Brazilian Artists :
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Joao Batista Castagneto 1851-1900 Painter
Eliseu Visconti 1866-1944 Painter
Artur Timoteo da Costa 1882-1923 Painter
Tarsila do Amaral 1886-1973 Painter
Anita Malfatti 1889-1964 Painter
Lasar Segall 1891-1957 Painter
Victor Brecheret 1894-1955 Sculptor
Emiliano Di Cavalcanti 1897-1967 Painter
Flavio de Carvalho 1899-1973 Painter
Candido Portinari 1903-1962 Painter
Jose Pancetti 1904-1958 Painter
Hercules Barsotti Born 1914 Painter
Milton Dacosta 1915-1988 Painter
Lygia Clark 1920-1988 Installation Artist
Arcangelo Ianelli Born 1922 Painter
Manabu Mabe 1924-1997 Painter
Arthur Luiz Piza Born 1928
Lygia Pape 1929-2004
Sergio Camargo 1930-1990 Sculptor
Anna Bella Geiger Born 1933
Antonio Henrique Amaral Born 1935 Painter
Susan Seddon Boulet 1941-1997
Art Prints
Sebastiao Salgado Born 1944 Photographer
Frida Baranek Born 1961 Sculptor
Jac Leirner Born 1961 Sculptor
Vik Muniz Born 1961 Photographer
Ernesto Neto Born 1964 Installation Artist
Pedro Alexandrino Borges Painter
Luis de Camoes
Any study of Brazilian art must begin with Luis de Camoes (1525 - 1580), Portugal's national poet. Born in Lisbon to an impoverished noble family, he joined a military expedition to the Orient to seek fame and fortune, but returned penniless. While in Macau, off the coast of China, in a cave, he wrote the Lusiadas, the great Portuguese national epic (Kind of like Shakespeare writing his plays in a hut in Afghanistan). The development of all subsequent Portuguese (and Brazilian) literature can be traced to this work. Camoes totally dominates all poetic currents of his time. He also wrote beautifully structured sonnets and lyric poems. Camoes died in poverty and obscurity. A giant of his era, he has influenced writers in many languages, including the great English poets of the Elizabethan era (Browning's Sonnets from the Portuguese: "How do I love thee, let me count the ways").
Jose de Anchieta
Jose de Anchieta (1534 - 1597), a Portuguese Jesuit priest, is considered to be the first writer of Brazilian themes. His writings reveal religious devotion and include religious plays, poems, descriptive prose, and the first Tupi Indian grammar. Ancheta is also known for founding the great city of Sao Paulo in 1554.
Alejadinho
From the beginning of the 17th century to the end of the colonial period, the baroque styles of Europe dominated the artistic life of both the Spanish and Portuguese colonies. Baroque architecture is represented in the large churches featuring the use of connecting oval interior spaces and contrasting concave and convex exterior walls. In Brazil, baroque art is most visible in the magnificent churches and the sculptural creations of Antonio Francisco Lisboa, known as Aleijadinho, meaning The Little Cripple. He was said to have worked with paintbrush, hammer and chisel strapped to his hands, not being able to hold them with his fingers, because of disease. The most famous of Aleijadinho's work are the Sao Francisco de Assis church in Ouro Preto, brilliantly decorated with carvings in wood and soapstone, and the dramatic statues of the Twelve Prophets at Congonhas do Campo.
Antonio Goncalves Dias
Antonio Goncalves Dias(1823 - 1864)is regarded as Brazil's national poet, and his Song of Exile (1843), with its evocative first line,
Minha terra tem palmeira, onde canta o sabia
"My land has palm trees, where the nightengale sings"
is Brazil's bet known known poem. Educated in Portugal at the University of Coimbra, he wrote of love and of his country in Primeiros Cantos (First Songs, 1846), Segundos Cantos (Second Songs, 1848), and Ultimos Cantos (Last Songs, 1851). He was returning to Brazil from Europe when he died in a shipwreck at the age of 41.
Joaquim Nabuco
Joaquim Nabuco de Araujo (1849 - 1910) a Brazilian writer and diplomat, was a leader in the fight to abolish slavery in Brazil. He helped secure a partial and gradual emancipation bill in 1871, founded the Brazilian Antislavery Society in 1880, and wrote extensively about slavery, which was finally abolished in Brazil in 1888. Joaquim Nabuco's importance derives from his use of literature as social conscience and political weapon, a mix of Sinclair Lewis and Harriet Bleecher. His works have none of the beauty and poetic precision of those of Goncalves Dias.
