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How Music Has Brought Blacks Back to the Brazilian Melting Cauldron PDF Print E-mail
Written by Austen Cruickshank   
Thursday, 25 May 2006 21:52

MPB, Brazilian Popular MusicSince the second half of the 20th century, global or 'World' music has become steadily more fashionable in the West. Various factors have allowed this to occur, not least the incredible advancements in communication technology. From early radio broadcasts of the 1920s to modern commodities like Apple's iPod, musical audiences have had access to increasingly more varieties of music.

In modern Britain, it is not uncommon to hear foreign music on specialist evening shows on national radio stations; the pioneering Radio One DJ Gilles Peterson has been playing music from South America, Africa, and Asia for over ten years.

Most high street music retailers will have some kind of foreign language section, and large Internet stores often have entire back catalogues of many international artists.

The success of many genres has been 'triggered' by the popularity of certain artists or records. Bob Marley is the internationally recognised symbol of Jamaican Reggae; the Sugarhill Gang launched the New York Rap scene in 1979 with the record ' Rapper's Delight'; The Prodigy brought British dance music to the mainstream in the early 1990s; and in 1963, 'The Girl from Ipanema' made history by placing higher in the pop charts than any foreign language record had previously done so, the effect of which will be discussed later in this essay.

This is not to say that there was no Reggae music before Bob Marley, no Rap before the Sugarhill Gang, or no Brazilian music before 'The Girl from Ipanema', but rather that the success of these icons provided a platform for other contemporary artists to leap from, in order to achieve international recognition.

An artist like Bob Marley came to represent not just his musical genre, but also his country. It is not uncommon to see a Jamaican flag with Marley's image printed on it, especially posthumously. His work catalysed Brazilian samba-reggae and his death in 1981 overshadowed the anniversary of abolition in Brazil, becoming "the month of tributes to Bob Marley."

British band Oasis, representatives of 'Britpop', would often play a Union Jack guitar at the height of their international popularity. In the minds of many foreigners, 'The Girl from Ipanema', with its smooth melodies and agreeable rhythm, has come to culturally represent the Brazilian nation. This leads us to question how the Brazilian national identity has been constructed, and to gauge its validity.

Various elements can be identified in order to explore Brazil's musical identity, the first of which must be the nation's racial and cultural mixture. The process began the moment Cabral set foot in the country and when the Portuguese came into contact with the native Indian population.

The Atlantic Slave Trade brought Africans to the nation, adding another ingredient to the Brazilian racial recipe. It would seem that this mixture and miscegenation is what defines Brazilian national identity, but critics' opinions differ greatly on the subject of the racial balance, ranging from the utopian - "Brazil has been a real melting pot for centuries, not a mixed salad like in the United States" to the more realistic - "Brazil's knotty racial and ethnic contradictions" or "Brazil, unlike other multiracial polities (...) was not a land of equal opportunities."

Caetano Veloso, perhaps the most important and influential name in Brazilian musical history, offers his interpretation of Brazilian identity in the autobiographical 'Tropical Truth': "Brazil is America's other giant, the other melting pot of races and cultures, the other promised land to European and Asian immigrants, the Other."

An explanation for such vast variance in opinion between various critics and writers is that national identities are constructed, by the individual nation and by others. No matter how extensively they are studied, defined and redefined by scholars, critics, politicians and citizens, national identity will always be subject to debate. For example, a radical attempt at redefinition of Brazilian identity came in the form of the late 1970s Tropicália movement, the impact of which will be explored later in this essay.

Jeffrey Lesser, an expert in Latin American immigration, counters the idea of national identity as a malleable construct, instead suggesting that Brazil's racial demographic prohibits any imagined national identity:

"What does it mean to be a public "Brazilian," and how is "Brazilianness" contested? From the mid-nineteenth century on, both terms, and the notions behind them, were increasingly arbitrary, creating the space needed by newcomers to insert themselves into, or to change, paradigms about national identity. A single or static national identity never existed: the very fluidity of the concept made it open to pushes and pulls from below and above."

Colour and Race

Lesser questions how a nation with such racial miscegenation can have one national identity and that if there was such a single identity, it would have to be constantly transforming to accommodate the Brazilian demographic.

The concept of Brazilian race itself has been compared to 'shifting sand', the idea that the spectrum of colour in Brazilian society is so broad that individuals may change identities, depending on their situation. Anthropologist Livio Sansone noted in 1992:

"A man could be a 'worker' in the factory, 'preto' on his birth certificate, 'moreno' or 'escuro' [dark] with friends on the street and 'negro' during Carnaval or in the bloco afro."

Reichmann suggests that the idea of a 'shifting colour line' helps to explain racial politics in Brazil, by suggesting that colour, as opposed to race, is the dominant category:

"The colour line is perhaps the zone of greatest contention dividing those who believe that Brazil is a racial democracy from those who perceive discrimination based on colour."

Lesser explores the link between identity and ethnicity, Reichmann this ethnicity, and Dunn argues that 'mestiçagem', the emergence of a new Brazilian race through the process of miscegenation and the joining of distinct identities, provides the nearest to a fair definition of Brazilian national identity. Celebrated sociologist Gilberto Freyre was one to support this theory, as Perrone and Dunn note:

"For nationalist thinkers, Samba represented well Brazil's mestiço culture (unlike other Latin American mestizo identities that foregrounded the indigenous element). Freyre, for example, fancied samba as an uncontaminated expression of the "real Brazil" that had been obscured by Eurocentric elites."

Whilst Freyre considered just samba as a metaphor for the Brazilian people, McGowan and Pessanha suggest that all Brazilian music represents the population - "In its sounds and lyrics, it reflects the Brazilian people - their uninhibited joy or despair, their remarkable capacity to celebrate, and the all-important concept of saudade."

McCann suggests that Brazilian national identity is the collection of qualities that distinguish the Brazilian population from citizens of Argentina, Portugal and the United States, "three populations whom Brazilians felt that it was important to define themselves against" .

In the same chapter of 'Hello, Hello Brazil', the author references Alencar's 1857 nationalist novel 'O Guarani'. The book is an allegorical version of Brazil's birth, detailing the marriage of a Portuguese maiden and a native Guarani chief. No reference to any African influence is made in the novel, which was "Brazil's most influential nineteenth-century nationalist work."

A government survey in 1999 revealed that 42.6 percent of the Brazilian population consider themselves to be 'pardos', roughly translated as 'dark'. The ignorance of an Afro-Brazilian presence in Alencar's allegory demonstrates what McCann describes as the nation's continued 'covert racism', perhaps the largest difficulty encountered when studying Brazilian national identity. This racism was not limited to the cultural realm, or just to Brazil; speaking on Afro-Latin American politics, Fontaine noted in 1980:

"Standard texts on economics, politics, political economy, or even sometimes sociology tend to ignore the African presence and its implications, in spite of millions of blacks, 'morenos' (browns), mulattoes and 'zambos' (mixtures of blacks and Indians) in Latin America."

However, 'História do Brasil', a Carnaval 'marcha' composed by celebrated Brazilian musician Lamartine Babo in 1933, challenges the 'O Guarani' allegory, by adding a more realistic image. By using Afro-Brazilian names and language to carry on the allegorical story, Babo acknowledges the role of Africans in the nation's history and development.

McCann notes that this marginalisation perspective had, by the 1930s, become antiquated, noting the significance of such a change of thinking - "Reconsideration of the importance of African cultural influence was the single most important element in Brazil's collective inquiry into national character. Nowhere was that influence more apparent than in popular music."

Samba, Bossa Nova & MPB

If we are to take McCann's advice and consider Brazilian national identity through musical identity, then it is necessary to consider the spectrum of change and 'musical diplomacy' that Brazilian popular music has undertaken over the past 150 years.

