1 LUIZ COSTA-LIMA NETO
Transcrição
1 LUIZ COSTA-LIMA NETO
1 LUIZ COSTA-LIMA NETO _______________________________________________ FROM THE HOUSE OF TIA CIATA TO THE HOUSE OF THE HERMETO PASCOAL FAMILY IN JABOUR: TRADITION AND POST-MODERNITY IN THE LIFE AND MUSIC OF A POPULAR EXPERIMENTAL COMPOSER IN BRAZIL 1 . ABSTRACT This article describes the process of creation, rehearsal and arranging of the multi-instrumentalist, arranger and composer from Alagoas, Hermeto Pascoal, and of the Group which accompanied him during the period 1981-1993, when the composer and the quintet of musicians constituted a community joined by ties of neighborhood and kinship centered around the Alagoan musician’s house, situated in the neighborhood of Jabour, a suburban district in the city of Rio de Janeiro. In addition to music recorded in the period specified, we analyze compositions from other phases of the musician’s career in order to illustrate more thoroughly complementary aspects having to do with Hermeto’s personality and experimental musical system. Finally, the professional career of the composer is related to several important artistic movements and musical genres of the twentieth century – for example, bossa nova, jazz, nationalist modernism, MPB, the jovem guarda, the tropicalist avant-garde, etc. – demonstrating the innovative role played by Hermeto Pascoal in the history of contemporary popular music in Brazil. 1 – INTRODUCTION “Masters of this House, by your leave, here I come, here I come." (Opening verse of praise of the Folia de Reis/Public domain) In the present article on Hermeto Pascoal, the multi-instrumentalist, arranger and composer from Alagoas (born in Olho D’Água da Canoa, June 22, 1936), I will try to outline his singular importance to the panorama of popular instrumental music in Brazil. The music referred to in the article will be described in a manner accessible to the nonspecialist reader, avoiding whenever possible specifically musical terminology. In order 1 This article is based on my masters' thesis titled: A música experimental de Hermeto Pascoal e Grupo (1981-1993): concepção e linguagem, defended in April 1999 at the master's program in Brazilian Musicology at UNIRIO, under the direction of Prof. Dr. Martha Tupinambá de Ulhôa, whom I thank profusely. The present articlee, however, broaden the historical period which I studied for the masters', in looking at musical examples from other phases of the career of Hermeto Pascoal, as well as addressing aspects not considered in my thesis, such as, for example, the way in which esthetic experience and religious experience are interconnected in Hermeto's musical system. See also, COSTA-LIMA NETO, Luiz. ‘The experimental music of Hermeto Pascoal e Grupo (1981-93): a musical system in the making’. In: REILY, Suzel Ana (org.). British Journal of Ethnomusicology, 9/i, Brazilian Musics, Brazilian identities. British Forum for Ethnomusicology, 2000. This article it has been translated into English by Prof. Dr. Tom Moore. 2 to provide a sample of Hermeto's musical system I will refer to about fifty examples composed and/or recorded by him, beginning with the LP Hermeto Pascoal: Brazilian 2 Adventure (1972*). I make use of the term ‘biombo cultural’ (cultural divider) coined by Muniz Sodré, originally used by him in order to describe the way in which the dichotomy of choro-street/samba - yard at the house of Tia Ciata symbolized the differing positions of 3 resistance of the black community of Rio de Janeiro in facing the elites after Abolition. I use the notion of ‘cultural divider’ in order to symbolically move through the principal spaces in Hermeto's house in the neighborhood of Jabour, in the West Zone of Rio de Janeiro. In this house, Hermeto and the Group, made up of Itiberê Zwarg (1950), Jovino Santos Neto (1954), Márcio Bahia (1958), Carlos Malta (1960) and Antonio 4 Luis Santana, known as Pernambuco (1942[1940?]), rehearsed daily, from 2 to 8 PM, over the course of twelve years, between 1981 and 1993. Movement through the spaces in the house, such as the kitchen, the pool, the hidden room where Hermeto would compose, and the rehearsal room for the Group on the second floor, as well as the habits of the residents - such as the feijoada on Satudays - and the participation of pets in the recorded music, shows how the process of composition, arrangement and rehearsal for Hermeto and Group took place in the period mentioned, as well as demonstrating interrelated aspects of the personality, biography, personal cosmology and musical system of Hermeto Pascoal. When the musical examples analyzed in the article were recorded in other phases of the musician's career, the dates referring to these examples will be followed by an asterisk. In the final part of this article, I contextualize the professional trajectory of Hermeto, relating it to the history of popular music in Brazil in the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. I show how Hermeto Pascoal's innovative musical system blends 2 Record label - Buddah Records/Cobblestone. I note that some sources indicate 1970, 1971, 1972 or even 1973, as being the date of issue of this first disc under Hermeto's name. Confusion can also be noted in relation to the correct spelling of Hermeto's surnname: ‘Pascoal’ ou ‘Paschoal'? I believe that the date of issue is 1972, according to information in SANTOS NETO, Jovino. Tudo é som: the music of Hermeto Pascoal. USA: Universal Edition, 2001, p. 9. The correct spelling is ‘Pascoal’, in accordance with the autograph manuscript photocopied for Calendário do som, in which Hermeto himself signs his name. See PASCOAL, 2000. Op. cit., p. 17. I note that the names of Tia Ciata and Pixinguinha were also written in various ways: Siata, Aciata, Assiata or Asseata, and Pizindim or Pizinguim. See the bibliography. 3 See SODRÉ, Muniz. Samba, o dono do corpo. Editora Mauad, 2007, 2ª. Edição, [1979], p. 9-18. 4 According to Jovino Santos Neto the year of birth of the percussionist Pernambuco was 1942 or perhaps 1940, on Sept. 15. Unfortunately, I was unable to locate the percussionist to confirm his exact date of birth. In 1988, Hermeto’s son Fabio Pascoal joined the Group. 3 tradition, modernity and contemporaneity, and evaluate, in conclusion, the strategic role of the Internet as a form of post-modern cultural resistance. 2 – FIRST PARTE - TWO HOUSES IN THE HISTORY OF POPULAR VOCAL AND INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN BRAZIL 2.1 - A MODERN POPULAR HOUSE, PÇA. ONZE, 1916 Jammed into Praça Onze, together with other houses belonging to families of Bahian origin headed by women responsible for the cult of the orixás (the famous Tias), the 5 house of the mulata Hilária Batista de Almeida, known as Tia Ciata, is considered by researchers to be the "mother church" of popular urban music in Rio de Janeiro, where 6 one of the first recorded sambas, “Pelo telefone” (Donga, 1916), was born. Muniz Sodré identifies particular ‘cultural dividers’ in Tia Ciata's house separating the rooms, the spaces of the house, and the musical genres cultivated there: in the salon next to the street, choro and dances for partners (polkas, waltzes, lundus etc.); and, in the backyard at the rear of the house, partido-alto samba or samba-raiado and the rhythmic patterns of Candomblé. The polarized separation of the ‘cultural dividers’at the house of the respected babalaô-mirim Tia Ciata, symbolized, according to Sodré, “the strategy of musical resistence to the curtain of marginalization raised against the Negro following Abolition" (Sodré, 2007[1979], p. 15). Thus, continues Sodré, at the front of the house close, therefore, to the eyes of the white elite - there was the instrumental music of choro and the more "respectable" dances, while in the back, hidden from the authorities and the police, was samba, with the "black elite of swing and dance", and the batucada of the older people "where the religious element was present". (idem) The house of Tia Ciata is considered by the researcher to be a microcosm of the Brazilian socieity of the time, exemplifying racial prejudice and the marginalization of the Negro and his culture by the white elite. Musicians such as Pixinguinha (1897-1973), Donga (1889-1974), Sinhô (1888-1930), João da Bahiana (1887-1974) and Heitor dos Prazeres (1898-1966) were constantly crossing the subtly permeable frontiers between the terrain of choro and dances with European influence, on one side, and the terrain of the 5 Born in Salvador, on 23/4/1854, having arrived in Rio de Janeiro in 1876. See NAPOLITANO, Marcos, A síncope das idéias: a questão da tradição na música popular brasileira. São Paulo: Fundação Perseu Abramo, 2007, p. 18. 6 Nelson Fernandes, cited by NAPOLITANO, Marcos, ibidem, states that before “Pelo telefone” at least two other sambas had been recorded. 4 partido-alto samba and African Candomblé on the other. In crossing these frontiers or 'biombos', these musicians re-elaborated elements from African cultural tradition, making possible new forms of affirming black ethnicity in Brazilian urban life, affirmations represented by, in chronological order of their appearance, choro7 and samba. 2.2 - A POST-MODERN POPULAR HOUSE, JABOUR, 1982 8 “There is sound in these walls”... (Comment made by Jovino Santos Neto and by Mauro Brandão Wermelinger during a recent visit to the house of the Hermeto Pascoal 9 Family in the neighborhood of Jabour) Originally a one-story house, Hermeto's residence in Jabour, a neighborhood in the West Zone of the suburbs of Rio de Janeiro, was enlarged when, after an international tour with the Group, Hermeto began the construction of the second floor. Thus, unlike Tia Ciata's house, where the musicians and guests traveled on the same horizontal plane in order to cross the successive ‘cultural dividers’ which symbolically linked Europe (choro and social dances in the salon next to the street), to Brazil and Africa (samba and Candomblé in the backyard), Hermeto Pascoal's house in Jabour was laid out vertically, with two stories. Hermeto would compose silently on the first floor, without instruments, writing in score and seated on the sofa of a room hidden from the eyes of visitors, while the musicians of the Group (Itiberê Zwarg - contrabass, electric piano, baritone horn and tuba; Jovino Santos Neto - electric piano, keyboards, clavinet and flutes; Antônio Luis Santana/Pernambuco - percussion; Márcio Bahia - drums and percussion; and Carlos Malta - winds), would rehearse on the second floor. All the musicians came to live close 7 A genre which appeared in the later decades of the nineteenth century, initially as a syncopated sytle in which popular musicians played European dances such as the waltz, polka, mazurka, schottisch etc. The choro was consolidated by Pixinguinha and other musicians at the beginning of the twentieth century. See KAURISMAKI, Mika, Brasileirinho: grandes encontros do choro contemporâneo. DVD, Rob digital/Studio Uno, and also, CAZES, Henrique. Choro, do quintal ao Municipal. São Paulo: Edit. 34, 1998. 