This album displays the energetic rhythmic power of Brazil's northwest in the hands of an accordion virtuoso with extensive international experience, Sivuca. After an extremely successful tour in 1992 through Scandinavia and northern Europe playing this album's repertoire, they got together in a studio for only four days and recorded it all through. Pau Doido presents a rich panel of northwestern music, with forrós, aboios, and baiões, together with the southeast tradition of samba, choro, and bossa, also reminding the classical influence over Brazilian music, with its valses -- even if "modernized" to a 6/8 jazzy feel -- and canções. Everything glued by creative improvisation, this is an instrumental album at the same time regional and universal, which constitutes an excellent opportunity to present Brazil's cultural diversity. Alvaro Neder
Tracklist :
1. Pau Doido 2:53
Written-By – João Lyra
2. Fugu Para O Nordeste 3:48
Written-By – Dominguinhos
3. Riacho Seco 6:07
Written-By – João Lyra, Maurício Carrilho
4. Seu Tenório 5:22
Written-By – Cláudio Guimarães
5. Deixe O Breque Pra Mim 4:32
Written-By – Altamiro Carrilho
6. Forró Na Penha 3:09
Written-By – Adelmo Arcoverde, João Lyra
7. Que Par Seria 3:21
Written-By – Glorinha Gadelha, Sivuca
8. Mergulho 4:23
Written-By – Afonso Gadelha / Glorinha Gadelha
9. Forró Em Timbaúba 2:54
Written-By – Dominguinhos
10. Um Tom Pra Jobim 4:31
Written-By – Osvaldinho do Acordeon / Sivuca
11. Canção Pizaaollada 3:38
Written-By – Glorinha Gadelha / Sivuca
12. Jazz Tupiniquim 3:57
Written-By – Glorinha Gadelha / Sivuca
Credits :
Acoustic Guitar, Viola Nordestina, Guitar – João Lyra
Arranged By, Conductor, Accordion – Sivuca
Double Bass – Toni Dias
Drums – Fernando Pereira
1.7.25
SIVUCA — Pau Doido (1992) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
30.6.25
JOÃO DONATO — A Bad Donato -João Donato's Psychedelic Funky Experience (1970-2004) RM | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
João Donato, né en 1934, pianiste et compositeur, mais également arrangeur et chef d'orchestre. Dans les années 70, il vivait à Los Angeles. La Bossa Nova passée de mode, le label américain Blue Thumb Records lui offrit la possibilité de réaliser l'album de son choix tout en s'inspirant des sonorités électriques en vogue à l'époque. Il découvre les claviers électriques, en particulier le Fender Rhodes, véritable jouet entre ses mains qu'il va dompter et façonner pour en extraire la substantifique moelle qu'est A Bad Donato (1970). Aux frontières du Funk, de la Pop Psychédélique et du Jazz Fusion, A Bad Donato est une oeuvre expérimentale délicieusement groovie qui garde toujours sa fraîcheur et sa spontanéité 45 ans plus tard. Un album "déganté" réalisé "sérieusement" grâce à la participation de musiciens de Jazz exceptionnels comme Bud Shank, Dom Um Romao e Oscar Castro Neves et des arrangements en collaboration avec Eumir Deodato. "The Frog" entendu maintes fois comme générique d'émissions radio restera bien ancré dans mon inconscient comme un objet intemporel. A Bad Donato est au 76ème rang du classement Rolling Stone des 100 meilleurs albums de la musique brésilienne. Dominique Deret
Tracklist :
1. The Frog 2:37
Written-By – João Donato
2. Celestial Showers 2:36
Written-By – João Donato
3. Bambu 2:20
Written-By – João Donato
4. Lunar Tune 4:55
Written-By – João Donato
5. Cadê Jodel? = The Beautiful One 2:07
Written-By – João Donato
6. Debutante's Ball 3:00
Written-By – João Donato
7. Straight Jacket 3:27
Written-By – João Donato
8. Mosquito = Fly 2:59
Written-By – João Donato
9. Almas Irmãs 1:53
Written-By – João Donato
10. Malandro 2:31
Written-By – João Donato
Credits :
Acoustic Guitar – Oscar Castro-Neves
Arranged By – Eumir Deodato, João Donato
Bass – Chuck Domanico
Drums – Dom Um Romão, Mark Stevens, Paulinho Magalhães
Electric Guitar – Warren Klein
Flute – Bud Shank
Organ, Piano – João Donato
Percussion – Emil Richards, Joe Porcardo
Reeds – Bill Hood, Don Menza, Ernie Watts, Jack Nimitz
Trombone – Jimmy Cleveland, Ken Shroyer
Trumpet – Conti Candoli, Jimmy Zito, Pete Candoli
LUCIANA SOUZA — Brazilian Duos (2001) Two Version | FLAC (image+.tracks+.cue), lossless
Luciana Souza's well-received third record, Brazilian Duos, is a departure in two respects. First, the gifted vocalist is backed not by a jazz quartet, but rather by three different acoustic guitarists -- Romero Lubambo, Marco Pereira (playing eight-string), and Walter Santos (her father). Second, Souza turns away from original material and toward classic Brazilian songs by figures like Dori Caymmi, Luiz Gonzaga, Djavan, Jobim, Toninho Horta, and her parents, Walter Santos and Tereza Souza. The range of moods is astounding, from the tongue-twisting virtuosity of the opening "Baião Medley" and the playfulness of "O Bolo" to the heartbreaking strains of "Pra Dizer Adeus," "Docemente," and "Suas Mãos." Souza's voice, poised and attractive enough on its own, becomes a thing of transcendent beauty when matched with these sparse yet vibrant accompaniments. David R. Adler
Tracklist :
Baião Medley (5:25)
