Brazil’s Four Epic Adventures

Connect Brazil celebrates April as Brazil’s ‘month of discovery.’ Ready to explore?

Brazil’s four epic adventures are here for you to discover. Relive these true-life stories of exploration, recreated in diary form.


by Scott Adams

Why April? Because April 22nd marks Brazil’s official Day of Discovery observed to commemorate the official discovery of Brazil by Portugal’s Pedro Álvares Cabral in 1500.

Today, the joy of discovery is quite different for most of us. It usually comes in the form of a recommendation from friends: a new restaurant or a video gone viral.

Our world is smaller – what took the Portuguese Empire months can now be accomplished in just a few hours, flying in first-class comfort if you so choose. Or mere seconds at the computer or with your smartphone

Over the years, I’ve made other Brazilian discoveries by setting off on my own: reading, learning, and traveling with friends. And I came up with a novel idea.

What if I presented a few of these Brazilian discoveries as if we were reading the daily diaries of the explorers, as it happened?

So, here are Brazil’s four epic adventures: Cabral’s voyage, the story of Rio de Janeiro, President Roosevelt’s fateful decision, and the tale of giant waters.

I hope you’ll enjoy them, day by eventful day.

Voyage At Sea

Friday, March 9th, 1500. Navigator Pedro Álvares Cabral set sail with a fleet of 13 vessels from the port of Lisbon, charged by Portugal’s Emperor to follow in the wake of his fellow Portuguese explorers Bartolomeu Dias (the first sailor to round Africa’s Cape of Good Hope) and Vasco da Gama, who initiated the trade route to India.

Within a period of 15 short years, Dias and da Gama had elevated Portugal to world power status and Cabral was eager to make his mark.

He tacked along Africa’s coast until he reached the Cape Verde Islands, then turned southwest into the unknown. A few weeks later, Cabral’s lead ship sighted mountains on the horizon and several days later his fleet sailed into a large bay, which would later be given the title of Porto Seguro.

It’s that day, April 22nd, that Brazil annually celebrates ‘Discovery Day’. The day the Portuguese landed in the southern part of the state of Bahia.

Brazil’s Four Epic Adventures – Explorer’s Log: Pedro Álvares Cabral, 1500

Day 1:

We set sail from Lisbon under the command of Pedro Alvares Cabral with sunny skies and cheery dispositions all. Our fleet is quite a sight – fully 13 ships and more than 1,000 men. Expectations and spirits are high for this journey to India, which many have only dreamed about. I had a vision of a woman falling – with arms outstretched – towards the earth. What could it mean?

Day 2:

The Straits of Gibraltar are coming off our port side this afternoon and for many, this will their last familiar sight on this mission of discovery. We learned that we’re following the course of Vasco da Gama, and this news is comforting. Africa lies ahead – a continent filled with rhythms and melodies, which are somehow compelling.

Day 3:

Clear horizon at seven bells this day. Ship’s routine is settling in and time and tide seem to be with us as we prepare for a new day. Seagulls show us that the African coast is not far off.

Day 4:

We’re west of the Canary Islands to avoid rough currents, and stormy weather is ahead. But the troubadour’s song brings a sense of calm: His voice is whisper-soft, yet he can be heard even below decks.

Day 5:

Westerly winds are pushing our fleet into uncharted waters and we’ve spied land – perhaps an island – late in this day. Some say it’s India, but others think we’re looking at the Brazilian Horizon. I expect we’ll learn more tomorrow.

Day 6:

An exciting new land has been claimed for Portugal! The inhabitants welcome us with gifts, food, and music, with the women of their number singing beautifully in unison – we’ve never heard anything like it!

Day 7:

Our last night in Brazil before we sail for India’s spice trade, and our farewell includes music from one of our own – a Scandinavian living in London before he joined up with our expedition. Indeed, we have sailors from Spain, Italy, France, and Germany, too! What will the next adventure bring?

Brazil’s Four Epic Adventures – The Mouth Of A Great River

By 1501, the exploits of Italian explorer Amerigo Vespucci had come to the attention of the Portuguese crown, and he was commissioned to return to Cabral’s recently-claimed Brasil.

Ordered to pursue a southern tack to determine the size of this new land, Vespucci’s role as piloto brought Commander Coelho’s fleet to the mouth of a great river, that proved too irresistible to pass by. Here’s our Explorer’s Log from 1501 near the future location of Rio de Janeiro.

Day 1:

Three and a half weeks at sea (plus time well spent with Cabral in Cape Verde on the way home from his discovery of Brazil), we’ve charted our course south and west. Our navigator, Amerigo Vespucci has guided us to the mouth of a great river. The mountains which surround this area provide a stunning landscape, even prompting our commander Gonçalo Coelho to remark “This place might have a future!”

Day 2:

January 22nd. We’ve joined Gaspar de Lemos’s expedition across the peninsula – a rugged hike – and now this huge expanse of water has been given a name: River of January. Some have suggested shortening it to simply ‘Rio’, which is Portuguese for any large body of water, not just rivers.

Day 3:

The Tupininquim call this 19-mile-long bay Guanabara, and we’ve explored all 130 islands along with the surrounding forests and a tall, rough tree that yields a deep red dye. We’ve named it pau brasil and sent the first harvest back to Portugal just last week.

Day 4:

The French have now joined our little settlement at the base of Sugarloaf Mountain. The view of the bay is spectacular. I wish we could say the same of our new European comrades: reports of pirating are commonplace, but my fellow countrymen seem to be more interested in the native girls.

Day 5:

Amazing! The French, under their Viceroy Villegaignon have claimed our land and renamed it France Antarctique, establishing a fort on nearly Serigipe island. I guess our Portuguese leaders have been more interested in Bahia to the north.

Day 6:

Today is the day! The Portuguese flag has prevailed and our settlement is now a city, named São Sebastião do Rio de Janeiro in honor of the Portuguese King. We’ll expel the French, resist the Dutch and pirate attacks, and build fortresses to defend the bay of Guanabara.

Day 7:

We’ve discovered that there is no ‘river of January’ after all, but this giant bay surrounded by tropical rainforests, beaches, and mountainous peaks will surely be the epicenter of one of the most beautiful places in the world.

Brazil’s Four Epic Adventures – The River of Doubt

It’s 1913. Taking a personal pause from the rigors of his presidency, Teddy Roosevelt boarded a steamship south, to spend time with his son Kermit, who was living in Rio de Janeiro.

There, the President met Brazil’s famed explorer, Candido Rondon who invited him to join a fateful expedition in search of an unmapped river of legend, deep in the Amazon basin.