8 Hermeto settled in the neighborhood of Jabour em 1977, according to information posted in the blog: http://www.miscelaneavanguardiosa.com 9 I thank the teacher and musician Mauro Brandão Wermelinger for the interviews which he granted me on 24/01/2008 and 17/02/2008 and for the rich information with respect to the architecture of Hermeto's house in Jabour. Mauro W. was a privileged observer, since he daily frequented - over nine consecutive years - from 1984 to 1993 - the house where Hermeto and Group would rehearse every day. Approximately the same age as the members of the group, Mauro was also adopted by the Pascoal family. He eventually produced shows by the Group, and participated in various of Dona Ilza's feijoadas on Saturdays. 5 by so as not to waste time traveling daily from their residences to the distant neighborhood of Jabour. A visitor little-used to the streets of the West Zone neighborhood, having to ask the neighbors several times how to get to the house of the illustrious resident of Jabour, would only be certain that he had finally arrived at the right address when he heard, from outside the house, the sound of the music played by the Group. After identifying himself by the intercom, answered by the lady of the house, the visitor would enter through the service entrace letting on to the kitchen. Before entering the kitchen he would see, on the right, in an area next to the exterior gate, birds in their cages, the parrot Floriano and possibly the doges running back and forth, as well as glimpsing part of a small swimming pool. Continuing into the house proper, directed by the strains of the ever-louder music, the 10 visitor would cross the kitchen of Dona Ilza da Silva from Pernambuco and pass through a small ante-room (the L-shaped floor plan of which hid from the visitor the "secret" room where Hermeto would compose), until going up the stairs which led to the second floor. Arriving on the second floor of the house, the visitor would then identify two spaces: a little rest area with a refrigerator, chairs, and a nearby bathroom, and the large room with the instruments of the Group: piano, keyboards, percussion instruments, winds, electric bass, as well as other objects that would make sound when struck, and piles and piles of manscript scores. In order to provide acoustic isolation, straw mats bought cheaply at stores selling materials for Umbanda were glued to the walls of the rehearsal room, giving the space the appearance of a rustic hut. Finally, through the windows could be seen the houses in the neighborhood, and above them, the unlimited space of the sunny blue sky which made its presence known through the almost unbearable heat, which heat the cement slab in the hot days. The architecture of the little house was thus made up of two principal ‘cultural dividers’: the private space on the first floor of the house, where Hermeto would compose "secretly", without being seen or heard by anyone, and the second floor, more accessible, occupied by the musicians during their daily rehearsals. The second ‘biombo’ allowed a glimpse of the third space, external to the house, filled in turn by the houses of the neighborhood with the sky above. The windows made an exchange possible: the music played by the Group leaked out into the neighborhood, while the 10 Whom Hermeto married, in Pernambuco, in 1954. They lived together for 48 years and had six children. Unfortunately, Dona Ilza died several years ago. See SANTOS NETO, op. cit. 6 sounds of the landscape - birds, dogs, parrot, cicadas etc. invaded the house and came to permanently inhabit some of the music recorded during this period. The characters in the house included the owners Hermeto Pascoal e Dona Ilza, the sons and daughters of the couple, “the boys in the Group” (as Hermeto paternally called the musicians who accompanied him), as well as the factotum Mauro Brandão Wermelinger and, finally, the birds in their cages, Floriano the parrot, and the dogs Spock, Bolão and Princesa. The spaces of the house and characters mentioned above appear in particular songs included in the six LPs recorded by Hermeto and Group in the period 1981 to 1993, whether in the titles, in the sound referernces or in the home-made recordings which ended up being included on the records. For example: “Ilza na feijoada” (1984), a modal tune with Northeastern rhythm, a piece which we should note in passing was a true hit in the shows of the period, in which we hear the voices of the members of the Group and a laugh from Dona Ilza; and “Aula de natação” (1992), a “música da aura”, that is, an atonal piece of music which had as its melody the dialogue between Hermeto's daughter, Fabíola - a swimming teacher – with the children in the swimming pool of the house. Other examples, in chronological order, are: “Cores” (1981), in which is included the high-pitched call of a cicada recorded in the tree in front of Hermeto's house, and tuned to the instruments of the Group; “Spock na escada” (1984), a forró in which were included the syncopated barks of Hermeto's dog; and “Papagaio 11 alegre” (1984), in which the parrot Floriano is soloist. Other examples of the musical use of animal sounds (not recorded at the house in Jabour) are, to mention only two composition: “Arapuá” (1986), in which the instrumental timbres, textures and dissonant harmonies simulate the sound of the Arapuá bee, with its low buzz; and “Quando as aves se encontram nasce o som” (1992), a track where various bird-songs are used as rhythmic-melodic phrases which are harmonized and arranged by Hermeto 12 for the instruments of the Group. Making a comparison with the public and private spaces of Tia Ciata's house, the first floor of Hermeto's house - where the musician would compose far from the eyes of 11 Hear, also, “Caminho do sol, Tributo ao papagaio Floriano” (1999*), a song the instrumentation of which is made up of a whistling section, zabumba and prato de choque, simulating a Northeastern banda de pífanos [group of flutes with percussion]. 12 See COSTA-LIMA NETO, Luiz, op. cit., 1999, for a more complete list of the songs by Hermeto in which animal songs are included, as well as other forms of utilizing animal sounds in Hermeto's musical system. 7 the others living in the house and of the visitors - would correspond to the backyard of Tia Ciata's house, the place where samba and the batuques of Candomblé took place secretly, while the second floor of Hermeto's house, a space with open windows and the sound produced by the Group spilling out, would be associated with the salon close to the street, where Pixinguinha and the other choro musicians at Tia Ciata's house would play their polkas, waltzes, lundus, schottisches, and choros. The basic arrangement (front - back - exterior) of the ‘cultural dividers’ of Tia Ciata's house, thus has a correspondence with Hermeto's house, and will be used to show how the process of composition, arrangement and rehearsal would take place for Hermeto and Group, as well as addressing aspects of the personality, biography, cosmology and musical system of Hermeto. 3 – A THICK DESCRIPTION 13 3.1 - HERMETO E GRUPO From the room where he composed, Hermeto could easily hear the musicians. Thus, when he finished writing the score with the melodic-harmonic sketch of a new composition, Hermeto would go upstairs, put the score under the door to the second floor, and go back downstairs to his spot. As Hermeto's writing was doubly difficult, due to dissonant chords difficult to analyze in terms of traditional harmony, and to a hand that left doubts to the exact placement of the notes on the staff - due to Hermeto's visual deficiency - generally the musicians of the Group would re-write the manuscript parts left by the Champion. This was the nickname given to Hermeto by the "boys in the Group", although it is worth nothing that the hierarchy was frequently inverted, since the "boys in the Group" were also called Champions by Hermeto. After the musicians finished making clean copies of the manuscript parts, they would play them on their instruments, and at this point, Hermeto, on the first floor, would hear everything with his perfect pitch, and correct their transcriptions from down below: "Jovino, it's not G 14 with a major seventh, it's minor!" Immediately thereafter, the composer would once more go upstairs in order to resolve technical details of performance and do the 13 “Thick description” is a type of ethnographic description which seeks not only to narrate the facts as they superficially present themselves to the eyes of an observer, but to interpret what these facts signify in a particular context, in accordance with codes socially established by the natives of a specific cultural group. See GEERTZ, Clifford. A interpretação das Culturas, 1989, p. 13-41. 14 According to the statement of Mauro B. Wermelinger, in the interview already cited. 