The effect on class, race, national and international relations achieved by Brazilian music is a fundamental factor in the question of national musical identity.

As far back as the 1870s, Brazilian music and dance was being influenced by European trends, followed by the emergence of the modern samba in 1910, which became a symbol of unity between the North-East region of Bahia and Central-East region of Rio de Janeiro.

Throughout the 1920s, Brazilian musicians began to tour European capitals, play in foreign orchestras and receive international attention (partly due to the use of radio transmission) as Brazilian musical genres began to emerge. This broadcast of Brazilian Popular Music was a key stage for the country's musical identity.

There were of course many Brazilian musicians over the next three decades (Noel Rosa, Os Oito Batutas, Jackson do Pandeiro etc.), but on an international scale, two iconic representatives stand out as those waving the 'Auriverde' flag higher than the rest - Carmen Miranda and the musicians of the Bossa Nova movement. Those who wave their flag highest are the most open to scrutiny, and the respect of the nation and generation inevitably rests on their shoulders.

Caetano Veloso considers the icon's position in the essay 'Carmen Mirandada'. Although essentially a critic of Miranda's stereotypically 'South American' style, noting that she was "the opposite of our craving for good taste and national identity" , Veloso questions 1950s Brazilian identity, and remarks that "She was the only representative of South America who was universally readable, and it is exactly because of this quality that self parody became her inescapable prison."

Her cultural validity has been extensively debated - Miranda herself released a song called 'Disseram Que Eu Voltei Americanizada' (They Said I Came Back Americanized) in 1940. Nevertheless, she paved the way for future Brazilian artists and, in Veloso's words, "she represented less the adulteration alleged by her critics than a pioneering role in history that is still unfolding and that today seems more fascinating than ever: the history of the relationship between the very rich music of a very poor country and musicians and audiences from the rest of the world."
 
The Vargas dictatorship (1930-45 and 1951-54) attempted to capture 'Brasilidade' (Brazilian-ness) by promoting elements of 'national culture' in order to cement government support. Dunn notes:

"The free verse poetry, experimental prose, and provocative manifestos of the 1920s gave way to realist novels and social histories oriented towards the 'discovery' and documentation of Brazilian culture. Of particular salience was the articulation of a mestiço paradigm, which extolled cultural and racial hybridity as the foundation for a unified national identity. As elsewhere in the Americas, popular music would play a central role in the 'invention', dissemination, and international projection of national culture."

Vargas wished to project a unified image of his country to the rest of the world, preferably through his newly erected super radio-transmission tower, one of the five largest in the world at the time. The president sought "cohesion through popular culture" and to promote "dissemination of determined images of the country at home and abroad" , for his European and North American counterparts.

Along with the post-war Good Neighbour Policy, his tactics worked well, and Brazilian Popular Music enjoyed a degree of international success abroad, in a time when the genre of 'World Music' simply did not exist as it does today. North American popular culture was already present in Brazil in the 1930s, mostly through advertising and the film industry, and the Good Neighbour Policy is often credited with bringing Brazilian musicians and US producers together, the best example of which is the career of Carmen Miranda in the United States.

The 1930s was a period of modernisation for Brazil, including invaluable advances in the broadcast industry. The introduction and development of radio in Brazil is of high significance as it provided a link between the metropolis and the hinterland, and it was through radio that many Brazilians made their first contact with new artists and styles.

McCann notes "radio stations, above all, proved to be crucial laboratories for popular cultural formation." Through the medium of radio, the 27 Brazilian states were given the option to become a unified nation.

But exactly what image were the president and these radio broadcasts promoting abroad and at home, and how could it possibly have been accurate? Vargas took aspects of Brazilian popular culture, and poured government funds into their development.

The sport of football, predominantly a white upper-class sport in pre-1920s Brazil, was the first to receive attention from the government; Brazil has since become the only country to have qualified for every World Cup between 1930 and 1998.

Government support was also given to Samba, traditionally the music of the favela-dwelling Carioca Afro-Brazilians, resulting in the creation of Samba schools and the famous Rio Carnaval. Perrone & Dunn note: "Since this period, Samba has been intrinsically linked with Brasilidade"

Vargas' death in 1954 symbolised "the end of a period of political, economic, and cultural construction and consolidation." The period had catalysed the emergence of a new popular culture in Brazil, where the popular had become more linked to the political, at least in the musical arena.

Afro-Brazilians began to achieve a popular voice, in a time when they had no hope of achieving a political voice, or even basic civil rights, such as the right to vote or to free speech. The period also encouraged Brazilians to look at themselves and engage in national debates, aided by the critical consumption of popular music. McCann notes that the contrasting voices and opinions of the public led to "a swelling chorus of musical invention".

Another key issue that was revealed during the Vargas period and in the following years was the Brazilian nation's inherent racism, of which Alencar's O Guarani allegory was an earlier warning. The 1954 Brazilian popular music arena demonstrated that the music produced at the time was created collectively, and that characters from every economic level had participated.

It is debatable whether Afro-Brazilians have since managed to achieve a voice outside of the cultural arena. In October 2002, Gilberto Gil, perhaps the most famous living Afro-Brazilian, was appointed Culture Minister of Brazil by President Lula. The symbolic gesture has not changed the fact that Black and mixed-race Brazilians comprise 64 percent of the poor, the average salary for black Brazilians is less than half that of whites, while the illiteracy rate is twice as high, and that in 2002, Afro-Brazilians held just 14 of the 584 Congress seats.
 
In 1956, a new president, Juscelino Kubitschek, came to power, promising "fifty years of development in five". Planning was started for the new federal capital of Brasília, the Brazilian football team won the World Cup for the first time in 1958, the Brazilian architect Oscar Niemeyer was developing his most celebrated works and Cinema Novo, the country's progressive film industry, was blossoming. McGowan and Pessanha note: "In all the arts, it was a time of effervescence."

Along with Samba, Football and Carnaval, Bossa Nova is often next in the list of Brazilian stereotypes. Bossa Nova was essentially an extension of samba, kick-started by João Gilberto's 1959 album 'Chega de Saudade' and the soundtrack to the landmark Brazilian film 'Orfeu Negro', which featured songs by Tom Jobim and Vinicius de Moraes.

The movement was one of the most internationally successful Brazilian musical styles, and as a consequence became one of the most internationalised. Two classic examples of this internationalisation are the 'Jazz Samba' (1962) crossover album by Brazilian Stan Getz and American Charlie Byrd and 'The Girl from Ipanema' (1963) record by Stan Getz and João Gilberto.

The latter made history for foreign music by placing higher in the pop charts than other foreign record previously had. More than 25 million copies of various versions of the composition have been sold to date.

The song was translated by Norman Gimbel and released by Frank Sinatra in 1962. The English version of the song was extremely popular, and many of the lyrics had been changed dramatically.

John Fitzpatrick, writer for Brazzil Magazine (amongst other publications) notes that lyrics such as "When she walks, she's like a samba/That swings so cool and sways so gentle/That when she passes, each one she passes goes - ooh" simply do not exist in the original Portuguese version.

While the success of 'The Girl from Ipanema' can be seen as positive, in that it gave Brazilian music international exposure, the addition of these rather banal lyrics demonstrate a unfortunate stereotype of the nation.

Perhaps it is no coincidence that the most famous Brazilian song of all time includes references that most animalistic of international stereotypes - the beauty of the Brazilian women. Jobim's original composition details a "Moça do corpo dourado" (Girl with a golden body) strolling around the Ipanema beach, glancing at men.