Day 1:

Losing his bid for a third Presidential term, Theodore Roosevelt has decided to accept an invitation to speak in Rio de Janeiro, the next month. He hopes to meet up with his son Kermit after a cruise up the Amazon river. However, I suspect this itinerary will soon become too pedestrian for his adventurous spirit.

Day 2:

February 1914. Our Rio visit brings an offer to join Brazilian Candido Rondon’s expedition to explore his newly-discovered river in the Amazon basin. Kermit will watch over his father’s welfare. Our group of 19 includes naturalist George Cherrie.

Day 3:

Poor planning; that’s our first discovery. With provisions more suited for a New York tea room and heavy, dugout canoes that cannot navigate white water rapids, our sense of exploration has become somber. How will these next few weeks unfold?

Day 4:

Rio de Duvida – River of Doubt – is an apt name for this powerful artery: Making less than a mile and a half per day, we’ve jettisoned most of the provisions to lighten the floating weight of our canoes. There is no need for biscuits and marmalade in the jungle heat.

Day 5:

Our expedition has split up due to a lack of supplies. Half are trailing back to safety. The pace has slowed. Roosevelt has wounded his leg and Kermit worries about infection. And we’re building new canoes to replace those lost in the rapids.

Day 6:

A battle against nature! We are besieged with insects, malaria, cannibals, and starvation diets. One of our group was murdered and one was swept away yesterday in the river’s torrent. Dear Roosevelt is near death and we fear each day for his life.

Day 7:

Fate has smiled – we’ve met up with rubber tree tappers who have guided us down the rest of the river and treated Roosevelt’s severely infected leg. But will he live even five more years, to reach his 60th birthday? Or will the Amazon claim his life, too? Perhaps Brazil will rename the river Rio Roosevelt in his memory.

Brazil’s Four Epic Adventures – The Great Waters of Iguaçu

Four decades after Cabral’s discovery of Brasil, the South American continent was the focus of the world’s most powerful nations. Portugal and Spain battled for dominance, while the English, Dutch, and French did their best to establish themselves in the ‘new world’ to the south.

The problem for each of these nations was how to interpret a declaration by Spanish-born Pope Alexander VI in 1494. The Treaty of Tordesillas set a firm boundary for Spain and Portugal when laying claim to new lands.

Now, in the year 1541, these two world powers would come face to face yet again. But where were they, exactly?

Day 1:

Only four days south of Rio and already our ship has found yet another river to explore. The Guarani Indians call it Iguacu or ‘great water’ and today we’ve learned of a large waterfall somewhere upstream.

Day 2:

‘Great water’ indeed! These falls span more than a mile and a half, and the sound is deafening. We’ve counted 275 separate falls in this panorama, set in the middle of an expansive rainforest. You should see the animal and plant life here!

Day 3:

We’ve now learned that Spain’s Alvaro Nunes claimed these falls last year, in 1542, but as these waters divide Brazil from Argentina, we’re comfortable in staking our claim, too. Nunes called this place ‘Santa Maria’ but the name doesn’t fit.

Day 4:

Settlers are arriving daily, ready for a new beginning. Hardwoods are the crop of choice as the falls provide fertile land all around. The Indians speak of the Yauarete, the Black Jaguar which prowls the rainforest at night.

Day 5:

Guarani legend says that a god married a beautiful native girl named Naipú, but she fled upriver with her mortal lover in a canoe. the rage-filled god slashed at the river, creating the waterfalls, and condemning the lovers to an eternal fall.

Day 6:

Word of Iguassu has spread quickly, and visitors from Rio and Buenos Aires come for the spectacle.  They hike among the falls, take small boat excursions and delve deep into the jungles. First gold, then cattle… and now it has come to this!

Day 7:

Paradise! This morning a flock of large toucans flew overhead as we explored the Atlantic forest. We’ve collected hundreds of butterfly species, and more than 350 different kinds of birds. Truly, there is no place like this on earth.

Stories like ‘Brazil’s Four Epic Adventures’ are what we do. Why don’t you join us?

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Here In My Heart: Kenny Rankin

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Largely unnoticed, it went on to be named ‘Best Brazilian Vocal Album of the year’.

Here In My Heart by Kenny Rankin went through 1997 largely unheralded, and was almost lost in the shuffle until our buyers for The Brazilian Music Review came across it.


  1. Review
  2. Album Track Listing
  3. Press Release for Kenny Rankin’s Here In My Heart

Review: Here In My Heart – Kenny Rankin

Rankin’s gentle delivery is perfect for these 13 Brazilian titles, and his ballad-like style and delicate control are a perfect match for the Bossa sound, and comparable to the subtle interpretations of Joao Gilberto, but in English instead of Portuguese.

 Oscar Castro-Neves produces with lush strings and one of the many highlights of the album is the US debut of Brazilian singer Rosa Passos on “These Eyes” and “Stay.” Both songs feature delectable English/Portuguese duets.

Others by Antonio Carlos Jobim, Ivan Lins and Djavan have helped to make this album an easy choice as our selection for Vocal Album of 1997.  With special appearances by harmonica master Toots Thielemans and legendary guitarist Luis Bonfa. If you love a soft Brazilian melody, don’t pass this one by.

Recorded principally in Rio de Janeiro, this South American flavored album features Kenny’s signature smooth jazz vocals on songs penned by Brazilian legends Ivan Lins and Antonio Carlos Jobim, the Beatles and others. Includes very special guests Michael Brecker, Oscar Castro-Neves, Rosa Pasos, Ernie Watts and Don Grusin. Pure vocal seduction — the bossa nova way!

Album Listing for Here In My Heart

  1. A Day In The Life Of A Fool ( Manha de Carnaval)
  2. Life In The Modern World
  3. Puzzle Of Hearts
  4. Those Eyes
  5. A Lover’s Touch
  6. Stay
  7. A Slight Infatuation
  8. I’ve Just Seen A Face
  9. This Happy Madness
  10. Even You & I
  11. Come Rain Or Come Shine
  12. Art of Survival
  13. Here In My Heart

Press Release: Kenny Rankin and his Here In My Heart album

The title of Kenny Rankin’s 1995 Private Music debut Professional Dreamer perfectly captured the essencc of a career spanning over 30 years, writing and singing romantic Pop classics that The New York Times recently described, hardly exaggerating, as heartfelt “musical cloud castles.” The vocalist, whom legendary saxman Stan Getz once called “a horn with a heartbeat” for his playful way with a melody, muses that he’s spent his professional life “acting out my fantasies in song, expressing myself emotionally, using words as a canvas and music as the paint I spread upon it.  Music to me is a great gift that has the power to evolve every emotion imaginable.”