8 arrangement. The creative process functioned according to these stages, and sometimes a song was "finished" rapidly, in only three hours of work. A brief parenthesis. The list of visitors and musicians who were at the rehearsals 15 in Jabour is long, and includes names such as Chester Thompson, Alphonso Johnson, Pat Metheny, Ernie Watts, sections from the Boston Symphony Orchestra, Mauro Senise, Márcio Montarroyos, Zeca Assumpção, Nivaldo Ornellas, Paulo Moura, etc. In addition to these top musicians, a true stream of Brazilian and international students made the pilgrimage to Jabour in order to be present at the rehearsals of Hermeto and 16 Group. There were popular musicians, classical musicians, choro musicians, jazz musicians, musicians from the Brazilian popular music avant-garde, fusion musicians, etc. If it is not posible to fit all these visitors into a single musical genre, I believe that they all shared a common point of view: Hermeto's house represented a redoubt, far from the South Zone of Rio and the popular genres of vocal music which dominated the 17 scene during the eighties, such as BRock, for example. A dispute in the press, between the journalist Arthur Dapieve and the cartoonist Angelli, provides a good view of the musical scene at the time. Dapieve was defending the Rio band Blitz from an accusation of plagiarism made by Angelli, who had accused Blitz of copying Arrigo Barnabé (1951-). The collision between those on the side of BRock, supported by Rio journalists and large record labels, on the one hand, and the independent artists from a university milieu linked to the São Paulo avant-garde, on the other, exemplifies the opposing forces which polarized the musical scene at the time. Hermeto's music, in turn, had nothing to do with either the São Paulo avant-garde (influenced by tropicalismo), nor 18 with the rock and roll of Blitz. It should be said that the medium which Hermeto has chosen to work in is neither the classical nor popular avant-garde. Tropicália, an example of the avant-garde in Brazilian popular music, was a movement with which Hermeto had few links, as the 15 The Friday rehearsals were open to the public. 15 I went to four rehearsals in Jabour between 1987-1992. In 1998-1999, during my master's, I went to the house several times to interview Hermeto. 17 See DAPIEVE, Arthur, BRock: o rock brasileiro dos anos 80. São Paulo, Editora 34. (5ª edição), 2000 [1995], p. 55. 18 However, I note that in spite of the marked musical differences, Hermeto and Group, on one side, and the artists and groups of the São Paulo Avant-Garde, on the other, shared some common territory, as for example, the independent São Paulo recording company Som da Gente, used both by Hermeto and Group and by São Paulo avant-garde artists linked to the Lira Paulistana theatre. 9 reader will realize in reading this article. The avant-garde, in spite of "facing serious difficulties in seeing its work realized", which sometimes "may not take place" generally is absorbed by tradition and its conventional channels. This is because "nonconformists came from an artistic world, were trained in it, and to a considerable degree continue to face in its direction". (BECKER, 1977, p. 15) 19 This is not the case for Hermeto, a self-taught musician, who came from the rural environment, and was always battling with any kind of institution, for example with the transnational record companies, and the conventional communications media. For this reason, elsewhere (Costa-Lima Neto, 1999), I preferred to state that Hermeto was an experimental popular musician, even though the composer himself does not include himself in any existing 20 current, artistic movment or label. In reality, in addition to the unmistakable style of the music created by Hermeto, other details made his house in Jabour a really unique place for all the musicians, famous or anonymous, who frequented it. Indeed, there came to be a certain "mystique" around Hermeto, comparable to that which surround various classical composers. I do not intend here to lend support to the cult of the composer's "eccentricities", which have already been the subject of sensationalism in the press, but simply to highlight various musical skills which he possesses to a high degree. Firstly, his infallible perfect pitch and the rapidity with which Hermeto would compose without instruments, using only his internal ear to imagine the sounds which he noted in the score. In addition to this, Hermeto is a multi-instrumentalist and at the same time a virtuoso improviser. On the LP Hermeto Pascoal ao vivo em Montreux (1979*), for example, he demonstrates that in a single solo he can alternate between instruments such as electric piano, electronic keyboards, wind instruments and percussion, sometime using two instruments 21 simultaneously, and voice as well. Mauro Wermelinger reports that another uncommon characterist for Hermeto was that he would write down the score, and already begin to play it as if he had known the newly-created music for a long time. In addition, Hermeto would compose in the most unlikely situations, such as during the 22 television broadcast of a soccer game, (a sport which he adores), or mentally, during 19 In VELHO, Gilberto (org.). Arte e sociedade – ensaios de sociologia da arte. Rio de Janeiro: Jorge Zahar, 1977, p. 9-25. 20 See NYMAN, Michael. Experimental music: Cage and beyond. London: Studio Vista, 1974. 21 In the interview already cited. 22 Mauro's information is confirmed by the footnote written by Hermeto in Calendário do som (for 10 an interview, or finally, immediately after lunch. For this reason he always used to walk around the house with a blank piece of score paper folded in his pocket. In addition to the fact that Hermeto referred to classical musical forms in the titles of his compositions, as for example, the “Sinfonia em quadrinhos” and the “Suíte 23 Pixitotinha (neither recorded commercially), the “Suíte Norte, Sul, Leste, Oeste” and “Suite paulistana” (1979*) and also the “Suíte Mundo Grande” (1987), associations between Hermeto and classical music also include the great importance of written music in the process of creation, interpreation and arranging during the period 1981 to 1993. With the exception of the percussionist Pernambuco, the other members of the Group passed through classical music and abandoned it to dedicate themselves to popular music. Thus, this ensemble had characteristics resembling those of a chamber music ensemble, and at the same time those of a popular band. Hermeto used to teach them: “You have to compose and write as if it were improvised and play as it were written.” 24 In reality, in spite of the fact that it is indubitably influenced by jazz (especialy with respect to harmony), improvisation as practiced by Hermeto goes beyond the model of some American schools of jazz, based on melodic unfoldings of harmonic structures. For Hermeto, improvisation is existential. More than the capacity to create phrases based on harmonic schemes x, y or z, improvisation is the permanent search for the new, present both in improvisation and in written composition. 25 The daily rehearsals of the group, from Monday through Friday, from 2 to 8 PM, preceded by daily practice in the mornings, when the musicians practed the more difficult passage of their individual parts - as well as the rapid creative process for Hermeto and Group - made possible something unheard of in Brazilian those celebrating birthdays on August 2 ): “Música feita vendo o jogo molenga de nossa seleção.” See PASCOAL, Hermeto, 2000*. Calendário do Som. Editora SENAC, p. 63. I note that Hermeto seems to have the same capacity that Heitor Villa-Lobos (1887-1959) had, according to reports by observers who stated that the classical composer would write and compose music with no concern for the noise of radio, TV, children playing nearby, people talking, etc. 23 See also the “Sinfonia do Alto da Ribeira” and http://www.hermetopascoal.com.br/orquestra/audio.asp 24 According to the report by Jovino Santos Neto, in my interview with him in 1997. 25 I note that particular improvisational models of folk origin are also used by Hermeto, as, for example, the embolada, a poetic-musical genre in which “the difficulties of diction transform the song into a game of vocal dexterity which moves the attention of the listener from the semantic content to the "sound value" of the words". See TRAVASSOS, Elizabeth. “’O avião brasileiro’: análise de uma embolada”. Rio de Janeiro: 7 Letras, 2001, p. 91. In this respect, hear the vocal improvisation “embolada” by Hermeto in “Remelexo” (1979*) as well as “Viva Jackson do Pandeiro” (2002*). See COSTA-LIMA NETO, Luiz, op. cit., 1999, chapter III, for a more detailed explanation of the concept of improvisation in Hermeto Pascoal. 11 instrumental music: the keeping-up of a repertoire of hundreds of songs to which more compositions were constantly added. Thus, independently of new compositions, composed daily, Hermeto and Group had a fixed repertoire with "cards up their sleeve" for show, that is, around 200 songs, which they always rehearsed. When they got to the show itself, they would play only a small part of this total, since the songs, played live, grew in proportions due to the improvisations, (much) larger than in the rehearsals. Thus, each show lasted for at least two hours, but depending on the locale, it might last for three or four hours or longer. The record took place in Pendotiba (in Niterói / RJ), during the opening of a nightclub specializing in jazz, when Hermeto and Group played for five and a half hours. Before the end of the performance all of the paying audience had already left, with only the sleepy waiters remaining to listen. Precisely because of this vast repertoire every show was completely different from the next. As Jovino Santos Neto said in an interview: "We rehearse a lot because the repertoire is very large and always new. In twelve years of playing with him, I never played two shows that were the same". (Rodrigues, 1990, p. 03) The source seemed to be inexhaustible, and the effort as well. Mauro Wermelinger reported that the musician's work was really exhausting, and that Hermeto didn't spare them: “Mauro, today they are going to die, today I am going to get there and they will be stretched out on the floor...They are not going to be able to play this because I think that even I am not going to be able to play what I wrote!", Hermeto would say. Agreeing with what Mauro reported, the drummer in the Group, Márcio Bahia, told me in an interview that sometimes, during the individual morning rehearsals at the house, he would suffer from migraine and would have to lie down to rest after "breaking his head" studying the extremely difficult parts written by Hermeto. In fact, these songs - I note that Frank Zappa (1940-1993) also had a repertoire which he called humanly impossible – are identified as such sometimes by their own titles: "He ran so much that he disappeared" (1980*), “Unplayable” (1987), 26 “Difficult, but not impossible” (not recorded), among others. In reality, independent of title, various songs by Hermeto can be viewed as etudes: “Arapuá” (1986), for example, is an etude for baritone sax, in which none of the other members of the Group is spared technically; “Série de Arco” (1982), was written initially for piano, and manifests a high 26 Hear also the humanly impossible finales of the songs “Chorinho para ele” (1977*) and particularly “Aluxan” (2002*). 