Veloso, Caetano
Caetano Veloso (180 Gr)
The Tropica'lia art movement of the late 1960s, with flourishes in visual art, poetry, theatre and music, is one of
Brazil's most adored cultural concoctions. It was a movement which began out of necessity, shortly after a repressive
military dictatorship seized power after 20 years of peaceful democracy. The term Tropica'lia first came from the mind
of Brazilian visual artist He'lio Oiticica, whose eponymous piece consisted of a sandy maze bordered by tropical
Brazilian flora and, at the end, a television set. Through satirizing symbols of their homeland and rejecting a
pre-established national culture, the Tropicalists constructed a new form of "aggressive nationalism" outside of an
innately anti-imperialist Left and an unthinkingly patriotic Right. By refusing to accept underdevelopment as their
identity and excitedly "devouring" disparate culture (low and high brow, domestic and foreign, etc.), the Tropicalists
carved out a unifying creative space, a universal sound, different from the older, bourgeois bossa nova movement and the
newer, undiscerning rock movement. Caetano Veloso's self-titled debut solo album is one of the most important and
influential Brazilian (and, dare we say, South American) albums of all time. With the release of this seminal album,
Veloso would become the leading voice of Tropica'lia. The songs on this album immediately connected with people.
Alegria, Algeria was his breakout hit that gained traction as a hymn for liberty advocates, juxtaposing images of Coca
Cola, guerrilla groups, bombs and Brigitte Bardot as part of the everyday experience. The album's first song Tropica'lia
was an anthem for the whole movement; it's a fragmented allegory, a structure borrowed from friends in the concrete
poetry scene, touching on divergent cultural symbols, events, allusions and idioms, nimbly representing and critiquing
the many contradictions in the new Brazilian dictatorship. Superbacana (translated as "Supergroovy") follows a
hyperbolic superhero's use of technology to fight a gang of cowboys led by the money-hungry Uncle Scrooge, serving as
allusions to American imperialism and greed felt in their country, all in the rapid-fire structure of a comic book. The
subtext in all these songs, which the dictatorship would not immediately catch, were that these repressed but glaring
contradictions, not the bountiful sunny paradise that the military regime was pushing, were the true national identity.
Unfortunately, these cleverly veiled jabs in Veloso and his contemporaries' bodies of work gained greater and greater
exposure as the movement became more and more popular, leading to the arrest, imprisonment and forced exile of Veloso
and many of his cohorts. Despite these difficulties, the Tropicalists continued creating in exile, strongly influencing
artists both at home and abroad. This is the first authorized North American vinyl issue of Caetano Veloso. Whether
you're a longtime fan or first-time listener, Third Man Records could not be more proud to spread the compelling story
of this album, this artist and the Tropica'lia movement.
Price
Genre
Format
LP - 1 disk
Release
08-03-2019
Label
Item-nr
1113960
EAN
0813547026699
Availability
Not in stock
Tracks
Title
Artist
1
TROPICALIA
2
CLARICE
3
NO DIA QUE EU VIM-ME EMBORA
4
ALEGRIA, ALEGRIA
5
ONDE ANDARAS
6
ANUNCIACAO
7
SUPERBACANA
8
PAISAGEM UTIL
9
CLARA
10
SOY LOCO POR TIL, AMERICA
11
AVE-MARIA
12
ELES