Long-Lost Trove of Music Connects Brazil
to Its Roots
By Larry Rohter
Published: January 25, 2007 - São
Paulo, Brazil,
Jan. 24 From the mid-1930s
onward, the American ethnomusicologist Alan Lomax led expeditions into
the Deep South, searching for authentic blues and folk singers. Thanks
to those efforts, Muddy Waters and Woody Guthrie made their first recordings
and a template for American popular music was set.
Luis Saia
A dance at a boi-bumbá ceremony in Belém, in Pará
State, was recorded in 1938 by a Brazilian Folklore
Research Mission.
Early in 1938, Mário
de Andrade, the municipal secretary of culture here, dispatched a four-member
Folklore Research Mission to the northeastern hinterlands of Brazil on
a similar mission. His intention was to record as much music as possible
as quickly as possible, before encroaching influences like radio and cinema
began transforming the regions distinctive culture.
Traveling by truck, horse and donkey, they recorded whoever and whatever
seemed to be interesting: piano carriers, cowboys, beggars, voodoo priests,
quarry workers, fishermen, dance troupes and even children at play.
But the Brazilian missions collection ended up languishing in vaults
here. Only now, after nearly 70 years, is the registry of what Mr. de
Andrade called a prodigious treasure doomed to disappear finally
available, in the form of a six-CD boxed set that documents the roots
of virtually every important style of modern Brazilian popular music,
from samba to mangue beat.
This is an important event because all of the main tendencies, whether
European, African or Indian in origin, are represented and are detectable,
said Marcos Branda Lacerda, the director of the CD project, organized
by the government here in Brazils largest and most prosperous city.
Everything is encompassed, and when you listen, you can hear the
influences that would radiate outward and make Brazilian music the
global force that it is today.
The CD set, called Musica Tradicional do Norte e Nordeste 1938,
consists of more than seven hours of music, drawn from the 1,299 tracks
by 80 performers, totaling nearly 34 hours, that the folklore team recorded
in five states in northern and northeastern Brazil during the first half
of 1938.
Many of the styles documented on the records proved to be a major influence
on the Tropicalismo movement, which emerged here in the 1960s and today
has international admirers who include David Byrne, Beck and Devendra
Banhart. The founders of that movement, mainly Caetano Veloso, Tom Zé
and Gilberto Gil, currently Brazils minister of culture, come from
the interior of the northeastern state of Bahia and openly acknowledge
their debt.
Luis Saia
The Brazilian Folklore Research Mission crossing a river in the
northeast region in the late 30s. The teams aim was
to record the regions music.
This is the music
I heard as a kid in my fathers store, and its where all the
richness and strength of Brazilian popular music comes from, Mr.
Zé said in an interview. As sons of the Portuguese, Caetano
and Gil and all the rest of us tropicalistas absorbed this folk influence,
transmuted it and then took it to the world.
Mr. Zé also noted that the music of the Brazilian northeast that
came from Portugal was itself a result of cultural mixing, especially
from the Arab domination there during the medieval era. The lyrics of
some songs in the compilation date back to troubadours tales from
that era, but the Arab presence manifested itself mainly in a vocal style
characterized by a fondness for bent notes.
That influence is still there in Brazilian popular music today,
he said. I hear it most clearly and beautifully when Caetano sings.
He has developed a sophisticated, inventive way to use these modulations
that were quite common in the singers we heard there in the backlands
of the northeast.
Though the expeditions main focus seemed to be on rhythms, guitarists
are likely to be especially interested in the third and fourth discs,
which include field recordings of duos known as repentistas. Like the
blues, this guitar-based genre emphasizes call and response and often
employs the mixture of braggadocio and insults that Americans know as
the dozens.
Thirty years ago, after a visit here, a reporter played some recordings
of repentistas for the American primitivist guitarist John Fahey. As someone
interested in folk music around the world, Mr. Fahey expressed curiosity
about the tunings and scales they used and pointed out that some of the
gruff, raspy, somewhat nasal vocals reminded him of Son House and Bukka
White.
It gives me chills just to think of the similarities between
American blues and the music of the northeast, Mr. Zé said. Its
like Mother Africa ended up with grandsons in Alabama and Pernambuco,
the state where the folklore team began its mission.
Of the three main cultural streams that have blended to make Brazil what
it is, the Amerindian element is less represented on the discs than the
European and African components, Mr. Lacerda said. But the collection
contains songs performed by bandas de pífano, the fife and drum
groups that are Indian in origin, as well as recordings of praiás,
a largely Indian musical ritual that has all but vanished from modern
Brazil.
Luis Saia
Girls playing and singing in Patos, Paraíba.
The original project was
the idea of Mr. de Andrade, one of Brazils most prominent intellectuals
in the 20th century. A poet, novelist, critic, art historian, musicologist
and public official, Mr. de Andrade had studied to be a pianist but in
1923 became one of the founders of the modernist literary movement, which
dominated Brazils cultural scene for decades to come.
By the 1930s, Mário de Andrade and others felt an urgency
to register popular manifestations of culture before it was too late,
said Flavia Camargo Toni, a musicologist who wrote part of the liner notes
for the set. Most of the northeast had not received electrification
yet, so life was completely isolated, and few people had traveled. So
he felt he had to take advantage of the moment.
During World War II, copies of the recordings were sent to the Library
of Congress in Washington. A decade ago, Rykodisc released a single disc
sampler, co-produced by Mickey Hart, drummer of the Grateful Dead, and
called The Discoteca Collection, as part of the Library of
Congresss Endangered Music Project, but it was not until 2000 that
restoration efforts began here.
When I first saw the material back in the 1980s, the roof was falling
down, water was leaking in, and I thought we were going to lose it all,
Mr. Lacerda said. But I was greatly surprised when I found most
of the 78s to be in good condition, and when they werent, we were
lucky enough to find duplicates that we could copy straight to CD and
then eliminate a lot of the hisses.
During its travels, the Andrade expedition also collected musical instruments
and other objects and filmed and photographed dances and festivals. The
result of those undertakings have been put on display at the municipal
cultural center here, including the teams notebooks from the field,
the Presto Recording Corporation equipment it used and transcriptions
of interviews with performers.
At the time the recordings were made, Brazil was ruled by a dictatorship
that had outlawed Afro-Brazilian religious practices. As a result, the
folklore team required a letter of authorization from the police in order
to do its work, and a goodly portion of the objects they collected,
especially the drums, came from confiscated material at police stations,
said Vera Lucia Cardim de Cerqueira, a curator at the center.
Luis Saia
A repentista guitar duo in Cajazeiras, Paraíba, in 1938.
For all of Brazils musical sophistication
and exposure to international styles of music in recent years, that heritage
continues to be relevant. Mr. Zé referred specifically to Whats
Happening in Pernambuco: New Sounds of the Brazilian Northeast, which
will be released on Mr. Byrnes Luaka Bop label on Feb. 7 and which
he said was saturated with rhythms derived from those the folklore expedition
documented.
In the past, Brazil has not had a culture of preservation, Ms.
Camargo Toni said, complicating efforts to place the countrys musical
evolution in its proper context. But with the missions recordings
available at last, she said, Brazilians now have the possibility of
listening to the past thinking of the future.
We can show what we were, what we
are today and how that came to be, she said.