1.1. Repeita Januário
Written-By – Luiz Gonzaga, Humberto Teixeira
Guitar [8 Strings] – Marco Pereira
1.2. Qui Nem Jiló
Written-By – Luiz Gonzaga, Humberto Teixeira
1.3. Romance
Written-By – Djavan
2. Suas Mãos 3:58
Written-By – Antônio Maria
Guitar – Walter Santos
3. Pra Que Discutir Madame 2:42
Written-By – Haroldo Barbosa, Janet De Almeida
Guitar – Romero Lubambo
4. Pra Dizer Adeus 3:41
Written-By – Edu Lobo, Torquato Neto
Guitar [8 Strings] – Marco Pereira
5. Amanhã 3:03
Written-By – Tereza Souza, Walter Santos
Guitar – Romero Lubambo
6. Eu Não Existo Sem Você 2:36
Written-By – Antonio Carlos Jobim, Vinicius De Moraes
Guitar – Walter Santos
7. Doce De Côco 4:02
Written-By – Hermínio Bello De Carvalho, Jacob Do Bandolim
Guitar [8 Strings] – Marco Pereira
8. As Praias Desertas 3:31
Written-By – Antonio Carlos Jobim
Guitar – Walter Santos
9. Docemente 4:38
Written-By – Tereza Souza, Walter Santos
Guitar – Romero Lubambo
10. O Bolo 2:06
Written-By – Tereza Souza, Walter Santos
Guitar – Walter Santos
11. Viver De Amor 3:59
Written-By – Ronaldo Bastos, Toninho Horta
Guitar – Romero Lubambo
12. Saudade De Bahia 2:46
Written-By – Dorival Caymmi
Guitar [8 Strings] – Marco Pereira
Credits :
Producer, Vocals, Arranged By – Luciana Souza
LUCIANA SOUZA — Duos II (2005) Two Version | FLAC (image+.tracks+.cue), lossless
Tracklist :
1. Sai Dessa 3:02
Nathan Marques / Ana Terra
Guitar – Romero Lubambo
2. Nos Horizontes Do Mundo 4:00
Paulinho da Viola
Guitar – Swami Jr.
3. A Flor E O Espinho / Juízo Final 4:45
Nelson Cavaquinho / Guilherme DeBrito
Guitar – Swami Jr.
4. Muita Bobeira 2:50
Luciana Souza
Guitar – Romero Lubambo
5. Modinha 3:29
Antônio Carlos Jobim / Vinícius de Moraes
Guitar – Marco Pereira
6. No Carnaval / Vento 4:27
Antônio Carlos Jobim / Vinícius de Moraes
Guitar – Guilherme Monteiro
7. Sambadalú (Para Luciana Souza) 3:49
Marco Pereira
Guitar – Marco Pereira
8. Aparecida 5:48
Ivan Lins
Guitar – Romero Lubambo
9. Trocando Em Miúdos 5:42
Chico Buarque / Francis Hime
Guitar – Romero Lubambo
10. Chorinho Pra Ele 2:54
Hermeto Pascoal
Guitar – Romero Lubambo
11. Atrás Da Porta 2:46
Chico Buarque / Francis Hime
Guitar – Marco Pereira
12. Você 3:34
Guitar – Guilherme Monteiro
Walter Santos / Tereza Souza
Credits :
Luciana Souza - Audio Production, Producer, Vocals
Romero Lubambo - Casa Gonzalez (Classical Guitar); Ramirez (Classical Guitar)
Marco Pereira - Sughyama (Seven-String Requinto Guitar); Walter Vogt (Classical Guitar)
Swami Jr. - Tessarin (Seven-String Guitar)
Guilherme Monteiro - Manoel Andrade (Classical Guitar); Gibson 175 (Electric Guitar)
LUCIANA SOUZA — Duos III (2012) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Though Grammy-winning Brazilian vocal great Luciana Souza's third Duos
recording marks the (approximately) ten-year anniversary of her
Grammy-nominated Brazilian Duos, the trilogy concludes marvelously with
duets by the singer and the lineup that appears on Duos II (2005):
Toninho Horta, Romero Lubambo, and Marco Pereira. Traveling the world
and playing in the duet format over the previous decade has helped Souza
hone her ability with intimate yet lively voice-guitar conversations
rich with clarity and eloquence. Stripping away the need for busier
accompaniment, she and her cohorts eagerly embrace the core of each
story and its sonic moment. With the exception of a sparse, plaintive
meditation on Jobim's renowned "Dindi," most of the songs run from
two-four minutes, allowing for quick guitar-vocal exchanges that make
their point without dallying or overstating. The opening track, the easy
flowing and breezy "Tim Tim Por Tim Tim," has a simple guitar line that
allows the listener to zero in on Souza's dusky tones and expansive
range. The snappy "Doralise" finds her voice fluttering through her
higher register and daring the accompanying guitar line to keep up. She
balances percussive tunes like that with the gentler sensuality and
slightly mournful touches of tracks like "As Rosas Nao Falam" and the
opening segment of the medley of "Lamento Sertanejo" and (the
rollicking) "Maca do Rosto." No matter the tempo, no matter the tone
chosen by each guitarist, Souza's voice on these classics of her native
land are mesmerizing. Jonathan Widran
Tracklist :
1. Tim Tim Por Tim Tim 1:32
Haroldo Barbosa / Geraldo Jacques
Acoustic Guitar - Toninho Horta
2. Doralice 2:06
Antonio Almeida / Dorival Caymmi
Acoustic Guitar – Romero Lubambo
3. Chora Coração 2:42
Antônio Carlos Jobim
Acoustic Guitar [7-String Guitar] – Marco Pereira
4. Pedra Da Lua 2:55
J. Cascata / Toninho Horta
Acoustic Guitar & Backing Vocals – Toninho Horta
5. Dona Lu 3:56
Gilberto Gil
Acoustic Guitar [7-String Guitar] – Marco Pereira
6. Mágoas De Caboclo 3:39
Leonel Azevedo / J. Cascata
Acoustic Guitar [7-String Guitar] – Marco Pereira
7. Eu Vim Da Bahia 2:42
Gilberto Gil
Acoustic Guitar [7-String Guitar] – Marco Pereira
8. As Rosas Não Falam 4:02
Cartola
Acoustic Guitar – Romero Lubambo
9. Medley: Lamento Sertanejo (Forró Do Dominguinhos) / Maçã Do Rosto 3:45
Djavan / Dominguinhos / Gilberto Gil
Acoustic Guitar – Romero Lubambo
