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La dôtu lado

Coladera
Discos: Coladera / MPB

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Ficha técnica Discos

Sello Agogo Records
Estilo Coladera / MPB
Año de Edición Original 2019

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Coladera: Vitor Santana (voz, guitarra acústica), João Pires (guitarra acústica, voz).
Francesco Valente (bajo), Miroca Paris (percusión, coros), Daniel Guedes (percusión), André Xina (programación electrónica), Nath Rodrigues y Raquel Coutinho (coros), Diogo Duque (trompeta, flugelhorn), Elmano Coelho (saxo tenor).

Participación especial de: Marcos Suzano (percusión) y Aline Frazão (voz, coros).

Edición en formato Digipack.

El hermoso puente musical que une Brasil con Cabo Verde y Portugal proyectado e iniciado en 2013 por el cantante, guitarrista y compositor mineiro Vitor Santana y el guitarrista y compositor portugués João Pires, que ya pudieron apreciar en aquel momento espectadores de Brasil, Estados Unidos y Europa, finalmente va a tener la difusión que merece gracias a este disco (otro disco editado en noviembre de 2013, no llegó a ser comercializado).
Voces, guitarras acústicas y percusión unidas en la elegante y serena cadencia del ritmo originario de Cabo Verde.
El duo, junto al percusionista Marcos Suzano, participará en la edición de 2019 del Montreux Jazz Festival.

"La Dôtu Lado swings as much as it seduces. It maps new musical routes linking the Cape Verdean island sounds of batuque and funaná, with deep candomblé inspired rhythms and the heart tugging sway of fado. And in doing so, it has opened up a fascinating narrative on the slave trade, spirituality and love.
Coladera are two musicians from Brazil & Portugal, who have invited various musicians from other Portuguese-speaking countries like Cape Verde and Angola to participate on this album.
Their first official international release have crafted an exquisite and exploratory sound, adding new layers upon their individual and rich traditions. Singer-guitarist Vitor Santana from Belo Horizonte, Portuguese singer-guitarist Joao Pires are named after one of Cape Verde’s musical traditions, Coladeira – a form that borrows melodies from fado and rhythms from Brazil and Angola.
Sung mainly in the Portuguese language but with a couple of songs in Cape Verdean creole, La Dôtu Lado features guest percussionist Marcos Suzano, a Brazilian pandeiro master, and seamlessly pulses between the traditions of each country and also percusssionist Miroca Paris, who has been playing for many years for the Queen of Morna, Cesária Évora, with poignant lyrics about the spirits of the Orishas, deities worshipped by slaves who were shipped across the Atlantic to Brazil from West Africa often via Cape Verde. Indeed, Cape Verde was an empty island until the Portuguese empire found it in 1456 and it wasn’t long after when Cape Verde was central to the Portuguese’s triangular trade system strategy.
Coladera have released a previous long player back in 2013 but with little fanfare. Despite the modest release, they played at New York’s Summerfest and Joe’s Pub amongst other festival dates around Europe. Whilst both albums have flirted with Cuban rumba with striking Andalusian guitar flourishes, the project has always been Lusophone and inspired by close friendships and travel. For Vitor, a guitarist with grounding in classic bossa nova, the music of Coladera at times felt like a nostalgic trip exploring the dulcet and minimal groove of the guitar and voice.
All musicians have, at different points, lived or been at the coalface of their respective musical cultures within the Lusophone Atlantic triangle. Joao grew up listening to and learning fado, studied flamenco in Andalusia and has lived in Cape Verde, and Vitor lived with Joao for two years in Brazil and has lived and performed throughout Europe.
As Vitor explains, “In Brazil there is a lot of DNA from Cape Verde and West-Africa. You can find this DNA in many rhythms. One of them is coladeira. It’s a little bit samba, a little bit Bahia. Cape Verde is in the middle”. Vitor is particularly vital to the positive vibe that pervades the record. He practises the Afro Brazilian tradition and meditation of candomblé, originally brought over to Brazil by slaves from West Africa. The track ‘Luz de Yayá’ perfectly encapsulates the spirit of the Coladera collaboration, named after the candomblé god of the sea, Iemanjá." (Texto de presentación del sello discográfico)

Temas

CD 1
1
La dôtu lado
Vitor Santana - Dino D'Santiago
2
A luz de yayá
Vitor Santana - José Eduardo Agualusa
3
Primer letra
João Pires - Bilan
Coladera & Marcos Suzano
4
Mandinga
Vitor Santana - Brisa Marques
Coladera, Aline Frazão & Marcos Suzano
5
Mantafro instrumental)
Vitor Santana
Coladera & Marcos Suzano
6
Algúm lugar em nós
João Pires - Brisa Marques
7
Funaná do moreré
Vitor Santana - Marcelo Albert
8
Céu azulino
Vitor Santana - Edu Mundo
Coladera & Marcos Suzano
9
D'orixá
Vitor Santana
Coladera & Marcos Suzano
10
Deserto do sal
João Pires - Ana Sofia Paiva
11
Gira
João Pires
João Pires