All Topics  
Tropicalismo

 

   Email Print
   Bookmark   Link






 

Tropicalismo



 
 
Tropicália, also known as Tropicalismo, is a Brazilian art movement that arose in the late 1960s and encompassed theatre, poetry, and music, among other forms. Tropicália was influenced by poesia concreta
Poesia concreta

Poesia concreta is Portuguese language for concrete poetry, an avant-garde movement that came on the 1950s, initially in music, but later in poetry and plastic arts....
, a genre of Brazilian avant-garde
Avant-garde

Avant-garde means "advance guard" or "vanguard". The adjective form is used in English, to refer to people or works that are experimental or innovative, particularly with respect to art, culture, and politics....
 poetry embodied in the works of Augusto de Campos, Haroldo de Campos
Haroldo de Campos

Haroldo de Campos was a Brazilian poet and translator. He and his brother Augusto de Campos, together with D?cio Pignatari, are the founders of Noigandres, a Brazilian literary movement similar to Concretism....
, and Décio Pignatari
Décio Pignatari

D?cio Pignatari is a Brazilian poet, essayist and translator.Since the 1950s, conducting experiments with poetic language, incorporating visuals elements and the fragmentation of words....
, among a few others.

Tropicália is associated almost exclusively with the movement's musical expression, both in Brazil and internationally; a form of Brazilian music
Music of Brazil

The Music of Brazil encompasses various regional music styles influenced by African, European and Indigenous peoples in Brazil forms. After 500 years of history the Brazilian music developed some unique and original styles like choro, m?sica sertaneja, brega, forr?, frevo, samba, Bossa nova, M?sica Popular Brasileira, Brazilian rock, ax? and...
 that arose in the late 1960s from a mélange of bossa nova
Bossa nova

Bossa nova is a style of Brazilian music popularized by Ant?nio Carlos Jobim, Vinicius de Moraes and Jo?o Gilberto. Bossa nova acquired a large following, initially by young musicians and college students....
, rock and roll
Rock and roll

Rock and roll is a form of music that evolved in the United States in the late 1940s and early 1950s. Its roots lay mainly in rhythm and blues, Country music, folk music, gospel music, and jazz....
, Bahia
Bahia

Bahia is one of the 26 states of Brazil, and is located in the northeastern part of the country on the Atlantic coast.It is the fourth most populous Brazilian state after S?o Paulo , Minas Gerais and Rio de Janeiro , and the fifth-largest in size....
n folk music
Folk music

Folk music can have a number of different meanings, including:* Traditional music: The original meaning of the term "folk music" was synonymous with the term "Traditional music", also often including World Music and Roots music; the term "Traditional music" was given its more specific meaning to distinguish it from the other definition...
, African music
Music of Africa

The music of Africa is as vast and varied as the continent's many Regions of Africa, List of African countries and ethnic groups. Although there is no distinctly pan-African music, there are common forms of musical expression, especially within Regions of Africa....
, and Portuguese fado
Fado

Fado is a music genre which can be traced from the 1820s in Portugal, but probably with much earlier origins. In popular belief, Fado is a form of music characterized by mournful tunes and lyrics, often about the sea or the life of the poor....
.

icália was not only a musical movement at its inception.






Discussion
Ask a question about 'Tropicalismo'
Start a new discussion about 'Tropicalismo'
Answer questions from other users
Full Discussion Forum



Encyclopedia


Tropicália, also known as Tropicalismo, is a Brazilian art movement that arose in the late 1960s and encompassed theatre, poetry, and music, among other forms. Tropicália was influenced by poesia concreta
Poesia concreta

Poesia concreta is Portuguese language for concrete poetry, an avant-garde movement that came on the 1950s, initially in music, but later in poetry and plastic arts....
, a genre of Brazilian avant-garde
Avant-garde

Avant-garde means "advance guard" or "vanguard". The adjective form is used in English, to refer to people or works that are experimental or innovative, particularly with respect to art, culture, and politics....
 poetry embodied in the works of Augusto de Campos, Haroldo de Campos
Haroldo de Campos

Haroldo de Campos was a Brazilian poet and translator. He and his brother Augusto de Campos, together with D?cio Pignatari, are the founders of Noigandres, a Brazilian literary movement similar to Concretism....
, and Décio Pignatari
Décio Pignatari

D?cio Pignatari is a Brazilian poet, essayist and translator.Since the 1950s, conducting experiments with poetic language, incorporating visuals elements and the fragmentation of words....
, among a few others.

