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Dances
/Ciranda/ /Lambada/ /Dança do Maçarico/
/Carimbó/
/Lundu
/ /Siriá/ /
Maracatu /
Ciranda

One of the most enjoyable evenings I've ever spent in the city of
Recife in northeastern Brazil was when we learned to dance the
ciranda in front of the little white church in Boa Viagem beach. It
was Sunday after the evening mass, and the weather couldn't have
been better. There was a small band made up of brass and drums, and
a male singer. People of all ages held hands and formed a large
circle. The steps were very simple, and the rhythm was slow and sort
of hypnotic, going round and round. The music clip on this page is a
ciranda from northern Brazil, where the rhythm changes periodically
(that's the cue for the circle to change direction).
In a ciranda you can come in or leave as you please, and the
dancing can go on all night long. So people eat and drink potent
"batidas"
made with cachaça and tropical fruit juices, and children fall
asleep on their parents' or grandparents' laps. I bought a ciranda
record that year, and recently found a CD by Ney Matogrosso - the
fabulous pop artist - with a great recording of Pernambuco cirandas
he did with the group Aquarela Carioca (As Aparências Enganam,
Polygram CD 514 688-2).
Batidas
(Tropical Fruits Cocktails)
Here is one of the best reasons to visit Brazil, and you
teetotalers out there just don't know what you're missing! Batidas
are heavenly mixes of fresh fruit juice and
cachaça -
the potent sugarcane liquor from Brazil. Sometimes the recipe will
also call for "leite condensado" (sweetened condensed milk) and/or
other liquor. They are usually prepared in a blender and served in
tiny glasses, with crushed ice added.
The most common batidas are made with passion fruit (batida de
maracujá), cashew juice (batida de caju) and coconut milk (batida
de coco). Fortunately for us, residents of these northern
latitudes, these juices and the coconut milk can be found in Latin
and Oriental grocers. If you can find the small bottles of
Brazilian coconut milk, grab them. It's great stuff. Batidas
frequently have humorous names like angels' piss, virgin's sweat,
monkey's milk, etc. Enough intro, here are some great recipes I've
tried over the years, courtesy of my good friends in Rio and
Salvador da Bahia. Oh, and keep checking back with us, we will be
adding new recipes from time to time. For pictures of Brazilian
fruits, try our
Sherbets and
Juices Pages.

The word lambada refers both to the rhythm - a
fusion of
carimbó and merengue - and to the dance, which incorporates
elements of forró, samba, merengue and maxixe (the 19th century
Brazilian dance which was a tremendous success in Europe). The
dance is sexy, yes, but it is danced by all kinds of people, of
all ages and sexes, without the "dirty" connotations given to it
by very bad Hollywood movies. It's very graceful, fast-paced,
and believe me, when you have to move your feet and body that
fast on the dance floor without tripping all over yourself and
falling on the dance floor, the LAST thing on your mind is
sex...Anyway, the rhythm originated in the Amazon, was later
adopted by Bahians, who proceeded to create the steps...and the
rest is history!

The maçarico dance from the state of Pará takes
its name from an Amazonian bird. It's a graceful circle dance in
which women mimic the bird's movements.
Carimbó
drum |
The carimbó is a large drum of African origin. It is made of a
hollow tree-trunk section - about 1 meter tall and 30 cm wide -
covered on one end by a deer skin. The carimbó gives its name to a
folkloric dance of the state of Pará in the Brazilian Amazon, in
the area of the Marajó Island and the capital city of Belém. It is
a circle dance accompanied by heavy percussion and occasionally by
string instruments. At a certain moment in the dance, the woman
throws a handkerchief on the floor and her partner has to pick it
up using only his mouth! It's beautiful, captivating and fun!

The lundu or lundum was brought to Brazil by
Bantu slaves from Angola and surrounding areas. Still danced in
the island of Marajó in the Amazon delta, the lundu(m) is a very
sensual, voluptuous - rather lascivious really - couple's dance.
It was highly popular all over Brazil in the seventeenth and
early-eighteenth century. It was later replaced by the maxixe (which
was also considered scandalous...) and the samba.
The siriá is a graceful folkloric dance from the
state of Pará in the Amazon. It's danced by couples to the
sounds of a flute, guitar, etc. and the strong percussion of
large drums made of hollow tree trunks with both ends covered
with leather. Men and women dance together and alternate on the
dance floor. The siriá originated in the fishing communities
along the river, as a sort of "courtship" dance. These
populations, called "caboclos," are the biological and cultural
result of mixed European, Indian and African origins.
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Maracatu woodcut from Pernambuco
showing the queen, king and a woman holding the calunga doll. |
The maracatu is a carnaval group from Pernambuco, in
northeastern Brazil. The groups call themselves nação (nation),
for example, Nação do Leão Coroado, (Nation of the Crowned Lion),
meaning a large homogeneous group.
The maracatu is composed of a small percussion orchestra with
several types of drums, agogô, rattles; women dancers and a male
singer. They parade to the rhythm of the drums, wearing
beautifully decorated costumes. The soloist sings a song and the
chorus of women answers with the refrain. The standard bearer is
followed by the king and queen of the maracatu, and the man who
carries a large colorful umbrella adorned with fringes symbolizing
the sun. The woman in front of the group of dancers carries a doll
called the calunga. This doll is supposedly a fetish.
In the maracatus of the countryside, called maracatu rural,
there is also the figure of an Indian with a feathered headdress
who carries large rattles tied to his back.
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Maracatu. Miniature clay
figurines by Marliete, Pernambuco, 1984. |
A few years ago this centuries-old tradition - it originated
with groups of slaves and ex-slaves more than 300 years ago -
seemed to be dying out, slowly disappearing from the carnaval
celebrations. But recently, thanks to the efforts of a group
called Maracatu Nação Pernambuco, it has
made a come back. Their rehearsals in full costume are attended by
large crowds who also follow their parades in the cities of Olinda
and Recife during the carnaval celebrations.
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Cd cover, Maracatu Nação
Pernambuco: dancers and lead singer. |
pesquisa
http://www.aultimaarcadenoe.com/folcloreingles.htm
http://www.maria-brazil.org/cordel.htm
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