Feel he Brazilian Beat?
Download Free Brazilian Songs
that will keep the party alive!
liveloveleblon.com/the-music.aspx
Gilberto gi!
Browse a huge selection now.
Find exactly what you want
today.
www.eBay.com
Antonio Carlos Jobim DVD
With Herbie, Gonzalo, Ron Carter
Great Deal- Free CD with
purchase!
www.view.com
Gold Investment Profits
5 Ways to Get Rich on the Gold
Boom And a hidden "zero cost"
gold stock
www.WhiskeyandGunpowder.com/
Existential
Samba
Brazilian legend Gilberto Gil marries pop and politics
By Dave Pehling
Published: March 21, 2007
Politically minded musicians often make public stands
on specific issues, but rarely do they actually enter into
the bureaucratic machinations of government. In this
respect, Brazilian music icon Gilberto Gil stands out as
an exception. A gifted songwriter who came to fame as a
driving force behind the Tropicalia movement, Gil has
journeyed from jail and exile at the hands of the Brazilian
military dictatorship to serving under current President
Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva as the nation's Minister of
Culture some 35 years later. Likely the only official who
splits his time between departmental duties and the
demands of international pop stardom, Gil now balances
making technology more accessible with promoting
brilliant albums like Gil Luminoso, his recently re-released acoustic retrospective (originally out in
1999) that brings him on a rare solo tour of the United States.
stweekly.com ESUBSCRIBE
GIVE
IT TO YOU
RIGHT IN
THE INBOX
The CD strips Gil's songs down to the barest essence of voice and
guitar,
returning the songwriter to the bossa nova template he helped subvert with
the advent of Tropicalia in 1967. Mixing traditional Brazilian sounds with
fuzzed-out psychedelic guitar, experimental musique concrete, oblique
political criticism, and Dadaist humor, Gil, along with Tropicalia co-founder
Caetano Veloso, and fellow revolutionaries Gal Costa, Tom Zé, and Os
Mutantes, rebelled against both bossa nova's rigid complacency and the
heavy hand of the military regime. The self-described "cultural
cannibalism" of the Tropicalistas would eventually become the foundation
for popular music in Brazil while exerting influence on adventurous
musicians the world over.
Gilberto Gil: tropical transformer.
Details:
Admission is sold
out; visit
The joyous anarchy the music embodied did not sit well with Brazil's
oppressive dictatorship in the '60s. In 1968, Gil and Veloso were jailed for
several months before being exiled to London. Where the imprisonment
almost shattered Veloso (as detailed in his compelling autobiography
www.calperfs.berkeley.eTropical Truth), Gil turned the ordeal into a catalyst for positive self-
for more info.
transformation. Taking up yoga and a macrobiotic diet, the songwriter
emerged a stronger, more enlightened artist. After returning to his native
land in 1972, Gil mined both his African roots and regional Brazilian music to build a remarkable
body of work that echoes the humanist politics and irresistible grooves of global kindred spirits
Stevie Wonder, Bob Marley, and Nigerian firebrand Fela Kuti.