Professional Dreamer marked the first time Rankin played with only a jazz trio as accompaniment. His new collection, the decidedly South American flavored Here In My Heart, maintains a simple production around an eclectic, easily percussive set, featuring songs by Brazilian legends Ivan Lins (with English lyrics by Brock Walsh), and Antonio Carlos Jobim, as well as a romantic take on The Beatles’ classic, “I’ve Just Seen a Face.” Rankin himself wrote the whimsical title track, and co-­wrote the sweet and graceful “A Lover’s Touch,” with famed songwriter Paul Williams.

Recorded principally in Rio De Janeiro, Here In My Heart features the elegant acoustic guitar and arrangement expertise of another Brazilian icon, Oscar Castro-Neves, as well as jazzy performances by saxophonists Michael Brecker, and Ernie Watts along with keyboardist Don Grusin, and guitartst Ricardo Silveira. Also on hand are singers Rosa Passos, who sings in Portuguese as she trades verses with Rankin on her elegant composition, “Stay.” Rankin’s daughters Gena and Chanda add spirited backing vocals to a festive samba reading of “Come Rain Or Come Shine” along with Babel Gilberto and Denise Dumont.

In many ways, the collection pays homage to the acoustic guitar-vocal that became Rankin’s trademark on his albums in the late 60’s and throughout his 70’s heyday. “It was suggested that combining my voice with the nylon strings would take advantage of the sound, and I liked the idea of bringing in subtle Brazilian rhythms,” says Rankin. Because Rankin’s left arm suffered nerve damage in a chiropractic mishap in 1994, album producers, the late Miles “Bud” Goodman and Joel Moss (who engineered and produced the When Harry Met Sally soundtrack), suggested that co-producer Castro-Neves take on the task.

“Having Oscar playing guitar gave me the opportunity to just focus on singing,” recalls Rankin. “I could focus, as I love to, on the lyrics, passion and story. I rarely listen to the music first when I cover an outside composition. Instead, I read the story in the words, transfer the images into my own feelings and like I say, sing the story and tell the song.”

Here In My Heart by Kenny Rankin

Stories like ‘Here In My Heart by Kenny Rankin’ are what we do. Why don’t you join us?

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Rosa Passos Shines: Connect Brazil This Week

Tuesday celebrates a musical birthday for Bahian singer and songwriter Rosa Passos, and we are ready to join in the fun. Connect Brazil’s weekly digest keeps you informed and up to date with the best of Brazil. What will you discover?


What’s Happening at Connectbrazil.com April 11 – 17, 2021

Rosa Passos shines whenever she steps onto a stage, no matter where it might be: at home, singing on her couch for us on Instagram weekends, as a headliner for countless concerts in Brazil, or even recounting our musical memories from Ravinia Festival here in Chicago with YoYo Ma.

In fact, when it comes to Insta, Facebook, and youtube, Rosa Passos is a social butterfly. When the Chinese virus hit Brazil hard last summer, she decided to open her home and her heart to fans worldwide with regular pocket shows online.

And the response has been amazing.

“It’s funny, because there are a lot of people discovering Rosa Passos now,” she said to Uai’s Augusto Piro. “I’m happy, there are people putting my old videos and sharing them on their pages. Artists like Djavan and Hamilton de Holanda always leave likes on my videos. A sign that they are enjoying it, right?”.

Delicately creative on her own terms, Rosa Passos outgrew her place in Brazil’s “best-kept secret” category by virtue of her touring performances with YoYo Ma and on Kenny Rankin’s award-winning Here In My Heart album. Today, Her own critically acclaimed solo albums total 20.

Passos has all the modern phrasing and techniques, but throughout her Brazilian songbook, she never seems too far away from those early samba vocalists of the ’60s. As with all great singers, Passos’s soulful warmth has grown from her early influences to bring forth a vocal presence that is immediately recognizable.

Tuesday marks her birthday, giving us another reason to hear Rosa Passos shine: Listen for at least one song every hour during The Midday Show with Scott Adams, 9 am to 3 pm on our always-live streaming channel this Tuesday (below).

TOP STORIES

  • Lifestyle: Want to get a head start on Grillin’ Brazilian? There’s nobody better than Guga for a video tri-tip or two.
  • Music: As we await Marisa Monte’s first studio album in nearly a decade, we look back at how she turned the tables on the music industry.
  • Food & Drink: April is Brazil’s Month of Discovery, so spend some time exploring our Brazilian Comfort Food guide for bites near you.
  • People: Who’s celebrating? April’s video list for Brazilian musical birthdays tells all.
  • Picture of the Day: An inspiring photo every day whenever you visit our homepage.
Zona Sul: Beautiful Botafogo is the name of the expansive bay that Portuguese sailors thought was the mouth of a great river. Their mistake led to the name Rio de Janeiro, ‘River of January’. Photo: Rosana McPhee

Connect Brazil’s Weekender arrives in your inbox this Thursday! Read a current issue and sign up here.

Catch songs for Serenata by Gregg Karukas on the Easter edition of The Sunday Brazilian Brunch. Click here for more.

Spotlight Song: Rosa Passos ‘Caminhos Cruzados’

Lovely! Rosa Passos shines on our streaming channels, including Bossa Nova Love AffairXODO!, and Brazilian Jazz!

STREAMING MUSIC NEWS

This week, it’s a birthday celebration with Rosa Passos Fan Favorites on The Sounds of Brazil. Listen 4 X daily and on-demand through April 4th. The playlist and Producer’s Notes are here.

ON OUR STREAMING STATION

America’s lifestyle streaming station for Brazilian music! Our streaming station is a jazzy blend of breezy bossas and crossover hits from both sides of the equator. Always free and always live, this is music you can spend the day with!

Treat your ears to our unique blend. Our streaming station is the perfect choice for the sunshine season. Listen for these songs this week during The Midday Show with Scott Adams (M-F, 9 am to 3 pm CT).

  • ‘I Can’t Help It’ – Will Downing
  • ‘Wake Up’ – Torcuato Mariano
  • ‘Bom Dia Rio (Posto 6)’ – Bossacucnova

Listen for these songs and thousands more on our always-live streaming station, and click here for all of our streaming music channels.

Best way to listen? Connect Brazil’s Listening Lounge.

Brazil Back2Back

Always two-of-a-kind and always two in a row when you listen at the top of the hour, at 11 am, 2 pm, and 5 pm (US Central) Monday, Wednesday & Friday.

Here’s this week’s lineup:

  • Monday, April 12 – Rosa Passos
  • Wednesday, April 14 – New Music Wednesday: Daniela Soledade and U-Nam
  • Friday, April 16 – Brazilian Guitars

Next week on Brazil Back2Back:

  • Monday, April 19 – Minas Brazilian Jazz
  • Wednesday, April 21 – New Music Wednesday: Fred Martins and Lucas Felix with Lucy Alves
  • Friday, April 23 – Bossa Nova Breeze

Visit the Listening Lounge to listen live, for real-time playlists or to request a song.