10. Inútil Paisagem 2:51
Antônio Carlos Jobim / Aloysio de Oliveira
Acoustic Guitar - Toninho Horta
11. Dindi 6:06
Antônio Carlos Jobim / Aloysio de Oliveira
Acoustic Guitar – Romero Lubambo
12. Beijo Partido 5:03
Toninho Horta
Credits :
Vocals, Vocalese – Luciana Souza
MÔNICA SALMASO — Iaiá (2004) FLAC (tracks), lossless
Mônica Salmaso is one of those singers Brazil seems to produce by the dozens. She has a seductive, cool voice, mellifluous and on control over the material. She sounds wonderfully in control on the samba "Cabrochinha" and the stripped down "Estrela de Oxum," as well as an imaginative cover of Tom Zé's "Menina, Amanha de Manha." There's plenty of thought in the arrangements, such as the clarinets that are the spine of "Cidade Lagoa," and which typify this as a kind of Brazilian art music, as is evident from the piano on "Sinhazinha (Despertar)." In many ways it's an album to be admired rather than enjoyed, because it seems to keep an emotional distance, both from the heart of the material and from the listener. As such, that's fine, but it's hard to form any attachment to either the material or the singer. Salmaso may be good, but you never find the heart of her -- and that's a problem over the course of an entire CD. Chris Nickson
Tracklist :
1. Moro Na Roça 2:19
– Traditional
Acoustic Guitar [7-String] – Maurício Carrilho
Adapted By – Zagaia, Xangô Da Mangueira
Percussion – Robertinho Silva
2. Cabrochinha 3:48
Acoustic Guitar [7-String] – Maurício Carrilho
Arranged By – Maurício Carrilho
Bandolin – Pedro Amorim
Cavaquinho – Luciana Rabello
Clarinet – Nailor "Proveta" Azevedo
Flute – Marcelo Bernardes
Pandeiro – Jorginho Do Pandeiro
Tamborim – Celsinho Silva, Gordinho
Violoncello – Iura Ranevsky
Written-By – Maurício Carrilho, Paulo César Pinheiro
3. Estrela De Oxum 3:26
Acoustic Bass – Rodolfo Stroeter
Acoustic Guitar – Paulo Bellinati
Bass Flute ["A Gorda"] – Teco Cardoso
Percussion – Robertinho Silva
Written-By – Joyce, Rodolfo Stroeter
4. Menina Amanhã De Manhã 5:29
Accordion – Toninho Ferragutti
Acoustic Bass – Rodolfo Stroeter
Acoustic Guitar, Cavaquinho – Webster Santos
Arranged By – Benjamim Taubkin, Toninho Ferragutti
Flute, Baritone Saxophone – Teco Cardoso
Percussion – Ari Colares
Piano – Benjamim Taubkin
Written-By – Perna, Tom Zé
5. Vingança 3:39
Accordion, Arranged By – Toninho Ferragutti
Arranged By [Brass Arrangement], Clarinet, Alto Saxophone – Nailor "Proveta" Azevedo
Written-By – Francisco Mattoso, José Maria De Abreu
6. Por Toda A Minha Vida 2:20
Acoustic Guitar – Paulo Bellinati
Arranged By – Paulo Bellinati
Written-By – Tom Jobim, Vinicius De Moraes
7. Assum Branco 4:50
Acoustic Bass – Rodolfo Stroeter
Acoustic Guitar, Percussion – Paulo Bellinati
Arranged By – Paulo Bellinati
Violoncello – Lui Coimbra
Written-By – José Miguel Wisnik
8. Cidade Lagoa 3:00
Arranged By – Luca Raelle
Band – Sujeito A Guincho
Bass Clarinet – Luis Afonso "Montanha", Nivaldo Orsi
Clarinet – Edmilson Nery, Luca Raelle*, Sérgio Burgani
Written-By – Cícero Nunes*, Sebastião Fonseca
9. Doce Na Feira 3:04
Flute – Teco Cardoso
Percussion – Ari Colares
Piano – André Mehmari
Written-By – Altair*, Jair do Cavaquinho
10. Sinhazinha (Despertar) 5:04
Arranged By – André Mehmari
Piano – André Mehmari
Written-By – Chico Buarque
11. Onde Ir 4:42
Written-By – Vanessa da Mata
12. É Doce Morrer No Mar 5:25
Written-By – Dorival Caymmi
13. Na Aldeia 5:38
Acoustic Guitar [7-String] – Maurício Carrilho
Backing Vocals – Ana Costa, Analimar, Jurema De Cândia
Bandolin – Pedro Amorim
Cavaquinho – Luciana Rabello
Clarinet – Nailor "Proveta" Azevedo
Guest – Teresa Cristina
Pandeiro – Jorginho Do Pandeiro
Percussion [Prato E Faca] – Paulino
Reco-reco – Celsinho Silva
Surdo – Gordinho
Violoncello – Iura Ranevsky
Written-By – Carusinho, De Chocolat, Silvio Caldas
PAULO BELLINATI · MÔNICA SALMASO — Afro-Sambas (1997-2010) FLAC (tracks), lossless
1. Consolação 4:21
Baden Powell
2. Labareda 3:22
3. Tristeza E Solidão 4:27
Vinícius de Moraes / Baden Powell
4. Canto De Ossanha 3:53
Vinícius de Moraes / Baden Powell
5. Canto De Xangô 4:36
Vinícius de Moraes / Baden Powell
6. Bocochê 2:53
Vinícius de Moraes / Baden Powell
7. Canto De Yemanjá 7:05
Vinícius de Moraes / Baden Powell
8. Tempo De Amor 3:47
Vinícius de Moraes / Baden Powell
9. Canto De Pedra-Preta 4:12
Vinícius de Moraes / Baden Powell
10. Lamento De Exú 3:23
Vinícius de Moraes / Baden Powell
11. Cordão De Ouro / Berimbau 4:26
Paulo Bellinati
Credits :
Mônica Salmaso - Mixing, Performer, Vocals
Pauli Bellinati - Arranger, Mixing, Producer, Guitar by Ignacio Fleta & hijos - 1991

CÉSAR CAMARGO MARIANO & HÉLIO DELMIRO — Samambaia (1981-2003) RM | Odeon 100 Anos Séries | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Era chegado o momento de confeccionar meu segundo disco na Odeon. Foi marcada uma reunião com Mayrton Bahia, produtor do disco anterior, onde foi discutida a idéia de mais um disco instrumental. E a idéia tomou forma. Mais ficou a pregunta- com quem? Daí, a saudadede um velho amigo e companheiro de grandes batalhas trouxe a resposta.
