• logo

VA - Black Rio 2 (Original Samba Soul 1968-1981) (2009)

VA - Black Rio 2 (Original Samba Soul 1968-1981) (2009)

BAND/ARTIST: Various Artists

  • Title: Black Rio 2 (Original Samba Soul 1968-1981)
  • Year Of Release: 2009
  • Label: Strut
  • Genre: Samba, MPB, Soul, Funk
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks + .cue)
  • Total Time: 55:19 min
  • Total Size: 314 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Zeca Do Trombone & Roberta Sax - Coluna Do Meio
02. Renata Lu - Faz Tanto Tempo
03. Guimaraes E O Grupo Som Sagrado - Our Sound
04. Rubinho E Mauro Assumpcao - Ta Tudo Ai
05. Emilio Santiago - Bananeira
06. Watusi - Oi Gere
07. Os Diagonais - Nao Vou Chorar
08. Claudia - Salve, Rainha
09. Pete Dunaway - Supermarket
10. Super Som Lord - BR Samba
11. Azambuja & Cia - Tema De Azambuja
12. Avan Samba - Iber
13. Cry Babies - It's My Thing
14. Balanca Povo - Novo Dia
15. Edson Frederico E A Transa - Bobeira
16. Bebeto - Princesa Negra De Angola
17. Marlene - Sinal Vermelho
18. Sonia Santos - Poema Ritmico Do Malandro

The funk and soul scene in Brazil in the late 1960s, '70s, and early '80s fed off of a hybrid mix of Afro, Latin, and American influences, and while the result was a dance music that was relentless and infectious, it somehow added up to less than it should or might have been, maybe because the scene lacked a defining artist, a Bob Marley, a Fela Kuti, or a James Brown, to provide a template, a direction, and an iconic face to the whole thing. Put together by DJ Cliffy, the man behind "Batmacumba," the longest running Brazilian club night in London, this set is the second volume of "samba soul" from Strut Records (the first volume was released in 2002). It's a fun compilation, full of bright grooves and irresistible energy, but yet nothing really leaps out here, and listening to this anthology is a bit like dancing all night in a club and then not remembering a single song or melody the next morning. Not that there aren't cool tracks here -- sides like Super Sam Lord's horn-drenched "BR Samba" hit hard with a samba-on-steroids force, and Emilio Santiago's "Bananeira" has a groove and flow so natural and easy one could just float away on it. But no international hits came out of the Brazilian soul scene because there just wasn't that big, defining record that put all of it on the map. What's here is interesting, and no one will have a difficult time tapping their toes to it, but most of it just isn't memorable in the long run. -- Steve Leggett


As a ISRA.CLOUD's PREMIUM member you will have the following benefits:
  • Unlimited high speed downloads
  • Download directly without waiting time
  • Unlimited parallel downloads
  • Support for download accelerators
  • No advertising
  • Resume broken downloads
  • User offline
  • sulingman
  •  wrote in 02:46
    • Like
    • 0
Thanks for this great comp, but I'm really confused by the two different album covers and the different dates they display. Clicking on the preview button shows the other album cover that the file contains.