imomus: (Default)
[personal profile] imomus
From time to time you become fascinated with an album, play it again and again. An album becomes a door to somewhere you need to go, a dizzying view of freedoms, techniques, possibilities. An album—and it might be an old one, disowned even by its creator—is suddenly just right for just now, the answer to a debate, a quandry, a search. When all other albums seem like repetitions and dead-ends, suddenly an album is an open door with a starry sky behind it. You step through, into its weirdness, into its familiarity.

Right now, I feel this way about an album whose sleeve shows a man in underpants and what looks like an afro wig, gazing at himself in a mirror. It's Araça Azul, the 1973 album from Caetano Veloso. "Conspicuously non-commercial" is how Japan Times describes the record, "a mix of psychedelic rock, tribal drumming, pregnant silences and experimental vocals". To my ears it's just very daring, very experimental. There's a fascinating mix of warm textures and playful techniques with miking, pitching, texture, stereo placement. Vocal notes are sounded, held, varied by microtones, joined by single guitar notes. A song comes along, but it's just fragments of a song, with Dada-assonant nursery-rhyme lyrics. There are African-sounding tribal chants, over-the-top brass epics which give way to field-recordings of traffic jams, a wigged-out rock number, bits that sound like Bell lab tape cut-up music, whistling, stuff that sounds like concrete poetry or (very) underground theatre. I can hear Cornelius loud and clear here—this was surely a huge influence on his "Point" album (known in my house as "Disappoint" and "Vanishing Point", but still...)—and the playful post-Fluxus experiments of Tomomi Adachi and his Royal Chorus.

Veloso himself seems now to think that Araça Azul is pants. He's since turned his back on what he calls its "insolent experimentalism", calling the record "a failure" and "the last stand". His audience at the time seemed to agree: many took the record back to the shop, demanding a refund. But when he heard that Cornelius had made a cover of "Giberto Misterioso" for the tribute record "Caetano Lovers", Veloso seemed rather touched:

"'Gilberto Misterioso,' that's great."

Is he pleased with that?

"Yeah, well, the others are well-chosen, but they are also well-known and this one's not that well-known."

That was Cornelius' pick.

"It was him that chose that one? Oh, that's nice," he says with real warmth." (Japan Times)

Caetano made Araça Azul in 1972, on his return to Brazil after three years of political exile in London. And it's not hard to hear a two-finger salute to Brazil's military dictatorship in the record's defiant freedom from convention, its license. "I'm an artist, and artists can do what they like," the man whose head had once been shaved by the regime's thugs seems to be saying.



To explain why the record is important to me personally just now, I'd have to send you back—again!—to writings like Cute Formalism and The Electro-Acoustics of Humanism. I'd have, in other words, to repeat the story of where I was in the 90s, and where I am now. I suspect my reasons for being fascinated with the record are quite similar to Cornelius's. In the 90s we were both doing this easy-breezy loungecore thing, although Cornelius tended a bit more to the noisy cut-and-paste side of things and I tended more to some kind of uneasy compromise between the disturbing and the relaxing. But we both espoused tick-tocky rhythms (the bossa-like electronic Maestro rhythms you can hear on "Star Fruits Surf Rider" and all over my 1998 and 1999 albums) and "pop baroque" structures, with lots of sampling and genre-hopping. This fitted into "the loungecore revival", and "Shibuya-kei", and some of the stuff American artists like Beck and the Beastie Boys were up to.

But by the end of the 90s Shibuya-kei was dead. Most of the artists involved started to get more experimental, to distinguish themselves, perhaps, from the hordes of copyists and parodists appearing on labels like Escalator and Bungalow. Programs like Max/MSP came along to granulate and filter sound in new ways, and with it new possibilities for the Cute Formalists to make Sound Dust. Where once she was making hit singles and TV commercials, Kahimi Karie is now recording with Otomo Yoshihide's New Jazz Ensemble. If that particular career path is modelled, perhaps, on figures like Bjork and Brigitte Fontaine, Cornelius's swing towards ambient sound, acoustic guitars and Tropicalia pointillisme is undoubtedly modelled on Caetano's 1972 record; an index of possibilities, a marriage of the warm and the freaky.