Hélio Delmiro foi comunicado e sua reação foi imediata, pois vinha diretamente ao encontro de uma vontade antiga de realizar esse duo de alguma forma, tanto que as músicas que estavam em sua cabela eram coincidentementeas mesmas que as minhas,
E então começou a realização de um velho sonho. No dia 17 de agosto de 1981, entramos no estúdio e apresentei a ele um do meus temas, Samambaia. E mais uma vez foi confirmada a udentificação musical e sensitiva do duo pois no meio da exposição do tema, Helinho "saiu tocando" e a faixa foi gravada "na primera".
E num clima simples. gostoso e emocional, entre várias garrafas de água mineral com gás, foi regada aquela Samambaia que une as mãos e as cabeças desses dois amigos brasileiros a séculos. César Mariano
Tracklist :
1. Samambaia 5:04
Written-By – César Camargo Mariano
2. Carinhoso 3:51
Written-By – João De Barro, Pixinguinha
3. Emotiva Nº 4 4:11
Written-By – Hélio Delmiro
4. Curumim 3:41
Written-By – César Camargo Mariano
5. Das Cordas 1:50
Written-By – Hélio Delmiro
6a Milagre Dos Peixes 4:46
Written-By – Milton Nascimento, Fernando Brant
6b Cais
Written-By – Milton Nascimento, Fernando Brant
6c San Vicente
Written-By – Milton Nascimento, Fernando Brant
7. Choratta 2:10
Written-By – César Camargo Mariano
8. No Rancho Fundo 4:55
Written-By – Ary Barroso, Lamartine Babo
9. Ninhos 5:50
Written-By – Hélio Delmiro
10. Maria Rita 2:14
Written-By – César Camargo Mariano
Credits ::
Piano Yamaha : César Camargo Mariano
Violão Ovation : Hélio Delmiro
Arranjos : César Camargo Mariano / Hélio Delmiro
29.6.25
GRUPO MEDUSA — Grupo Medusa (1981) Vinyl LP | FLAC (tracks), lossless
The Grupo Medusa was formed in São Paulo, congregating some of the best
musicians of the Brazilian jazz scene. The group lasted a little time
and had two records released.
Apresentação do grupoThe first one, "Grupo Medusa", released in 1981,
inaugurated the record company Som da Gente, specialized in Brazilian
instrumental music. The line-up in this record, was: Amilson Godoy
(piano), Cláudio Bertrami (bass), Heraldo do Monte (electric and
acoustic guitar, mandolin) and Chico Medori (drums), with guest
appearence of Theo da Cuíca and Jorginho Cebion on percussion. An
innovative and authorial album, with lots of spaces for improvisation of
all the musicians, and highly rich in the exploration of the Brazilian
rhythms.
Tracklist :
1 - Baiana (Cláudio Bertrami)
2 - Zeby (Cláudio Bertrami)
3 - Caminhos (Cláudio Bertrami)
4 - Medusa (Chico Medori)
5 - Pé no chão (Chico Medori)
6 - Asa delta (Cláudio Bertrami-Chico Medori)
7 - Uma viagem (Cláudio Bertrami-Chico Medori)
8 - Ponto de fusão (Cláudio Bertrami)
Credits :
Drums, Percussion – Chico Medori
Electric Bass, Fretless Bass, Acoustic Bass, Surdo – Cláudio Bertrami
Electric Guitar, Mandolin, Acoustic Guitar – Heraldo Do Monte
Percussion – Jorginho Cebion, Theo Da Cuíca
Piano, Electric Piano, Clavinet – Amilson Godoy
Producer, Arranged By – Grupo Medusa
Recorded By, Mixed By – Carlos Duttweller
Vocalese [Gemido Da Seca] – Heraldo Do Monte (tracks: 1)
SAMMY DAVIS, JR. · LAURINDO ALMEIDA — Sammy Davis, Jr. Sings · Laurindo Almeida Plays (1966-2004) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
The intimacy inherent in this collection places 1966's Sammy Davis, Jr.
Sings and Laurindo Almeida Plays in a class unto itself. As he had done
on the highly conceptual All-Star Spectacular in 1962 and California
Suite in 1964, multi-talented entertainer Sammy Davis Jr. has created a
unique and thoroughly fascinating outing. The ten selections feature
Davis and Brazilian instrumentalist/arranger Laurindo Almeida, who made a
name for himself as an accompanist for Carmen Miranda before delving
into the decidedly American art form of West Coast cool jazz with
saxophonist Bud Shank in the mid-'50s. Here, the pair effortlessly
complement each other inside the very intonation and tenor of their
respective crafts. Davis' incisive abilities as an emotive performer
bring a pervasive dramatic quality to the wide range of material
covered. When compared to fellow Rat Packer Frank Sinatra's reading of
"Here's That Rainy Day," Davis' vocals lean into the song, resulting in a
palpable sense of melancholia. He evokes a similar sentiment on the
achingly poignant version of Cole Porter's "Ev'ry Time We Say Goodbye"
as well as the hopelessly optimistic "I'm Always Chasing Rainbows."
