Babá Ala Palá ♫ Gilberto Gil

Details
Title | Babá Ala Palá ♫ Gilberto Gil |
Author | Assia B. |
Duration | 4:56 |
File Format | MP3 / MP4 |
Original URL | https://youtube.com/watch?v=ZfsdwyQVBjA |
Description
From the album "Refavela» 1977
Produced by Roberto Santana
Credits
Gilberto Gil - guitar, vocal
Paulinho Braga - drums, percussion
Rubens Sabino - bass
Djalma - percussion
Cidinho Teixeira - piano
Perinho Santana - guitar, percussion
Ronaldo Boys - choir
Pelanca Do Kojak - choir
Jesse - trombone
Ze Bodega - tenor sax
Hamilton - trumpet
Chiquinho Azevedo - drums
Marcio Montarroyos - trumpet
Nivaldo Ornelas - tenor sax
Mauro Senise - alto sax
Roberto Silva - drums
Rubens Sabino - bass
Meireles - flute
Born Gilberto Passos Gil Moreira, June 26, 1942, Salvador (Bahia, Brazil), Gilberto Gil is Brazilian multi-instrumentalist, singer, and songwriter who was one of the leading names in Brazilian music and an originator of the movement known as Tropicália (or Tropicalismo).
Gil, grew up mostly in Ituaçu, a small town located near the Chapada Diamantina upland, in the eastern state of Bahia, until the age of nine. When it was time for him to enter secondary school, the family returned to Salvador. By that time Gil had learned to play the accordion as a result of his love for the music of the celebrated Northeastern performer Luiz Gonzaga, whose style of music (called baião) reflected the rhythms of the zabumba drum played in Pernambuco and Bahia states. When Gil was 18 years old and studying business administration at the Federal University of Bahia, in Salvador, he and others formed a music group, Os Desafinados (“The Tuneless”).
Shortly after recording his first song (“Coça coça lacerdinha”), in 1962, he met and befriended other then-unknown Brazilian superstars Caetano Veloso, Gal Costa, Maria Bethânia, and Tom Zé. These and other songwriters and poets (such as Torquato Neto and Capinan) sought to transform the cultural landscape of the country. Gil, who was impressed with the music of older singer and guitarist João Gilberto, added the guitar to the list of instruments he had made his own.
In 1967 Gil released his first album, Louvação (“Worship”), after appearing on the television show O fino da bossa, conducted by singer Elis Regina. The following year Gil and his friends were swept up in the Tropicália movement, a hybridization of rock music, samba, funk, soul, and other styles that reflected the upheaval characteristic of the late 1960s. Gil’s song “Domingo no parque” (“Sunday in the Park”) was considered one of the seeds of Tropicália.
In 1968 he participated in the album Tropicália; ou, panis et circensis, alongside Veloso, Costa, Neto, Os Mutantes, and others. With Veloso, Bethânia, and Costa, he later formed the group Doces Bárbaros (“Sweet Barbarians”). The military dictatorship then in power in Brazil found the Tropicália movement to be such a threat to the social order that it arrested and imprisoned Gil and Veloso in 1968, releasing them in February 1970 on the condition that they would leave the country.
He won Grammy Awards for best world music album in 1998 (Quanta Live) and for best contemporary world music album in 2005 (Eletracústico), and he took home several Latin Grammys, including three (2001, 2002, 2010) for best Brazilian roots/regional album and one in 2010 for best Brazilian popular music album.
Perhaps a more popular development of his late career was his release in 2014 of Gilbertos samba, a tribute album dedicated to João Gilberto. The album contained Gil’s versions of songs associated with Gilberto, and it also incorporated elements of earlier Bahian samba music and 1970s Tropicália. It was by many accounts—in the words of one critic—“an astonishing compendium of Brazilian music” and a consummate summary of that movement.
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