12 degree of technical difficulty; finally, the track “Irmãos Latinos” (1992) has an extremely difficult line for electric bass, a present from Hermeto to his friend and musician Itiberê, at a delicate moment in the bassist's life. 3.2 – THREE PERSONAS AND ONE HOUSE As well as the dynamic of exchange between Hermeto and the Group, the ‘cultural dividers’ of Hermeto's house illustrate how his biography is related to his musical system, a system which, tracking the three stages of his professional career and his personal cosmology, blends regional, Brazilian, international and universal elements. 3.2.1 - THE FIRST FLOOR (1936-1950) On the first floor of the house, we find Hermeto the individual, a composer, linked to rural folk roots from the Northeast from his childhood in Lagoa da Canoa, Município de Arapiraca, Alagoas (where he was born and lived from 1936 to 1950). In the heart of the fertile tobacco-planting interior of Northeastern Brazil, Lagoa da Canoa gave Hermeto the bases for his experimental musical idiom, since he does his experimentation departing from the rural traditions of his childhood. There, unable to play in the sun with the other children, and following in the Northeastern tradition of musicians with special needs in the area of vision (Cego Aderaldo, Cego Oliveira, Sivuca, Luiz Gonzaga, among others), Hermeto made music his favorite toy/game, whether through composing little tunes created by striking pieces of iron stolen from the junk of his grandfather’s blacksmith’s workshop, or making flute duets with birds and frogs, or playing the eight-bass accordeon pé-de-bode (literally, goat’s hoof), together with his 27 brother and father at local social dances and wedding parties. Since Lagoa da Canoa Hermeto has followed a paradigm, that is, a fundamental musical model, which he would broaden over the course of his career. According to this precociosly experimental paradigm, Hermeto as a boy blended, in an improvised way, sounds from nature, animals, from unconventional sound sources (such as the pieces of iron mentioned above) and the melodies of speech (which he would later call "music of aura"), with "conventional" musical styles and pitched sounds from instruments such as the accordeon pé-de-bode and the flute. The presence of birds, of Floriano the parrot, 27 Hear “Forró em Santo André” and “Forró Brasil” (1979*), “Arrasta pé alagoano” (1980*) and “O tocador quer beber” (1986). 13 and of the dogs by the pool, at the house in Jabour, show that Hermeto retains part of the sonorous landscape and geography of his childhood. As he affirmed in an interview: "Until age fourteen I was in Lagoa da Canoa, my land, in contact with nature. Everybody thinks that nature is only this. It's not. nature can be in a car on Avenida Brasil, at rush hour, or during a storm. For me nature is everything you see. It is daily 28 life". Continuing to pass through the first floor on the house in Jabour - the space which would correspond to the terreiro for Candomblé at the house of Tia Ciata - we can note another important characteristic for Hermeto: his cosmology or personal vision of the cosmos, related to his religiosity and spirituality, which certainly contributed to his public image as a shaman (bruxo), wizard or magician of sound. The ‘cultural divider’ will be useful to us once more. The room where Hermeto composed was reached only after the visitor had passed through Dona Ilza's kitchen and a somewhat labyrinthic stretch thereafter. I believe that this trajectory is symbolic as well. Dona Ilza da Silva, from Pernambuco, whose Saturday feijoadas would bring together all those living at the house - as well as invited guests and neighbors - was, like Tia Ciata, an adept of Afro-Brazilian religions, and guarded, from the kitchen, the entrance to the house and the rooms where Hermeto composed and the Group rehearsed. As I reported above, she was the first person that the visitor contacted, by intercom, even before entering the house. Apparently Hermeto and Ilza shared some common religious beliefs, and, according to information gleaned from interviews with members of the group, the title of the song “Magimani Sagei” (1982) refers to the name of a Caboclo(a), that is, an indigenous entity to whom the adepts of Umbanda attribute a very elevated spiritual degree. In this music, rhythm predominates. Hermeto uses the drumset as a melodic instrument, constructing seven rhytmic-melodic phrases which, double by the electric bass, serve as a base for the theme played by flute, piccolo and cavaquinho, and for free improvisation on bamboo flutes, bass flute, and ocarinas. As the music was being recorded, the studio technician Zé Luiz invented, at Hermeto's request, words which sounded like Tupi (“oirê, ogorecotara, tanajura”), while, during the instrumental breaks, the musicians spoke disconnected words, blew whistles, and shouted. The barking of the 28 See GONÇALVES E EDUARDO, “Vivendo música”. Rio de Janeiro: Revista Backstage. 1998, 39: 46-57. 14 dogs Spock, Bolão and Princesa thickened the texture, while the tempo accelerated to the freely improvised finale. “Magimani Sagei” suggests a tribal dances, and has deep roots in the imagination of Hermeto and his childhood in Lagoa da Canoa, near the city 29 of Palmeira dos Índios, a settlement of the Xucuru-Cariri Indians. Other discographic, musical and bibliographic references will help to broad the pictures with additional relevant aspects concerning the spirituality and religion of Hermeto. On the LP Brasil Universo (1985), for example, a ballad in binary meter, with a long introduction for solo piano, titled “Mentalizando a cruz”, was composed by Hermeto and dedicated to the musician Paulo Cesar Wilcox. Hermeto seemed to be convinced that the dedicatee, who had recently passed away, had "whispered" this music into his ears, as a sort of psychography. 31 32 30 On the LP Zabumbê-bum-á (1979*) , as well, the songs “São Jorge” and “Santo Antônio” 33 are named for Christian saints, and include the participation of Hermeto's parents: Vergelina Eulália de Oliveira e Pascoal José da Costa, about to whom the two compositions are dedicated. The two tracks refer to Northeastern folk music and to popular festivities having to do with the Catholic liturgical calendar. “Santo Antônio”, for example, begins and ends with Hermeto's mother's voice describing the procession for this saint's day (June 13), accompanied by modal religious chants from the Northeast, and by Zabelê and Pernambuco imitating the voices of children asking for alms for the church-sponsored festival in honour of the Saint Anthony. Another musical example which alludes to the religious universe of popular syncretism is the “Missa dos escravos”, recorded on the disc by the same name (Slaves Mass, 1977*). 34 This music is quite varied in rhythm, with a strong Afro- 29 Hear also “Dança da selva na cidade grande” (1980*), a song the sound of which is quite experimental and "indigenous", in which the spoken voice is combined with percussion and improvisation on bamboo flute. 30 According to the report of Mauro W., in the interview cited. Hear also the song “Cannon” (1977*), dedicated ‘spiritually’ to the alto saxophonist Cannonball Adderley. “Cannon” is a long slow flute solo by Hermeto, accompanied by the sounds of birds and by Hermeto's own voice, as if he were praying. 31 At the time of this excellent disc, the Group which accompanied Hermeto was made up of Nenê, Zabelê, Cacau, Jovino, Pernambuco and Itiberê. the disc also included the participation of Antonio Celso on electric guitar. 32 I note that in popular Afro-Brazilian syncretism this saint corresponds to the Orixá Ogum. 33 Popularly Santo Antônio is considered to be the "marrying" saint. 34 The Group formed by Hermeto at this time was made up of : Ron Carter, Airto Moreira, Flora Purim, 15 Brazilian influence. After alternating measures with seven and five beats, “Missa dos escravos” comes to a climax, repeating the same cycle of fourteen beats, assymetrically divided into groups of 3, 3, 2, 2, 2 and 2 pulses. The sung phrase “Chama Zabelê pra poder te conhecer” is hypnotically intoned in a crescendo, on a single continuous low note, as in a recitative (recto tono) from a medieval Catholic mass, accompanied by a dissonant flute section, and having as a basis the dancing rhythms of the toms from the drumset. At the end, a duo of grunting pigs dialogs with the vocal solo of laughs, crying and shouting of Flora Purim, superimposed on a slow melody played on the transverse flute in unison with the singing voice, apparently inspired by the chants of praying women and the folkloric chants of popular Northeastern catholicism. “Maracá-maracatu-maracájá-Mará”! In the lyrics for “Mestre Mará” (1979*) a song rich in non-conventional vocal resources, such as whispers, hissing, glissandos, glottal attacks, coughing, shouting, etc - Hermeto uses words with similar sonorities (alliterations), a technique very commonly found in the Northeastern embolada, in order to associate the Afro-Brazilian rhythm of ‘maracatu’, with the indigenous instrument known as ‘maracá’, as well as the forest-cat ‘maracajá’ and finally the name of the master ‘Mará’. In this song, the melody sung by Hermeto is heard at a slow tempo, while the chorus exploring unconventional vocal techniques is at another, quicker tempo. The unusual superposition of two tempi in “Mestre Mará” indicates the presence of two simultaneous dimensions. In fact, in addition to Umbanda, spiritism, and musical traditions related to the popular catholicism of the Northeast, in this music Hermeto reveals another facet of his spirituality in singing: “O Master, I received your message, it was with great happiness that I set your image to music". The "master" in questions seems to be related to another figure which Hermeto labeled "The gift", 35 and which in 1996, gave him the "devotional" task of composing one piece of music per day, throughout an entire year, paying homage to all those celebrating birthdays on the planet with a Calendário do som. 36 It contains 366 Raul de Souza, Chester Thompson, David Amaro, Hugo Fatoruso and Alphonso Johnson. 35 According to Mauro W., in the interview cited. See also the back cover of the 1982 LP, where Hermeto states: "The gift for me is an image, a picture. My teacher was my gift. The musician is a magical person, with different energy, which communicates with people through music. When he can pass this energy, and receive the same way, it achieves the greatest success." 