The lyrics and gentle Bossa Nova guitar rhythm aim to transport the listener to Jobim's position, admiring beautiful women and writing lyrics on a napkin in a warm, relaxing climate. Over the years, the idealised, agreeable beach image has led many foreigners to believe that it defines Brazil, ignoring the vast racial inequality, corrupt politics and economic instability that have marred Brazilian and other Latin American societies for centuries.

Nevertheless, as well as gaining immense international attention, Bossa Nova gave Brazilian musicians a reason to be proud of their country and identity. Caetano Veloso suggests that the national and international success of Bossa Nova allowed musicians to diversify to a wide range of national musical styles - "without the self-assurance that bossa nova infused in us, making us feel capable of creating things wholly our own, we would still when working in studios be leaving out the supremely inventive elements of Brazilian traditions".

Tropicália - Cannibalism, Censorship & Outrage

Politics has proven to play an integral role in the formation of a national Brazilian music. This role can be seen as positive - President Vargas promoted Samba and Afro-Brazilian music in general in post-war Brazil, helping Samba become the 'national music' and Afro-Brazilians to gain a cultural voice. But as we shall see, some periods of politics have also had an extremely detrimental effect on Brazilian musicians, and on the country as a whole.

MPB, an acronym for Música Popular Brasileira, was a catch-all term, as the name suggests, for Brazilian Popular Music. But the name of MPB also came to represent a certain generation of Brazilian musicians and songwriters performing in the late 1960s and early 1970s, such as Elis Regina, Chico Buarque, Edu Lobo, Milton Nascimento and Ivan Lins. Michael Anthony Lahue notes that the term had been used as early as 1960, in the liner notes of the LP Bossa Nova, by Carlos Lira.

 McGowan and Pessanha note some qualities of the generation's music - "An especially important characteristic of MPB songwriters is their keen ability to combine compelling melodies, rich harmonies, varied rhythms and poetic lyrics."

McGowan & Pessanha also note that the MPB generation was "intensely eclectic" . When comparing the turbulent career of Chico Buarque, the Tropicália movement, or the complex compositions of Dori Caymmi, one can see how this statement is valid. Many of the MPB generation took part in the televised music festivals of the period. Pessanha notes that these were "a forum for political dissent".

In March 1964, the military took over the Brazilian government, promising to return power to the people through elections a year after. But Brazilian Congress would not be allowed to elect a civilian president until 1985, over two decades later.

The military initially attempted to legitimise their illegal seizure of power, forming alliances with the anti-populist party UDN. But after two failed gubernatorial elections, the military gave up on legitimate public support, introducing Institutional Act No.5 in 1968. Thomas E. Skidmore considers the impact of the act:

"Brazil was now a genuine dictatorship. Congress was closed (although not abolished) and all crimes against 'national security' were now subjected to military justice. Censorship was introduced, aimed especially at television and radio. [...] Wire tapping, mail opening and denunciations by informers became commonplace. University lectures were monitored and a wave of purges hit the leading faculties, especially in São Paulo. [...] Numerous other faculties were hit, losing their political rights for ten years. Security forces zeroed in especially on opposition clergy and students, among whom doctrines of liberation theology were still influential."

Such military oppression was not uncommon in 20th Century Latin American politics, similar circumstances arising during 'El Gran Reorganización' in Argentina in the late 1970s and in Spain under the Franco dictatorship. Many of the rights had been taken from Union leaders and politicians, making students, artists and journalists the only real opposition to the government. The press and the universities were watched closely, and one of the many student protests in Rio resulted in at least one death.

The Act No.5 effectively suffocated any expression of national identity contrary to the government image. The act began to affect the televised music festivals, MPB musicians' main platform for exposure. For instance, Geraldo Vandré received second place at Rio's FIC festival in 1968 for his contribution 'Caminhando'.

Due to the composition's rather obvious references to the dictatorship - "There are armed soldiers, they may be loved or not/ Almost all of them lost, with guns in their hands.", the song was banned by the government for ten years. Nevertheless, the song became a slogan for student protests and Vandré went into exile.

A similar set of circumstances occurred at the first performance of 'Cálice' by Chico Buarque and Gilberto Gil. McGowan & Pessanha note:

"Using powerful Catholic imagery, the song is a metaphorical comment on the repressive times and the silencing of an entire nation [...] The song's title carries two meanings: 'Cálice' translates as 'chalice' yet is also a homophone of the phrase 'cale-se' which means 'shut up'. And that is exactly what the authorities did to Buarque and Gil when they first attempted to perform 'Cálice' in public. The police came on stage and turned off the microphones as they were singing. The song was banned, but it became yet another anthem against the dictatorship."
 
The dictatorship and Act No.5 won the battle against MPB and the festivals. Many musicians left the country and the festivals began to decline. At the 1970 FIC festival, 25 of the 36 finalists were prohibited from performing by government censors. When top musicians such as Tom Jobim and Chico Buarque resisted, by signing a petition against the censorship, they were promptly arrested.

It is often the case that when a product is banned or censored, the reverse of the effect desired by the censor occurs, and the product achieves a degree of infamy. The 1979 Italian horror film 'Cannibal Holocaust' was banned in 12 countries after its release.

The ban and subsequent piracy made the film one of the most notorious horror films of all time and when the film was re-released in 2005, it became the fastest-selling limited edition release in DVD history.

The censorship of Chico Buarque had a similar effect, and he became a people's representative of cultural resistance, even though almost all of his material was banned by the government in the following years.

The most important cultural movement provoked by the military regime was Tropicália, a counter-cultural movement manifested in music, theatre, arts and poetry. The movement allowed Brazilian artists a carte blanche to express themselves in whatever way they saw fit, unrestricted by the constraints of the traditional Brazilian art forms. Tropicália musicians experimented with rhythms, lyrics, influences, and outfits, many of which were influenced by North American or European contemporary styles.

John J. Harvey explains the radical experimentation in his essay 'Cannibals, Mutant, Hipsters - The Tropicalist Revival'. "The adoption of technology was key to the Tropicalist movement, helping to destabilise facile alignments of 'authentic' or 'indigenous' with a notion of an endemic premodernity."

The movement was closely linked to Oswald de Andrade's 1928 'Manifesto antropófago'. Harvey notes: "Oswald urged artists to essay all themes and to incorporate an international repertoire of styles, assimilating them in the local vernacular in a practice of cultural development." The 'cannibalistic' mentality of Tropicália deeply angered many fans of MPB.

It may seem rather ironic that some audiences of the Tropicália period were outraged by the music and the concept of incorporating foreign styles; the Brazilian nation is itself a historic mixture of races and cultures. Furthermore, the berimbau, pandeiro, agogô, atabaque and various other Brazilian percussion instruments have African roots, but had been played alongside traditional Brazilian musical instruments for hundreds of years; Bossa Nova was essentially a bastardised, 'desafinado' version of North American West Coast cool jazz mixed with traditional samba.

Yet when Caetano Veloso played 'Alegria, Alegria' at the 1967 TV Record festival, he was loudly booed. This was repeated a year later, in São Paulo, when Veloso, backed by Os Mutantes, couldn't even finish his new song 'É Proibido Proibir'. Harvey claims that the audience even began to throw fruit at the performers.

Why was the audience so against the distorted electric guitar at the festival, but had accepted the berimbau for years? Critics McGowan and Pessanha report that it was because rock and roll represented American colonialism.

Perhaps the reasons were more profound, and the outrage was because the Brazilian musical audiences had seen traditional national genres like Samba and Bossa Nova exported and watered down to fit international tastes, symbolically 'stolen' and betrayed by icons like Carmen Miranda and Frank Sinatra.

