Tag: Portuguese

Caminho Diário é lançado no Brasil, Argentina e México

Seja a sua rotina treino-música-café ou banho-café-da-manhã-notícias, todos nós temos uma “rota diária” que fazemos para começar o dia. Quer usar esse tempo para se manter atualizado sobre o mundo ao seu redor ou se animar para trabalhar com suas músicas favoritas? Agora, os ouvintes no Brasil, Argentina e México podem encontrar tudo em um só lugar com a playlist Caminho Diário do Spotify.

Esta playlist de mídia mista personalizada combina o melhor dos podcasts de notícias, incluindo a relevância e a personalidade dos apresentadores, com o melhor do streaming de áudio (sob demanda e com reprodução e descoberta personalizadas). Ele combina a música que você adora com atualizações mundiais relevantes e oportunas de fontes confiáveis ​​- tudo reunido em uma experiência de audição uniforme e unificada.

Os usuários no Brasil, Argentina e México agora podem se animar para uma playlist personalizada que combina música e notícias em um só lugar para a experiência perfeita de deslocamento. Incluído no lançamento:

  • Atualizações curtas de podcasts de notícias como 123 Segundos, Café Expreso, Hechos Podcast, Boletim Folha.
  • Uma mistura de suas músicas e artistas favoritos
  • Atualizações duas vezes por dia, nos deslocamento da manhã e da noite, para manter suas músicas e notícias fresquinhas
  • Uma fuga na busca diária de várias estações para música que não faz seu estilo

Usuários brasileiros, argentinos e mexicanos podem aproveitar ao máximo seu tempo nos deslocamentos sintonizando a Caminho Diário a partir de hoje.

 

Agnes Nunes Is Brazil’s New Go-To Collaborator

When Agnes Nunes was 12, she asked her mother for a cell phone. She got a keyboard instead, a twist of fate that would reshape the Brazilian singer’s entire future. And so, in the mountain-flanked city of Campina Grande, she began teaching herself how to play the instrument that had slipped quietly into her life.

“I started inside my mother’s apartment,” she told For the Record. “I used to play my keyboard in front of the window. I started recording myself and that’s how it all started.”

Her recordings grew into videos of herself performing cover songs that she would post online, showcasing the soulful poise and sensitivity of her vocals as well as her progressing keyboard work. Those covers snagged the attention of Rio de Janeiro rapper-singer Xamã (“Shaman” in English), and last year the pair enjoyed a breakthrough collaboration with “Cida,” a romantic duet that unfolds over wispy keys and gentle acoustic guitar.

Besides earning herself an instant calling card with that heartbreaking song, her association with Xamã led to her first record deal with the São Paulo label Bagua. “Xamã is kind of a godfather to me,” said Nunes. “He was the one who introduced me to my label, [which] now is a family to me.”

Their seamless pairing also yielded the four-song EP Elas Por Elas (“They For They”), produced by Nunes’s repeat collaborator CMK. Featuring “Cida,” the EP further illuminates her versatility, thanks to the spectral piano ballad “Dolores” and the samba-kissed “Sônia.” There’s also “Rose,” which pivots from a jazzy slow burn to funky disco pop, with Nunes gliding over the upbeat dance-floor summons with heavenly finesse.

Influenced by vocalists as diverse as Nina Simone, SZA, and Rihanna, Nunes brings a smoldering intimacy to everything she sings. That includes her debut single, “Segredo” (“Secret”), which pairs a skeletal keyboard hook with electronic beats and flourishes, and the more swaggering, R&B-shaded “100 por Hora” (“100 per Hour”), which references both iconic criminal couple Bonnie and Clyde and northeastern Brazil’s popular genre and dance, forró.

Singing in her native Portuguese, Nunes has found that her music travels well across other countries and cultures, transcending any would-be language barrier. “I think Brazilian music is well accepted in the whole world,” she said. “We had masters that opened this door for my generation. I receive a lot of messages from people from all kinds of countries, but especially where Portuguese is the mother language, like Portugal and Angola.”

Nunes’s varied run of singles and collaborations—in 2019 she also released a track with acclaimed Brazilian songwriter Tiago Iorc entitled “Pode Se Achegar” and appeared on Chico César’s orchestral yet funky “De Peito Alberto”—has already established the young artist as a rare singer who can slot into practically any setting while retaining her delicate phrasing and distinctive accent. This flexibility made her a fitting candidate for Spotify’s global emerging artist program, RADAR. The program features artists from over 50 markets worldwide and helps performers at all stages of their careers strengthen their connection to audiences via Spotify’s social channels, RADAR playlists curated by Spotify’s editors, and bespoke marketing initiatives.

Such an opportunity is definitely a step in the right direction for Nunes, who has grown by leaps and bounds from when she was that curious 12-year-old teaching herself keyboard in her mom’s apartment. When asked about her goals for the future, she answers simply, “Music. Music is my plan and goal for life.”

Check out more of the artists selected for Spotify’s global RADAR program.

 

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.