Castro Alves
Castro Alves (1847 - 1871) addressed many of the same themes as Joaquim Nabuco, but much more poeticallly. There has never been a greater literary assult on the evils of slavery than Navio Negreiro (Black Slave Ship)
Senhor Deus dos desgracados
Dizei-me vos, Senhor Deus
Se e' loucura ... se e' verdade
Tanto horror perante os ceus.
Jose de Alencar
Jose de Alencar (1829 - 1877) and Machado de Assis (1839 - 1908) are two romantic era novelists, known for their romantic, brazilian themes. They both deal with the common aspects of everyday life of the common people. Alencar is more of a naturalist, focusing on the purity of native society, uncorrupted by civilization. Assis, on the other hand, uses urban themes to paint a very pessimistic picture of life.
Mario de Andrade
Mario de Andrade (1893 - 1945) was a leading cultural figure in the modernist movement in Brazil and the central figure in 1922 Week of Modern Art movement, the beginning point of all modern art in Brazil. His book of poetry, Hallucinated City, can be considered a manifesto of a literary trend toward popularizing art. His dynamic leadership and his enormous influence led Andrade to be called the "Pope of Modernism." Macunaima (1928) is his best known work, and is considered by critics to be a masterpiece that defines the soul of the Brazilian people. To most foreigners, Macunaima is indecipherable, a complete mystery. It has been made into a movie that is more confusing than the book. I would like to here from someone about this.
Gilberto Freyre
Gilberto Freyre (1900 - 1987) pioneered sociological studies in his native Brazil. His most famous work, The Masters and the Slaves examined the relationships of Brazil's Portuguese colonizers and their African slaves. It inspired other investigations of African contributions to Brazilian society. Also well known among his 120 books is The Mansions and the Shanties (1936) which examines the rise of urbanization in 19th-century Brazil and the decline of the rural social structure. Freyre represents the social sciences in Brazilian literary tradition, but has been much criticized in the last twenty years for his naive view of racism in Brazil.
Jorge Amado
Jorge Amado (1912 - ?) is Brazil's best known story teller. Amado depicts life in his native state of Bahia at the beginning of the century, when wealthy cacao planters dominated the land, as in Gabriela, Clove, and Cinnamon (1958) In Dona Flor and Her Two Husbands (1966) his characters gain greater individuality. Amado is said to demonstrate in his works a genuine sympathy for the humble and the socially downtrodden, unless these downtrodden happen to live in a Communist country, in which case they can be murdered by the millions without a peep from Mr. Amado.
Erico Verissimo
Erico Verissimo (1905 - 1975) was one of the great Brazilian novelists of the 20th century. He is best known for his works about his native state Rio Grande do Sul (the trilogy: Time and the Wind, comprising The Continent, The Portrait, and The Archipelago). He also wrote short stories, criticism, children's books, and travel essays, including an account of life in the United States, from 1941.
Carlos Drummond de Andrade
Carlos Drummond de Andrade (1902 - 1987) can be considered Brazil's greatest modern writer. His many literary works focus on the individual and the banality of modern life. His poetry is short and simple, thrusting like a knife into the soul.
E agora, Jose?
A festa acabou,
A luz apagou,
o povo sumiu,
a noite esfriou,
e agora, Jose?
e agora, voce?
New Suff!! review this and merge
A branch of Portuguese literature from the 16th to the early 19th century, Brazilian literature began to acquire its own identity only after 1822, when Brazil severed political ties with Portugal. Through World War II, the model for Brazilian letters was French literature. Literary schools, therefore, followed French patterns: first romanticism, then realism, symbolism, and finally--after a transitional period between approximately 1900 and 1920--avant-garde modernism.
Critics and literary historians generally agree that the Brazilian Joaquim Maria MACHADO DE ASSIS was the outstanding Latin American novelist of the 19th century. Machado was the first major Brazilian writer to experiment with language and structure, beginning a tradition of openness to the avant-garde that continues to this day. Modernism shaped Brazilian letters in the period before World War II, and, like similar movements in Europe, it turned to folk sources for material and used the vernacular as its language. The leading exponent of modernism was Mario de ANDRADE, whose great novel Macunaima (1928) is considered its outstanding example.