The animosity of Veloso's São Paulo audience brings to mind Bob Dylan's appearance at the Newport Folk Festival, just two years before. Dylan's use of electric guitar was booed and heckled by his traditional folk crowd, forcing him and his band off the stage.

52 years before in Paris, the audience had such a bad reaction to Stravinsky's modern pioneering score and Nijinsky's choreography in 'The Rite of Spring' that the orchestra played unheard. Like Dylan and Stravinsky, the Tropicália musicians were later hailed as geniuses, and have attracted attention from a variety of modern sources, from Nirvana, to Beck, to the Beastie Boys.

As well as blending musical genres and styles, the Tropicalistas often used intelligent imagery and surrealism in their lyrics, often manipulating the Portuguese language into sounds or noises representing an entirely different idea. Soul Jazz Record's 2006 release,

'Tropicália: a Brazilian Revolution in Sound' opens with Gilberto Gil's suitably offbeat composition 'Bat Macumba', the sole lyrics being "Bat Macumba iê iê, Bat Macumba iê ô". McGowan and Pessanha reference another Gil Tropicalista contribution, "Geléia Geral", the lyrics of which juxtapose a Maranhão folkloric style, 'bumba-meu-boi', and 1960s rock and roll, or 'iê iê iê', as it was called by Brazilian critics:

"In the general jelly/ That Jornal do Brasil announces/ It's bumba-iê-iê-boi/ Next year, last month/It's bumba-iê-iê-iê/ It's the same dance, meu-boi"

Home vs. Away

In many ways, Tropicália was a far cry from the Bossa Nova movement, though it is doubtful that the former could have existed without the latter. Bossa Nova presented a proud yet romanticised Brazil; Tropicália answered with the voices of a modern, rebellious youth.

The leading Tropicalistas, Caetano Veloso and Gilberto Gil, were forced into exile in England . Censorship ensured that voices contrary to government could not be heard, and Brasilidade was to be dictated by the military.

We must therefore question all imposed identities, so easily manipulated by governments and other leading institutions. Perhaps the solution is to consider a nation's artistic history of music, film, theatre, aesthetic art and architecture as the raw broadcast of a national identity. Artistic work often reflects the creator's influence, attitude, background and cultural heritage.

The work of Pedro Almodóvar, Spain's most celebrated director, emphasized tolerance and acceptance of individuality over the division and repression inherent in a totalitarian state. Andy Warhol's famous Campbell's Soup cans pastiched commercial industries and advertisement , whilst other works commented on democracy, radicalism and optimistic materialism in American society. Gaudí, amongst others, promoted the Catalan nationalist movement by incorporating elements of the region's culture and diverse art techniques into his architecture.

In Brazil, other artistic movements such as Cinema Novo and Concrete Poetry represented well a section of Brazilian national sentiment. But Popular Music has surely provided the most useful insight into 'Brasilidade', emphasised by the broad range of themes explored.

Identity, sentiment and mentality have been reflected not just in the music itself, but also in what the music has come to represent. Samba marked the beginning of accepted Afro-Brazilian expression; Bossa Nova presented an idealised Brazilian image, countered by Tropicália's cannibalistic attitude revealing an international Brazil with a hunger to be connected to the rest of the modern world.

Contemporary hit parades/charts in Brazil are a reasonably balanced mix of national artists and the usual international bestsellers, a representation of Brazil's battle between globalisation and national pride.

We must question identities imposed onto Brazil by other nations, and the validity of foreign interpretations of Brazilian popular music. Elvis Presley recorded the rock and roll fusion composition 'Bossa Nova, Baby' on the 1963 album 'Fun in Acapulco'.

In fact, the song has little to do with the real Bossa Nova movement, instead opting for a stereotype of Latin American rhythm and imagery. Presley's offering is actually far more reminiscent of the Mexican 'Tex-Mex' genre than Brazilian Bossa Nova. Of course, the misrepresentation did not prevent Presley from becoming the biggest selling solo artist in American history.

A more modern misrepresentation of Brazilian culture can be seen in the work of Los Angeles Hip Hop act 'Ugly Duckling'. The Brazilian lifestyle is a major theme for the rap group, especially in songs such as 'A Little Samba', 'Another Samba' and 'Rio de Janeiro'.

Unfortunately, like Sinatra, they present a cliched version of the nation as a tropical paradise, free from the stress of First World cosmopolitan life: "Watch the palm trees sway in the breeze/ Beautiful girls talking to me in Portuguese/ I do 'mas que nada' which means the minimum/ Sipping Brazilian coffee with a bit of cinnamon/ Do you find the daily grind is inescapable? /Have a rest from the stress."

Contrastingly, eclectic American artist Beck provides a far more suitable tribute to Brazilian popular music in the composition 'Tropicália' from the 1998 album 'Mutations' . The imagery, attitude and rhythm are loyal to the movement of the title, as demonstrated in the first verse:

"When they dance in a reptile blaze/ You wear a mask, an equatorial haze/ Into the past, a colonial maze/ When there's no more confetti to throw." The song draws to a close in true Tropicalista fashion, reminiscent of the psychedelic, cacophonic conclusion of 'Ando Meio Desligado' by Os Mutantes.

The incongruous level of quality of foreign interpretations of Brazil and Brazilian music prevent the critical, investigative mind from trusting it as a reference for national identity. As accurate as the song may be, Beck's offering will only ever be a tribute to a past Brazilian cultural movement.

However, as initiators and key players in a cultural movement such as Tropicália, Os Mutantes, Gilberto Gil and Caetano Veloso have come to personify Brazilian Popular Music, and by extension, Brazilian culture. Gil and Veloso are still active cultural icons in Brazil, both having released albums of original material in the last two years.

It can be said that the culture of a nation represents the identity of its population. But there will inevitably be Brazilians who feel they are not accurately culturally represented by national arts, the country's racial mixture, or any of the attempts to define national identity in this essay.

We must therefore conclude that Brazil's extensive musical history and level of miscegenation are but two particularly loud voices in the proverbial chorus of national opinion, that Brasilidade can only be defined by every expression, thought and action of every Brazilian since 1500.

This article's original title was: "Is Brazilian Popular Music a projection of the nation's identity?"

Bibliography

* Brazilian Popular Music & Globalization. Edited by Charles A. Perrone & Christopher Dunn. Routledge, 2002.

* The Brazilian Sound, Samba, Bossa Nova and the Popular Music of Brazil. Chris McGowan & Ricardo Pessanha, Temple University Press, 1998.

* Hello, Hello Brazil - Popular Music in the Making of Modern Brazil. Bryan McCann. Duke University Press, 2004.

* Race in Contemporary Brazil: From Indifference to Inequality. Edited by Rebecca Reichmann. Pennsylvania State University Press, 1999.

* Tropical Truth. Caetano Veloso, Bloomsbury, 2002.

* Negotiating National Identity, Immigrants, Minorities, and the Struggle for Ethnicity in Brazil. Jeffrey Lesser, Duke University Press, 1999.

* Cinema Novo X 5: Masters of Contemporary Brazilian Film'. Randall Johnson. University of Texas Press, 1984.

* Haroldo De Campos: A Dialogue with the Brazilian Concrete Poet'. Edited by K.David Jackson. Centre for Brazilian Studies, 2005.

* Todo Dj Já Sambou. A história do disc-jóquei no Brasil. Claudia Assef. Conrad Editora do Brasil, 2003.

* Website : http://www.tau.ac.il/eial/X_2/chormaio.html

* Website : http://www.latinamericanstudies.org/brazil/black-brazilians.htm

* Website : http://www.brazzil.com/content/view/8873/78/

* Website : http://www.brazzil.com/content/view/9539/78/

* Website : http://www.staticmultimedia.cjb.net

* Website : http://www.allmusic.com

Many thanks to Professor Bernard J McGuirk and Dr Mark Sabine at University of Nottingham for their help and guidance with this essay.
 
