Samba E Pagode Vol: 1
He listened to the rest of the album in a trance. Seven tracks. Simple arrangements. Stories of feijoada on Sundays, lost loves in the port district, the quiet dignity of a night watchman. No political slogans. No flashy solos. Just samba de raiz—root samba—and pagode as it was born: not the商业化 version of the 90s, but the backyard kind, where friends gathered around a beer crate and invented harmonies on the spot.
Within a week, the post had been shared a thousand times. A samba school in Portela used one of the tracks for a rehearsal video. A documentary filmmaker called. A record label in London asked about reissuing it on vinyl. samba e pagode vol 1
“Meu pai me dizia, menino, cuidado com a rua…” (My father told me, boy, watch out for the street…) He listened to the rest of the album in a trance
But the most important message came from a woman named Raquel, in São Gonçalo. “Jorginho,” she wrote, “was my father. He never knew anyone outside our street heard him sing. Before he died, he asked me to find the recording. I thought it was lost.” Stories of feijoada on Sundays, lost loves in
Elise Kost
Thank you Catherine, for this wonderful series of Inanna’s/Nature’s/Celestial’s/Our story.
I appreciate and enjoy your commentary as much as the stories themselves.
Thank you for the good old stories and your gifts of insights all these years.
Blessings all ways.
~ elise
Drcsvehla
Elise! Thank you so much. High praise coming from you. Hope you’re doing well my friend. xoxo Catherine