New Music: Silva ‘Voce’

Singer and songwriter Silva brings this springtime love song to our playlists this week.

Listen to this song on Connect Brazil’s always-live streaming station, 24/7, worldwide.

EVENTS

Connect Brazil’s Events section has the early line on entertainment recommendations for Spring with more live venues, and club dates added regualrly. And musicians can post thier events for free, anytime.

We have a full slate of streaming and virtual events for pianist Gregg Karukas posted, including last weekend’s YouTube show for Rick’s Cafe Live! Enjoy live club dates and livestream Brazilian jazz concerts with Philly’s Minas, or St. Pete’s Nate Najar Trio with Daniela Soledade, You’ll find virtual Brazilian cooking and Zumba classes, even the return of Brazilian Jazz to San Antonio’s Riverwalk.

Plus your pick of full length, on-demand virtual Brazilian jazz concerts, too.

  • Click here to browse upcoming events.

THE BRAZILAIN COMFORT FOOD GUIDE

Brazilian Chesssebreadss are delicious and addictrive! Explore our guide to Brazilian Comfort Food! Click the image

Browse Brazilian eateries, cafes and markets near you, coast to coast

Africa, Portugal, Japan, and Italy. America and indigenous Brasil. Hundreds of family-owned Brazilian restaurants, coffee houses and cafes, bakeries, and grocery markets coast-to-coast are ready to share these international influences with you and your family.

Connect Brazil is donating its services to spread the word about the tasty rewards of your patronage.

We hope that you will do the same by placing an order soon with an eatery near you. Your support makes everything taste better. Even Brazilian cheesebreads!

SEARCH THE DIRECTORY FOR BRAZILIAN COMFORT FOOD NEAR YOU

Rosa Passos Shines: Connect Brazil This Week

Stories like ‘Rosa Passos Shines: Connect Brazil This Week’ are what we do. Why don’t you join us?

  • Sign up for our emails on music, travel, friends and fun. Listen to our ‘always live’ streaming station and our 12 streaming music channels, always free. Browse our Lifestyle Directory. Click here to like our Facebook page and here for Brazilian events coast to coast.

Alex Atala Loves Brazilian Food

It’s bad enough that so few people outside Brazil know much about the country’s cuisine, right?

Alex Atala loves Brazilian food and he’s on a mission to change your mind.


Alex Atala loves Brazilian food. “We are so proud of our soccer, our models, our music, our graffiti artists,” he said in a recent telephone interview with Jenny Barchfield. “Why is no one excited about Brazilian food?”

Atala is Brazil’s top-ranked chef and the man behind Sao Paulo-based D.O.M., one of the top-ranked restaurants in the world. “Brazilian food is so amazingly diverse, and we have to celebrate that,” he continued.

A desire to correct this poinit – over and over again – spurred him to write “D.O.M.: Rediscovering Brazilian Ingredients.”

What is it? It’s a cookbook that Atala hopes will propel Brazilian food onto the world’s culinary stage. So he flew to New York to promote it.

Brazilan Organic Gets Real

Once foreigners wake up to Brazilian food, Atala reasons, Brazilians themselves might just give their own, long-neglected culinary legacy its due.

Atala knows that many of the ingredients used in the book are not readily available to home-based, family chefs. He knows that even in most Brazilian supermarkets, let alone in the United States, Australia or Britain don’t keep stock.

But that’s beside the point, he insists.

“The main idea of the book wasn’t to make recipes to be reproduced,” he said. “It was to provoke people to taste Brazil, to get them curious about Brazilian foods and ingredients.”

Atala’s Culinary Explorations

Brazil is known mostly for its workaday rice and bean dish “feijoada,” as well as its all-you-can-eat Brazilian Steakhouses. But Atala thinks he can push readers well beyond that.

The book is full of surprising and downright bizarre ingredients. Like the Brazilian sea snail, which Atala says are tastier and less fatty than their North American cousin. How about the priprioca, a viny, aromatic root that’s described as tasting like a cross between vanilla and, uh… earth?

And don’t forget jambu, an Amazon herb that the book explains “creates a short circuit of our taste buds,” like an electric shock to the tongue.

Most of the recipes reflect intricate details: reasons why Alex Atala loves Brazilian food as a true passion for creativity.

As Natural As Brazil Itself

This can require hours of painstaking preparation. Here’s an example.

The “Langoustine with mini rice and any powder,” involves preparing a pickled white radish, a broth made from langoustine heads. Then add the actual crustaceans, plus ant powder from dried sauva ants.

Atala would tell you that the powder is typically used by the indigenous peoples of northern Brazil as a spice.

Atala, a Sao Paulo native whose trademark camouflage of tattoos testifies to his years as a teenage punk, got his start in the restaurant business during a backpacking trip to Europe.

This early opportunity brought apprentice work in the kitchens of celebrated chefs in Belgium, France, and Italy. He returned to Brazil and applied the methods he’d learned to native Brazilian foods.

But before Brazilian food can truly take its place on the world’s collective dinner plate, Atala says the Brazilian people must learn to appreciate their own cuisine.

“It’s funny that in Brazil, people know so much about different kinds of pasta and can tell you all the different properties of different sorts of flour,” he said. “But know very little about native Brazilian ingredients and techniques.”

Want to talk about technique? Atala’s on-stage slaughtering of chickens has cemented his reputation as a bad boy of haute cuisine.

Tropical Taste Buds

“I’d say the average Brazilian has never tasted at least 50 percent of the ingredients in this book.”

One reason for that is the colonial legacy of this former Portuguese colony, which traditionally valued imported European foods and looked down on native ingredients.

To this day, the most ubiquitous fish on Brazilian menus remains cod, which is caught off the icy waters of Scandinavia, salted and shipped to Brazil — a country with 4,660 miles of coastline.

Red tape in this notoriously bureaucratic nation also has been a stumbling block. For example, regulations on the interstate transport of cheese between Brazil’s 26 states have stymied the development of what Atala called a “world-class cheese” from the central Minas Gerais state.

“If Parmesan was born in Minas Gerais, it would be an unknown cheese today,” he said. No doubt about it, Alex Atala loves Brazilian food as well as he knows it.

Alex Atala Loves Brazilian Food

Stories like ‘Alex Atala Loves Brazilian Food’ are what we do. Why don’t you join us?

  • Sign up for our emails on music, travel, friends and fun. Listen to our ‘always live’ streaming station and our 12 streaming music channels, always free. Browse our Lifestyle Directory. Click here to like our Facebook page and here for Brazilian events coast to coast.

