Tag: bossa nova

Discover the Enduring Legacy of Brazilian Music With Our New Spotify Singles Series ‘Atemporais’

This year, four of Brazil’s most iconic musicians—Caetano Veloso, Gilberto Gil, Milton Nascimento, and Paulinho Da Viola—all celebrated their 80th birthdays. As a way to commemorate this remarkable milestone and pay tribute to their many contributions, we launched a new series of Spotify singles we’re calling Atemporais.

The aim of Atemporais—which translates to “timeless” in English—is to bring generations together by taking two classic songs from each of the four artists and having eight of Brazil’s most talented artists record covers. We teamed up with Pabllo Vittar, Linn da Quebrada, Djonga, LUDMILLA, Marina Sena, Mari Fernandez, Criolo, and Emicida to honor each of the legends by releasing the following singles:

Caetano Veloso

Mari Fernandez – “Você Não Entende Nada”

Marina Sena – “Da Maior Importância”

Milton Nascimento

LUDMILLA – “Maria Maria”

Djonga – “Travessia”

Paulinho da Viola

Emicida – “Não Quero Vingança”

Criolo – “Argumento”

Gilberto Gil

Pabllo Vittar – “Back In Bahia”

Linn da Quebrada – “Babá Alapalá”

On each of the eight songs, the artists have taken the original songs and reimagined them in their own unique style. And for fans who want to dive deeper into the greatest hits of Caetano, Milton, Paulinho, and Gilberto, we’ve rounded up some of our favorite tracks and added them to our Atemporais playlist. 

With these singles, we’re giving different generations of music fans around the world a new way to appreciate these musical pioneers and something new to love.  

Ready to experience the timelessness of Brazilian music? Stream our Atemporais playlist below:

 

A New Wave of Gospel Washes Over Brazil

In the United States, gospel music is synonymous with soaring choral harmonies and easily identifiable melodies. But in Brazil, a new strain of gospel is on the rise, one that does not sound at all like its North American cousin. Brazilian gospel does not have one signature sound; rather than a unified genre, it is an umbrella term that encompasses many styles of Portuguese-language Christian music: the soft-rock uplift of Casa Worship, the high-polish pop of Gabriela Rocha, the fingerpicked acoustic guitars and distinctly South American flavor of Preto no Branco.

Casa Worship

But there’s strength in numbers. Brazil is an overwhelmingly Christian country, and since 2015, Brazilian gospel’s listenership has grown by an average of 44% year over year. Last year, it was the second-fastest-growing musical genre in the country. (Only country music grew more, and much of that growth was driven by streams of Lil Nas X’s “Old Town Road.”) These numbers are reflective of the steady growth of the evangelical protestant community, which constitutes Brazilian gospel’s principal listenership and, according to NPR, also represents Brazil’s fastest-growing denomination.

Christian music has a substantial history of shaping the Brazilian music market. The best-selling album in Brazilian history is Músicas para Louvar O Senhor, by the Catholic priest Padre Marcelo Rossi—it sold over 3.3 million copies. And, according to an article in the Guardian by Tom Phillips, for more than a decade there has been a history of Brazilian gospel artists like Aline Barros and Fernanda Brum ranking alongside international superstars like Justin Bieber in the pop charts in Brazil.

On Spotify, Brazilian gospel is an increasingly powerful force. The Sucessos Gospel playlist is one of the biggest Christian playlists worldwide, while Louvor & Adoração is the biggest worldwide playlist in worship music.

Brazilian gospel artists are being carried into the mainstream by the genre’s soaring popularity. In August 2019, only three artists had over 1 million monthly active listeners; now 15 artists have reached that mark: Gabriela Rocha, Fernandinho, Aline Barros, Preto no Branco, Casa Worship, Isaias Saad, Kemuel, Isadora Pompeo, Priscilla Alcantara, Bruna Karla, Ton Carfi, Midian Lima, Luma Elpidio, Gabriel Guedes and Ministério Zoe.

Priscilla Alcantara and Whindersson Nunes

Priscilla Alcantara and Whindersson Nunes’ “Girassol” recently debuted in the top 5 on Spotify’s Brazil Top 50 playlist, which is the highest-charting debut by a Brazilian gospel artist. “Girassol” was also the first Christian song ever to be added to the playlist. Before that, Casa Worship’s “A Casa é Sua” became the first Brazilian gospel song to enter Spotify Brazil’s Viral Top 50 playlist—another sign of Brazilian gospel’s growing influence within Brazilian popular music.

And the demographics of gospel’s listeners suggest that it is only poised to grow. More than half of the genre’s listeners are under 30. In the 1960s, Brazilian bossa nova—literally, “new wave”—swept the nation and the world; in the new century, the rising tide is Brazilian gospel.