36 See PASCOAL, Hermeto, 2000, op. cit., p. 16-9. Hear ‘Itiberê Orquestra Família’, 2005. double CD, 16 scores, including leap-years. Taken together, aspects having to do with Hermeto's religiosity and spirituality revealed his particular cosmological vision, the roots of which are strongly based in popular syncretism. Music is a transcendental vehicle which unites him to nature and animals, to other human beings and to being from spiritual hierarchies. In this sense, for Hermeto the wizard, music is a ritual. Through musical ritual, spiritual experience and esthetic experience are interconnected, in an inseparable way. Thus, going up and going down the stair that unites the two floors of the house, Hermeto constructs and simultaneously participates in the harmonious order of the sacred, 37 which he offers with devotion to all human beings, in the form of music. I also believe that a certain profane celebration was an important part of the calendar of the house in Jabour: Dona Ilza's feijoada on Saturdays, when the Pascoal family and the families of the musicians, as well as other guests, would join to confraternize and rebuild the energies spent during the week. The instruments (Fender Rhodes piano, drums, winds, etc.) were transported from the second to the first floor, to the open area where the feijoada took place, and then Hermeto and the musicians of the Group would alternate eating, drinking and playing, surrounded by family members and guests, always numerous. “The money which Hermeto earned with shows in Brazil and international tours was only for this: to eat well, pay the bills, and dress reasonably well. They lived with just the basics. Their thing was playing". (WERMELINGER, 2008a) The feijoada, one of the symbols of Brazilian cuisine, is a dish linked directly to the presence of blacks in Brazil, and is the result of the mixture of European customs of cuisine with the creativity of the African slave. Dona Ilza's feijoada is related symbolically to the duo of solo pigs and to the "pagan liturgy" of the “Missa dos 38 escravos” (1977*), mentioned above. In fact, music and cooking are two interconnected areas in the imagination and music of Hermeto Pascoal, as the following declaration reveals: “I cook up a meal, this music that I call universal. (...). It is the world all mixed up together, but Brazil predominates. Nobody in the world eats like one Calendário do Som, on the Maritaca label. 37 On the relation between ritual, experience and music see REILY, Suzel Ana. Voices of the Magi: Enchanted Journeys in Southeast Brazil. Chicago University Press, 2005, p. 11-17. 38 Hear as well the slow and atonal song “Religiosidade” (1980*), the experimental “Velório” (1972*) and also “Santa Catarina” (1984), as well as “Tacho (Mixing Pot)” (1977*). 17 eats in Brazil, with the mixtures that you have in Brazil”. (FRANÇA, 2004, p. 13) 3.2.2 - THE SECOND FLOOR (1950 A 1970) Continuing our route, and entering the second floor of the house in Jabour, we have Hermeto in society, the arranger and performer in contact with the Group and with the urban and international popular music of his adolescence and youth on the radio and in the clubs in Recife, Caruaru, Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo, cities where he lived between 1950 and 1970. After Lagoa da Canoa, in 1950 the Pascoal family moved to Recife (PE). With his brother, José Neto, Hermeto played on a local radio station, Rádio Tamandaré, and later, on Rádio Jornal do Comércio. Over the course of 15 years, Hermeto learned, selftaught, to read and write music, to play the 32 and 80 bass accordeon, as well as piano, flute, saxophone, bass, guitar, percussion, and other instruments. He began his professional career as a practical musician, playing choro, frevo, baião and seresta in regional groups on the radio. He also played in dance bands or in night-clubs in Recife, Rio de Janeiro (1958) and São Paulo (1961) and jazz trios and 39 quartets (SambrasaTrio and SomQuatro). His broadened perception, the intense instrumental work in a varied repertoire and his observation of singers, instrumentalists, arrangers and conductors of radio at work - such as Clóvis Pereira dos Santos (1932), César Guerra Peixe (1914-1993) and 40 Radamés Gnatalli (1906-1988), allowed Hermeto to gradually learn the art of instrumentation and arrangement. The Festivals of Song, in which he participated as an instrumentalist and arranger between 1967 and 1970, consolidated his abilities in reading and writing music, and at the same time allowed him to develop as an arranger. In 1966, Hermeto joined the Trio Novo, which then came to be called the 41 Quarteto Novo. This group represented the mid-point of Hermeto's career, marking the transition between the instrumentalist hired by radio stations and nightspots, and the 39 With which it had one of its first recorded compositions in record, the soundtrack “Coalhada”, in the LP of 1966. See http://www.miscelaniavanguardiosa.com 40 Hermeto dedicated to him the song “Mestre Radamés” (1984). In addition to the rich and varied arrangement of this song, hear, in particular, the extremely difficult rhythms of the drumset played by Márcio Bahia. 41 I thank the gentleman researcher of Brazilian music, Prof. Dr. Sean Stroud, for having given me copies of rare discs by Hermeto, prior to the record by the Quarteto Novo. I note that these records were found in stores in London, England (!) It's not only recently that some foreigners seem to value Brazilian music more than many Brazilians do. 18 arranger and composer known internationally. In addition to Hermeto Pascoal (flute, piano and guitar), the Quarteto Novo included Heraldo do Monte42 ([1935], viola caipira and electric guitar), Theo de Barros (guitar and bass) and Airto Moreira ([1941], drums and percussion). After having recorded a disc in 1967, for Odeon, the group dissolved in 1969. Hermeto told me in an interview that one of the reasons for the short lifespan of the Quarteto Novo was the nationalist mission of Geraldo Vandré: “When I would play a very modern chord, people would be critical: "you can't play jazz chords". But they weren't jazz chords, it was what my head wanted. Music belongs to the world. Wanting Brazilian music to be only of Brazil is like putting the wind in a bag, and no one can put 43 sound in a bag”. Inspired by the nationalist modernism of Mário de Andrade (1893-1945), Geraldo Vandré (1935) proposed the creation of an "authentic", "pure" Brazilian music, based on rural folklore, and avoiding any form of external influence. During the years of the military dictatorship anything that might serve as an icon of the culture of the colonizing power - such as jazz, electric guitars, rock and roll, the iê-iê-iê of the Jovem Guarda and tropicalismo – could be furiously bombarded by the intellectuals, students 44 and artists of the urban left, for which Vandré was an ardent militant, as his "songs for the barricades" show. (NAPOLITANO, 2007, p. 125) However, for Hermeto, who grew up in a rural area, folk culture did not have the same "authentically nationalist" associations that it did for Vandré. If for the artists of the urban middle class the search for the "national" signified the discovery and preservation of "distant" rural culture, for Hermeto, such a project meant confinement and repetition: folk music was not something that needed to be discovered, reinvented or artificially produced. But Hermeto did not only reject the nationalist "purism" of Vandré. He also refused the other alternative path which opened during the period of the Festivals of Song, Tropicália, lead by Caetano Veloso (1942) and Gilberto Gil (1942). The tropicalists invoked the anthropophagic cannibalism of Oswald de Andrade (18901954), blending songs disseminated by radio, television and cinema with samba, rumba, 42 In 1964, in LP Os Cinco-pados, from Heraldo do Monte, Hermeto would have recorded his first composition, the track "Sete contos." Thank researcher Ricardo Sá Reston for the information. 43 In an interview with me in March 1999. 44 See CALADO, Carlos. Tropicália: a história de uma revolução musical. São Paulo: Edit. 34, 1997, p. 106-13 and also NAPOLITANO, Marcos, op. cit, 2007, p.114-29. 19 45 baião, rhythms from macumba, bolero and rock , and also added musical information from the classical avant-garde and the concrete poets from São Paulo. In 1967, the Quarteto Novo was invited by Gilberto Gil to accompany him in the song “Domingo no 46 parque”, which was competing in the Festival of Song on TV Record. Inspired by the recent model of the Beatles' Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band (EMI, 1967), Gil wanted to combine the basic rhythm of the song, an afoxé of capoeira, with the Northeastern sound of the Quarteto, as well as an orchestra and an electric guitar. The project was vehemently rejected by the Quarteto, demonstrating the group's disdain for iê-iê-iê and for rock. Hermeto's objections to Tropicália, however, were owing more to characteristics of the movement such as the carnivalized celebration of modernity and commercial popular music, than to the use of foreign musical elements. Neither nationalist modernism, nor anthropophagic cosmopolitanism. Hermeto's conflict with the urban intelligentsia represented by Geraldo Vandré, on the one hand, and with the avant-garde of popular music represented by Gilberto Gil on the other, marked out the personal path which Hermeto would choose to follow. 3.2.3 - THE SPACE OUTSIDE THE HOUSE (1970-1979) In 1970, Hermeto traveled to the USA, going with the couple Airto and Flora Purim (1942), in order to arrange the songs on LPs Natural Feelings and Seeds on the ground (Buddah Records, 1970* and 1971*). On the latter disc, Hermeto records and arranges a song created by his parents in approximately 1941, in Alagoas, while they were working on the harvest. The experimental “O Galho da roseira” (parts I and II) was considered to be one of the best 47 songs of the year by the English critics. In fact, the trip meant that Hermeto, literally, got out of the house, in going beyond intercontinental frontiers, crossing the musical boundaries of Northeastern folklore (first floor) and urban popular music (second floor). The journey represented an important turning point for Hermeto, since in the USA he gained international recognition as an arranger in writing for orchestras and big bands in his first disc under his own name in 1972* (Hermeto Pascoal: Brazilian adventure) and got to know important jazzmen (Ron 45 See FAVARETTO, Celso. Tropicália, alegoria, alegria. São Paulo: Ateliê Editorial, 1996, p. 106. 