Till Bronner’s Bossa Nova: Connect Brazil This Week

Till Bronner’s Bossa Nova is a breezy blend of lyrical trumpet play with a masterful way of interpreting Brazil’s trademark style. Don’t miss our streaming debut of ‘Lemonade’ from his new album, On Vacation. Connect Brazil’s weekly digest keeps you informed and up to date with the best of Brazil. What will you discover?


What’s Happening at Connectbrazil.com April 4 – 10, 2021

Till Bronner’s Bossa Nova: On this side of the Atlantic, Germany’s Till Bronner is best known for his breathy, muted trumpet and flugelhorn play, easily applied to jazz or pop.

Back home, he’s a mega pop star, combining his horn skills with vocal chops and the ability to move between styles with artistic ease. “Throughout my career, I have had the desire to reduce things to their essentials,” he says.

Brazilian music is also part of his vocabulary, with the 2008 album Rio featuring Vanessa da Mata, Sergio Mendez, Annie Lennox, Melody Gardot, and Milton Nascimento.

You’ll find plenty of Brazilian tunes on various albums from this gifted horn man, and you’ll hear two of them – including ‘Lemonade’ from his new album On Vacation – when you tune in to Friday’s Brazil Back2Back (below).

TOP STORIES

Simple pleasures: Freshly-squeezed juice from the fruit of the caju, sweetened and servered ice-cold. Plus, you can roast, then eat the nut.
Simple pleasures: Freshly-squeezed juice from the fruit of the caju, sweetened and servered ice-cold. Plus, you can roast, then eat the nut.

Connect Brazil’s Weekender arrives in your inbox next Thursday! Read a current issue and sign up here.

Catch songs for Serenata by Gregg Karukas on the Easter edition of The Sunday Brazilian Brunch. Click here for more.

Spotlight Song: Leo Gandelman ‘Maracato Atomico’


Listen to Leo Gandelman’s sax on our streaming channels, including Bossa Nova Love AffairXODO!, and Brazilian Jazz!

STREAMING MUSIC NEWS

This week, it’s Best Brazilian Collections on The Sounds of Brazil. Listen 4 X daily and on-demand through April 4th. The playlist and Producer’s Notes are here.

ON OUR STREAMING STATION

We’re always ready for your next Brazilian break! Our streaming station is a jazzy blend of breezy bossas and crossover hits from both sides of the equator. It’s America’s only ‘Always Live’ streaming station for Brazilian music.

We’re sprucing up our playlists because a little Spring cleaning is always a good idea. You’ll find that our playlist has already made its seasonal switch to the sunshine season. Listen for these new songs this week, including:

  • ‘Song 4U’ – Jorge Vercillo
  • ‘Travessia’ – Gregg Karukas
  • ‘Nao Passa Vontade’ – Anavitoria ft Duda Beat

Listen for these songs and thousands more on our always-live streaming station, and click here for all of our streaming music channels.

Best way to listen? Connect Brazil’s Listening Lounge.

Brazil Back2Back

Always two-of-a-kind and always two in a row when you listen at the top of the hour, at 11 am, 2 pm and 5 pm (US Central) Monday, Wednesday & Friday.

Here’s this week’s lineup:

  • Monday, April 5 – New Bossa vocals
  • Wednesday, April 7 – New Music Wednesday: Mariana Nolasco & Ouvindo
  • Friday, April 9 – Till Bronner’s Bossa Nova: ‘Lemonade’ streaming debut!

Next week on Brazil Back2Back:

  • Monday, April 12 – Rosa Passos
  • Wednesday, April 14 – New Music Wednesday: Daniela Soledade and U-Nam
  • Friday, April 16 – Brazilian Guitars

Visit the Listening Lounge to listen live, for real-time playlists or to request a song.

New Music: Mariana Nolasco ft. Vitor Kley ‘Alto Mar’

Mariana Nolasco always brings her best to our palylists.

Listen to this song on Connect Brazil’s always-live streaming station, 24/7, worldwide.

EVENTS

Connect Brazil’s Events section has the early line on entertainment recommendations for Spring when every Friday Brazil Back2Back features different versions of ‘The Waters of March’ on our streaming station.

We have a full slate of streaming and virtual events for pianist Gregg Karukas posted, including last weekend’s YouTube show for Rick’s Cafe Live! Enjoy live club dates and livestream Brazilian jazz concerts with Philly’s Minas, or St. Pete’s Nate Najar Trio with Daniela Soledade, You’ll find virtual Brazilian cooking and Zumba classes, even the return of Brazilian Jazz to San Antonio’s Riverwalk.

Plus your pick of full length, on-demand virtual Brazilian jazz concerts, too.

  • Click here to browse upcoming events.

THE BRAZILAIN COMFORT FOOD GUIDE

Explore our guide to Brazilian Comfort Food! Click the image…

Browse Brazilian eateries, cafes and markets near you, coast to coast

Africa, Portugal, Japan, and Italy. America and indiginous Brasil. Hundreds of family-owned Brazilian restaurants, coffee houses and cafes, bakeries, and grocery markets coast-to-coast are ready to share these international inflences with you and your family.

Connect Brazil is donating its services to spread the word about the tasty rewards of your patronage.

We hope that you will do the same by placing an order soon with an eatery near you. Your support makes everything taste better. Even Brazilian chocolate!

SEARCH THE DIRECTORY FOR BRAZILIAN COMFORT FOOD NEAR YOU

Till Bronner’s Bossa Nova: Connect Brazil This Week

Stories like ‘Till Bronner’s Bossa Nova’ are what we do. Why don’t you join us?

  • Sign up for our emails on music, travel, friends and fun. Listen to our ‘always live’ streaming station and our 12 streaming music channels, always free. Browse our Lifestyle Directory. Click here to like our Facebook page and here for Brazilian events coast to coast.

Serenata Sunday: Gregg Karukas On The Sunday Brazilian Brunch

Listen to The Sunday Brazilian Brunch This Weekend

One of life’s greatest pleasures is waking to the warmth of a Copacabana morning to enjoy a relaxing brunch at your hotel’s balcony table and then moving poolside for some quality time with the Brazilian sun… Here’s who I’m featuring this week:

Serenata Sunday: Gregg Karukas on The Sunday Brazilian Brunch

  • Listen to The Sunday Brazilian Brunch on our streaming station at Connectbrazil.com.. Three full hours beginning at 5 am, 9 am, 2 pm, and 8 pm Central time every Sunday.
  • Sign up for our emails on music, travel, friends and fun. Click here to like our Facebook page and here for Brazilian events coast to coast.

