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Reviews
*In
Brazil, choro continues to be heard amid
a rich musical landscape. After
nearly becoming extinct during the emergence of bossa nova in the early
Sixties, choro (pronounced "shóro" in Portuguese, the word literally
means "I cry") has fluctuated in popularity, finally benefiting from a more
lasting, if unlikely, renaissance in the past decade.
*In the past few years the Chorando Alto festivals in São Paulo have
successfully closed the generation and cultural gap by uniting pioneers such
as Paulinho da Viola with modern masters like American mandolin virtuoso
Mike Marshall.

Clube do Choro follows in Paulinho da Viola's
footsteps
*Clube do Choro, a Brasilia-based musical epicenter in the tradition of New
Orleans' House of Blues, has kept choro's spirit alive and maintains
the music's high stylistic standards by promoting musicians who represent
the crème de la crème. Toninho Ferragutti, whose Núcleo Contemporâneo is
responsible for the popularization of choro in São Paulo, and
clarinet and sax player Paulo Moura have been guests in the past. MPB (música
popular brasileira) star Marisa Monte has even included choro in
her repertoire. In fact Monte and Arnaldo Antunes's "De Mais Ninguém" may
very well be the single most important hit in bringing choro back to
life. Today tattooed twentysomethings with body piercings bump and grind to
choro in the cafes of Rio de Janeiro, the same city that served as a
backdrop to the art form's coming of age early in the Twentieth Century. Go
figure.
* Last month at Tobacco Road, Miami's own Clube do
Choro, an informal group
of local Brazilian musicians, acquainted its audience with choro. The
intricate harmonies were new to listeners more familiar with prefabricated
pop than refined instrumental sounds. But by the end of the night even
Tobacco Road's hardened regulars stood in awe. "We had everybody on their
feet," asserts flute player Danuzio Lima.
*Clube do Choro formed a year ago in North Bay Village. The group of
musicians -- William Duba on cavaquinho (a small, ukulele-like
guitar), Sergio Ferretti on seven-string guitar, Lima on flute, Paulo
Carvalho on guitar, Vito Souto on mandolin, and Claudio Silva on percussion
-- began congregating weekly for a traditional roda de choro at the
Bayview Café. The roda (a circle) is an all-night jam session, a
social gathering of sorts where the common language and bond is music,
specifically choro. "I really love the music," says Lima, who
recently released a solo CD called Ave Rara. "In the roda we
talk, we play, it's very open." The group plays classic compositions from
the likes of Pixinguinha, Jacob do Bandolim, Luis Americano, and Zequinha de
Abreu.
*Choro is to bossa nova and samba what ragtime is to bebop and
later forms of jazz. "It's the origin," says Lima, a native of
Maranhão,
Brazil. "The beginning of Brazilian popular music, the first time there was
a crossover of European and African music. When people get together and play
choro, young people listen. It commands respect and it's a way of
playing music. Like in jazz, it lends itself to interpretation and
improvisation." In the same breath Lima, who says he took it up several
years ago because he felt he needed a challenge, cautions that spontaneity
does not translate into laid-back playing. "Choro is very difficult
to play, but very beautiful. I think for you to be a Brazilian instrumental
musician you have to play some of it or else it would be like being a
classical musician and not being able to play Bach."
*Choro was born in the mid-Nineteenth Century and was once regarded
as Brazil's version of European classical dance music. Structurally, it is
the Brazilian music that most resembles the Chopin waltz and polka.
Choro's identity, however, really took form when Pixinguinha, one of the
most prolific choro composers and a great flute improviser ahead of
his time, incorporated Afro-Brazilian percussionists into his performances.
In 1922 Pixinguinha, dubbed "the Bach of choro" by musicologists
because of his near-perfect mastery of harmonic structure, and his group Os
Oito Batutas (the Eight Masters) became the first Brazilian musicians
contracted to perform abroad when they played in Paris. In Brazil, he is
synonymous with choro and is recognized as the father of samba.
*Lima, who himself lived in France for eight years, hopes audiences in
Miami are as receptive to his band as the Parisians were with Pixinguinha
and Os Oito Batutas. But he understands that the average listener may find
it hard to embrace the giant leaps in melody and sudden harmonic shifts. For
now he's content with simply weaving his flute in and out of Duba's
cavaquinho and Ferretti's seven-string guitar during the roda de choro.
It's what he lives for.
by
BY LISSETTE CORSA
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