeiro on March 22, 1942....
 for instance mixed samba with rock, funk and jazz and composed songs dealing with unusual themes, like esoterism ("Os Alquimistas Estão Chegando" -- The Alchemists are Coming) or history of IndiaIndia Summary

India , officially the Republic of India, is a country in South Asia....
 ("Taj Mahal").

See also

  • ChoroChoro

    Choro, traditionally called chorinho, is a Brazilian popular music style....
  • Noel RosaNoel Rosa

    Noel de Medeiros Rosa was a brazilian singer, composer and guitar/banjo player....
  • Partido AltoPartido alto

    Partido Alto refers to a type of samba with a number of particularities....
  • Samba-enredoSamba-enredo

    A samba-enredo is a song that is sung by a samba school for the festivies of Carnaval....
  • Samba-rock
  • Carmen MirandaCarmen Miranda

    Carmen Miranda was a Portuguese-Brazilian samba singer and motion picture star most active in the 1940s....
  • Adoniran BarbosaAdoniran Barbosa

    Adoniran Barbosa, actual name João Rubinato, was a famous Brazilian traditional samba singer and composer....
  • List of English words of African originList of English words of African origin Summary

    This is a list of English language words that come from any of the sub-Saharan African languages....


External links

  • Fansite for Brazilian Beats Series of classic and modern Samba Fusions
  • , some podcasts from 'RadioFavela - The Sound of Rio'


ISWC T-0425394804 "Latin Complete Collection" Album. Published with the permission of the owner of rights