The anthropologist and historian Gilberto FREYRE, in such social histories as The Masters and the Slaves (1933; Eng. trans., 1946), had a significant influence, especially on writers of Brazil's Northeast region. The Devil to Pay in the Backlands (1956; Eng. trans., 1963), by the great novelist Joao Guimaraes Rosa (1908-67) is a regional novel and one of the first contemporary Latin American literary works to achieve international acclaim. The novels of Jorge AMADO, one of Brazil's most popular writers (for example, Dona Flor and Her Two Husbands, 1966, Eng. trans., 1969) are also widely translated.
A novelist, poet, literary and art critic, musicologist, and teacher, Mario de Morais Andrade, b. Sept. 9, 1893, d. Feb. 25, 1945, was a leading cultural figure in the modernist movement in Brazil. His book of poetry, Hallucinated City (1922; Eng. trans., 1968), can be considered a manifesto of a literary trend toward popularizing art. His dynamic leadership and his enormous influence led Andrade to be called the "Pope of Modernism." Several of his short stories and Macunaima (1928), his most famous prose work, are considered masterpieces.
Antonio Francisco Lisboa, b. 1738, d. 1814, known as "O Aleijadinho" ("Little Cripple"), was the most renowned sculptor and architect of the Brazilian rococo period. He was the illegitimate son of the Portuguese architect Manuel Francisco Lisboa and a black slave called Isabel. At the age of 39 he contracted a disease that crippled him and left him without the use of his hands; thereafter he worked with a hammer and chisel strapped to his arms. His best work was done in his maturity. As an architect he is most noted for the design of the church of Sao Francisco de Assis in Ouro Preto, for which he also carved most of the interior decoration. His sculptural masterpiece is the series of 12 stone prophets and 6 polychromed wood scenes of the Passion of Christ, which he executed in 1800-05. These are installed in six chapels flanking the approach to the church of Bom Jesus de Matozinhos in Congonhas do Campo (Minas Gerais).
Antonio Goncalves Dias, b. Aug. 10, 1823, d. Nov. 3, 1864, is regarded as Brazil's national poet, and his Song of Exile (1843), with its evocative first line, "My land has palm trees," is that country's best-known poem. Educated in Portugal at the University of Coimbra, he wrote of love and of his country in Primeiros Cantos (First Songs, 1846), Segundos Cantos (Second Songs, 1848), and Ultimos Cantos (Last Songs, 1851). The unfinished Indian epic, Os Tambiras (1857), and a dictionary of the Tupi language (1858) reflect his interest in ethnology. Acting on behalf of the government, he surveyed the school system in North Brazil and participated in a scientific expedition to the Upper Amazon Valley. He was returning to Brazil from Europe when he died in a shipwreck.
Brazilian novelist Jorge Amado, b. Aug. 10, 1912, was elected to the Brazilian Academy of Letters in 1961. Amado depicts life in his native state of Bahia at the beginning of the century, when wealthy cacao planters dominated the land, as in Gabriela, Clove, and Cinnamon (1958; Eng. trans., 1962). In Dona Flor and Her Two Husbands (1966; Eng. trans., 1969) his characters gain greater individuality. A genuine sympathy for the humble and the socially downtrodden pervades his writing. This, in addition to his lyricism, imagination, and warm sense of humor, has given him an enormous reputation in Brazil and abroad. Two early novels, Jubiaba (1935) and Sea of Death (1936), were published in English translation in 1984, and several other works from the same period appeared in English translation in 1988.
Joaquim Maria Machado de Assis, b. June 21, 1839, d. Sept. 29, 1908, Brazil's most revered writer and the founder and first president of the Brazilian Academy of Letters, was the son of a black father and a Portuguese mother who received scant education before entering the printer's trade and then becoming a journalist. Although Machado wrote poetry, drama, chronicles, criticism, and political works, he was known above all for his novels and short stories depicting life in Rio de Janeiro during the Second Empire (1822-89). Sometimes compared to Henry James, he focuses on universal humanity in his profound and ingenious analyses. Because for Machado life was a tragic dream, his writings are underlined by pessimism, bitterness, and a melancholic tone, all disguised by an ironical humor, as in Epitaph of a Small Winner (1881; Eng. trans., 1952) and his greatest work, Dom Casmurro (1900; Eng. trans., 1953). What predominates in his pages, however, are the aesthetic values, and it was for the subtlety and power he brought to his art that Machado gained international recognition.