Tropicália is associated almost exclusively with the movement's musical expression, both in Brazil and internationally; a form of Brazilian music
Music of Brazil

The Music of Brazil encompasses various regional music styles influenced by African, European and Indigenous peoples in Brazil forms. After 500 years of history the Brazilian music developed some unique and original styles like choro, m?sica sertaneja, brega, forr?, frevo, samba, Bossa nova, M?sica Popular Brasileira, Brazilian rock, ax? and...
 that arose in the late 1960s from a mélange of bossa nova
Bossa nova

Bossa nova is a style of Brazilian music popularized by Ant?nio Carlos Jobim, Vinicius de Moraes and Jo?o Gilberto. Bossa nova acquired a large following, initially by young musicians and college students....
, rock and roll
Rock and roll

Rock and roll is a form of music that evolved in the United States in the late 1940s and early 1950s. Its roots lay mainly in rhythm and blues, Country music, folk music, gospel music, and jazz....
, Bahia
Bahia

Bahia is one of the 26 states of Brazil, and is located in the northeastern part of the country on the Atlantic coast.It is the fourth most populous Brazilian state after S?o Paulo , Minas Gerais and Rio de Janeiro , and the fifth-largest in size....
n folk music
Folk music

Folk music can have a number of different meanings, including:* Traditional music: The original meaning of the term "folk music" was synonymous with the term "Traditional music", also often including World Music and Roots music; the term "Traditional music" was given its more specific meaning to distinguish it from the other definition...
, African music
Music of Africa

The music of Africa is as vast and varied as the continent's many Regions of Africa, List of African countries and ethnic groups. Although there is no distinctly pan-African music, there are common forms of musical expression, especially within Regions of Africa....
, and Portuguese fado
Fado

Fado is a music genre which can be traced from the 1820s in Portugal, but probably with much earlier origins. In popular belief, Fado is a form of music characterized by mournful tunes and lyrics, often about the sea or the life of the poor....
.

Beginnings

Tropicália was not only a musical movement at its inception. It also took form in the visual arts scene of 1960s Brazil, by the hands of the artists Hélio Oiticica
Hélio Oiticica

H?lio Oiticica was a Brazilian painting, sculpture and performance artist.Oiticica's early works, in the mid 1950s, were greatly influenced by European modern art movements, principally Concrete art and De Stijl....
, Lygia Clark
Lygia Clark

Lygia Clark was a Brazilian artist best known for her painting and Installation art work. She was often associated with the Brazilian Constructivist movements of the mid-20th century and the Tropicalia movement....
, Rogério Duprat
Rogerio Duprat

Rog?rio Duprat was a Brazilian composer and musician.Born in Rio de Janeiro, Duprat spent much of his life in S?o Paulo, where he died. It was there in the early 1960s that he developed an interest in the avant-garde art and music that would soon lead to him studying in Europe with Karlheinz Stockhausen and Pierre Boulez....
, and Antonio Dias
Antônio Dias

Ant?nio Dias is a Brazilian municipality located in the state of Minas Gerais. Its population as of 2006 is estimated to be 10,245 people living in a total area of 877.844 km?....
. The name Tropicália came from a Hélio Oiticica art installation of the same name. It is important to note that one of the cultural constructs of the Tropicália movement was antropofagia, or the cultural and musical cannibalism of all societies, taking in influences from all types of genres and concocting something unique. The concept of antropofagia, as embraced by the Tropicália movement, was created by poet Oswald de Andrade
Oswald de Andrade

Jos? Oswald de Andrade Souza was a Literature of Brazil poet and polemicist. He was born and spent most of his life in S?o Paulo, S?o Paulo....
 in his 1928 Manifesto Antropófago
Manifesto Antropófago

The Manifesto Antrop?fago was published in 1928 by the Literature of Brazil poet and polemicist Oswald de Andrade.Its argument is that Brazil history of "cannibalizing" other cultures is its greatest strength, while playing on the modernists' primitivism interest in cannibalism as an alleged tribal rite....
 (Cannibal Manifesto).

Owing its roots to musical tolerance and innovation, the arrival of Tropicália on the Brazilian music scene began in the 1960s. Although short-lived due to the popularity of the national music trend at the moment, bossa nova
Bossa nova

Bossa nova is a style of Brazilian music popularized by Ant?nio Carlos Jobim, Vinicius de Moraes and Jo?o Gilberto. Bossa nova acquired a large following, initially by young musicians and college students....
, the Tropicália movement would be honored later in 1985 when its 25 year legacy and Brazil's return to a democratic government coincided. Two of the many pioneers of the genre, Caetano Veloso
Caetano Veloso

Caetano Emanuel Viana Telles Veloso , better known as Caetano Veloso, is a composer, singer, guitarist, writer, and activism. He has been called "one of the greatest songwriters of the century" and is sometimes considered to be the Bob Dylan of Brazil....
 and Gilberto Gil
Gilberto Gil

Gilberto Passos Gil Moreira , better known as Gilberto Gil , is a Grammy-winner Brazilian singer, guitarist, and songwriter, known for both his musical innovation and his political commitment....
, released the CD Tropicália 2 in 1993 for this purpose.

