Back from BRAZIL pt I
September 11, 2008
I will skip all the cliches that you can read at your local travel office, such as “Amazing country / Beautiful beaches / Incredibly Friendly People / Awesome Great Food “ and so on and on. Not because they aren’t true, but because they are all true.
I would rather share some impressions to do with music and the general way of life as I perceived it in Brazil.
In Sao Paulo, we were invited to a party by some journalist friends of my dear tourist guide, Ana Paula. After some cold beers – Brahma beer is easily in the top three worldwide so far as I can tell – we ventured onto the dance floor, a place that I normally avoid. This is because the last music style I really had fun dancing to was the funky stuff from “Earth Wind and Fire” in the last century.. unnecessary to say that I hate Rap music and I even more detest Techno. To my amazement, dancing to Samba music (the samba rock variation, not the carnival samba one) turned out to be very great fun!
The next day, we went to see some buildings by master architect Oscar Niemeyer, notably the “Oca” in the Ibirapuera Park. The Oca currently hosts an exhibition celebrating “50 Years of Bossa Nova” with an amazing multimedia show, featuring Tom Jobim and his colleagues on black and white film footage from the 60s, displayed on state-of-the-art holographic screens that I haven’t seen before – you can walk around those large plastic sheets and the film is showing on the back side as well, without being mirrored the wrong way round!
I am always touched when I see children becoming aware and proud of something meaningful and beautiful.. I was especially touched when hundreds of schoolchildren came in with their teachers to appreciate Brazil’s Bossa Nova revolution. A real brazilian moment .. sitting inside Niemeyer’s futuristic building with my brazilian guide, and the school children flocking around everywhere and Tom Jobim and Vinicius de Morais composing their hit songs on the hologram screen before us.
I also learned an important figure that day: “The Girl from Ipanema” is, (after “Yesterday” by The Beatles) the second-most-played song in the world..!
- to be continued -
Erik, (jet-lagged)