Joaquim Nabuco de Araujo, b. Aug. 19, 1849, d. Jan. 17, 1910, a Brazilian writer and diplomat, was a leader in the fight to abolish slavery in Brazil. He helped secure a partial and gradual emancipation bill in 1871, founded the Brazilian Antislavery Society in 1880, and wrote extensively about slavery, which was finally abolished in Brazil in 1888. Although a monarchist, Nabuco served the Brazilian republic as ambassador to the United States (1905-10). Among his writings are an autobiography (1900) and Abolitionism: The Brazilian Anti-Slavery Struggle (1883; Eng. trans., 1977).
A major force in modern Brazilian literature, Joao Guimaraes Rosa, b. June 27, 1980, d. Nov. 19, 1967, practiced medicine in the sertao, the sparsely populated hinterland where he had been born, before becoming a diplomat in the Brazilian foreign service. The sertao, however, remained the background for his fiction, which includes several volumes of short stories--notably Sagarana (1946; Eng. trans., 1966) and The Third Bank of the River (1962; Eng. trans., 1968). It was his monumental novel The Devil to Pay in the Backlands (1956; Eng. trans., 1963), however, that brought him international fame and that sustains his reputation today.
The modernist Brazilian writer Erico Verissimo, b. Dec. 17, 1905, d. Nov. 28, 1975, chronicled the rise of his native state Rio Grande do Sul in his masterpiece, the trilogy Time and the Wind, comprising The Continent (1949; Eng. trans., 1951), The Portrait (1951; Eng. trans., 1951), and O Arquipelago (The Archipelago, 1961). He also wrote short stories, criticism, children's books, and travel essays, including an account (1941) of life in the United States.
The Brazilian Modernists
At the start of the 20th century the Brazilian modernist movement, centered on Sao Paulo, also began to achieve a similar cultural independence through different means. Brazil had gone through the same stages of development as the rest of Latin America, but its political and cultural independence came more gradually. The first emperor of Brazil, Pedro I, was a legitimate member of the royal Portuguese dynasty. Although he declared Brazil's independence from Portugal in 1822, the country remained under imperial rule and the dominance of the court in Rio de Janeiro until 1889.
With Brazil thus tied to Portuguese culture, Brazilian writers only little by little assumed responsibility for giving expression to their own landscape and ethnic mix of peoples. The presence of large numbers of former slaves added a distinctive African character to the culture; and subsequent infusions of immigrants of non-Portuguese origin helped the new nation to find its own voice and to use it.
Early in the century the novels of Joaquim Maria MACHADO DE ASSIS, such as Dom Casmurro (1899; Eng. trans., 1953), of Graca Aranna (1868-1931), and of Euclydes da Cunha (1866-1909) took stock of both urban and rural Brazilian life. About 1922 the modernist group (unrelated to the Spanish-language modernists of the 1890s) broke totally with this past, declaring themselves representatives of a new vanguard, and in numerous magazines and small publications experimented with verse and prose. A great deal of editorial and dramatic activity spread to areas remote from the coast, thus helping to upgrade the cultural validity of regions other than the largest urban centers. In the past the states of both Bahia and Minas Gerais had fostered active but relatively short-lived literary movements. Mario de ANDRADE was the foremost exponent of the modernist group.
Recent Latin American Literature
Brazil has given birth to a number of avant-garde schools since modernism, the best known of which is CONCRETE POETRY, and both poetry and prose fiction have continued to develop under local and European influence. Some of the best-known Brazilian authors of recent decades include Jorge AMADO, Erico VERISSIMO, Oswald de Andrade (1890-1954), Clarice Lispector (b. 1925), Joao Guimares Rosa (1908-67), and Raquel de Queiros (b. 1910) in prose; and Carlos Drummond de Andrade (b. 1902), Joao Cabral de Melo Neto (b. 1920), Vinicius de Moraes (1913-80), and Jorge de Lima (1893-1953) in poetry.