Now many years since its inception, Tropicália and its pioneers continue to be cited by Brazilian musicians as sources of musical creativity and inspiration.

Tropicália: ou Panis et Circencis

The 1968 collaboration album Tropicália: ou Panis et Circenses
Tropicália: ou Panis et Circenses

Tropic?lia: ou Panis et Circenses is a collaboration album by artists including Gilberto Gil, Caetano Veloso, Tom Z?, Nara Le?o, Os Mutantes, Gal Costa with arrangements by Rogerio Duprat....
 is considered the musical manifesto of the movement. Caetano Veloso and Gilberto Gil are considered the leaders of the movement. Veloso, Gil, and other artists commonly associated with the movement, notably Os Mutantes
Os Mutantes

Os Mutantes are an influential Brazilian psychedelic rock band that were linked with the Tropicalismo movement of the late 1960s. It was formed by two brothers and a vocalist, but has gone through numerous personnel changes throughout its existence....
, have experimented with unusual time signature
Time signature

The time signature is a notational convention used in Western culture musical notation to specify how many beat s are in each bar and what note value constitutes one beat....
s and other means of unorthodox song structures. Many Tropicália artists were driven by socially aware lyrics and political activism following the coup of 1964, much like its contemporary Brazilian film movement, Cinema Novo
Cinema Novo

Cinema Novo or Novo Cinema was practised by Brazilian film director in the 1950s and 1960s. In Portugal it flourished after the 1960s, where it lasted, inspired by the French New Wave movement of the New wave, the direct cinema techniques, and by the ideals the Carnation Revolution up to the early 1980s ....
. The movement only lasted consistently for a few years, and, in part, is responsible for what is now known as Música Popular Brasileira
Música Popular Brasileira

M?sica Popular Brasileira, or MPB, literally "Brazilian Popular Music", designates a trend in post-Bossa Nova urban popular music. It is not a discrete genre but rather a constellation that combines original songwriting and updated versions of traditional Brazilian urban music styles like samba and samba-can??o with contemporary influen...
 (Brazilian Popular Music), or MPB. After 20 years of struggle for freedom of expression and artistic censorship, Brazil witnessed an unprecedented development in popular music when military rule ended in 1985 "with the election of a civilian president." To celebrate their 25 years of existence, the tropicalistas "launched their CD Tropicalia 2 in 1993 as sort of nostalgic remembrance" of their earlier experiments.

"Haiti", for example, received the most attention from listeners because of its very powerful and provocative lyrics about the social issues in both Haiti
Haiti

Haiti , officially the Republic of Haiti , is a Haitian Creole language- and French language-speaking Caribbean country. Along with the Dominican Republic, it occupies the island of Hispaniola, in the Greater Antilles archipelago....
 and Brazil. The song addressed these very serious “contemporary sociopolitical issues (such as) poverty related to ethnicity (and the ambiguity of racial identity), police and military brutality, politicians and church officials defending the values of capital punishment and anti-abortion, collective murder of homeless children, the AIDS epidemics, etc."

Tropicália as a movement ended in 1968 when its leaders, Caetano Veloso and Gilberto Gil, were incarcerated on a false charge. The true reason for their arrest concerned the fact that their experimental music, dress, and acceptance of Western musical trends disturbed the right-wing dictatorship. "Brazil's military government labeled the musicians a political threat and a decadent influence who will corrupt Brazilian youth." After two months they were released and exiled by the military government
Military government

Military government can refer to conditions under either*Military occupation, or*Military dictatorship...
. (They relocated to London
London

London is the capital of both England and the United Kingdom, and the most populous municipality in the European Union. An important settlement for two millennia, History of London goes back to its founding by the Roman Empire....
 until 1972.) "Others in the Tropicalismo movement were less fortunate; several underwent torture or were forced into 'psychiatric care.' One tropicalista, the lyricist and poet Torquato Neto
Torquato Neto

Torquato Pereira de Ara?jo Neto was a Brazilian journalist and poet. He is perhaps best known as a lyricist for the Tropicalismo movement and general linkage to M?sica Popular Brasileira....
, committed suicide after such treatment." Although Gil and Veloso were exiled from Brazil for four years, they were eventually able to begin rebuilding their careers in 1974.