Austen Cruickshank (UK) is a musician, writer and World Music DJ. Cruickshank was captivated by foreign music from an early age, having lived in France, Spain and Brazil during his youth. A particular appreciation for Brazilian music and culture was formed during his months studying Portuguese in Belo Horizonte, Minas Gerais, last year. Perturbed by the lack of exposure and understanding of foreign culture in his native England, Cruickshank attempts to set things straight through his music writing and DJ sets (Ginglik, London and Moog, Nottingham). Contact: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

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Comments (54)Add Comment
...
written by Guest, May 26, 2006
I will never understand why people feel ok saying "blacks". Do you mean black PEOPLE. For me it is the terminology of apartheid and segregation. I would seriously challenge anybody who referred to me or my family as blacks to my face. FOOL.
Re: Blacks
written by Guest, May 26, 2006
I think in many places you would have to challenge people all day long.
BLACK/BROWN/YELLOW/WHITE
written by Guest, May 26, 2006
Differently from most countries, black people tend to disappear in Brazil. Miscegenation goes to such an extent that in 100 years black people will be rare in Brazil.
At this very moment black people ARE NOT prevalent, but
a hybrid of several skin colors .
Good for Brazil. Where else can you find such beautiful black and mulatto and whatever-color women in such numbers?
..................................
GREAT ARTICLE !!!
THE SKIN COLOR IS NOT IMPORTANT
written by Guest, May 26, 2006
Personal qualities are what matters.
Re: Blacks
written by Guest, May 26, 2006
The term 'black' is just as justified as the term 'white'. I feel that 'African American' is a far more racist term. Aren't white Americans really 'European Americans'?

Whoever wrote the first comment to this article does not understand Brazilian racial politics. If you had read the article properly, you would have realised that Race and Skin Colour in Brazil are explored in depth, concluding that the Brazilian concept of 'Race' creates its own category.

You are clearly not an Afro-Brazilian, otherwise, you would understand that the term 'black' has an entirely different meaning in Brazil. I refer you to 'Racial Politics In Brazil' by Michael Hanchard. Read the book (and this article properly) before you call the writer a fool.
Gj
written by Guest, May 26, 2006
Good job on the essay!
Good for Brazil?
written by Guest, May 26, 2006
Good for Brazil that they are trying to erase the black presence? Shame on Brazil.
Getz no Brazilian
written by Guest, May 26, 2006
Interesting and well researched article, but surely your reference to "Brazilian Stan Getz" is a typographical error. Any true fan of Brazilian Bossa Nova can easily distinguish it from its American cousin, and distinguish between its Brazilian and American jazz interpreters.
comments #2
written by Guest, May 26, 2006
First, M. Jackson sold more records than E. Presley. Secondly, the young blacks in Brazil are not ashamed to be call blacks. The light is shining in Brazil and many people are waking up to the BS.
missing in action?
written by Guest, May 28, 2006
Banda Black Rio and the whole 70s giant afro funk soul groove?

Tim Maia?

Funk brasileiro? Baile funk?

This article completely misses out on the very things it complains that people miss out on. He's only interested in the politically correct officially approved by co-opted intellectuals national culture of Afro-brazilians, the one that's ok for them to have and that they are supposed to have. But national culture as a promoted ideal is a very dangerous commodity, very easily tipping over into the kitsch and totalitarian chauvinistic ideals. The Soviets were constantly having folk dancing and folk songs all over the place. All over the eastern european bloc folk was OK but not rock unless it was sanitized. There is always that risk when music of the people, indigenous folk traditions, become co-opted by the state to promote an officially sanctioned culture. And there will always be tweedy intellectuals who look on approvingly, with no sense of shame nor irony of their own part in it. And they will always go on about their darling Caetano bloody Veloso and nothing about the Roberto Carlos that really touched the hearts of Brazilians. And now Caetano is trying to co-opt Rappin' Hood. It is all so sad.

Rap Roledei
...
written by Guest, May 28, 2006
I wrote the first comment and if YOU actually read what I said I have no problem with the term black but BLACKS. I cold go into a very in depth reasoning with you in another place but when I think about it its none of your business and NOTHING to do with brazilian racial politics because this article is in ENGLISH.
I am a young brown woman and it is perfectly legitimate for me to question his use of the term blacks. Why try and attack me? did i say I was brazilian.I am a mulatta and my partner is Black from Brazil.
There is nothing wrong with saying black PEOPLE.
They Said That 100 Years Ago
written by Guest, May 29, 2006
Brazil has been trying to "whiten" itself for the past 100 years yet blacks are still there. The rest of the world may think Brazil's "women of color" are to die for but obviously Brazil doesn't. All of their models and actresses are blue-eyed blondes of German, Italian or Polish ancestry such as the multi millionaire blonde entertainer Xuxa.

Brazil tries to hide her anti-black feelings under the banner of racial democracy but when all else is said or done, Brazil wants to be a white Aryan country and is ashamed of her black population. Brazil won't help the black and brown citizens because she hopes they will die off and be replaced by blonde Xuxa clones.
Original title
written by Guest, May 29, 2006
I wrote this article. The title was changed by the editor. The original title was "Is Brazilian Popular Music a projection of the nation's identity?", intended to provoke debate.

I disagree with the title "How Music Has Brought Blacks Back to the Brazilian Melting Cauldron", as this is not what the essay is really about. Race and Colour is just one section - my real point is that national identites are constructed, and, as someone points out above, these constructed identities can be very dangerous. If you have a problem with the term 'blacks', then email the editor, as it has nothing to do with my essay, and I refuse to be criticised for something I didn't write.

Secondly, of course Baile Funk and Funk Brasileiro are important movements in Afro-Brazilian history, but word limts apply and I chose to focus on Bossa, Samba and Tropicalia. My aim was to compare critics' opinions on the subject of Brazilian National Identity and to consider the Internationalization of Brazilian Music - the amended title is misleading, and I have emailed the editor ask for it to be switched to my original title..

This essay has received a lot of criticism, but if people disagree so strongly, then write your own 6,000 article and prove me wrong.

Oz
...
written by Guest, May 29, 2006
I completely accept that then if the title was changed by the editor. Please accept my apologies.
To the first comment
written by Guest, May 29, 2006
Wow if you're Brazilian this is not a good representation. First of all why would you be sensitive about someone saying Blacks? People say whites, Jews, Asians, girls, boys, etc.Secondly you call yourself a brown woman? What the f**k is that? Is someone ashamed of being black? Hmm, my guess is yes.
OK OZ
written by Guest, May 29, 2006
It's a good article, I guess it needs more chapters to make the whole book. :-)

Rap Roledei

and of course....
written by Guest, May 29, 2006
Caetano Veloso actually did record an album with Banda Black Rio. Hard to find, though...
She is right.
written by Guest, May 29, 2006
She is right, and you know that.
Could I call you bobalhão without your being angry?. Of course, you sound like being one, but I don´t need to classify you as such.
I can just say; You...

People don´t call me "white", just because I happen to be white.

Brazilians are giving in to the American propaganda which disseminates their hatred around. the globe. (Globalization, hum? )
" Afro-American " is a discriminatory expression.They should all just be "Americans".

We are Brazilians. Who cares about the color of your skin?
Saying "Afro-Brasileiro" além de ser uma babaquice (não há melhor palavra) é empréstimo.
E, de mal gosto?

Será interessante quando você for convidar um amigo para ir a sua casa . Que tal?
- Leve a crioula da sua mãe também. Eu gosto tanto dela.

ou: The Anerican way.