Daily Listening Schedule | Upcoming Events  | Make A Request | Brazil Back2Back Schedule  | Time Zone Converter | Send a message to Scott

The Sounds of Brazil is one of 13 streaming music channels at Connectbrazil.com
The Sounds of Brazil is one of 13 streaming music channels at Connectbrazil.com

Sundays are special; especially this one. Happy Easter and joyous Passover, too. It’s time to set the rest of your busy week aside and relax with us for a while. Listen to The Sunday Brazilian Brunch! On the go? Take us along with our apps for Android and Apple, too.


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This Week on The Sunday Brazilian Brunch:

Serenata Sunday: Pianist Gregg Karukas

Today on The Sunday Brazilain Brunch, I’m featuring songs from Gregg Karukas’s beautiful solo piano album, Serenata, his tribute to the music of Milton Nascimento and Dori Caymmi.

READ MORE ABOUT SERENATA AND GREGG KARUKAS

I’m Scott Adams, and I’ll bring you Brazilian-themed Smooth Jazz tunes from Gregg’s earlier albums. Plus, I’ll tell you what’s coming up next week at Connect Brazil, too.

Happy Listening,

Scott Adams

SERENATA BY GREGG KARUKAS

Follow Gregg Karukas on

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Amazon | Apple Music | Pandora | Spotify | Deezer | Gregg Karukas store

Programming like ’Serenata Sunday: The Sunday Brazilian Brunch’ is what we do. Why don’t you join us?

Sign up for our emails on music, travel, friends and fun. Listen to our ‘always live’ streaming station and our 12 streaming music channels, always free. Browse our Lifestyle Directory. Click here to like our Facebook page and here for Brazilian events coast to coast.

Serenata Sunday: Gregg Karukas On The Sunday Brazilian Brunch

Live: Gregg Karukas Plays Travessia From Serenata

Travessia, the first of several live videos from Serenata makes its debut.

Live: Gregg Karukas Plays Travessia from his album Serenata


One of pianist Gregg Karukas’s goals for Serenata was to record several of the album’s best songs, live in-studio. Today the first of these has been released to fans worldwide.

‘Travessia’ (‘Crossing’) is Serenata’s opening track for both the CD and digital release, a heartfelt tribute to the music of Milton Nascimento, Dori Caymmi and several of Brazil’s best songwriters from one of the most creative periods in Brazilian pop (MPB).

Most Brazilian music fans can point to a special moment, a bond with a particular song or musician that made a lasting impression, and Gregg’s personal attachment to this song by Milton Nascimento made him a fan for life.

“My parents had Antonio Carlos Jobim’s Wave album and I was playing the standard Bossa Nova tunes on lounge and jazz gigs as a teenager,” Gregg recalls.

“I was lucky to become friends with Mitch Rubin, the cook at Harold’s Rogue and Jar, the jazz club in Washington, DC. Mitch had lived in Brazil and he let me borrow a stack of classic MPB LP’s from Milton Nascimento, the classic Clube da Esquina albums, Edu Lobo, João Bosco, Chico Buarque, to name a few. I copied them all to cassettes and I still have them.”

READ MORE ABOUT SERENATA AND GREGG KARUKAS

About Travessia

‘Travessia’ is the opening song of Milton Nascimento’s record debut, released to the Brazilian market in 1967 and in the USA in 1969, under the title ‘Bridges’ with Milton singing in English on several songs.

‘Travessia’ was first heard at the 2nd International Song Festival in late October 1967 in Rio de Janeiro, where Milton’s performance was seen nationally by TV Globo. The song took second place, but led to Milton’s first recording deal, with Creed Taylor in the USA.

On the album’s 50th anniversary in 2017, Radio Brasil de Fato noted that ‘Travessia’ was the album that forever changed the sound of Brazilian music. In an interview with the station, long-time friend, and member of Clube da Esquina put it this way:

“There was nothing like that in Brazilian music, in the vast Brazilian songbook, there was no such thing as Travessia. It wasn’t bossa nova, it wasn’t samba-song, it was a super original song, unprecedented, by a guy named Milton Nascimento.”

Listen to Travessia

Recorded Live, Gregg Karukas plays ‘Travessia’ with the same sense of longing and passion found in Milton’s original recording. While the lyrics tell the story of moving on from lost love, pianist Gregg Karukas allows the melody to carry the story; capturing the uniquely Brazilian sense of Saudade throughout the song.

Listen, and you can’t help but be moved by his solo piano tribute to a song which has touched the lives of millions worldwide.

Live: Gregg Karukas Plays Travessia From Serenata

Follow Gregg Karukas on

Facebook | YouTube | Instagram | Twitter

Amazon | Apple Music | Pandora | Spotify | Deezer | Gregg Karukas store

Stories like ’Live: Gregg Karukas Plays Travessia’ are what we do. Why don’t you join us?

  • Sign up for our emails on music, travel, friends and fun. Listen to our ‘always live’ streaming station and our 12 streaming music channels, always free. Browse our Lifestyle Directory. Click here to like our Facebook page and here for Brazilian events coast to coast.

Anitta Wants To Own The World: Connect Brazil This Week

Anitta has grand plans, but she’ll have to wait because new springtime hits keep knocking on our door, plus events for pianist Gregg Karukas include an on-demand streaming show. Connect Brazil’s weekly digest keeps you informed and up to date with the best of Brazil. What will you discover?


What’s Happening at Connectbrazil.com March 28 – April 3, 2021

Anitta wants to own the world, and 2021 could be the year it happens. That’s the buzz.

Last year, she hired a new agent in Los Angeles. Five years ago, the New York Times wrote about her musical trajectory two years after our first story here at CB. This week, a flurry of stories has declared her a world phenom, ready to put Brazil on the map as the queen of Baile Funk.

For those of us who already know where Brazil is, Anitta will need to do better than that. But if anyone can, we’d put our money on Anitta, who’s already one of Brazil’s top moneymakers, talented and savvy. And she sings in English and Spanish, as well as Portuguese. Somewhere, Ivete Sangalo’s ears are positively burning.

The bigger question? Does Anitta really want to be the Brazilian Cardi B?

TOP STORIES

Brazil From Above: Copa Surfers take an early morning stroll along the hand-laid tiles of Rio de Janeiro’s celebrated sidewalk boardering Avenida Atlantica.

Connect Brazil’s Weekender arrives in your inbox this Thursday! Read a current issue and sign up here.

Spotlight Song: Stacey Kent with Marcos Valle ‘Batucada’


Listen to Stacey Kent sing on our streaming channels, including Bossa Nova Love AffairSunday Brazilian Brunch, and Brazilian Jazz!

STREAMING MUSIC NEWS

This week, it’s the Astrud Gilberto Birthday Show on The Sounds of Brazil. Listen 4 X daily and on-demand through April 4th. The playlist and Producer’s Notes are here.

