Brazil - Luna Kafé - Full Moon 24 - 10/05/98
Paulo Moura & Os Batutas
Pixinguinha
Blue Jackel
Why some albums take so long to be released is
something we will probably never know for sure. Recorded live at the
Carlos Gomes Theater in Rio de Janeiro in 1996, Pixinguinha
was only released in Brazil a year later. Now, another year later,
Blue Jackel brings this magnificent recording for everyone's
enjoyment.
Pixinguinha won Brazil's Prêmio
Sharp for Best Instrumental CD and Best Instrumental Group in 1997.
The CD presents 16 tracks of classic choro music by one of Brazil's
most important composers of all time, Alfredo da Rocha Viana
Júnior, better known as Pixinguinha. Born in 1897, Pixinguinha
got that nickname from his grandmother. One of 14 brothers and
sisters, he began playing cavaquinho at the early age of 11. It was
also between 11 and 12 years of age when he composed his first choro,
"Lata de Leite". However, it was not until he was 15 years old that
he began to play professionally. In the original group Os Batutas,
Pixinguinha played the flute. Later on, he would change the flute for
the tenor sax.
Named after the original group created by
Pixinguinha, Os Batutas in this recording is composed of Brazil's
most respected choro players: Jorge Simas (guitar), Márcio
(cavaquinho), Jorginho (pandeiro), Jovi (percussion), Marçal
(percussion), Zé da Velha (trombone), and the great Joel do
Nascimento (bandolim). Arranging all music and playing saxophones and
the clarinet, Paulo Moura completes this superlative
ensemble.
As for the music in Pixinguinha, over 60
minutes of authentic choro and samba are performed for generations to
come. Historically credited as the first samba ever recorded in
Brazilian music, Donga and Mário de Almeida's Pelo
Telefone could not be omitted in this collection. Donga himself
was one of the original members of Os Batutas. Arguably the most well
known of Pixinguinha's songs, Carinhoso makes the audience
sigh when Zé da Velha plays its first notes. Carinhoso
has an interesting story behind it. When Pixinguinha composed it, no
one was interested in recording it. Everybody wanted to record the
waltz Rosa, also majestically performed here in a moving solo
by Joel do Nascimento. Hearing Nascimento's bandolim, one can easily
understand why this type of music is called choro (choro is
Portuguese for weeping). After several tries, Pixinguinha finally
found a "new" singer who would record Carinhoso with the bonus
track Rosa. That new singer was none other than one of
Brazil's most famous voices, the late Orlando Silva.
Other great songs parade in this must-have
collection: Ingênuo, Lamentos, Oito
Batutas, Naquele Tempo, and more. When you reach the end
of this historic recording, the electrifying choros Um a Zero
and Urubu Malandro will prove why Brazil's great musical genre
choro fascinates audiences throughout the world. The music is
infectious, and when played by Paulo Moura and Os Batutas, it cannot
get any better.
Copyright © 1998 Egídio Leitão
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