46 See CALADO, Carlos. O jazz como espetáculo. São Paulo: Editora Perspectiva, 1990, p. 121-2. 47 See MARCONDES, Marcos Antônio (org.). Enciclopédia da Música Brasileira erudita, folclórica e popular. São Paulo: PubliFolha, 1998, p. 606-607. 20 Carter, Miles Davis, Chick Corea, Herbie Hancock, Wayne Shorter, Joe Zawinul, among others), rapidly making a place for himself in American and European jazz circles through his virtuoso improvisations on the piano, flute and saxophone, as well as through his arrangements and original compositions. It was his heterogeneous mixture of jazz and free jazz with the folk music of Northeastern Brazil, together with his virtuosity as a performer and the compositions and arrangements which combined viola caipira, percussion, big band 48 and an orchestra of tuned bottles, which reserved Hermeto a special place outside Brazil. This mixture is present, for example, in the LP Montreux Jazz Festival (1979*), in which 49 Hermeto and his Grupo of the period were given an ovation by the audience. The title track “Montreux”, a slow and very beautiful ballad, composed by Hermeto at the hotel shortly before the show, became a necessary part of the sound track of the life of many of 50 his fans. In conclusion, Hermeto did not get a free ride with any of the labels created by the culture industry, but created his own, an anti-label, which, like a revolver, did not respect limits of genre nor style in his experimental project. Thus, Free Music and above all, Universal Music are some of the "native" categories which Hermeto uses to define his musical system. 3.3 – RITORNELLO (1980 - ...) In 1980, at age 44, after various international journeys (during which he recorded the LPS mentioned above), Hermeto returned to Brazil and finally formed a fixed group of musicians which accompanied him for 12 years, from the end of 1981 to 1993, a period after which this formation broke up. Jovino Santos and Carlos Malta were replaced by, respectively, André Marques (keyboard) and Vinicius Dorin ([1962], winds), with whom Hermeto recorded - after the solo CD Eu e eles (1999*) - the CD Mundo Verde Esperança (2002*), a CD which also included the special participation of the ‘Orquestra Itiberê Família’, an excellent ensemble lead by the bassist, arranger and composer 48 On the track “Velório”, (1972*), in addition to this song, Hermeto uses 52 tuned bottles in “Crianças, cuida de lá” (1985). 49 Nenê, Cacau, Itiberê Zwarg, Jovino Santos, Pernambuco, Zabelê and Nivaldo Ornellas,. 50 On the disc, Hermeto tells the audience, live, that he composed “Montreux” in his "usual" way, that is, using only his inner hearing, without the aid of an instrument. Someone in the audience must have doubted this, to which Hermeto answered, "It's no joke, I am serious!" Confirm this by hearing for yourself. 21 51 Itiberê Zwarg. Hermeto continued to develop and broaden the same sonoro-musical paradigm from his childhood in Lagoa da Canoa, in combining the instruments which he learned to play and in blending the musical styles which he got to know over the course of his career. Thus, in his musical system, a coco, a frevo, a maracatu, a baião could be vertiginously mixed with choro, samba, jazz, free jazz, or classical music, in the same way that a noise could be employed as a pitch, or vice-versa. Symbolically traversing the ‘biombos culturais’ in his house, Hermeto went beyond the barriers between Northeastern modalism, the tonality of popular music, and finally, contemporary atonality, noise as music, and experimentalism. In this way, he created an original musical system, unique in the world, which problematizes the separations between the popular and the classical, and also between the national and cosmopolitan, since Hermeto "blends regional, national, international and universal elements in order to create de-territorialized music which refuses to deny its roots". (REILY, 2000, p. 08) 4 – SECOND PART: A HOUSE CALLED BRAZIL UNIVERSE A recurring question which is the object of debate between various researchers in popular music in Brazil is: how did a marginalized genre like samba come to be one of the most representative musical symbols of Brazilianity? In other words, how did samba 52 leave the backyard in order to enter the salon of all Brazilians? It is not my place, in this article, to answer this complex question, nor to discuss the different hypotheses formulated by specalists. I will only address here that which is most directly connected to my theme: during the twentieth century, samba and choro, popular vocal music and popular instrumental music, traded places in the "house". Samba and the popular vocal genres that came after it during the century - as for example, bossa nova, baião, jovem guarda, MPB, BRock, sertanejo, sertanejo romântico, funk, etc. - were, to a greater or lesser degree, massified by the 51 For the sake of completeness, I note that in 1989* Hermeto recorded for Som da Gente the piano solo LP Por diferentes caminhos and in 2006*, the independent CD Chimarrão com rapadura, with the singer Aline Morena, Hermeto's present companion. 52 In addition to the work already cited by Muniz Sodré, see, for example: SQUEFF, Enio and WISNIK, José Miguel. O Nacional e o Popular na Cultura brasileira. 1982. VIANNA, Hermano, O mistério do samba, 1995. SANDRONI, Carlos, O Feitiço decente, 2001. NUNES, Santuza Cambraia. O violão azul, 1998. See bibliography. 22 communications media and came to dominate the Brazilian musical scene. At the same time, choro and other genres of popular instrumental music moved gradually to the "back of the house”, and, although objects of passionate attention by a growing number, are frequently invisible to the eyes of the larger public. The following declaration by Hermeto exemplifies the present panorama of popular music in Brazil: [Instrumental] musicians without personality, who unfortunately are the majority, do whatever the singers want. If you have personality you have to say to them: I will accompany you, but I want to take solos (...). We have piano, bass and drums, and we will only accompany you, if there are at least two solos in each show. (FRANÇA, 2004, p. 12) In this sense, Hermeto's house, like that of Tia Ciata, was a redoubt of musicians and a symbol of resistance for popular instrumental music in the 1980s and early 1990s, a period when MPB, BRock, sertanejo, and foreign disco prevailed, along with other genres. In his own way, Hermeto is linked with the tradition of choro and popular instrumental music in general (including frevo and various types of wind bands, including military bands, symphonic bands, the bandas de pífanos, etc.), 53 a tradition for which Pixinguinha is central and the house of Tia Ciata a vital symbolic locus. In addition to sharing with Pixinguinha a taste for jazz and for big bands 55 54 (see Os Oito Batutas), Hermeto has various choros in his repertory , dedicated compositions to important choro musicians 56 and on the first LP under his name released in Brazil, titled: A música livre de Hermeto Pascoal (1973*), Hermeto made an arrangement for orchestra based on the song “Carinhoso” (Pixinguinha/João de Barro), considered by some musicians to be the true Brazilian National Anthem. Hermeto and Group, like sambistas and choro musicians (and American jazzmen from New Orleans) from the beginning of the past century, were pioneers in the way in which they re53 Hear, for example, “Frevo” (1971*), “Frevo em Maceió” (1984), “Briguinha de músicos malucos no coreto” (1982) and “Parquinho do Passado, Presente e Futuro – dedicado às crianças e aos parques” (2002*). 54 Hear the recordings of compositions by Hermeto for big band at http://www.hermetopascoal.com.br/bigband/audio.asp 55 Hear, for example, “Chorinho para ele” (1977*), “Chorinho MEC” (1999*) and “Choro árabe” (?) at http://www.hermetopascoal.com.br/bigband/audio.asp. 56 Hear, for example, “Salve Copinha” (1985), as well as “Mestre Radamés” (1984). 23 elaborated rural, urban and international musical elements in order to invent new musical genres. These musicians resisted and used music, each in his own way, in order to affirm themselves in the Brazilian and international cultural mosaic. However, if there are similarities between Hermeto and the choro musicians of the beginning of the twentieth century, there are also differences which should be noted. In a recent interview, Hermeto stated: There are lots of people who are 18 years old playing old, square things. These people who play chorinho, regional music, MPB, begin playing like old guys, and seem like old guys. Someone who is born today needs to be wellinformed. The guy is born and listens to Pixinguinha. The music is pretty, and has that square chordal way that it is dressed. If someone is born today and they don't tell him that this is old music, it's the same thing as him seeing an old building without knowing that it's old. Not that old is 57 bad. But the young are born so old. (YODA, 2006) The differences I mention demonstrate the contrasts between two different historical contexts: the modern, in the case of the dwelling of Tia Ciata, and the contemporary, in the case of Hermeto's house in Jabour. Thus, unlike the house of Tia Ciata, where the musicians who crossed ‘biombos culturais’ were members of the same social class, of the same black ethnic group, and participated in musical genres which, in spite of their particularities, had a common denominator in the syncopated rhythms of Candomblé, at Hermeto's house, however, he and the musicians in the Group had geographic and social origins which were quite distinct, and the movement through the vertical ‘biombos culturais’ of the house in Jabour crossed frontiers between musical genres which were much more heterogeneous. In fact, the musical practices used by Hermeto are related to a contemporary context which presents various melodic, harmonic, rhythmic, timbristic and formal ruptures in relation to traditional choro. This did not prevent Hermeto, however, from composing choros, and innovating with respect to harmony, through introducing dissonant chords and unexpected progressions, as the recent interview cited indicates. Thus, to use a culinary metaphor, so much to Hermeto's taste: the two houses, separated by an interval of about 70 years, had a dish in common (feijoada), though the receipt was 57 See http://www.orkut.com/CommMsgs.aspx?cmm=10980&tid=2489510022838154349&kw=entrevista 24 