Joyce Moreno: Hard Bossa (1999)
I try to avoid saying here whether I think something is ‘good’ as it’s not a useful comment, but I can’t help stating that Hard Bossa (1999) by Joyce Moreno (featured in #005) is excellent. I was fooled by ‘the b word’, thinking that it would be easy-going music made by Brazilians catering to an international audience, and I was very wrong: traditional elements are unapologetically slathered throughout.
I’ll share my impressions of some songs, but the whole album is worth a listen:
- Zoeira starts the album with complex interlocking rhythms between instruments, yet it flows like air.
- Nome De Guerra’s rapid pandeiro beat and [that universal folk rhythm clapping pattern whose name escapes me] underpins a moment sung by Paulo Cesar Pinheiro, and it flows like air.
- London Samba sounds to me more like bossa nova than samba, but it feels like you’re dancing and someone is twirling you around. There is a trombone solo and it flows like air.
- Todos Os Santos features duet harmonies in a seven meter, and it flows like air.
- Hard Bossa’s scurrying onomatopoeic melody doubled rhythmically by flute flies right by, and it flows like air.
This falls under the #Under45Minutes classification that I disclosed last week.
I also thought it was neat that a legendary artist from the 1970s has a Bandcamp.