ON OUR STREAMING STATION

We’re always ready for your next Brazilian break! Our streaming station is a jazzy blend of breezy bossas and crossover hits from both sides of the equator. It’s America’s only ‘Always Live’ streaming station for Brazilian music.

Spring always makes us feel better, and you’ll find that our playlist has already made its seasonal switch to the sunshine season. Listen for these new songs this week, including:

  • ‘Love Came Between Us’ – Sergo Mendes
  • ‘Sound of Emotion’ – Gregg Karukas
  • ‘Voce’ – Silva

Listen for these songs and thousands more on our always-live streaming station, and click here for all of our streaming music channels.

Check out Connect Brazil’s Listening Lounge.

Brazil Back2Back

Always two-of-a-kind and always two in a row when you listen at the top of the hour, at 11 am, 2 pm and 5 pm (US Central) Monday, Wednesday & Friday.

Here’s this week’s lineup:

  • Monday, March 29 – Springtime Sambas
  • Wednesday, March 31 – New Music Wednesday: Bianca Rossini and Lee Hutchinson
  • Friday, April 2 – Carioca Chill

Next week on Brazil Back2Back:

  • Monday, April 5 – New Bossa vocals
  • Wednesday, April 7 – New Music Wednesday: Mart’nália and Lee Hutchinson
  • Friday, April 9 – Seu Jorge

Visit the Listening Lounge to listen live, for real-time playlists or to request a song.

New Music: Belo ‘Vide Que Segue’

We’ve introduced Kell Smith’s ‘Nossa Bossa’ to listeners coast to coast. Now, its your turn.

Listen to this song on Connect Brazil’s always-live streaming station, 24/7, worldwide.

EVENTS

Connect Brazil’s Events section has the early line on entertainment recommendations for Spring when every Friday Brazil Back2Back features different versions of ‘The Waters of March’ on our streaming station.

We have a full slate of streaming and virtual events for pianist Gregg Karukas posted, including last weekend’s YouTube show for Rick’s Cafe Live! Enjoy live club dates and livestream Brazilian jazz concerts with Philly’s Minas, or St. Pete’s Nate Najar Trio with Daniela Soledade, You’ll find virtual Brazilian cooking and Zumba classes, even the return of Brazilian Jazz to San Antonio’s Riverwalk.

Plus your pick of full length, on-demand virtual Brazilian jazz concerts, too.

  • Click here to browse upcoming events.

THE BRAZILAIN COMFORT FOOD GUIDE

Explore our guide to Brazilian Comfort Food! Click the image…

Browse Brazilian eateries, cafes and markets near you, coast to coast

Pascoa!! Easter traditons in Brazil center on faith, family and friends… and the dinner table with kitchens from Belem to Porto Alegre putting out their Sunday best.

Here, hundreds of family-owned Brazilian restaurants, coffee houses and cafes, bakeries, and grocery markets coast-to-coast are ready to share those traditions with you and your family.

Connect Brazil is donating its services to spread the word about the tasty rewards of your patronage.

We hope that you will do the same by placing an order soon with an eatery near you. Your support makes everything taste better. Even Brazilian chocolate!

SEARCH THE DIRECTORY FOR BRAZILIAN COMFORT FOOD NEAR YOU

Anitta Wants To Own The World: Connect Brazil This Week

Stories like ‘Anitta Wants To Own The World’ are what we do. Why don’t you join us?

  • Sign up for our emails on music, travel, friends and fun. Listen to our ‘always live’ streaming station and our 12 streaming music channels, always free. Browse our Lifestyle Directory. Click here to like our Facebook page and here for Brazilian events coast to coast.

Bebel Gilberto’s Grammy Rebound: Connect Brazil This Week

Bebel Gilberto’s Grammy rebound, plus new music tops our to-do list this week, plus events for pianist Gregg Karukas. Connect Brazil’s weekly digest keeps you informed and up to date with the best of Brazil. What will you discover?


What’s Happening at Connectbrazil.com March 21 – March 27, 2021

Bebel Gilberto’s Grammy Rebound: After four tries and four fails, it’s clear that Bebel and the Grammy awards just don’t see eye to eye. And considering last week’s musical theater of the absurd, being passed over again could easily be considered as a badge of honor.

However, ear to ear is a different story, so we’ll award Bebel Gilberto with two-in-a-row for Brazil Back2Back this week. See below.

TOP STORIES

  • Lifestyle: Brazilian art for the home? Meet south Floridian Ana Bondarenko-Machado and her ‘Copacabana Beach’.
  • Music: Preview Serenata, Grammy-winner Gregg Karukas’s solo piano album to Milton Nascimento and Dori Caymmi.
  • Food & Drink: When was the last time you did brunch? Easter Brunch! Read up on Brazilian Restaurants near you in our Brazilian Comfort Food guide.
  • People: Catch Up With Alexia Bomtempo and her transformational album, Chasing Storms and Stars.
  • Picture of the Day: A handpicked photo every day whenever you visit our homepage.
Exclsuive to Brazil, this rare Ararajuba Macaw is a sure sign of Spring it all its natural beauty.

Connect Brazil’s Weekender arrives in your inbox next Thursday! Read a current issue and sign up here.

Spotlight Song: Bebel Gilberto ‘Samba da Bencao’


A rare, live version of Astrud’s springtime Bossa classic!

Listen to Bebel Gilberto’s best songs on our streaming channels, including Bossa Nova Love AffairCafe Copacabana and XODO!

STREAMING MUSIC NEWS

This week, we’ll Spring Into Brazil on The Sounds of Brazil. Listen 4 X daily and on-demand through April 4th. The playlist and Producer’s Notes are here.

ON OUR STREAMING STATION

Make The Sounds of Brazil part of your listening routine! Our streaming station is a jazzy blend of breezy bossas and crossover hits from both sides of the equator. It’s America’s only ‘Always Live’ streaming station for Brazilian music.

Spring always makes us feel better, and you’ll find that our playlist has already made its seasonal switch to the sunshine season. Listen for these new songs this week, including:

  • ‘Be The Change’ – Jarrod Lawson
  • ‘O Cantador” (Like A Lover) – Gregg Karukas
  • ‘Outra Coisas’ (Other Things) – Roberta Sa

Listen for these songs and thousands more on our always-live streaming station, and click here for all of our streaming music channels.

Check out Connect Brazil’s Listening Lounge.

Brazil Back2Back

Always two-of-a-kind and always two in a row when you listen at the top of the hour, at 11 am, 2 pm and 5 pm (US Central) Monday, Wednesday & Friday.