- A Afro-Brasileira da sua mãe também pode ir... desde que ela se comporte bem. Eu gosto tanto dela.

Também poderia ser(buscando a exatidão):

- Não se esqueça de levar, também, a corcunda da sua mulher e a merda dos seus filhos.(Talvez um pouquinho de estatística tornasse o discurso mais elegante. ) - Seus 4 filhos.

" Afro-American" is a lousy term. Rejecting thought habits is confortable but not convenient.

Brazil is neither white nor black.
Most people have mixed blood, and this is very good. Many people have black blood and this is excellent. Many are from indian descent (Brazilian indians ) and this is fortunate.

---

Hey, you have a right to have an opinion, but it seems Roberto Carlos will be forgotten as soon as he dies.

He lacks something important - intelligence.

Caetano Veloso may lack some other thing but musical intelligence.
Re: They said...100...
written by Guest, May 29, 2006
Copycats like copying. You are copying somebody or something you read or you heard somewhere, aren´t you?
First of all, you know very little about Brazil. Its is disgraceful playing the fool., butyou have anonimity to give you a hand.
Brazil IS an "Aryan" country if you just take into account the States in the South region.
Brazil IS "African" if you take into account Bahia. Brasil IS "Indian" if you take into account the Amazon region.
If you go to Rio or São Paulo you have all these races mixed in a vast region.
XUXA is welcome. She is a beautiful woman. Besides, XUXA you have thousands and thousands and thousands of beautiful women on every corner, in every city in Brazil. They happen to be graceful, delicate and very feminine, differently from the overweight, shrill-voiced, graceless American women( There are a few exceptions , I concede).
Now, if you knew what you were saying you would not have commited a stupid mistake in your discourse.
I will not tell you what it is. Go and repeat your mistake and show around your ignorance.
A Brazilian would spot it immediately.
Hey, I think it is Barneys show time. Don´t miss it.


Graceful, delicate and feminine women?
written by Guest, May 29, 2006
Ever heard of a thing called plastic surgery? It happens to be RAMPANT in Brazil. So there's your answer.

Also you might not like this idea, but American women don't want to deal with globally famous controlling, cheating, beating men. Maybe that's not graceful, but liberty sure is.
PEOPLE!
written by Guest, May 30, 2006
So many arguments! Why is having Black "excellent" and having Indian blood only "fortunate"? You must have some underlying prejudice to write this.

Using the term Afro-Brazilian in an academic context is not 'babaquice'. I think the point that people are missing here is that racial history and identity MUST be explored if acceptance is to arise. All Brazilians have as much a right to know about Quilombos as they do about Cabral. This knowledge is the key to defeating prejudice and racism in Brazil, and the rest of the world, as we can only move forward by learning from the past. Brazil is still a very racist country.

I'm sorry, but whoever wrote 'She is right...' needs to get their facts straight. Brazil IS a White, Black, Indian, Asian. Please accept this. The question is, how well have all these races and origins mixed over the years.

To pretend that we live in an equal and fair world is 'babaquice'. We must acknowledge, embrace and celebrate our differences - this is the only way to rid the world of racism. To ignore them would be ignorant.

Oz
...
written by Guest, May 30, 2006
Saying Jews, Asians,Boys Girls. Is not the same as saying blacks or whites. Why do people always say- oh well you are obviously not a brazilian. So the f**k what.
Desde que ela se comporte bem
written by Guest, May 30, 2006
"- A Afro-Brasileira da sua mãe também pode ir... desde que ela se comporte bem. Eu gosto tanto dela."

Americans don't use African-American that frequently. They wouldn't say that African American can come too. It's more for formal use, like 80% of African Americans etc.

"desde que ela se comporte bem"??

Is that how Brazilians talk about blacks? Saying they should behave themselves or expecting them not to? Or is that the impression they have of America, that Americans talk about blacks this way?
Brazil is still a very racist country?
written by Guest, May 30, 2006
Can you explain how Brazil is racist?
Poor Choice of title.....
written by Guest, May 30, 2006
I think much of the debate has resulted in the silly choice of title of this article " How Music Has Brought Blacks Back to the Brazilian Melting Cauldron", really the article was about how Brazilian music has changed over the years vis a vis the people and culture, not about 'blacks' specifically and the original title "Is Brazilian Popular Music a projection of the nation's identity?" is far more accurate and wouldnt have brought a fraction of the responses most of which have nothing to do with the article itself.
...
written by Guest, May 30, 2006
Exactly!
Re: Brazil is still a very racist countr
written by Guest, May 30, 2006
In response to your question, Brazil, like most other nations, is not a land of equal opputunities.

Many say that Brazil is the great melting pot of the world. This is true to an extent, but this view ignores the fact that while many races and cultures have mixed, shared and miscengenated in the nation, it is still rare to find a Black manager in a bank.

The echoes of slavery still ring out, having left many Afro-Brazilians at the bottom of the economic ladder, where many still reside. Many of the white elite still thoroughly distrust Afro-Brazilians.

"Black and mixed-race Brazilians comprise 64 percent of the poor, the average salary for black Brazilians is less than half that of whites, while the illiteracy rate is twice as high, and that in 2002, Afro-Brazilians held just 14 of the 584 Congress seats".

Afro-Brazilians may have found a popular cultural voice in the 20th Century, but have little representation politically.

Brazil is a beautiful, amazing country, full of interesting, intelligent and passionate people, but is far from a utopia. There are many books on the subject, but I feel that "Racial Politics in Brazil" by Michael Hanchard would answer a lot of questions on this comments board.

Oz
...
written by Guest, May 31, 2006
quote:
Is that how Brazilians talk about blacks? Saying they should behave themselves or expecting them not to? Or is that the impression they have of America, that Americans talk about blacks this way?


I think the person was giving his impression of how he perceives American whites. I'm sure it was a caricatural exaggeration just to highlight the schock of culture when foreigners talka about races, i.e. not Brazilians.

I think the only racism that exists in Brazil is the one of a brazilian being rich or poor. Or being poor or middle-class or being upper class or middle class.Not races. I don't really think race is a issue in Brazil but having or not havng money. There you can feel preconceived I think from my experiences and others as well.
...
written by Guest, May 31, 2006
quote:
Is that how Brazilians talk about blacks? Saying they should behave themselves or expecting them not to? Or is that the impression they have of America, that Americans talk about blacks this way?


I think the person was giving his impression of how he perceives American whites. I'm sure it was a caricatural exaggeration just to highlight the schock of culture when foreigners talka about races, i.e. not Brazilians.

I think the only racism that exists in Brazil is the one of a brazilian being rich or poor. Or being poor or middle-class or being upper class or middle class.Not races. I don't really think race is a issue in Brazil but having or not havng money. There you can feel preconceived I think from my experiences and others as well. It's crazy...
...
written by Guest, May 31, 2006
Maybe, but in many countries, especially South Africa and Brazil, Race is intrinsically linked with Economic status.