However, the real magic woven into this collaboration is without a doubt
Davis' incorporation of several significant Broadway melodies. "Where
Is Love" -- taken from Lionel Bart's Oliver -- is a stunning, if not
mesmerizing, interpretation. "Joey, Joey, Joey" bears an earthy
closeness, offering what is arguably a defining moment as the tune
transcends its place within the stage production Most Happy Fella,
becoming an exceptional and exquisite ballad. [In 2004, Collectors'
Choice Music reissued Sammy Davis, Jr. Sings and Laurindo Almeida Plays
as part of the label's complete restoration of Davis' 1960s Reprise
Records catalog.] Lindsay Planer
Tracklist :
1 Here's That Rainy Day 2:15
Written-By – Burke/Van Heusen
2 Two Different Worlds 3:21
Written-By – Frisch, Wayne
3 The Shadow Of Your Smile 4:12
Written-By – Mandel, Webster
4 Where Is Love 3:00
Written-By – Lionel Bart
5 Ev'ry Time We Say Goodbye 4:01
Written-By – Cole Porter
6 I'm Always Chasing Rainbows 2:20
Written-By – Carroll, McCarthy
7 We'll Be Together Again 3:14
Written-By – Fischer, Laine
8 Joey, Joey, Joey 4:18
Written-By – Frank Loesser
9 The Folks Who Live On The Hill 3:40
Written-By – Kern/Hammerstein
10 Speak Low 3:32
Written-By – Weill, Nash
Credits :
Classical Guitar – Laurindo Almeida
Vocals – Sammy Davis Jr.
28.6.25
SÂO BERNARDO (1972) Dir. Leon Hirszman | VIDEO (AVI)
Synopsis :
The story of Paulo Honório, a poor kid who becomes a rich farmer. Obsessed by his desire to get even richer, he doesn't pay much attention to his wife, Madalena, a teacher who reacts against his tyrannical ways.
A história de Paulo Honório, um garoto pobre que se torna um rico fazendeiro. Obcecado pelo desejo de ficar ainda mais rico, ele não dá muita atenção à esposa, Madalena, uma professora que reage contra seus modos tirânicos.
Title : São Bernardo (1972)
Directed by Leon Hirszman
Duration : 112 min.
Audio in português / English Subtitles
Genres : Drama
Countries : Brazil
SAMBALANÇO TRIO — Sambalanço Trio (1964-2000) FLAC (tracks) 24-32Hz
Tracklist :
1 – Samblues (César Camargo Mariano) 2:16
2 – Balanço Zona Sul (Tito Madi) 2:33
3 – O Morro não tem vez (Tom Jobim – Vinicius de Moraes) 3:45
4 – Nos e o Mar (Roberto Menescal – Ronaldo Boscoli) 2:19
5 – Homenagem a Clifford Brown (Dorimar) 2:44
6 – Berimbau (Baden Powell – Vinicius de Moraes) 3:57
7 – Jacqueline K (Heraldo Correia) 2:49
8 – Consolação (Baden Powell – Vinicius de Moraes) 2:38
9 – O Amor que Acabou (Chico Feitosa – Luiz F. Freire) 3:13
10 – Pra que Chorar (Baden Powell – Vinicius de Moraes) 2:30
11 – Marisa (Cesar Camargo Mariano) 3:04
12 – Sambinha (Humberto Clayber – Cesar Camargo Mariano) 2:12
Credits :
Contrabass – Humberto Clayber
Drums – Airto Moreira
Piano – Cesar Camargo Mariano

CARLOS BARBOSA-LIMA — Plays The Music of Antonio Carlos Jobim & George Gershwin (1982-1990) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Carlos Barbosa-Lima is a superb Brazilian classical guitarist who has a beautiful tone. On his debut for Concord Concerto (the first of many releases), Barbosa-Lima performs six pieces by Antonio Carlos Jobim and eight by George Gershwin. The guitarist mixes together hits with some lesser-known tunes. Highlights include "Desafinado," "Corcovado," two of Gershwin's Preludes," "'S Wonderful" and "The Man I Love." Not an improviser, Barbosa-Lima worked out inventive and melodic renditions of these classic melodies, some of which are quite concise; "'S Wonderful" is only five seconds over a minute long. A strong example of the beautiful music of Carlos Barbosa-Lima. Scott Yanow
Tracklist :
1. Caminho De Pedra 2:38
(Antônio Carlos Jobim / Vinícius De Moraes)
2. Desafinado 3:11
(Antônio Carlos Jobim / Newton Mendonça)
3. Estrada Branca 3:04
(Antônio Carlos Jobim / Vinícius De Moraes)
4. Stone Flower 3:22
(Antônio Carlos Jobim)
5. Corcovado 3:48
(Antônio Carlos Jobim)
6. Amparo 3:42
(Antônio Carlos Jobim)
7. One Note Samba 1:10
(Antônio Carlos Jobim / Newton Mendonça)
8. Modinha 1:18
(Antônio Carlos Jobim / Vinícius De Moraes)
9. Canta Mais 3:23
(Antônio Carlos Jobim / Vinícius De Moraes / Chico Buarque De Holanda)
10. Prelude #2 2:41
(George Gershwin)
11. Prelude #1 2:18
(George Gershwin)
12. Promenade 3:51
(George Gershwin)
13. Summertime 3:40
(George Gershwin / Ira Gershwin / DuBose Heyward)
14. Swanee 1:44
(Irving Caesar / George Gershwin)
15. 'S Wonderful 3:04
(George Gershwin / Ira Gershwin)
16. Merry Andrew 3:33
(George Gershwin)
17. The Man I Love 1:18
(George Gershwin / Ira Gershwin)
Credits :
Acoustic Guitar, Arranged By – Carlos Barbosa-Lima
27.6.25
ARTHUR MOREIRA LIMA — Arthur Moreira Lima Interpreta Ernesto Nazareth Vol.1 (1975) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
This disc is part of a series of four devoted to recordings by Brazilian pianist Arthur Moreira-Lima to the music of his compatriot, Ernesto Nazareth. The total absence of documentary material other than a track list is frustrating, but these recordings were apparently made in the mid-'70s, with the CDs mixing material from various sources. Nazareth's music is quite close in its position vis-à-vis classical and popular traditions to that of Scott Joplin in the U.S.: it is rooted in popular dance rhythms, but it also follows examples of European composers going back to Chopin. The most common rhythm is the tango, which is somewhat different in its configuration from the rhythms used in Astor Piazzolla's tango. Indeed, for North American listeners the most fascinating aspect of these tangos may be the degree to which they resemble Scott Joplin's more meditative piano rags. The polkas have a similar lyrical tone and are more squarish not so much in the left hand as in the basic melodic material. Probably the most ornate material is heard in the four waltzes on the disc. The tunes are never less than attractive and in many cases extremely sticky in the brain. The sound engineering was impressive for its time, and the transfers pose no problem. The only real issue here is that four CDs of Nazareth may be a lot for listeners without a special interest in this Brazilian composer, but as a single disc this one doesn't necessarily make an ideal sampler inasmuch as Nazareth also wrote pieces less firmly tied to dance rhythms. Recommended for those who can supply the background material and knowledge for themselves. James Manheim
