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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
34 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Celebrating a friendship,
By Mauricio Bussab (Sao Paulo, SP Brazil) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Clube Da Esquina (Audio CD)
This is both the high point and the beginning of the end of a long friendship (as beautifully told in the book Sonhos nao Envelhecem, available only in portuguese :-( )
The Clube da Esquina was a loosely bound group of friends from Belo Horizonte, a city located in the middle of the Brazilian territory, in the Minas Gerais state, far away from the sea. They got together in the 70s to play music, drink beer and talk about the Beatles, a band they loved. Milton was the obvious star in the group but all of them were immensely talented and had a lot to contribute as is clear in their solo work (Lo Borges albums are masterpieces if you are able to overlook his vocal flaws and Beto Guedes is pretty good too). Notice that by then Milton was not the superstar he became after. This album is signed by both him and Lo Borges. This is still a group effort. The album has a very free style. It sounds lyrical, obviously Beatles influenced, smooth, gentle, the Brazilian rhythms presented there are not the ones you are used to, a lot comes from their native Minas Gerais state. It is the product of a group of friends having a lot of fun playing together. The group began to dissolve slowly after this album. Milton got famous, started hanging out with a different crowd, you know how it goes, how all friendships end... The follow-up to this double LP is another double LP (Clube da Esquina 2) that features major stars of the time, lavish production and has a different beauty to it, maybe it is even more musically relevant than this one. But this is the more sincere and is generally considered the best. My personal opinion is that if you like Brazilian music you should have both :-)
19 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Classic Rock Without the FM.,
By David S. Minjares (Montebello, CA. USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Clube Da Esquina (Audio CD)
"Clube da Esquina", or "The Corner Gang", may look and sound like another Brazilian/Latin record on the surface, but that's where it all ends. The racially mixed cover portrait of children sitting together should be a slight indication.Tropicalia was a late 60's movement in Brazil where the limitations of then-traditional/popular music (i.e. brazileiras, bossa nova, batucada, choros, etc.) were charged around by the use of British/American pop-rock influences. Talents like Os Mutantes, Lo Borges, Caetano Veloso, Gilberto Gil, Milton Nascimento and others took the liberties of the above and created a music that, though poking fun & rebellion at already set national musical values, was actually quite complimentary & evolutionary. Though a lot of the older generation did not welcome it with open arms (this was 1966-1969), Tropicalia not only matured Brazilian music & gave it an undeniable social awareness (though some sentiments did not settle well with the then-government and, as a result, some musicians/composers were jailed & questioned about their lyrical content), but was also an important and underwritten chapter in psychedelic music. Milton Nascimento & Lo Borges' great project "Clube Da Esquina", recorded in 1972, brings the whole Tropicalia movement full circle. Though all of the songs are sung in Portuguese (save for one, a haunting cover of "Dos Cruces", sung in Spanish), there is an urgency and edginess in the music that is undeniable. Electric guitars, basses and organs are inescapable here and used in a fashion that not only brings a truly modern & progressive twist to Brazilian folk forms, but an adventurousness & unpredictability that is not usually associated with Brazilian music (at least, not with the United States). All 21 tracks present a song cycle that expresses all of the country's music and social climate up to that point. All moods are direct throughout. They can range from the haunting ("Tudo Que Voce Podia Ser" & "Os Povos", the latter with a wonderful vocal performance from Alaide Costa), to psychedelic ("Pelo Amor De Deus", "Trem De Doido"), to absolutely somber ("Cais", "Dos Cruces" & "Ao Que Vai nascer") to even a few poppier & playful oments along the way. Yet, with what may be considered to be schitzophrenic to some, it's very consistent & cohesive all throughout. And to also note that there isn't a bad track on here, also helps the above statement. Plenty of great playing, singing and writing, too: Nascimento, brothers Lo & Marcio Borges, Ronaldo Bastos, Toninho Horta, Eumir Deodato, Wagner Tiso, Robertinho Silva, Beto Guedes, etc. All strong players and, more importantly, contributors. And yet, this is an album that ranks right up there in equal status alongside "Piper At The Gates Of Dawn", the United States Of America's debut, Love's "Forever Changes", Sly's "There's A Riot Goin' On" and even recent alternative masterpieces like Wire's "Pink Flag", R.E.M.'s "Murmur" and even Radiohead's most progressive material. If you're a ProgRock head, you'll love this. If you're looking for something new and unheard of, this will NOT disappoint. If you want to expand your knowledge about Brazilian music, this is a great addition to your collection. It's a powerful record. Plenty of talent, great songs and true artistic risk-taking. The only favor asked once you've been initiated to this album's charms is to spread the word to anybody who cares. You want to keep it a trade secret, but the music says otherwise. A TRUE Latin-Rock MASTERPIECE.
16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This Album changed my life,
By
This review is from: Clube Da Esquina (Audio CD)
I first heard this incredible masterwork of sonic bliss about 3 years ago. This is the first CD I've ever heard that contains some of the background music that's played in heaven. Don't believe me? Listen to track 11 "Clube da Esquina 2" and the melody might bring you to joyful tears. The lyrics are of someone who is a deep thinker. They explore life, love, loss, longing, angst, they just run the gamut of human emotions in this album. To anyone who has ever listened to Pink Floyd or the Beatles later albums and thought "I get it, I want more" here is the more you asked for. If you don't speak portuguese you will still understand brilliance when it's smacked in your face. It's worth learning a whole new language just to understand this cd in my opinion. The melodies are just haunting. The musicianship and creativity in the effects boggles the mind. Every time I listen to this cd I wonder who has come close to touching this kind of mastery of the art of musical storytelling, well maybe Pink Floyd. But don't let my comparison make you think that Milton Nascimento and Lo Borges ripped anyone off, on the contrary, they were pioneers. BUY THIS CD AND CHANGE YOUR LIFE!
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