In the rest of Latin America it is safe to say that contemporary prose ranks ahead of poetry in its general quality, particularly in view of the success many authors have had in experimenting with techniques introduced by French novelists and literary critics, such as the "new novel," and with the innovations of such U.S. writers as Faulkner--while retaining a very personal style and a distinctly Latin American voice. Novelists or short-story writers in this vein include Carlos FUENTES and Juan Rulfo of Mexico; Alejo CARPENTIER of Cuba; Jorge Luis BORGES, Julio CORTAZAR, and Manuel PUIG of Argentina; Juan Carlos Onetti (b. 1900) of Uruguay; Gabriel GARCIA MARQUEZ of Colombia; Mario VARGAS LLOSA (b. 1936) and Jose Maria Arguedas (1911-69) of Peru; and Jose DONOSO of Chile. These writers, who are responsible for the boom of the 1960s, have finally managed to fuse the persistent need for self-definition with the need for modernity and universality. Although they have relinquished none of their Latin American specificity, they have expressed themselves in terms that were equally accessible to the much wider audience that is drawn from contemporary Europe and North America.
Many of their novels incorporate painful reassessments of the nation's immediate past as well as suggestions for new courses of action. These range from the creation of a new Latin-American-wide consciousness, which would thus obviate the need for European models, to a return to an almost apocryphal native past. At every turn of history, with every successful choice or error, Latin Americans have evolved their own particular sense of history, and writers have assumed an especially active role in forming this consciousness. The famous Canto General (1950) of Pablo NERUDA, for instance, is a summa of all Latin America: its land, its history, and its peoples. Cesar VALLEJO in his poetry grieves for all the Christs of the continent; Nicanor Parra (b. 1914) mocks the banality of ordinary experience; and Ernesto Cardenal (b. 1925) exhorts Latin Americans to union and activism in the original Christian sense of setting all people free. Nicolas GUILLEN is the poet who most successfully celebrates the infusion of African blood into the Hispanic cultural mainstream. Octavio PAZ remains the best-known exemplar of the cosmopolitan tradition.
Persecution and Exile
If Latin American writers have never been far from the historical events that shaped their lives and have borne witness to these in print, they have also had to bear the brunt of political persecution. From colonial times - when many Brazilian poets were banished to Angola--through independence -- when many writers had to flee their countries--the price for writing about Latin American reality, as they saw it, has often been exile. Again today many younger Latin American writers are far from the source of their language and of their concerns, yet busily writing about both.
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. Introduction Brazilian Literature, writings in the Portuguese language produced by inhabitants of Brazil. Three ethnic groups have contributed to the shaping of this literature: Native Americans; transplanted Europeans; and blacks, whose ancestors were brought from Africa as slaves.
II. Colonial Period The literature of the colonial period is rich in historical and geographical descriptions. The exploration of Brazil, the wars incidental to its conquest by Portugal, and the early settlement by Portuguese and other Europeans form the major themes of the early writings. The first literary works based on the conquest were chronicles and epic poems. Bahia enjoyed distinction as the first literary center of the country. Noted writers included Jesuit priest Antônio Vieira and satirist Gregório de Mattos Guerra. By the second half of the 18th century, literary predominance passed from Bahia to the vigorous mining area of Minas Gerais. Several epics originated there, including Uruguay (1769) by José BasÃlio da Gama and Sea Dragon by Friar José de Santa Ritta Durão.
III. National Period Literary tendencies of the European continent continued to be reflected in 19th-century Brazilian literature, while some writers focused on the Brazilian sertão (inland plateau) and the selva (Amazon jungle). Romanticism was brought to Brazil from France by Domingos José Gonçalves de Magalhães, who is credited with giving to Brazilian verse new and freer forms that further distinguished it from Portuguese verse. Another noted romantic poet was Antônio Gonçalves Dias, who also compiled a Dictionary of the Tupi Language (1858). Other 19th-century Brazilian poets include Antônio Ãlvares de Azevedo, Olavo Bilac, Raimundo Correia, and Alberto de Oliveira.
The most important novelist of the 19th century was Joaquim Maria Machado de Assis, whose many novels are distinguished for their psychological penetration. Novelist Jose de Alencar wrote about Native American themes, while 19th-century novelists Bernardo da Silva Guimarães and Euclides da Cunha chronicled life in the Brazilian backlands. Two novelists who set the stage for realism and naturalism in Brazilian literature were Manuel Antônio de Almeida and Alfredo d'Escragnolle, visconde Taunay. The first authentic naturalistic author was Aluizio Azevedo.
African influences and the theme of slavery have played an important role in the work of Brazil's many black writers, including renowned poet João da Cruz e Sousa. Jorge de Lima was one of the most prolific poets of the 20th century. Two other outstanding poets were Manuel Bandeira and Carlos Drummond de Andrade, also a popular dramatist. João Cabral de Melo Neto rooted his verse in native folklore tradition. Twentieth-century Brazilian novelists include José Lins do Rêgo, Erico VerÃssimo, João Guimarães Rosa, Jorge Amado, and Clarice Lispector; and dramatists include Drummond de Andrade and Ariano Suassuna.
