Brazilian music has become increasingly well-known and popular
in the United States in recent years. Caetano Veloso's performance
of "Burn It Blue" was nominated for the 2003 Oscar for Best Song, and
his fusion in the late sixties of American pop with Brazilian roots
and an avant-garde sensibility, known as Tropicália, is beloved
with hip young rock fans thirty years later.
Caetano Veloso and Chico Buarque represent the strand in Brazilian
music known as Música Popular Brasileira, or MPB for short.
This is music that has its roots in the bossa nova of the early sixties,
but has moved on stylistically incorporating elements from many sources,
particularly rock from outside Brazil.
Caetano (1942-) is perhaps one of the best representatives of the
cultural practice known in Brazil as antropofagia (cannibalism),
where Brazilians, rather than slavishly imitating cultural products
from outside, "eat" foreign culture, so that it in the
process of digestion those products become fully Brazilian. Listeners
will hear some familiar elements, but incorporated into a brew that
is wholly new. Caetano is a talented composer and lyricist (as a
lyricist he was influence by the "concrete" poets of São
Paulo), but particularly excels as a performer, using his voice beautifully
even at age sixty, and always connecting with the audience, flexible,
at easy, changing with each song. The live show recorded (at the
Metropolitan, Barra da Tijuca, Rio de Janeiro, Sept. 12-13, 1998)
for Prenda Minha combines some older material (the classic "Meditation" by
Tom Jobim, as well as some favorites from his own catalog, dating
to the seventies (Terra, Eclipse Oculto), with more recent songs,
in a production that emphasizes variety of affect, and a self-consciously
arty presentation (noticeable in the lighting, and in some of the
camera work in the recording). The ensemble incorporates a percussion
in the Bahian style (Caetano is from Bahia), which is rare in MPB.
Essentially this is the record of a public performance by an important
performer at the peak of his powers.
Chico Buarque (1944-) is the most respected lyricist in Brazil,
with an amazing command of the language, allusive, full of images,
and yet not out of touch with the tradition of the samba. His music
may be considered MPB, but it is much closer to the roots, and incorporates
little in the way of foreign influences. In contrast to Caetano,
Chico was not born to perform – he seems somewhat uncomfortable
in front of the public, stiff, ill-at-ease, and his voice is an instrument
that he is unable to completely command, with a tone that is not
free, and occasional lapses in intonation. The video is a travelogue
of the tour for Chico's album and show "As Cidades" (The
Cities), combining back-stage and on-stage views of the artist with
interviews around Rio de Janeiro. Particularly involving is the joint
interview with Chico and Maria Bethânia (Caetano's sister,
and a star in her own right). As soon as she begins to sing she begins
to simply gleam, and it is impossible not to be captivated.
Tracks (Caetano Veloso):