As Minister of Culture, Gil is spearheading a different kind of anti-establishment
revolution. This time it's about democratizing the distribution of intellectual
property rights. The country has battled Microsoft, Monsanto and drug companies
selling patented HIV drugs. Gil works closely with Stanford Law Professor
Lawrence Lessig and the Creative Commons project.
Gilberto Gil was in New York this week for the Personal Democracy Forum, a
conference that focused on how technology and the internet are changing
democracy. He also performed last night to a packed crowd here in New York.
Yesterday, I sat down with Gilberto Gil in the press room of the Personal
Democracy Forum.
AMY GOODMAN: Gilberto Gil, welcome to Democracy Now!
GILBERTO GIL: Thank you.
AMY GOODMAN: It's a great honor.
GILBERTO GIL: A pleasure for me, too.
AMY GOODMAN: Can you talk about where you were born?
GILBERTO GIL: I was born in Salvador. It's the capital of Bahia, the state
of Bahia. And it's been-like in the fifteenth-the sixteenth century,
Salvador-and when New York was founded, Salvador was larger then.
That's what-Salvador was the largest city of the south hemisphere then.
And it's been a very important place for Brazil, as far as the development,
the culture, the politics, everything. I mean, it was the founding city of
Brazil.
AMY GOODMAN: It's also known as the musical city.
GILBERTO GIL: It is, it is, it is. It's been an artistic city, not just for
music, but for other things also, but especially for music-people like
Dorival Caymmi, great Dorival Caymmi, people like Joao Gilberto, our
generation, myself, Caetano Veloso, Maria Bethania. And now, the Carnival,
the Carnival in Salvador, that has developed into a very, very, very broad
and big party with a lot of music for a whole week, music-and local music
and music, international music, music from the Caribbean area and
everything. I mean, Salvador is really a musical city.
AMY GOODMAN: How did you become a musician?
GILBERTO GIL: That was a kind of self-initiative, so to speak. I told my
mother when I was two to two-and-a-half-I told my mother that I'm
going to be a musician. And she kept that in mind. When I was ten, and
then I had to move from the small city that we lived in inland in Bahia to
Salvador, the capital, she told me, "Now, it's time for you to start to be a
musician, as you wanted, you know, since very early childhood." And then
she bought me an accordion, sent me to a school to learn how to play it.
And then I started playing accordion. And then later, at the age of
seventeen-seventeen, eighteen-I took guitar. She also bought me a
guitar and gave me. So I've been now-it was a kind of self-inspired and
self-envisioned thing that I had myself about being musician, and with my
mother's help.
AMY GOODMAN: Can you explain the Tropicalia movement?
GILBERTO GIL: Well, by the '60s, early '60s, we had in Brazil-late '50s
and early '60s, we had a range of, a set of different artistic and cultural
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