post-modernized at Hermeto's house in Jabour, and although some ingredients were no longer present, others were, and still others were modified or added to. As I observed in an earlier article (Costa-Lima Neto, 2000, p. 119-42), the uniqueness of Hermeto's musical system lies in the uncommon capacity of Hermeto to combine the "conventional" with the "natural", that is, to establish a dialogue between, on the one hand, the vocabulary and instruments of "conventional" ethnic (indigenous and Afro-Brazilian), Brazilian (urban popular music: choro, frevo, bands, etc.) and international (jazz, classical music) styles and on the other, atonal and non-harmonic "universal" sonorities found in "nature" (animal sounds, human speech) and in unconventional every-day sound objects (pieces of iron, pans, wooden shoes, flasks 58 for oral hygine, etc. ). "Nature is the day-to-day", states Hermeto . This is, in my opinion, the key to understanding Hermeto's singular musical system. In combining the "conventional" with the "natural", the composer creates a third substance, which is no longer either nature nor day-to-day, but the fusion of the two. From choro to jazz, from classical music to Northeastern coco. The singular recipe for Hermeto's contemporary "musical feijoada" does not seem to have gone together well with the modernist ideologies of Mário de Andrade (1893-1945) and Oswald de Andrade (1890-1954), as those ideologies were reinterpreted by particular popular musicians during the second half of the twentieth century. As I already mentioned, the modernist ideas of Mário e Oswald influenced, respectively, the nationalist project of Geraldo Vandré at the time of the Quarteto Novo - during the Festivals of Song in the 1960s and 1970s - and the anthropophagic tropicalist esthetic of Gilberto Gil and Caetano Veloso, which served as inspiration, in turn for artists of the São Paulo avant-garde, such as Arrigo Barnabé, in the 59 1980s. In my opinion the music of Hermeto Pascoal should alert researchers that 60 Tropicália does not hold a monopoly on innovation in Brazilian popular music. In fact, Hermeto is modern without being modernist, is Brazilian without being nacionalist and practices, in his own way, “anthropophagy”, without ever having been tropicalist, nor even having read the Manifesto Antropofágico (1928) of Oswald de Andrade. 58 In the interview already cited. 59 NAPOLITANO, Marcos, op. cit., relativizes the influence of Oswald de Andrade on the tropicalistas and notes that, in spite of differences, there are points in common between the nationalists and the avant-gardists. 60 According to the important observation by Prof. Dr. TREECE, David. Journal of Latin América Studies no. 35 (reviews). London: King’s College, 2003, p. 207-13. 25 Hermeto Pascoal's uniqueness must be correctly understood in order that associations not obfuscate characteristics instrinsic to Hermeto, but rather reveal, through comparison, what is unique about these characteristics. The differences between Hermeto and the artists and movements cited above were not solely musical. Because while in Modernism "artists coming from the elites and the bourgeoisie were trying to establish a new way of relating to the cultures of the people" (TRAVASSOS, 2000, p. 08), Hermeto, in contrast, followed the opposite path, that is, he left the first floor, "below", left the less-economically-advantaged classes of the Northeast, in order to then go beyond geographic and class barriers in order to migrate to the large cities. Thus, unlike the rationally oriented, civilized, scientific, theoretical and literate vision of the cosmos of urban intellectuals and artists, for Hermeto the emphasis seems to fall on the opposite pole, on the sensitive, nature, intuition, religion or spirituality, practice and improvisation. Like Pixinguinha, who learned the codes of cultivated music, the selftaught Hermeto uses and dominates musical notation, even if it is never the point of departure in his creative process. In addition to this, Hermeto's search for the unusual is joyful, and does not spend much time rationalizing the process of experimentation, unlike some musical currents of the avant-garde. In the following quote, Hermeto explains: Music for the musician, without experiences nor vanguards, only felt music, note for note, forming arrangements in which the instruments, in one only time, coexist and are individually explored. Listen. (HERMETO, 1979) In this way, blending tradition, modernity and contemporaneity without belong to any school or movement, the esthetic territory traced by Hermeto Pascoal acquires intentionally shifting fronties. In avoiding any identification with commercial labels and artistic movements he frees himself professionally and esthetically. Considering, however, that Hermeto is present in the context of the contemporary culture industry, it is necessary to verify, what the strategies of resistance and survival are which he adopted over the course of his career, while he was trying to maintain the authenticity of his singular musical system in the commercial arena. This rather utopian path was not easily traveled. Migrating from Lagoa da Canoa to the great cities of Brazil and the world, Hermeto experienced the era of radio in the 1940s and 1950s, the expansion of TV in 26 the 1960s, and its boom in the 1970s, the monopoly of the great multi-national recording companies 61 accentuated by the majors, the appearance of the CD, the 62 movement to indy labels and independent musicians in the 1990s, until the arrival of the age of the Internet. In the 1940s and 1950s radio was the most important mass communication medium in Brazil, and the majority of the music broadcast was played live by regional ensembles, bands, singers and orchestras. The consolidation of samba as the musical symbol of national identity was possible thanks to dynamics and broad cultural exchanges between agents and shapers of opinion in various sectors of society. The nationalization of this musical genre is strongly linked to the history of radio and the way in which the Estado Novo (1937-1945) of Getúlio Vargas (1982-1954) utilized this medium of communication in order to co-opt the sambistas and promote "national integration" and "racial democracy" through sambas exalting civic values. In the 1950s, recalled in history as the "golden years" of the government of Juscelino Kubitschek (1902-1976), the bossa nova, a genre which maintained the traditional melodic emphasis of Brazilian music, used more dissonant harmonies than those of the traditional samba. The guitar becomes more percussive, in dialogue with sophisticated orchestral arrangements and a type of vocal production which was whispered and cool, quite different from the operatic mannerisms of the popular singers of the previous generations. Bossa nova was the fruit of the desire of the artists from the middle class to artistically and technologically "modernize" popular music in 63 Brazil, passing from the "agricultural phase to the industrial phase". In the 1950s, the radio stations became an excellent vocational school for Hermeto, and at the same time an important source of support for the adolescent musician, recently-arrived from the countryside. Even fifty years later, Hermeto still finds important professional opportunities in radio, recording for the label of the state radio station, MEC, in 1999* and in 2002*. 61 Hermeto recorded for the following multinational companies: EMI (1967*); Polygram (1973* e 1992); WEA (de 1977* a 1980*). The last disastrous attempt was on the CD Festa dos Deuses (PolyGram, 1992), when Hermeto broke the contract soon after the commercial launch of the CD. 62 As for example, the label Som da Gente, already mentioned, with which Hermeto and Group recorded six of the seven discs made during the period 1981-1993 (one of the discs was not issued). 63 Tom Jobim citado por NAPOLITANO, op. cit., p. 69. 27 In the 1960s, when the military dictatorship (1964-1985) took power – and while Hermeto was progressing through work in clubs, on the radio and in the instrumental ensembles already mentioned - musical programs on television, theater, the Festivals of Song and the record industry, with an eye on the new demands of the market, went after the public from the universities. Thus MPB appeared, which made it possible for middle class artists to connect, even if provisorily, esthetics, ideology, and market. However, the commercial explosion of the jovem guarda (iê-iê-iê), with its success among lower middle class youth, outsold MPB in 1965 (with the homonymous disc by Roberto Carlos) 64 and upset the balance, presaging the brega, música sertaneja and música romântica of the following two decades. In this sense, the jovem guarda was the vanguard for music for the masses in Brazil. 65 Since he did not belong to the old guard of samba, or bossa nova, or politicized MPB, or to the tropicalist avant-garde, nor to iê-iê-iê, Hermeto had to seek other commercial spaces for his instrumental music, traveling outside Brazil in 1970, with his friends Airto and Flora Purim, as the interview quoted below exemplifies: I went to the USA with my way of working and the desire to change the habit that obliged Brazilians to go there to learn with American musicians. (...) I wanted to show something that isn't jazz, nor samba, nor bossa nova, because I am tired of all that! (...) Yes, I make music and I am Brazilian. You can take that any way you like. (HERMETO, Jazz Magazine, 1984) As I already mentioned earlier, in the USA, in 1972, Hermeto recorded his first solo disc. However, just as had happened during the period of the Festivals of Song, Hermeto was going the opposite way from the record industry. In fact, Hermeto's path is opposity to the process of formation and expansion of the majors, that is, the conglomerates of large multi-national recording companies, consolidated during the 1970s and 1990s. 66 Proof of this is Hermeto's refusal to be 64 See NAPOLITANO, Marcos op. cit., p. 87-98. 65 See ULHÔA, Martha Tupinambá. ‘Nova história, velhos sons: Notas para ouvir e pensar a música brasileira popular’. In: Debates: Cadernos do programa de pós-graduação em música. Rio de Janeiro: UNIRIO, 1997, p. 87. 