I remember once visiting Arto Lindsay in his apartment in Chelsea. He had stacks of books and CDs everywhere. I started flipping through them all. I wanted to know if there had been any Brazilian artists who made electronic bossa, something like a Brazilian Bruce Haack. Arto seemed stumped. There was nobody quite like that, but had I heard Caetano's Araça Azul? Tom Zé? All I'd heard from Caetano was his first record, Domingo. And I'd got it—don't laugh—because the editor of Relax magazine had nominated it the ultimate "Sunday People" record. The ideal record to listen to in your Kamakura summer house, sipping macciato, wearing deck shoes. The ultimate gooey, melting, sophisticated easy listening record, a record for affluent slow lifers and Japanese yuppies. That's why I bought it, and how I used it.

Arto is, of course, a good friend of Caetano's, and produced some of his 90s albums. I haven't heard those yet. I'll get round to them, I'm sure. But for now, it's Araça Azul that fascinates me. For its mixture of warmth and experimentalism, songs and pure sound. For the fact that it's the very opposite of generic or reassuring. For the fact that you're never going to hear it playing in the background in a Tokyo cafe. For its impish, zany, willful perversity. For its huge sense of freedom and self-license. For just how great and interesting and exotic it sounds, playing from my system, into my apartment, filling the space with invisible parrots, radical politics, unexplored possibilities. And for the fact that, in the way it marries the easy-breezy and the sing-songy with a formal interest in acoustics and how sound can determine structure, it's addressing the key questions of the place—the historical and formal place—I now find myself in. Post-something and pre-something else, no doubt. Wearing pants and an afro wig, probably.

Araça Azul sampler file (4.2 MB, 4mins 35secs)

(no subject)

Date: 2005-10-14 09:39 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
That sounds like a record I want to hear. Do you know/like Os Mutantes, Nick?

(no subject)

Date: 2005-10-14 09:46 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
Yes, but I can't say I'm a huge fan, I don't really know why, perhaps it's the density of their sound, with thick electric guitars and things filling it out. No frailty or languid sensuality there, more of a pop freakout.

(no subject)

Date: 2005-10-14 09:58 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cap-scaleman.livejournal.com
I've found it distrubingly hard to find those kinds of records that open new doors for me. Actually, it's only those records I am looking for when record hunting. Though I get down when I listen to a record when I have read so much hype and imagined how it would sound and it sounds completely different and much "less" than my imagination. Or it can surprise me how much wrong my imagination had. Examples of surprises are Pizzicato five's "Made in USA", Lee Hazlewood's "Cowboy in Sweden", Bruce Haack "Hush, hush little robot" and "Electric Lucifer", etc etc.

So, I have hard for reading reviews, words from friends and hype at times. I always expect the best and then when I listen to the record it's perhaps a big dissappointment. So I just shelve the record.

But then suddenly, after a while of shelving the record, I get into a period and looks at the record again and thinks "hmmm, I'll give it another chance". Voila! I got myself some new sights and sounds.

Or when you just find an album by an artist you have never heard of and listen to it for the first time and think "gosh, this is fantastic". I got that feeling when I once found Joanna Newsom's album "the milk-eyed mender". Described as "Bjork if she played harp" it was a sort of appalachian folk, harp and genre blending.

Hmm, Kahimi Karie is working with Otomo Yoshihide? He's one of my heros! I got this Ground Zero album, Recolutionary pekinese opera, with samplings from a chinese communist opera where he puts of this amazing guitarnoisesolo after 4 minutes of ambient and percussion.

(no subject)

Date: 2005-10-14 11:38 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] klasensjo.livejournal.com
Oh, you have to give the first two Os Mutantes records a chance unless you've already put them in the reject bin. I know what you mean by the "thick electric guitars" thing, but there's so much more.
It has everything a pop record needs: false starts, hysteria, nasal singing, whimsy, nervousness...a song like "Algo Mais"...ooooh aaaah.

(no subject)

Date: 2005-10-14 12:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] niddrie-edge.livejournal.com
interesting to hear how you come at this...i did a phase of a lot of Brazilian music in the mid to late 90s but i can't remember this one...i spose many blame David Byrne for his Tropicalia album, others Gilles Peterson and the Brazilica fetish... for me it was Ennio Morricone via Portishead..i sought that Robinson Crusoe tv soundtrack sound and hit Mondo Morricone, where this strange bossa takes place...from there i thought whats Bossa? and fell for Joao Gilberto and the jazz angle...its only a few cd's before one realises theres a lineage of histories here..and then i recalled an old teacher had the Minas Geraes artist Milton Nascimento...but of course some of the surreal concrete poetry of Tropicalia and Tom Ze is just irresistible(?)... and those string arrangements... and Edu Lobo...

stimulating read as always..i shall endeavour to partake forthwith

(no subject)

Date: 2005-10-14 12:23 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dzima.livejournal.com
Brazilian Bruce Haack = Arrigo Barnabe (http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:39byxdyb1olf~T1)

Another interesting and obscure album is called "A Paixão de V Segundo Ele Próprio" by Vitor Ramil (http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:wgjx7i82g75r~T1), very much in the same avant pop vein of "Araca Azul".