MACHADO DE ASSIS and Jose de ALENCAR
Machado de Assis, Joaquim Maria (1839-1908), Brazilian novelist, considered one of the great masters of Brazilian literature. Machado de Assis was born in Rio de Janeiro. His most successful works are rooted in the European tradition. These realistic psychological studies have a tone of urban pessimism alleviated by ironic wit. In 1896 Machado de Assis founded the Brazilian Academy of Letters. His novel Epitaph of a Small Winner (1881) is a first-person, digressive narrative using the techniques of free association. Other major novels are Philosopher or Dog? (1891) and Dom Casmurro (1900), regarded as his masterpiece. He is considered a master of the short story, collections of which were published in translation as The Psychiatrist and Other Stories (1963) and The Devil's Church and Other Stories (1977).
Alencar, José Martiniano de (1829-1877), Brazilian playwright, journalist, lawyer, and politician, best known as a pioneer of modern Brazilian literature. Alencar was born in Mecejana (Messejana), Brazil. In 1857 he published the novel O Guarani, which established his reputation and popularity as a writer and introduced the Indianista genre of Brazilian fiction. Indianista novels typically describe the life, language, and customs of the indigenous Brazilian peoples known as Amerindians.
Alencar believed that Brazil should forge a new language and literature to differentiate its cultural tradition from that of Portugal. In his writings, he reworked words from the Amerindian Tupi language and changed sentence structure to form what he considered a proper Brazilian form of Portuguese.
Classical music
During the 18th century and the first half of the 19th century, the classical music in Brazil was strongly influenced by the music style practiced in Europe, particularly the Viennese classical style. The first major Brazilian composer was José MaurÃcio Nunes Garcia, a priest who composed several sacred pieces and some secular music. He wrote the opera Le Due Gemelle ("The two twins"), the first opera written in Brazil, but the music is nowadays lost. About 250 works written by him are known in the present days. Elias Ãlvares Lobo composed the first Brazilian opera with a libretto in Portuguese: "A Noite de São João" (Saint John's Party Night).
Near the end of the 19th century, Carlos Gomes (from Campinas) produced a number of Italian-style operas, such as Il Guarany (based on a novel by José de Alencar). BrasÃlio Itiberê was another prominent classical composer, the first to use elements of Brazilian music in Western classical music, in his Sertaneja (1869).
In 1922, the Week of Modern Art revolutionized Brazilian literature, painting and music. Heitor Villa-Lobos led a new vanguard of composers who used Brazilian folk music in their compositions.
By the end of the 1930s, there were two schools of Brazilian composition. Camargo Guarnieri was the head of the Nationalist school, inspired by the writer Mário de Andrade. Other composers including Guerra Peixe, Oscar Lorenzo Fernandez, Francisco Mignone, Luciano Gallet and Radamés Gnattali. Beginning in 1939, Hans Joachim Koellreutter, creator of the Live Music Group, founded another school, characterized by the use of dodecaphonism and atonalism. Other composers in this school included Edino Krieger, Cláudio Santoro and Eunice Catunda.
Tropicalia eventually morphed into a more popular form, MPB (música popular Brasileira), which now refers to any Brazilian pop music. Well-known MPB artists include chanteuses Gal Costa, Maria Bethânia and Elis Regina and singer/songwriters Chico Buarque, Milton Nascimento, Gilberto Gil, Caetano Veloso, Ivan Lins, Djavan, João Bosco, and others.
[edit] Bossa nova
Bossa nova
Antonio Carlos Jobim and other 1950s composers helped develop a fusion of jazz harmonies and a smoother, often slower, samba beat called bossa nova, which developed at the beach neighborhoods of Ipanema and, later, the Copacabana nightclubs. The first bossa nova records by João Gilberto quickly became huge hits in Brazil. Bossa nova was introduced to the rest of the world by American jazz musicians in the early 1960s, and songs like "The Girl from Ipanema", which remains the biggest Brazilian international hit, eventually became jazz standards.
The TYPE of Government :
Democratic and federal republic
2007-02-07 08:06:54
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answer #5
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answered by nonconformiststraightguy 6
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