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LERNEN
SIE HIER
DEN
KARNEVAL
VON
OLINDA,
PERNAMBUCO,
BRASILIEN,
KENNEN !
Um ein Video des Karneval
von Olinda und Pernambuco,
Brasilien zu sehen,
clicken Sie bitte hier !
Lernen
Sie hier den Frevo kennen,
die Musik, welche im
Karneval
von Olinda,
Pernambuco,
Brasilien,
gespielt wird !
Das
Rathaus mit
der
Stadtverwaltung
von Olinda
"Prefeitura de Olinda"
KARNEVAL
VON OLINDA
DER VOR-KARNEVAL
UND DER KARNEVAL
VON RECIFE
UND OLINDA,
PERNAMBUCO, BRASILIEN
Olinda
- Beschreibung der Stadt
Die
Beschreibung
der Kirchen von Olinda,
Pernambuco, Brasilien
Die
Strände
von
Pernambuco, Brasilien !
Von
Olinda aus gibt zahlreiche
Ausflüge
zu den Stränden
von Pernambuco,
Brasilien.
Sehen Sie hier
die Landkarte
der Strände
von Pernambuco, Brasilien
Recife
- Beschreibung der Stadt
Um
mehr über
die
erste Sinagoge
von Süd-
und Nordamerika zu wissen,
"Kahal Zur
Israel",
in
Recife, Pernambuco,
Brasilien,
clicken Sie bitte hier !
Die
Zeitung
The
Hadassah News
über Recife,
Pernambuco, Brasilien




Google
Sprach-Tools
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Die
E-mail-adresse des
Hotel Pousada Peter
- Kunstgalerie,
Olinda,
Pernambuco,
Brasilien

HOTEL POUSADA PETER
- KUNSTGALERIE IN OLINDA,
PERNAMBUCO, BRASILIEN
- PENSION, ZIMMER
MIT FRÜHSTÜCK
KARNEVAL
KARNEVAL
KARNEVAL
Olinda
Olinda
Olinda
Olinda
Pousada
KARNEVAL
OH,
LINDA !
OLINDA
HOTEL
RECIFE
HOTEL
OLINDA
KARNEVAL
KARNEVAL
PERNAMBUCO
RECIFE
Hotel Pousada Peter
Bed and Breakfast
Strassenkarneval

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Der
Frevo
ist die berühmte Musik
des Karnevals
von Olinda und Recife
- Hotel Pousada Peter
- Kunstgalerie,
Olinda, Pernambuco, Brasilien.
Die
einzelnen Frevomusiken sind im Format MP3 !
Um diese zu hören, klicken Sie bitte hier :
Três
da Tarde
Elefante
de Olinda
Banho
de Conde
O
Homem da Meia-noite
Bate-bate
com Doce
Hino
da Troça (ceroula)
Hino
de Pernambuco (Frevo)
About the Frevo
Accelerated march makes Brazil jump
Frevo is dance-driven march played in a very fast, binary tempo. A
derivation of martial polka, it used to be called "northeastern
martial music" or "martial music from Pernambuco" in
the early days, when capoeira (a type of dance-fight, early
break dance, currently played as a game and accompanied by African
drums and berimabau - a single string attached to a bamboo stick)
dancers led their groups on parades. The bouncing dance steps, which
bore a strong resemblance to Russian folk dances, imprinted the
specific frevo steps. The colorful parasols carried by frevo dancers
represent defense weapons. As lyrics and tune formats were added to
frevo, the style took over the country. O Teu Cabelo Não Nega,
from 1932, is regarded as the song that established the Carnival marchinhas
(literally, "short, quick martial music") made in Rio,
although the song was actually a Lamartine Babo adaptation of the
frevo Mulata, by Irmãos Valença (from Pernambuco).
The first recording to carry the name of the style was Frevo
Pernambucano (Luperce Miranda/Oswaldo Santiago), released by
Francisco Alves by the end of 1930. A year later, Nelson Ferreira’s Vamo
Se Acabá was recorded by the Orquestra Guanabara and labeled as
frevo. Two years before, though, still known as "northeastern
martial music", the pioneering Não Puxa Maroca (Nelson
Ferreira) had been recorded by the Victor Brasileira orchestra,
conducted by Pixinguinha.
On the first half of the decade, numerous radio stars included frevo
in their repertoires. In 1950, inspired by the energy of the frevo
from Pernambuco and playing on a block of wired wood (an extremely
rustic version of the electric guitar), musicians Dodô & Osmar
created the prototype of the trio elétrico (a stage built on
top of a truck) from Bahia. The trio would only become known across
the country in 1979, when Caetano Veloso documented the phenomenon in
the song Atrás do Trio Elétrico.
Carnival invasion
In 1957, the frevo Evocação No.1, by Nelson Ferreira and
recorded by Bloco Batutas de São José, would take over Rio’s
Carnival, knocking down the usual marchinhas and sambas. Local
label Mocambo was responsible for most releases from the two greatest
frevo composers of all times: Nelson (Heráclito Alves) Ferreira
(1902-1976) and Capiba (Lourenço da Fonseca Barbosa, 1904-1997).
The feverish style also made its way into the intimacy of bossa nova:
the accelerated compass seduced Tom Jobim and Vinícius de Moraes
(Frevo), Marcos and Paulo Sérgio Valle (Pelas Ruas do Recife) and Edu
Lobo (No Cordão da Saideira). Frevo also stimulated Gilberto Gil to
include electric guitars in his Frevo Rasgado, in the midst of
the tropicalist eruption.
Gal Costa, the girl from Bahia, inserted frevo and funk shades in one
of her greatest hits, Festa do Interior (Moraes Moreira/Abel
Silva). Carlos Fernando (from Pernambuco) author of the smashing hit Banho
de Cheiro, recorded by Elba Ramalho, organized a series of albums
called Ases da América in the early 80s. His merit was to gather
all-star casts to record frevo tunes: Chico Buarque, Alcione, Lulu
Santos, Gilberto Gil, Jackson do Pandeiro, Elba and Zé Ramalho,
Geraldo Azevedo, Fagner and Alceu Valença and others. Among those,
Alceu, Zé Ramalho and Geraldo Azevedo plus Quinteto Violado, Lenine
and Antônio Nóbrega are some of the artists that keep frevo rolling
to this day.
Um die Fotos des Karnevals zu sehen,
klicken Sie bitte hier !
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