"I think the only racism that exists in Brazil is the one of a brazilian being rich or poor"

I'm sorry, but this is simply not true. Economic prejudice is not racism, but the two are often linked. Many Brazilians like to think that they live in some kind of utopia, like you claim, that racism does not exist in Brazil. Of course there is racism in Brazil - racism exists in every society in the world! I never once saw an Afro-Brazilian bank manager. If racism does not exist in Brazil, why are Afro-Brazilians so woefully under represented politically?
...
written by Guest, May 31, 2006
Because many Afro-Brazilians haven't got appropriate education. And no economic prejudice is not racism, is prejudice, that's right. I was just trying to point how I see this issue. It is not exactly the case of being creating an utopic racism-free country. No, no. You are not Brazilian to say that, meaning you say that because you don't have deep experiences in Brazil.
Or maybe I am a Brazilian who live in a world, a small world you may say, where people mix and get along between races without perceiving it exclusively as a risk? No no boy, that ain't a criterion in Brazil to judge people from my experiences, never was. This exists and it is not utopia. Utopia is having this country running greately this year and the next 4 years probably. that is. Maybe the world I live is a juvenile one, and in that case i would be a fortunate person? People say about Argentinians for example b/c they are only tourists or rivals football players, that's personal experience.Anyway, economic prejudice is what I understand to be the root of subtle prejudice here, not racism and it is not fun though.
It was nice to write.
Eu concordo
written by Guest, May 31, 2006
Nao acho que ha o racismo no Brasil.

I haven't been to Brazil but I have been studying their politics and culture. I have yet to hear anything that resembles racism.

Racism is having a hierarchy of races that makes some races inferior and others superior, a hierarchy that is biological. Not having a black bank manager or having a lot of poor black people doesn't make a place racist at all. Neither does have the elite distrust the black population.

If wealth distribution signaled racism, then Washington DC would be the most racist city in the US, because the most developed section is all white even though the city is 70% black. But DC, "Chocolate City" is nowhere close to racist.

As for the distrust, if you were part of a market-dominant minority, were part of the .01% that controls most of the country's land, were one of the top 30,000 families, and were rich in a country that has by far one of biggest income disparities in the world, would you distrust the masses? Probably. You would be waiting for them to overthrow the government, like the Zapatistas. You would be waiting for extremists like El Mallku to swoop down. Race doesn't have to factor into that distrust and even if it does, that isn't racism.
...
written by Guest, June 01, 2006
Quote:

"I wrote this article. The title was changed by the editor. The original title was "Is Brazilian Popular Music a projection of the nation's identity?", intended to provoke debate.

I disagree with the title "How Music Has Brought Blacks Back to the Brazilian Melting Cauldron", as this is not what the essay is really about. Race and Colour is just one section - my real point is that national identites are constructed, and, as someone points out above, these constructed identities can be very dangerous. If you have a problem with the term 'blacks', then email the editor, as it has nothing to do with my essay, and I refuse to be criticised for something I didn't write.

Secondly, of course Baile Funk and Funk Brasileiro are important movements in Afro-Brazilian history, but word limts apply and I chose to focus on Bossa, Samba and Tropicalia. My aim was to compare critics' opinions on the subject of Brazilian National Identity and to consider the Internationalization of Brazilian Music - the amended title is misleading, and I have emailed the editor ask for it to be switched to my original title..

This essay has received a lot of criticism, but if people disagree so strongly, then write your own 6,000 article and prove me wrong.

Oz"


Reply:

Well I thought the essay was pretty badass (awsome). Plus you know how to communicate clearly and your thoughts are very orderly and crisp. Hopefully one day I'll write as good.
Hey, Hey!!!
written by Guest, June 01, 2006
Where is the article about the Brazilian army being ready to defend the Amazon region from invaders??

It was right here in Brazzil yesterday 05/31, but now it HAS JUST VANISHED.

Didn´t my comments on endangered American forests please Brazzil´s staff???

Isn´t this a free serious magazine ???

...
written by Guest, June 01, 2006
Quote:

"Nao acho que ha o racismo no Brasil.

I haven't been to Brazil but I have been studying their politics and culture. I have yet to hear anything that resembles racism.

Racism is having a hierarchy of races that makes some races inferior and others superior, a hierarchy that is biological. Not having a black bank manager or having a lot of poor black people doesn't make a place racist at all. Neither does have the elite distrust the black population.

If wealth distribution signaled racism, then Washington DC would be the most racist city in the US, because the most developed section is all white even though the city is 70% black. But DC, "Chocolate City" is nowhere close to racist.

As for the distrust, if you were part of a market-dominant minority, were part of the .01% that controls most of the country's land, were one of the top 30,000 families, and were rich in a country that has by far one of biggest income disparities in the world, would you distrust the masses? Probably. You would be waiting for them to overthrow the government, like the Zapatistas. You would be waiting for extremists like El Mallku to swoop down. Race doesn't have to factor into that distrust and even if it does, that isn't racism."


Reply:

Damn! I'm not sure if I agree or disagree with you. But you raise some interesting points.

I do tend to believe that racism best manifests itself economically, however life being complex as it is, that one or more groups in the dawm of the 21st century has a lot less share of national wealth or political representation does not in itself mean "racism" per se. It could be the *effects* of racism from a century or more before, if the economy remained primarily agricultural for a long time.

The US ecenomy is $10 or $11 trillion large. I'm not sure because I can't recall off of the top of my head but I don't believe the Brazilian economy is even $100 billion large. Out of $10 or $11 trillion I would hope Black Americans would have some of that wealth wherein it could manifest itself in certain luxuries and in enrollment in universities.

Anyways there are brown people in Brazil in the middle classes. Hell Lula himself is dark enough that had he been President in the United States many people in the US would point to him as an example of US racial progress. And cominf from the Northeast as I undersatand it, the people there are generally heavily mixed, of short stocky powerful build, and rather swarthy. Which is pretty much what Lula looks like - from my perception at least [shrug].

I still like that he wears a beard. smilies/smiley.gif
Re:Eu concordo
written by Guest, June 01, 2006
“Neither does have the elite distrust the black population.

Race doesn't have to factor into that distrust and even if it does, that isn't racism.”


Race has or not importance in that distrust? This part is confusing and contradictory.
You are also saying that the 1% elite people have an excuse to distrust? Well, that would be an excuse for everybody then!
Yeah
written by Guest, June 01, 2006
I was saying that their distrust is not "excusable" exactly (neither is their elite status) but explainable without even bringing in race, much less racism.
Oh weird
written by Guest, June 01, 2006
I didn't know that Nordestinos generally looked like Lula. That'll be interesting to see smilies/smiley.gif
Nordestinos
written by Guest, June 01, 2006
Nordestinos look like anything. It really depends which states and where in the northeast you go. Although, in general the people from the interior are more mixed european and some indian decent and most of the coast has a lot more black and mullato. But I know people from the northeast who are decendents of lebenon and italy also. But generally Northeasterners are more mixed. At the same time I wouldn't really think of Lula as looking anything other than white, just not anglo saxon. Just as when I look at Ralph Nader (lebanese decent) or Dukakis (Greek) my mind still classifies them as white people just not as white as someone who is northern european decent. But anyway's that's probably not that important. Getting back to whether there is racism against black people in brazil I think there is but it is not as strong as in the US on average. The history is just different. In general white and black people share more of the same culture than in the US. For example, you can tell USUALLY when you speak on the phone to an american whether they are black or white, or even a lot of time when people write in this blog, because the words used and accents are different. (Even when they have the same eduction level). However in brazil two people with the same education level will sound the same on the phone regardless of thier race.
Brazil is a Racist Sh-thole
written by Guest, June 03, 2006
I am tired of hearing about how the races "all get along" and how black people are at the bottom of the sh-t heap because of class discrimination. Hah Hah Hah hah! So not true!

It has been acknowledged time and time again that the most beautiful women in Brazil are located in Southern Brazil and are the most beautiful because of their GERMAN, ITALIAN or POLISH ancestry. Not mixed, not black,not Indian but white and European. I have traveled to Brazil. Never do you find a black or mulatto face on ads, billboards and in magazines unless it is a racist caricacture. Never or seldom has Brazil chosen a beauty queen that wasn't white or preferably blonde.