Here’s this week’s lineup:

  • Monday, March 22 – Bebel Gilberto’s Grammy Rebound
  • Wednesday, March 24 – New Music Wednesday: Adam Dunning and Kell Smith
  • Friday, March 26 – ‘The Waters of March’ – Sergio Mendes and Rosa Passos

Next week on Brazil Back2Back:

  • Monday, March 29 – Springtime Sambas
  • Wednesday, March 31 – New Music Wednesday: Bianca Rossini and Lee Hutchinson
  • Friday, April 2 – Carioca Chill

Visit the Listening Lounge to listen live, for real-time playlists or to request a song.

New Music: Alexia Bomtempo ‘Even Now’

We’ve introduced Kell Smith’s ‘Nossa Bossa’ to listeners coast to coast. Now, its your turn.

Listen to this song on Connect Brazil’s always-live streaming station, 24/7, worldwide.

EVENTS

Connect Brazil’s Events section has the early line on entertainment recommendations for Spring when every Friday Brazil Back2Back features different versions of ‘The Waters of March’ on our streaming station.

We have a full slate of streaming and virtual events for pianist Gregg Karukas posted. Enjoy live club dates and livestream Brazilian jazz concerts with Philly’s Minas, or St. Pete’s Nate Najar Trio with Daniela Soledade, You’ll find virtual Brazilian cooking and Zumba classes, even the return of Brazilian Jazz to San Antonio’s Riverwalk.

Plus your pick of full length, on-demand virtual Brazilian jazz concerts, too.

  • Click here to browse upcoming events.

THE BRAZILAIN COMFORT FOOD GUIDE

Explore our guide to Brazilian Comfort Food! Click the image…

Browse Brazilian eateries, cafes and markets near you, coast to coast

It’s true. Hundreds of family-owned Brazilian restaurants, coffee houses and cafes, bakeries, and grocery markets coast-to-coast need your active support during these challenging times. Many have already closed. We want to help you help them.

Connect Brazil is donating its services to spread the word about the tasty rewards of your patronage.

We hope that you will do the same by placing an order soon with an eatery near you. Your support makes everything taste better.

SEARCH THE DIRECTORY FOR BRAZILIAN COMFORT FOOD NEAR YOU

Bebel Gilberto’s Grammy Rebound: Connect Brazil This Week

Stories like ‘Bebel Gilberto’s Grammy Rebound’ are what we do. Why don’t you join us?

  • Sign up for our emails on music, travel, friends and fun. Listen to our ‘always live’ streaming station and our 12 streaming music channels, always free. Browse our Lifestyle Directory. Click here to like our Facebook page and here for Brazilian events coast to coast.

Brasilian Serenata: One Track Mind Review

Dori Caymmi’s second US release treats us to an aural tapestry, rich with musical emotion.

Brasilian Serenata is sheer joy and passion from a Brazilian master!


This article was first published in The Brazilian Music Review.

Those who know Dori Caymmi’s music usually point to his years as the music director for Sergio Mendes as a pivotal moment: That’s where he honed his skills at creating a sound, a style – as opposed to his talents as a singer, songwriter, and guitarist.

It’s not difficult to understand the difference, as subtle as it may first seem: Antonio Carlos Jobim could compose, arrange, and orchestrate his own music – he just preferred to leave the arrangements of his songs to others.

Conversely, Dori preferred to keep everything closer to home. To put it another way, think of songwriting as something that exists in one dimension. An arranger thinks in multiple dimensions.

1991’s Brasilian Serenata is Dori’s second US release and perhaps his best recording from beginning to end. It’s where Caymmi’s introspective and intimate style found maturity, where his knack for creating beautiful melodies plumed greater depth, and where his sense of musical framing began to mirror his craft as a storyteller.

This album – the first for Quincy Jones’s Qwest Records – was also the first in a run of several memorable recordings that mark the pinnacle of his career.

It begins with Joel Nakamura’s cover art. The painting perfectly captures the essence of Dori’s music. It shows a guitar riding along with a wave of sound, crossing nature’s own river to a place of sun-drenched calm. A visual metaphor for a Brazilian Serenata.

Mostly, it’s the songs: Each one a dedication to its particular inspiration. The opening strains of ‘Amazon River’ are also reprised to close this set, giving us some insight into the expansive nature of the music held between these bookends.

This is musical mastery, pure and simple: ‘Trés Curumins’ – sung in Portuguese – continues the rainforest theme (as do the light Samba rhythms of ‘Toucan’s Dance’) before turning towards the Caymmi homeland, the coastal state of Bahia and Salvador, its capital city. Many consider this to be the birthplace of Brazilian song; it’s also where Dori’s father, Dorival, grew to become a legendary songwriter decades earlier. Lessons learned…

Dori filters this sense of tradition through the prism of American jazz as part of his trademark style, where the emotion of Brazilian saudade – an overwhelming sense of longing and fond remembrance – is an elemental part of his music.

You’ll hear it in a brace of songs including ‘To My Father’, ‘Flower Of Bahia’ (in English), ‘Mercador De Siri’, and of course, his dad’s own ‘Você Ja Foi A Bahia?’ – a simple question that serves as an open invitation: ‘Have you been to Bahia?’

Stories and emotion, translated through his skills as a masterful musician – that’s what the word ‘Serenata’ means here. And with Dori’s music, it’s easy to say yes.

Brasilian Serenata by Dori Caymmi


01.   Amazon River
02.   Trés Curumins
03.   The Colors Of Joy
04.   Mercador De Siri
05.   Ninho De Vespa
06.   Toucan’s Dance

07.   Flower Of Bahia
08.   Você Ja Foi A Bahia?
09.   To My Father / Pescaria
10.   História Antiga
11.   The Desert/The Wraith

12.   Amazon River (Reprise)

Personnel: Dori Caymmai (guitar, vocals), Tom Scott (saxophone, flute), Freddie Ravel, Don Grusin (keyboards), Larry Corbett, Dan Smith, Jerry Watts, Abraham Laboriel, James Johnson (bass), Claudio Slon, Michael Shapiro (drums), Paulinho Da Costa (percussion), Inner Voices (background vocals).

Strings: Ray Pizzi (bassoon), Bruce Dukov, Ralph Morrison, Clayton Halsop, Berj Garabedian, Armen Garabedian, Joel Derouin, Meg Zivahl-Fox, Dimitrie Leivici, Gina Kronstadt, Ezra Kliger, Don Palmer, Peter Kent (violin), Robert Becker, David Campbell, Herschel Wise, Jimbo Ross (viola), Ernie Ehrhardt, Susie Katayama, Arni Egilsson, David Stone (acoustic bass).

Produced and arranged by Dori Caymmi. Recorded at Sunset Sound, Capitol Recording Studios, and Groove Masters, Los Angeles, CA. 1991.

Stories like ’Brazilian Serenata: One Track Mind Review’ are what we do. Why don’t you join us?

And our ‘One Track’ from Brasilian Serenata? ‘Mercador De Siri’.