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Caetano Veloso - O Quatrilho album

Caetano Veloso - O Quatrilho album

  • Performer: Caetano Veloso
  • Genre: Latin / Creative music
  • Title: O Quatrilho
  • Released: 1996
  • Style: Soundtrack, MPB
  • MP3 version size: 1292 mb
  • FLAC version size: 1987 mb
  • Other: AHX MOD AAC ADX APE AHX XM
  • Rating: 4.8
  • Votes: 796

Description

lbum Branco, which means White Album, in Portuguese) is an album released in Brazil in 1969, being the third album by Caetano Veloso, his second solo. It is considered by many one of Veloso's best, and one that represents Tropicália. The album vocals and acoustic guitars were recorded in a small recording studio in Salvador, where Veloso was confined for defying the authoritarian Brazilian government of the time.

Based on Italy's colonization of Brazil, the movie O Quatrilho is part immigrant success story and part ty romance. The soundtrack consists of 19 tracks by celebrated Brazilian roducer Caetano Veloso and conductor/producer Jacques Morelenbaum. Veloso sings on three tracks; the rest feature various combinations of orchestra, harp, and bandoneon. Like many film scores, much of the music is written in a kind of late-romantic classical music style.

Caetano Veloso (1971 album). Caetano Veloso was a superstar in Brazil. He came to England and decided to make London his home in the summer of 1969. Caetano adopted English for the lyrics on this album to convey his first impressions of living in a foreign country. The songs serve as a two-way mirror, focusing thoughts and memories of home and absent friends and reflecting his reaction to a new but friendly environment

Caetano Veloso is the debut solo album by the artist of the same name, released in Brazil in 1968. He had released Domingo the year before in collaboration with Gal Costa. Caetano has expressed displeasure with the album, calling it "amateurish and confused", but it is widely regarded as a classic, often showing up on lists of greatest Brazilian albums. It was very popular upon its release in Brazil, and the Brazilian press used the song title "Tropicália" to christen the larger artistic movement it represented "Tropicalismo", to.

Listen to Caetano Veloso lyrics sorted by album. New music videos and mp3 for artist Caetano Veloso. Qualquer Coisa (1997). Divina Estampa (1996). Fina Estampa (1994). Personalidade (1993). Sem Lenco Sem Documento (1990). Totalmente Demais (1988).

Full list of Caetano Veloso albums, sorted by release date. You can also sort the list of albums by most recently added, year recorded (from most recent to first recorded), by views and by album name.

Caetano Veloso is an album released in Brazil in 1969, being the third album by Caetano Veloso, his second solo. He recorded the vocals, and Gilberto Gil the acoustic guitar, which were sent to arranger and producer Rogério Duprat, who added layers of electric guitars, horns, bass, drums and other instruments in a more professional studio in São Paulo. The album, like its predecessor, is very eclectic (a characteristic of the Tropicália movement), with songs that vary from Bossa Nova, Psychedelic rock, Carnival music,.

Caetano Veloso is the third self-titled album by Caetano Veloso. It was recorded in England, when the artist was in an exile imposed by the Brazilian government of the time for being subversive. It is mostly sung in English and portrays a sad tone throughout, reflecting his feelings about homesickness and the absence of his family and friends. It was released first in Europe, and then in Brazil, in 1971. All tracks written by Caetano Veloso except where noted. It was recorded in England, when the artist was in an exile imposed by the Brazilian government of the time for being subversive, it is mostly sung in English and portrays a sad tone throughout, reflecting his feelings about homesickness and the absence of his family and friends. Jóia is a 1975 studio album by Caetano Veloso. The album was released simultaneously with Qualquer Coisa. The original cover art, picturing Veloso, his wife and his son naked was censored by the ruling Brazilian military dictatorship and substituted by one with only doves on it.