For the record, I find Tom Ze unbearable.

(no subject)

Date: 2005-10-14 12:23 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
I know the feeling very well - you listen to something for the first time and immediately you sense this is what you've been looking for and dreaming of your whole life.

Last time I had the experience was a few monts ago when I got Os Afro Sambas by Baden Powell. I actually looked at a copy of Araça Azul at that time, considerig to buy it but I was kind of shocked by the sleeve :)

(no subject)

Date: 2005-10-14 12:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dzima.livejournal.com
BTW, I have a Arto Lindsay produced Caetano Veloso album called "Estrangeiro" and it's... average. There are only couple of good tracks in it.

I have heard that Kazu Makino sang in a Caetano album, don't know which.

(no subject)

Date: 2005-10-14 12:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
Hmm, I was hoping for more from Arrigo Barnabe. The clips on this page (http://www.tvcultura.com.br/musikaos/41/musica-arrigo1.htm) are sort of annoyingly quirky, jazzy and manic rather than charming, suave and sensual, like Caetano's experiments. Absolutely no wish ever to hear that again!

From clips of his new record (http://www.vitorramil.com.br/discos/longes.htm#), Vitor Ramil sounds a bit like U2 on mogadon. I'm sure he was better in the 70s or something...

(no subject)

Date: 2005-10-14 01:14 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dzima.livejournal.com
Indeed, both of them used to be good in the 80's.

If was I looking for any breakthrough contemporary artists, South America would be one of the last places I'd go to. Albums like "Araca Azul" are a bit of a one-off because third-world countries are not charming, suave and sensual, rather they are way more quirky, jazzy and manic!

(no subject)

Date: 2005-10-14 01:21 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
I've put up a sort of zap-through sound-sampler of the album (http://www.imomus.com/aracasampler.mp3) now, just to give people a taste of the textures and flavours.

(no subject)

Date: 2005-10-14 02:14 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dr-deadmeat.livejournal.com
of course Arto L is now in contact and occasionaly creative partnership with Jamie Lidell and Matthew Herbert - both people who understand that delicacy and noise, tunefulness and experimentation, kitsch and seriousness are not actuall oppositions....

(no subject)

Date: 2005-10-14 02:29 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
Jamie Lidell and Matthew Herbert

Not. A. Fan.

(no subject)

Date: 2005-10-14 02:56 pm (UTC)
jinty: (music)
From: [personal profile] jinty
I got Tom Ze's 'Defeito de Fabricacao' on the basis of 'Xiquexique' and while I love that one single track the rest of the album hasn't struck all that many chords with me. I really adore 'Xiquexique' though.

I love Caetano's work

Date: 2005-10-14 03:10 pm (UTC)
jinty: bright enamel depiction of stylised sun (sun)
From: [personal profile] jinty
Some years ago I would have ranked Chico Buarque above Caetano in my list of favourites (not in terms of being a better overall musician necessarily, mind; Chico's strength is in lyrics). Now Caetano is well in the lead, partly because I love more individual songs of his but also because I am really impressed with his versatility, inventiveness, variety, intelligence, and oh yes -- looks. (I also remember seeing Caetano on Brazilian telly in the 80s, promoting skirts for men, by example. He looked well in it -- it was a long, white, straight skirt if I remember rightly.)

I also very much enjoyed Caetano's autobiographical 'Tropical Truth', though it seems to be pretty hard to find now...

(no subject)

Date: 2005-10-14 03:32 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] charleshatcher.livejournal.com
I can hear Cornelius loud and clear here—this was surely a huge influence on his "Point" album (known in my house as "Disappoint" and "Vanishing Point", but still...)

Yes, similarly in my home "Otto Spooky" has become known as "Not So Good-ky".

Is it just me?

Date: 2005-10-14 04:17 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] addicted2sushi.livejournal.com
Or does that top pic look like Slash from Guns N Roses?
But Slash in a Speedo?
Now THERE'S a song title!