Today

Although it originally attained little notice outside of Brazil, Tropicalismo and its associated artists have a growing popularity, and has been cited as an influence by rock musicians such as David Byrne
David Byrne (musician)

David Byrne is a Scotland-United States musician and artist perhaps best known as a founding member and principal songwriter of the New Wave band Talking Heads, which was active between 1974 and 1991....
, Beck
Beck

Beck Hansen is an United States musician, singer-songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist known by the stage name Beck. With a pop art collage of musical styles, oblique and irony lyrics, and postmodern arrangements incorporating sample , drum machines, live instrumentation and sound effects, Beck has been hailed by critics and the public...
, Kurt Cobain
Kurt Cobain

Kurt Donald Cobain was an American musician who served as Singer, guitarist, and songwriter for the Grunge music band Nirvana .With the lead single "Smells Like Teen Spirit" from Nirvana's second album Nevermind , Cobain with Nirvana entered into the mainstream, bringing along with them a subgenre of alternative rock called Grunge musi...
, Arto Lindsay
Arto Lindsay

Arto Lindsay is an United States guitarist, singer, record producer and experimental composer.He has a distinctive soft voice and an often noisy, self-taught guitar style comprised almost entirely of extended techniques, described by Brian Olewnick "studiedly na?ve ......
, Devendra Banhart
Devendra Banhart

Devendra Banhart is an United States/Venezuelan folk rock singer-songwriter and musician. Banhart's music has been classified as indie folk, psych folk, Naturalismo, and New Weird America; his lyrics are often surreal and Naturalism ....
, Of Montreal
Of Montreal

of Montreal is an United States indie pop band formed in Athens, Georgia. Fronted by Kevin Barnes, it was among the second wave of groups to emerge from The Elephant 6 Recording Company....
 and Nelly Furtado
Nelly Furtado

Nelly Kim Furtado is a Grammy Award-winning Canada singer of Portuguese people ancestry. She is a singer-songwriter, record producer, and actress....
. In 1998 Beck
Beck

Beck Hansen is an United States musician, singer-songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist known by the stage name Beck. With a pop art collage of musical styles, oblique and irony lyrics, and postmodern arrangements incorporating sample , drum machines, live instrumentation and sound effects, Beck has been hailed by critics and the public...
 released Mutations
Mutations (album)

Mutations is the third major-label studio album by Beck, released in 1998. Though less successful on the charts than the preceding Odelay, Mutations established Beck as an eclectic and innovative artist for his sampling -free mixture of far-ranging musical genres, including tropicalia, bossa nova, country music, and blues....
, the title of which is a tribute to Tropicalismo pioneers Os Mutantes. Its hit single, "Tropicalia", reached number 21 on the Billboard Modern Rock singles chart.

In 2002 Caetano Veloso published an account of the Tropicália movement, Tropical Truth: A Story of Music and Revolution in Brazil. The 1999 compilation Tropicália Essentials, featuring songs by Gil, Veloso, Gal Costa
Gal Costa

Gal Costa is a Brazilian singer of M?sica Popular Brasileira....
, Tom Zé
Tom Zé

Tom Z? is a songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, and composer who was influential in the Tropicalismo movement of 1960s Brazil. After the peak of the Tropic?lia period, Z? went into relative obscurity: it was only in the 1990s, when the musician and label head David Byrne discovered an album recorded by Z? many years earlier, that he returned...
, and Os Mutantes
Os Mutantes

Os Mutantes are an influential Brazilian psychedelic rock band that were linked with the Tropicalismo movement of the late 1960s. It was formed by two brothers and a vocalist, but has gone through numerous personnel changes throughout its existence....
, is an introduction to the style. Other compilations include Tropicalia: Millennium (1999), Tropicalia: Gold (2002), and Novo Millennium: Tropicalia (2005). Yet another compilation, Tropicalia: A Brazilian Revolution In Sound, was released to acclaim in 2006. This latter compilation, however, is problematic in its definition of Tropicália, since it includes Jorge Ben and tracks from the third Os Mutantes album, released in 1970.

Further reading

  • Paula, José Agrippino. "PanAmérica". 2001. Papagaio.
  • McGowan, Chris and Pessanha, Ricardo. "The Brazilian Sound: Samba, Bossa Nova and the Popular Music of Brazil." Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1998 ISBN 1-56639-545-3
  • Dunn, Christopher. "Brutality Garden: Tropicália and the Emergence of a Brazilian Counterculture." Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2001. ISBN 0-8078-4976-6
  • Mei, Giancarlo. Canto Latino: Origine, Evoluzione e Protagonisti della Musica Popolare del Brasile. 2004. Stampa Alternativa-Nuovi Equilibri. Preface by Sergio Bardotti and postface by Milton Nascimento.


External links

  • Perrone, Charles: , Latin American Music Review, Vol. 6, No. 1 (Spring - Summer, 1985), pp. 58-79. (clic on "Request Ticket" and then on "download").
  • 2001 Documentary 52'