ERNESTO NAZARETH (1863-1934)
1. Fon Fon 2:12
2. Confidências 6:00
3. Retumbante 3:02
4. Faceira 5:44
5. Turuna 4:56
6. Ameno Resedá 2:26
7. Batuque 4:32
8. Coração Que Sente 5:35
9. Duvidoso 2:46
10. Turbilhão De Beijos 6:25
11. Labirinto 3:01
12. Apanhei-Te Cavaquinho 2:07
Credits :
Arthur Moreira Lima - Piano
ARTHUR MOREIRA LIMA — Arthur Moreira Lima Interpreta Ernesto Nazareth Vol.2 (1975) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
The dozens of short piano pieces of Ernesto Nazareth are often designated as tangos, waltzes, polkas, and other dances. But although they're deeply enmeshed with the popular music of Brazil early in the last century, they're not for dancing, and, as with Chopin's piano music (another major influence), they don't always fall into one classification or another. For North American listeners, the striking thing is how many of them, had they been written in St. Louis or Chicago, would have been called rags. Hear track 1 on the present disc, Famoso, several strains of which feature pure ragtime rhythms, while others add a syncopation or two that would have been mostly absent in North America except perhaps in the mostly lost music of the New Orleanian Louis Chauvin. Scott Joplin, for his part, wrote a few tangos that could have held their own in South America. This disc is part of a set of four featuring performances by Brazilian pianist Arthur Moreira-Lima. No documentary information whatsoever other than a track list is provided, but the performances were apparently taken from LPs released in the 1970s. The sound drops out a bit in spots but has generally held up quite well. This set may be of the most interest to collectors, but the performances are beautifully sensitive to the small rhythmic details in Nazareth's music and strike a nice balance between its popular and classical elements, something that seems to elude most players of Joplin. Hear the very Chopin-like waltz Mercedes, track 5, or Odeon (track 6) with its contrasting strains of straight polka and 2+3+3 bass lines for a good idea of what you're getting here, which anyone who likes either tango or ragtime will enjoy. James Manheim
ERNESTO NAZARETH (1863-1934)
1. Famoso 3:29
2. Fidalga 6:46
3. Floraux 3:56
4. Nenê 2:47
5. Mercedes 4:33
6. Odeon 2:58
7. Brejeiro 2:09
8. Eponina 6:28
9. Escovado 2:49
10. Pássaros Em Festa 6:00
11. Sarambeque 2:49
12. Vem Cá, Branquinha 2:11
13. Você Bem Sabe 1:55
Credits :
Arthur Moreira Lima - Piano
ARTHUR MOREIRA LIMA — Arthur Moreira Lima Interpreta Ernesto Nazareth Vol.3 (1977-1984) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
This disc is part of a series of four reissuing performances of Ernesto Nazareth's music by Brazilian pianist Arthur Moreira-Lima. The original recordings apparently appeared in the 1970s. The sound is reasonable for that era, but there's no documentation at all other than a tracklist and some anti-copying warnings in Portuguese. The newcomer to Nazareth might wish to choose a disc that gives a bit more background on this fascinating and underrated composer, but recordings of his music are not abundant, and the music heard here is thoroughly enjoyable. Think of Nazareth as occupying a position somewhere in the middle of a triangle formed by Chopin, Scott Joplin, and the often nameless but worship-worthy early pioneers of tango. Sometimes it's hard to tell whether he was directly influenced by ragtime or made similar rhythmic discoveries on his own; probably each process occurred to some extent, and you can puzzle out the relationships for yourself in a piece like Bambino (Você Não Me Dá), track 1, which is designated a tango. Whether working in the form of a tango, polka, waltz, or any of several local Brazilian dances, Nazareth often pushes the music just slightly away from the salon and in the direction of classical complexity. It would have been fascinating to see what might have happened if Joplin had gotten to know his music. His triple-meter pieces are especially free in spirit; rooted in the waltz, they place the accents all over the place. Try out Meigo, track 11, for some especially subtle sets of three, played to the hilt by Lima. Recommended, especially for those who've heard a bit of Nazareth and want to know more. James Manheim
ERNESTO NAZARETH (1863-1934)
1 Bambino, tango for piano 3:21
2 Crê e espera, waltz for piano 6:02
3 Tenebroso, tango for piano 5:36
4 Favorito, tango for piano 4:16
5 Perigoso, tango brasileiro for piano 2:45
6 O Futurista, for piano 3:55
7 Plangente, tango basiliero com estilo de Habanera for piano 6:32
8 Dirce, waltz for piano 4:02
9 Sutil, tango for piano 3:49
10 Quebradinha, polca para Serestas for piano 4:58
11 Meigo, for piano 3:58
12 Espalhafatoso, for piano 2:36
Credits :
Arthur Moreira Lima - Piano
ARTHUR MOREIRA LIMA — Arthur Moreira Lima Interpreta Ernesto Nazareth Vol.4 (1977) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