(no subject)

Date: 2005-10-14 04:24 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)

I saw Tom Ze perform in collabaration with Tortoise at the London Barbican in 2001, and despite being hyped by everyone, everywhere, I remember the whole thing was in turns largely perplexing, impenetrable, underwhelming, and disappointing. Tortoise where predictably slick in their back seat role as a backing band, but Ze fudged it IMHO, seemingly playing more on his eccentricities to try and endear himself to the mostly confused audience rather than through his music.

Rob

(no subject)

Date: 2005-10-14 04:25 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] besskeloid.livejournal.com
Tom Zé's 'Best Of' on Luaka Bop, compiled from his 1970s albums, is probably the best way in.

the only steady way to communicate

Date: 2005-10-14 04:55 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
That's funny Nick. I was just listenning to the self-titled Veloso album just the other day...it has a similar a pic of Caetano dressed in a fur coat looking very much like Gene Simmons facially circa mid 70s. It has my favorite song by Veloso on it, 'A little more blue'(a song that I hope no one will attempt to cover after having said that). This self-titled album is groovy because alot of it is in English as well. With that said please stop talking about him and other Brazilian psych stuff so that I can still find it for pennies. I don't want to pay 100000000 dollars for a fucking obscure/forgotten album just because people think it is cool to pretend to like it and horde it in their dusty music museum. If anyone that is reading this has a bunch of old Braizilian psych albums that their father or mother have stored in their opium-den-turned-library please................................................................................
much love,
john/ fashion flesh
WWW.FASHIONFLESH.COM

(no subject)

Date: 2005-10-14 05:10 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
(dare I share?)
GILBERTO
GIL....................................................................................................now I'll never find these records. This week people can't give them away, next week they will be out of my price range.
more love,
john
www.fashionflesh.com

(no subject)

Date: 2005-10-14 05:43 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] arwyn.livejournal.com
I'm listening to the sampler, actually, and wondering where I can find the whole album. From your description I thought I wouldn't like it much, but I love it... hmmmm.... maybe I'm just a sucker for latin languages... but no, it really does sound good!

(no subject)

Date: 2005-10-14 06:40 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] goldenmelodies.livejournal.com
I too love Caetano, and this album. It's a great one.

Saturnian Caetano

Date: 2005-10-14 07:12 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
The ongoing inner dialogue between an
artists urge towards both order AND chaos seems
to be a neccessary one-- and it's a good thing,
unless the "battle" gets too lopsided.

I find it interesting that Veloso dismissed
his more Dionysian impulses as "insolent
experimentalism". I wonder how "ordered" his
songwriting process could possibly be, since his
songs have always been quirky enough to suggest a bit of
experimentING.

But I guess if I was "Three Dog Night" and
just saw Fluxus and then chose Dick Higgins over
Randy Newman for my next record, I might regret
that move later.
Mike Z

(no subject)

Date: 2005-10-14 07:34 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] butterflyrobert.livejournal.com
an afro wig

Are you certain it's a wig? That was a popular hair style in Brazil at the time (much like the "Detroit Afro" in the US around the same time).

brazilian

Date: 2005-10-14 07:59 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Being brazilian, I guess I can clear this very important point: its not a wig. :) he really had lots of hair at the time, and like most of us, has black blood in him. Here in Brazil its very hard to tell where black or white begins, we´re all a little mixed.
I have to tell too that really he´s come a long way from araça azul. Its hard to teel if for the best or for the worst. actually in one of those interviews you linked to, he explained very well: brazilian industry in general is so fragile, he felt it was irresponsible to being so much experimental. I mean, he thought it was wiser to bring some of that into the mainstream. to add strangeness and rich lyrics into pop music. we sort of take him for granted, because he´s been around for so long, but he has a very rich work.
vitor ramil is pretty good too and I can see paralels between their works. and he has gone to be more pop, I guess. in the same spirit: bring some strangeness to the masses. I think its a very worth point of view.
Odyr

(no subject)

Date: 2005-10-14 08:21 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dzima.livejournal.com
I was going to say that people who like Tom Ze are late 90s Tortoise hype victims but the comment below, left by Rob, pretty much summarises my opinion.

Caetano Veloso also wrote a not self-deprecating song called London, London (http://www.asklyrics.com/display/Veloso_Caetano/London,_London_Lyrics/108335.htm).

