Boyz from Brazil.On the subtropical sub·trop·i·cal adj. Of, relating to, or being the geographic areas adjacent to the Tropics. subtropical Adjective of the region lying between the tropics and temperate lands mainland rap is made for and by a decidedly "select" group - the urban poor who inhabit the periferia, the bairros, and the favelas of Rio de Janeiro Rio de Janeiro, city, Brazil Rio de Janeiro (rē`ō də zhänā`rō, Port. rē` thĭ zhənĕē`r , Sao Paulo, and Brasilia. The only time Brazilian rap gets out of these neighborhoods and into the mainstream is via the locally produced Yo! MTV MTVin full Music Television U.S. cable television network, established in 1980 to present videos of musicians and singers performing new rock music. MTV won a wide following among rock-music fans worldwide and greatly affected the popular-music business. Raps or the pages of the Brazilian DJ Magazine. And while everybody is talking about Dr. Dre coming down to produce the fourth album for Os Racionais MCs - Brazil's biggest selling rap act - the airwaves remain almost rap-free. Apart from RPC (Remote Procedure Call) A programming interface that allows one program to use the services of another program in a remote machine. The calling program sends a message and data to the remote program, which is executed, and results are passed back to the calling , Rio's only rap station, which offers mainly what cariocas call funky melody - a Rio version of Latin disco/Miami sound, as practiced ten years ago by artists like Noel and Lisa Lisa Based in Brooklyn, vocalist Lisa Lisa (born Lisa Velez) and her supporting band, Cult Jam (Mike Hughes and Alex "Spanador" Moseley), were one of the most consistent dance-pop/R&B groups of the mid-'80s. , that is produced mostly by local DJs and characterized by endless tracks featuring cheap sequencers, dull drum programming, and talking heads
Talking Heads were an American rock band that formed in the early 1970s and was based out of New York City. The group consisted of David Byrne, Chris Frantz, Tina Weymouth and Jerry Harrison. miming embarrassing lyrics - there's little effort to capture the real rhythm and poetry of Brazilian rap on the airwaves. The Sao Paulo Metropolitana FM station used to broadcast an hour-long program each day at noon and a two-hour show weekday evenings dedicated to rap. Though most of it was rap forofa or baba ba·ba n. A leavened rum cake, usually made with raisins. [French, from Polish, old woman.] Noun 1. - the pop version of rap embodied by Gabriel O Pensador's commercial hit "Loraburra" (Dumb blond), or the copycat Sao Paulo-based gangsta Noun 1. gangsta - (Black English) a member of a youth gang AAVE, African American English, African American Vernacular English, Black English, Black English Vernacular, Black Vernacular, Black Vernacular English, Ebonics - a nonstandard form of American English posers Piveti and the Doctor MCs whose songs draw far too heavily on Dr. Dre and Eazy E - even these programs were taken off the air in September with the station alleging that rap is not commercially viable. Twice a week we still get Yo! MTV Raps - even though, according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. recent MTV research, it has a limited and segmented audience. The program features a guest appearance by a local rapper and shows two or three locally produced videos; the rest consists of videos/news from the North American North American named after North America. North American blastomycosis see North American blastomycosis. North American cattle tick see boophilusannulatus. Yo!. MTV only gets about two to three new Brazilian rap videos in a six-month period because most local rap acts - at least the ones dedicated to keeping it real - are on independent labels, and it's almost impossible to get enough money together to produce a video. But a new era is dawning: in 1994, Os Racionais MCs had an explosive hit - not their first - in the bairros and favelas with "Fim de Semana no Parque" (Weekend in the park), from their third CD, Raio X Brasil (X ray Brazil), released in late 1993 by the independent Sao Paulo label Zimbabwe. The most requested track on several major Sao Paulo radio stations for weeks, it represented a real breakthrough for Brazilian rap. Even radio programmers afraid of the impact this seven-minute-long reality check into the lives of the poor and miserable majority would have on their white, middle-class listeners couldn't avoid playing it. Though Os Racionais MCs were never granted airplay air·play n. The broadcasting of an audio or audiovisual recording on the air over radio or television. airplay