Brazil - Luna Kafé - Full Moon 13 - 11/14/97
Gilberto Gil
Quanta
Mesa
Along with Caetano Veloso, Gilberto Gil is responsible for one of
the most significant musical movements in Brazil. Tropicalismo, as
this movement was known, started 30 years ago, in the late 60's.
Tropicalismo brought several foreign elements to Brazilian music. No
longer would songs be performed with acoustic guitar only; the
electric guitar became a noticeable presence. Furthermore, song
lyrics were "used to address social issues, to voice protest of
authoritarian control, to make aesthetic statements, and to explore
philosophical and spiritual themes," as Charles Perrone states in his
book Masters of Contemporary Brazilian Song: MPB 1965-1985.
Thirty years later, Gilberto Gil is still innovative.
Quanta, his most recent release, shows the diversity in
Gilberto Gil's musical universe. Using science and art as his theme,
Gilberto Gil comes up with over 70 minutes of good music, covering
Brazilian classics as well as presenting brand new compositions, such
as Pela Internet (By The Internet). Pela Internet is
Gilberto Gil's way of showing evolution in communications. With
lyrics using internet terminology, Gilberto Gil draws a comparison
with what is considered to be the first samba ever recorded in
Brazilian music, Pelo Telefone (By The Telephone). The last
verses in Gil's songs are in fact an update of the original lyrics in
Pelo Telefone.
The opening track, Quanta, brings Mílton Nascimento
as a guest vocalist. The song itself is like an overture with its
statement that "art is the sister of science." Then with Cartola and
Carlos Cachaça's exultation samba about Brazil,
Ciência e Arte (Science And Art), Gil sings praises to
famous Brazilians, such as Pedro Américo, famous for his
historical paintings, and Cesar Lattes, Brazil's most famous
physicist. In Vendedor de Caranguejo (Crab Seller) and
Pílula de Alho (Garlic Pill), Gil proves how
irresistible "forró" is. Those two songs will likely stick in
your mind, and you will feel an uncontrollable urge to dance as you
listen to them. In O Lugar do Nosso Amor (The Place of Our
Love), a love song about the emptiness after the end of a love
affair, Gil uses an arrangement evoking Tom Jobim's Só
Tinha de Ser com Você (It Had To Be With You). This nice
remembrance is extended in the following song, De Ouro e de
Marfim (Of Gold And Ivory), which is a tribute to Tom Jobim
himself. In yet another homage to the great João Gilberto,
Bossa Nova's most notable performer, Gil performs the instrumental
Um Abraço no João (A Hug For João). This
variety of sambas, forrós, ballads, and bossa nova rhythms
will make Quanta always fresh every time you hear it.
Quanta was originally released in Brazil as a double CD
set. The worldwide release is a single CD (five tracks were deleted
from the original double set).
Copyright © 1997 Egídio Leitão
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