This disc is part of a series of reissues of performances from the 1970s by pianist Arthur Moreira-Lima that covers a large part of the piano output of Brazilian composer Ernesto Nazareth. They're stingy as to documentation, providing no information whatsoever other than a tracklist, making them less than suitable for newcomers to this intriguing composer. But the 1970s sound engineering isn't bad for the period, and the accumulation of music makes sense for those already bitten by the Nazareth bug. Nazareth is a composer who grows on you the more you hear him and get the hang of catching the small details. The most intriguing thing for newcomers is how many of his pieces, designated tangos, resemble the rags of African American composer Scott Joplin. This particular disc contains fewer of the short dances heard especially on the first two recordings in the series; most of those that do appear are waltzes. In their place are longer compositions of five or six minutes that introduce not only several strains, but also different rhythms, as they unfold. These are among the most subtle and beautiful of Nazareth's compositions. Sample Yolanda (track 5), with its languid elaborations on the basic waltz rhythm, its return to a simple waltz just under three minutes in, and the ingenious variations that follow upon that: this is Nazareth at his fascinating best. Recommended, like the rest of the series, for Nazareth's admirers. James Manheim
ERNESTO NAZARETH (1863-1934)
1 Carioca, tango for piano 6:26
2 Escorregando, tango brasileiro for piano 2:33
3 Adieu - Romance sem Palavras, for piano 4:31
4 Sustenta a... Nota!, tango for piano 2:53
5 Yolanda, waltz for piano 5:42
6 Elegantíssima, waltz for piano 4:09
7 Expansiva, waltz for piano 5:09
8 Janota, for piano 1:50
9 Ouro sobre azul, tango for piano 5:58
10 Improviso, estudo para concerto, for piano 3:56
11 Dora, for piano 6:28
12 Pinguin, for piano 2:52
Credits :
Arthur Moreira Lima - Piano
26.6.25
SOM IMAGINÁRIO — Matança Do Porco (1973-2003) RM | Odeon 100 Anos Series | Two Version | FLAC (image+.tracks+.cue), lossless
Tracklist :
1. Armina 5:41
Drums – Robertinho
Electric Bass – Luiz Carlos
Guitar – Frederiko
Written-By, Piano, Electric Piano, Organ – Wagner Tiso

2. A3 3:09
Drums, Congas – Robertinho
Electric Bass, Maracas – Luiz Carlos
Flute – Danilo Caymmi
Guitar – Chiquito
Percussion – Chico Batera
Twelve-String Guitar – Tavito
Written-By, Electric Piano, Organ – Wagner Tiso
3. Armina (Vinheta 1) 0:45
Conductor – Arthur Verocai
Orchestra – Orquestra Odeon
Written-By – Wagner Tiso
4. (A Nova Estrela) Nº 2 6:35
Conductor – Gaya
Drums – Robertinho
Electric Bass – Luiz Carlos
Guitar – Chiquito, Frederiko
Orchestra – Orquestra Odeon
Percussion – Chico Batera
Twelve-String Guitar – Tavito
Written-By, Organ, Electric Piano – Wagner Tiso
5. A Matança do Porco 11:01
Conductor – Gaya
Drums – Robertinho
Electric Bass – Luiz Carlos
Guitar – Frederiko
Orchestra – Orquestra Odeon
Percussion – Chico Batera
Vocals – Golden Boys, Milton Nascimento
Written-By, Piano, Organ – Wagner Tiso
6. Armina (Vinheta 2) 0:34
Conductor – Arthur Verocai
Orchestra – Orquestra Odeon
Written-By – Wagner Tiso
7. Bolero 3:08
Drums – Robertinho
Electric Bass – Luiz Carlos
Flute – Danilo Caymmi
Written-By – Luiz Alves, Milton Nascimento, Roberto Da Silva
Written-By, Piano, Electric Piano – Wagner Tiso
Written-By, Twelve-String Guitar – Tavito
8. Mar Azul 3:43
Drums – Robertinho
Electric Bass, Guitar – Luiz Carlos
Flute – Danilo Caymmi
Guitar – Chiquito
Written-By – Luiz Alves
Written-By, Electric Piano, Organ – Wagner Tiso
9. Armina (Vinheta 3) 0:46
Conductor – Arthur Verocai
Orchestra – Orquestra Odeon
Written-By – Wagner Tiso

QUARTETO NOVO - Quarteto Novo (1967-2008) RM | Celebrate 50 Years Bossa Nova Series | Two Version | FLAC (image+.tracks+.cue), lossless
The sole album by the legendary Quarteto Novo was released by the Odeon label in 1967 and was accorded various coveted Brazilian artistic prizes, including the Troféu Roquette Pinto and the Troféu Imprensa. The band was made up of four now legendary Brazilian musicians: percussionist Airto Moreira; bassist, guitarist, and violinist Theo de Barros; guitarist, violinist, violist, and sometimes banjo player Heraldo do Monte (these three musicians all being members of the previous Trio Novo); and later arrival Hermeto Pascoal. Coming from the northeastern part of the nation, all of these men were intimately familiar with baião music, the danceable rhythmic style comprised of a syncopated 2/4 time signature that could be played on the double-skinned zabumba drum and harmonic and melodic structures written around a Lydian flat seventh scale; it is derived from the tuning of the pífano flute, which has a raised fourth and flattened seventh. The chord structure is based on a dominant seventh. And while the style is not well-known outside Brazil, it nonetheless influenced a host of popular songwriters in America, England, and Europe, who scored hits with tunes utilizing the style's elements. (A couple of examples are the Burt Bacharach tune "Do You Know the Way to San Jose?" and "Save the Last Dance for Me," written by Doc Pomus and Mort Schulman and recorded by the Drifters.) Quarteto Novo -- and their patron and songwriting collaborator Geraldo Vandré -- had a deep, some would say obsessional, interest in American bebop; combine them and you have something very special indeed. Though in many ways, these eight songs sound somewhat quaint to undisciplined in the 21st century, the opposite is actually quite true. This meld of styles and the deep interest in subtle yet innovative rhythmic interplay, counterpoint, and taut song structures are to this day quite revolutionary.