Noun the broadcast performances of a record on radio before " Fim de Semana no Parque," they have an enormous following in the outskirts and favelas of Sao Paulo's metropolitan area (population 16 million plus) - a following with no buying power Buying Power The money an investor has available to buy securities. In a margin account, the buying power is the total cash held in the brokerage account plus maximum margin available. Also referred to as "Excess Equity. (the average monthly wage is $100; a CD costs around $20). Os Racionais made their name by performing relentlessly in the favelas, rapping about drug-trafficking, racism, and government corruption. Hard-hitting street beats heavy on drums and bass - inspired by old-school North American rappers like Run-DMC and Public Enemy - back samples and loops of Brazilian popular music. This year, they're wanted by the police (after a car accident in which one person died and seven were injured), the public, and, of late, their record label. Nine months late with their '95 release, the band are nowhere to be found in their bairro, Capao Redondo - one of the most violent areas in Sao Paulo - where they're hiding out waiting for news from Dr. Dre. The hardcore/rap act from Rio, Planet Hemp, has gotten heavy MTV rotation this year with "Legalize le·gal·ize tr.v. le·gal·ized, le·gal·iz·ing, le·gal·iz·es To make legal or lawful; authorize or sanction by law. le Ja" (Legalize now), released by Sony Brazil. For saying it like it is, Cypress Hill-style, the video's been relegated to the after 11:00 P.M. slot. With a more trenchant social message, but with no video to go with it, GOG hit home with his second release Dia-a-Dia da Periferia (Day-to-day life in the periphery, 1995), produced by his own label So Balanco and filled with old-school references. GOG hails from one of those bleak satellite cities surrounding Brasilia, crammed with the people who came to build the new capital in the '50s but were found unworthy of inhabiting this Modernist utopia when it was officially completed in 1960. Thirty years later, the first generation to grow up in neighborhoods with names like Sobradinho (Little mansions) are giving voice to their experiences. GOG's deadly "Assasinos Sociais" (Social assassins) proves that he might just be the best poet of them all. In February, he finished his third solo CD, tentatively entitled Prepare Se (Get ready), scheduled for May release. And the beat goes on. Last year, the small Sao Paulo-based Atelier Studio recorded 18 rap acts, the female-led RPW RPW Regulative Principle of Worship RPW Real Pro Wrestling RPW Random Plane Wave RPW Recorder Players West (Los Angeles, California) RPW Random Packet Win (throughput scheme) RPW Rugged Pentium Workstation being the most promising - with their RPW esta na area (something like RPW is in the house) produced by old-school veteran Fabio Macari, who also produced GOG's latest. However, their CD (completed last year by the independent label Spotlight) still hasn't been released due to financial difficulties. It's been rescheduled - a third time - for May. Nevertheless, the rap "elite" keeps growing: the Chic Show sound system alone moves around 20,000 pairs of feet each weekend in the periferia and bairros of greater Sao Paulo with a funky mix of Brazilian and North American rap, hip-hop, R&B, and the occasional samba. All against a backdrop that is decidedly bleak. This year the homicide rate in Rio during Carnival was up 32 percent, while in greater Sao Paulo it rose by 43 percent - to achieve a record high. Rio's favelas remain under siege as local drug lords feeding off a never-ending supply of North American arms North American Arms is a United States company, headquartered in Provo, Utah, that manufactures small pistols and mini-revolvers. The mini-revolvers produced by the company are single action revolvers which have a spur trigger design and are very reminiscent of late 19th Century stage daily shoot-outs. Tired of this hostile environment See: operational environment. and the complete lack of government action in the periferia and the bairros, the message of most Brazilian tappers is, Let's do it ourselves, let's cross over, and let's work for peace. Brazilian rappers and hip-hop culture are where North American rappers were in the mid '80s: struggling to broadcast their hard-edged social message beyond the borders of their own neighborhoods. Jan Field cofounded the '80s Brazilian arts and culture magazine Caos, and writes regularly for the newspaper Jornal da Tarde and Showbizz magazine. |
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