Get your head out of our bunda and wake up! Everybody comments on how blonde and white the models from Brazil generally are and where are the black or mulatto models. That Brazil would choose a white blonde as the national symbol of beauty in a nation of black and brown speaks volumes about her true views of racism. The only persons who comment on the beauty of the brown or black women are foreigners. In Brazil these women are considered ugly. Why else would a supposedly poor country pay a white blonde like Xuxa half a billion US DOLLARS. It is self hate pure and simple.

Slavery existed in Brazil as well as the States and blacks in Brazil were treated no better than elsewhere. Racism against blacks not as strong as in the States? Then why is 99% of them still living in third world shanties while your average white lives in first world luxury? Brazil is VERY racist against black people. The only Brazilians who will say that we treat "our blacks" better are white rich Cariocas. Ask their black maids whether they have it better and you will get a different story. Any visitor to Brazil can OBVIOUSLY see the poverty and squalor Brazil's blacks live in. That is why they have given up trying to participate in Brazilian society and turn to drug lords instead.

Nobody is buying that "we are all one under the sun" bullshyt but rich white Cariocas who have never had to live in a sh-tty crime infested favela!
Activists intimidated as logging company
written by Guest, June 03, 2006
Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea — True to form, Asia's biggest logging company, Rimbunan Hijau (RH), intimidated and detained six of our activists who attempted to present them with a ‘Golden Chainsaw’ award for forest destruction.

The activists were harassed inside RH’s Port Moresby compound and had to lock themselves into their vehicles for their own safety. A cameraman was assaulted while attempts were made to seize his film and his camera was broken.

RH is the largest logging company in PNG today. A 2003/2004 review of existing logging concessions documented numerous allegations of abuse of local landowners, including rape and physical violence, by either logging company officials or police associated with the logging companies. Allegations were also made by a former officer of an elite PNG police taskforce that RH paid local police officers to intimidate and beat landowners who complained about breaches to their rights.

Today, our personnel and people from the media were prevented from leaving the compound for 45 minutes. The cars and windows were pounded on and verbal threats made. The situation came to an end after police arrived and escorted Greenpeace staff and volunteers, along with senior management from RH, to the local police station. No charges were laid.

We wanted to peacefully present the company with the award – to mark 30 years of forest destruction – and leave. RH’s over-reaction reflects its belief that it is above the law.

The incident occurred as delegates from around the world arrived in Port Moresby for the African, Caribbean and Pacific – European Union (ACP-EU) ministerial meeting to discuss trade and development. We will be asking EU delegates to urgently implement legislation to stop illegal timber from companies like RH from entering the European market.

RH controls logging concessions in many parts of the developing world. It operates with impunity in PNG, directly controlling 40 per cent of all log exports. It was recently granted a new 791,000 hectare concession in Kamula Dosa by the PNG government. This concession is located in one of the largest pristine forest areas left in the country.

The Greenpeace Golden Chainsaw award is reserved for the worst forest destroyers in the world. It has been awarded twice before, to companies in Brazil and Indonesia.

In conjunction with the award, we released a “Forest Crime File” highlighting RH’s continued involvement in large scale forest destruction and questioning the legality of its operations.

The report states that unless brought under control, timber giants such as RH will continue to “plunder the world’s ancient forests, destroying cultural diversity, biodiversity, stealing from some of the world’s poorest and most vulnerable people and degrading the environment on which we ultimately depend”.

The report also points to the close ties RH enjoys with the PNG government. Examples include:

An ex-Deputy Prime Minister was criticised by the PNG Ombudsman for pressuring the National Forest board to favour RH with an illegal timber permit extension.
In 2004, Minister for Internal Security, Mark Maipakai was the shareholder and director of a company, Gopera Investments Ltd, holding a timber permit sub-contracted to RH.
A National Intelligence Organisation report alleged that a provincial Governor and two Members of Parliament were on RH’s payroll.

Nun assassinated defending Amazon
written by Guest, June 03, 2006
Anapu, Para State, Brazil — 74 year old American missionary Sister Dorothy Stang was assassinated on Saturday in the Amazon state of Para, Brazil. Sister Dorothy was travelling to a sustainable development project in Anapu with some colleagues when she was shot three times by two gunmen.

This tragedy occurred 16 years after the murder of Chico Mendes, who was also a defender of rural communities. Mendes was also a colleague of the current Minister for the Environment Marina Silva. Marina Silva is in Anapu meeting with State authorities, following the news of Sister Dorothy's death.

"Like Chico Mendes, Sister Dorothy refused to be intimidated and she paid an enormous price," said Paulo Adario, Greenpeace Amazon co-ordinator. "She selflessly worked for many years supporting the rights of rural workers, and defending the Amazon from reckless deforestation and we can't let her death be in vain."

Originally from Dayton, Ohio, US, Sister Dorothy was a Brazilian citizen and has worked in the Amazon for the past 37 years, living in Anapú since 1972. For 56 years she has been a member in good standing in the Congregation of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur, an international Catholic religious order of approximately two thousand women who work on five continents. She opposed land grabbers and illegal loggers who use intimidation, violence and guns to force small landowners off their land. She worked in an area that is remote and lawless and she has received many death threats.

"She had been on a death list for years, yet the State government of Para has failed to protect her. She was not alone either, as there are many others fighting against the forest destruction and the rights of local communities, whose lives are in danger", said Adario. "The violence and intimidation must stop. We cannot accept more martyrs in the Amazon."

Para is the Amazon state with the highest murder rate related to land disputes. According to the Pastoral Land Commission (CPT), a Catholic organisation campaigning for landless people and the poor, 1,237 rural workers died in Brazil from 1985 to 2001, and 40 percent of these occurred in Para.

Para State is responsible for approximately one-third of the deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon and plays a leading role in both environmental abuse and human rights violations
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written by Guest, June 03, 2006
Quote:

"It has been acknowledged time and time again that the most beautiful women in Brazil are located in Southern Brazil and are the most beautiful because of their GERMAN, ITALIAN or POLISH ancestry. Not mixed, not black,not Indian but white and European. I have traveled to Brazil. Never do you find a black or mulatto face on ads, billboards and in magazines unless it is a racist caricacture. Never or seldom has Brazil chosen a beauty queen that wasn't white or preferably blonde."


Reply:

That's true of about every nation in Latin America. Over in Asia India has plenty of very dark people, but you'll strain yourself to death to find any models that aren't very light skinned Indian women. The Japanese and their manga magzines makes almost all their cartoon figures look white - the good guys that is. The bad guys they make with slanted eyes.

But the problem with your commentary is it's lack of context. Because Brazil choose just not white models but skinny ones with no *ass* them. So if Brazilian culture was to be judged by her run way fashion models, one would conclude the Brazilian men and culture put no emphasis or appreciation on the *bunda.* One would conclude that their is little market in Brazil for jeans that would accentuate the *ass.*

Fact is, regardless of nationality, ethnicity, or so called race, most people in the world are *shallow* and *followers.* Brazil like almost every other nation on earth (minus perhaps China and most of Africa) chooses models that *sell to the world.* One's that are considered *industry standard.*

A few years ago it was a fairly dark skinned woman (darker than me) that Brazil choose to lead it's famous Rio Carnaval. She walked in the parade naked but for paint on her body, her round and plump bubble ass was the envy of women across Brazil. --- So there is more than one side to Brazil.
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written by Guest, June 04, 2006
very true there is WAY more than one side to brazil. It seems to me the guy who wrote the above about Brazil only wanting blond women had probably taken a trip or two there and is only looking at the surface. Of course there is racism in Brazil. But Brazil also has a long history of celebrating the mullata woman. There is even a white artist who made his entire career drawing sexualized mullata women.
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written by Gues