The soulfulness at the heart of this music is a far cry from the breeziness of bossa nova, and there are no lyrics. Instead, on tunes like "Fica Mal com Deus," a 12-string guitar, a nylon-string guitar, and the pífano flute of Pascoal all enter in a head line like a bop composition. Within a chorus, the flute moves to a different melody, guitars accent two different parts of the rhythm, and Airto allows timekeeping and rhythmic invention to flow toward the melody instead of framing its outside. The listener is completely caught up in the joy and drama of the tune -- this also goes for the much more intricate and haunting "Canto Geral," which begins much more slowly but quickly weaves a pair of melodic intricacies together and frames them with a samba feel, which is stretched and cast off as three voices wordlessly create a third melody in the middle as a bridge, followed by a minor seventh interlude that is utterly forlorn before the pastoral open country feel returns. Amazing! The set closes with the popping "Vim de Sant'Ana," where piano, double bass, nylon-string guitars, and Airto's percussion magic are woven inseparably with a contrapuntal Wes Montgomery swinging soul-styled melody. Over its five minutes the track changes considerably, moving from one mode to another with seamless transitions until the listener is left breathless by its end. This record is difficult to find at times, and keeps getting reissued on CD in small batches. Look for it. One can hear so many things in this music that deserve a place on the sacred shelf. One can think of producers like Creed Taylor and his original idea for CTI and know he heard this music; one can hear the very foundation of Egberto Gismonti's music inside this record; and it can also be credited with much of the killer '70s jazz and Brazilian fusions that occurred on records by everyone from Joe Farrell and Chick Corea to Gary Burton and Freddie Hubbard. And then there are those brilliant albums by Airto, Dom Um Romão, Flora Purim, and so many others that came directly from the sounds displayed here so generously and ingeniously.
-> This comment is posted on Allmusic by Thom Jurek, follower of our blog 'O Púbis da Rosa' <-
Tracklist :
1. O Ôvo 2:17
Geraldo Vandré / Hermeto Pascoal
2. Fica Mal Com Deus 3:26
Geraldo Vandré
3. Canto Geral 3:45
Geraldo Vandré / Hermeto Pascoal
4. Algodão 7:19
Luiz Gonzaga / Zê Dantas
5. Canta Maria 2:45
Geraldo Vandré
6. Síntese 2:37
Heraldo Do Monte
7. Misturada 4:15
Geraldo Vandré / Airto Moreira
8. Vim De Sant'Ana 5:09
Theo de Barros
Credits :
Acoustic Guitar – Heraldo Do Monte
Bass, Violão – Théo De Barros
Drums, Percussão – Airto Moreira
Flute – Hermeto Pascoal
MARIO ADNET e ZÊ NOGUEIRA apresentam MOACIR SANTOS — Choros & Alegria (2005) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Tracklist :
1 Agora Eu Sei (Now I Know) 4:55
Moacir Santos
2 Outra Coisa (Another Thing) 3:30
Moacir Santos
3 Paraíso (Paradise) 4:41
Moacir Santos
4 Vaidoso (Vain) 2:56
Moacir Santos
5 Flores (Flowers) 3:28
Moacir Santos
6 Saudade de Jacques (Looking for Jaques) 3:40
Moacir Santos
7 Cleonix 3:38
Moacir Santos
8 Ricaom 2:21
Moacir Santos
Credits :
Mario Adnet - Adaptation, Arranger, Guitar, Orchestration, Producer, Re-Orchestration, Transcription
Muiza Adnet - Vocals
Ronaldo Bandolim - Mandolin
Cristóvão Bastos - Keyboards, Piano
Zé Paulo Becker - Guitar
Teco Cardoso Sax (Baritone)
Andréa Earnest Dias Flute, Piccolo
Phillip Doyle - French Horn
Jorge Helder - Bass (Acoustic)
Armando Marçal - Percussion
Wynton Marsalis - Guest Artist, Soloist, Trumpet
Marcelo Martins - Sax (Tenor)
Jota Moraes - Vibraphone
Jurim Moreira - Drums
Marcos Nimrichter - Piano (Electric)
Zé Nogueira - Arranger, Producer, Sax (Soprano), Transcription
Nailor Proveta - Clarinet, Sax (Alto)
Jessé Sadoc - Trumpet
Moacir Santos - Arranger, Composer, Vocals
Vittor Santos - Trombone
Ricardo Silveira - Guitar (Electric)

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ANNITA RAY — Slow Glow (1962-2010) FLAC (tracks), lossless
Annita Ray's sublime debut pairs the singer with arranger Harry Betts, whose soft-focus, gossamer backings perfectly complement Ray'...