(no subject)

Date: 2005-10-14 08:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dzima.livejournal.com
Also, (don't) check out the Ambitious Lovers!

(no subject)

Date: 2005-10-14 09:04 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
No, I'm just joking about the wig. I realise his luxuriant hair is his trademark. For me, though, it would certainly have to be a wig.

(no subject)

Date: 2005-10-14 09:21 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
OOooh. Hang on a minute. I just said I DIDN'T buy into into it.

(no subject)

Date: 2005-10-14 09:37 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
why do I summarise your opinion?

Rob
From: [identity profile] thetemplekeeper.livejournal.com
Yes, I have much the same experience with Tom Ze's excellent Jogos de Armar
Image (http://www.villagevoice.com/music/0236,dibbell,38004,22.html)

?

Date: 2005-10-14 09:56 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] thetemplekeeper.livejournal.com
what about those (like me) who first fell quite intensely for "the best of Tom Ze" (Luaka Bop vol 5) in about 1993?

I dislike Tortoise rather a lot, but the fact that Mr Santana Martins happened to tour with them doesn't mean he is part of them... I believe he's far too interesting an artist for that...

(no subject)

Date: 2005-10-15 03:27 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cerulicante.livejournal.com
Having an album and being on the cover is a great way to foist your banana-hammocked package upon an unsuspecting world.

Re: the only steady way to communicate

Date: 2005-10-15 03:31 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Music is a worthless artform.

Don't complain.

You used to work at Best Buy.

have you heard...

Date: 2005-10-15 04:36 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
...the album "re.sort" by sora?
i think you:d like it.

re: domingo

Date: 2005-10-15 03:36 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nicepimmelkarl.livejournal.com
you have forgotten gal costa. it was a combined effort of caetano veloso and gal costa.

Re: ?

Date: 2005-10-15 08:03 pm (UTC)

Re: domingo

Date: 2005-10-16 10:46 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
You're right, and I knew that, but I was too lazy to check the spelling of Gal Costa's name in iTunes. Caetano's first proper solo album is "Caetano Veloso", not "Domingo". But "Domingo" is his debut.

Re: the only steady way to communicate

Date: 2005-10-16 06:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] goldenmelodies.livejournal.com
Well, all of this stuff already became hipster-popular in the mid/late-90s. Its already long been expensive. Caetano Veloso has many self-titled albums, the first three were I believe (not counting Domingo). The one you are talking about is the 3rd, the record right before the one Momus speaks of. Really wonderful music.

(no subject)

Date: 2005-10-16 06:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] goldenmelodies.livejournal.com
Momus,

This is a recent reissue of a 70's Brazilian record worth checking out: http://www.forcedexposure.com/artists/cortes.e.ze.ramalho.lula.html I like it lots.

Re: the only steady way to communicate

Date: 2005-10-17 12:19 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Only someone like an average drummer in a radiohead coverband would say such a sad all-encompassing thing as that and then follow it with "don't complain". Never had the pleasure of working there either actually...you're creeping me out though with your "anonymous" mask and an inaccurate shared knowledge of my childhood. Please do talk to me via e-mail if you are some freindly shadow or someone that wants to tell me that they hate me. We can talk further about your bitterness towards all sound-art through e-mail rather than through Nick's blogspot. So what is a valid artform, cinema? Perhaps that would be the thought of someone who used to work at a camera shop rather than a music store? e-mail is the way of the future babble;in good taste and less filler for those whom don't care.
more and more love,
john flesh

Re: the only steady way to communicate

Date: 2005-10-17 12:32 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Nevermind. Sorry if my vision of you is at all accurate, I don't want to know honestly. I actually do agree in most cases with you: Music is a worthless artform. So is all other artforms in general, particularly the most entertaining ones...it's the tiny bits that are salvageable that make it worth listenning though, and those bits are really really good sometimes. Please do e-mail me if you feel so inclined as I hope to chat a bit with someone that cares enough to hate an entire medium like music. You must be interesting in some way, shape or form.
love love love,
john flesh

Caetano Albums favorites?

Date: 2005-10-17 02:42 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dirtypearl.livejournal.com
My favorites are :

MUITO, BICHO, CORES NOMES, and TROPICALIA 2.

Re: Caetano Albums favorites?

Date: 2006-05-04 06:37 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
albums: transa, 1968, 1971, araca azul

songs: a little more blue, triste bahia

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