66 The majors, which control more than two thirds of the world record market are: EMI + Odeon = EMI (1969); Phonogram + Polydor = PolyGram (1978); Sony Corp. + CBS = Sony Music (1987); Bertelsman + Ariola + RCA = BMG-Ariola (1987); and, finally; Time-Warner + WEA + Toshiba + Continental = Warner Music (1991-93). The fusion of PolyGram with MCA, in 1998, produced the 28 part, as keyboardist, of the fusion band of Miles Davis for the gigantic multinational Sony, choosing, instead of a (subaltern) stardom, to begin his solo career as composer, arranger and instrumentalist for a relatively unknown record label (Buddah Records). In counterpoint to Hermeto's professional career, the power of the majors influenced the whole culture industry beginning in the 1970s, reaching a climax in the 1990s. It produced styles such as disco and lambada, launched products directed at the children's market, such as the TV host, model and singer (?) Xuxa, as well as styles directed to the young middle class public - such as BRock and pop in the 1980s - and finally, mass consumption genres directed to the mass popular market in Brazil, such as 67 axé, pagode, música sertaneja and música romântica. The products which were promoted jointly by the majors, newspapers, radio stations, films (Saturday Night Fever, Lambada), clips on MTV (“Thriller” by Michael Jackson), TV programs (Xou da Xuxa) and mini-series (Dancin’ Days, Pantanal, O Rei do gado, etc.), had in common the fact that they were directed to large slices of the market. The change in format from LP to CD, and the diversity of these products did not hide, however, their musical redundancy. In fact, in search of the largest possible consuming public, in the soundtrack of the end of the twentieth century “the multiplex sounds, styles, genres, agents, places and authors [seemed] to intone, in reality, a single song” (Dias, 2000, p. 170) However, the movement of the independent musicians and recording companies in the years 1980-1990 - a period in which Hermeto and Grop recorded six discs for the independent label Som da Gente - began a gradual change on a scene dominated by the insatiable appetite of the transnational cultural industry. Severely criticized due to the high price charged for CDs - the sale of which only brought the artist approximately 13% of the unit value of the product (Dias, 2000) - the large record companies were obliged to lower their prices due to the indie movement, but that did not prevent the former from experiencing a vertiginous decline after the turn of the millennium, while the Internet continued to grow, connecting more than thirty million Brazilians and approximately a Universal Music Group, since 2006 the largest record company in the world. See DIAS, Márcia Tosta. Os Donos da voz. São Paulo: BoiTempo Editorial, 2000: 41-3 and ULHÔA, op. cit., 1997, p. 85. 67 See ULHÔA, Martha Tupinambá de, ibidem, p. 80-100 and ULHÔA, ‘Música Romântica em Montes Claros’. In: REILY, Suzel Ana. British Journal of Ethnomusicology 9/i, 2000. p. 11-40. 29 68 billion people around the world. Looking at the number of sites, 69 blogs and virtual 70 communities of Hermeto's fans in Orkut (with more than sixteen thousand participants) Hermeto would seem to be more comfortable than ever. In facilitating access by Brazilians and others to diverse audiovisual and bibliographic material, the Internet is being utilized by its users as a contemporary strategy of resistance, making it possible, 71 partially, to get around the isolation which the majors and the media in general imposed on musical genres which belong to areas of lower production, sales and consumption, among these being classical music, choro and instrumental music in general, and the music of Hermeto Pascoal in particular. Hermeto stated in a recent interview that the record companies never interfered in the choice of repertoire to be recorded on his discs, and that the problem, in reality, was in inadequate distribution and non-payment of royalties: [The record companies] just use you as catalog, that's all. Then there's a jazz festival, and they put on display the disc by Hermeto Pascoal. And it sells and sells, more than anyone else. Once the festival is over, they collect everything. (...) And they don't pay what they are supposed to pay. (...) Now and then, they send R$100,00, and that's it. I am going to say something light: what the record companies do is nothing more or less than robbery. It's robbery.(...) Everyone can pirate my songs. I will never be against that, because that way it's much easier for people to hear them. What we make is independent music. (FRANÇA, 2004, p. 14) In fact, on various occasions Hermeto recommended that is fans record his shows with home recorders. The lack of distribution on the part of the record companies can easily be noted by those who seek in vain for the records of Hermeto Pascoal on the shelves of stores and at the websites of Brazilian megastores. As research, during the editing of this article I sought 16 discs recorded by Hermeto beginning in 1971*. 68 69 70 71 72 With the See: http://www.hermetopascoal.com.br See: http://www.miscelaneavanguardiosa.blogspot.com See: http://www.orkut.com/Community.aspx?cmm=62155 Educational TV and Rádio MEC represent an exception. As I already mentioned, Hermeto issued in 1999, on the MEC label, the solo CD Eu e eles, on which he plays all the instruments, as well as the CD Mundo Verde Esperança (2002), with the new lineup of the band. 72 In a search done at the beginning of 2008, at the sites of the virtual megastore Submarino and at the specialized megastore Modern Sound. The latter had, in stock, three CDs by Hermeto recorded for Warner Bros. and reissued in Brazil in 2001, because the owner of the store had foresight and bought a relatively large quantity of these three items before the company took them off the market in 2004. 30 exception of two CDs issued by the label of Rádio MEC (1999* e 2002*) and of the independent CD from 2006*, Hermeto's other discs (11 items) are out of print in Brazil and abroad, and the two other titles (1977* and 1987) are only available as imports to Brazil. The growing market for rare vinyl makes a profit on this, but it is in the virtual space of the Internet that Hermeto's work is experiencing a true revival. In addition to the 11 out-of-print discs of the record companies, net users have available various other unpublished recordings and videos of Hermeto and the groups which accompanied 73 him . Considering the decreases in the costs of the technologies of recording, reproduction and the cost of home computers, as well as the global reach of the Internet, and the fact that Pascoal is a composer possessing a vast oeuvre (around 4.200 compositions)74 - of which only a small part was recorded commercially - I believe that the potential for disseminating his music on the Internet is promising. 5 - CONCLUSION - THE COMMONPLACE AND THE "NO-PLACE" These days I understand that the media does not deal with serious work. This is something that is true the world over. This is why great musicians despair. (...) As if people weren't enjoying what they do. I think exactly the opposite. (...) I am with the people who want me. The people who want me are not the ones who are trying to know what they will want. It's the people who want to want. (HERMETO, 1998) Since the first phonograph recordings in Brazil, among them the samba “Pelo telefone” (1916), produced at the sessions of sambistas at the house of Tia Ciata, until the sound files of Hermeto Pascoal and Group, shared over the Internet, popular musicians have been negotiating their place in the Brazilian society of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Crossing the ‘biombos culturais’ which link the rooms of a house, in the same way that they link the house to the street, the city to the farm, the colony to the metropolis, and the local to the international, popular artists make exchanges between heterogeneous musical genres, thus creating new hybrid species. In this urban house with open windows, the musics of the Americas blended with the musics of Africa and Europe, guaranteeing varied mixtures. Folk music, choro, "Hermeto's discs always sell well!" the owner of the store, Pedro Passos Filho, told me. 73 See the list of URLs in the appendix, after the bibliography. 74 See Hermeto in GARCIA, Revista [email protected], p. 27. See http://www.brasilnet.co.uk 31 samba, bossa nova, jovem guarda, MPB, tropicália, música romântica, brega, BRock, the experimental popular music of Hermeto Pascoal, etc. constitute different musical expressions of subjects with distinct regional, class and ethnic identities. These differences, however, do not prevent the various dwellers in the house from exploring their common portion of musical Brazilianity. In spite of the musical diversity of Brazil, only three genres - samba, bossa nova and MPB - are included in the same developmental line, accepted canonically by artists, producers, audience and critics as being the principal tradition of popular music in Brazil. Tropicália is given the role of the rupturer of this tradition through introducing musical elements from pop, rock, jovem guarda and avant-garde classical music, weaving a critical parody of "traditional" Brazilian music. However, at the margin of the official historiography constructed around only three or four musical genres from the southeastern region of Brazil, there exist various other popular musical traditions in the country, and in addition to these, the Brazilian musicians who play non-Brazilian musical genres, such as rock, metal, punk, funk and hip-hop. In reality, the industrial era problematizes the categories "people" and "nation", to the extent that industry promotes a sort of generalized musical de-territorialization, through which national popular music traditions are "media-ized", that is, they are "transplanted and freed from the frontiers of time and space" through "interaction with the system of mass communications" (discs, radio, TV, Internet). Modern transnationalization, since the days of radio and records, tends toward contemporary globalization, with TV and Internet. For this reason, in theory, independent of national musical traditions, any style or genre can be massified 75 by the communications media and become "popular music". Just like his music, Hermeto Pascoal's personality is complex. For Hermeto, the archaic, and the roots of the rural tradition of the Northeast are blended with the 76 languages and customs of modernity and contemporanity. The quote cited at the beginning of this conclusion, where Hermeto states that he is not seeking to please people with his music, demonstrates the combative personality of the Northeastern composer. His discourse of resistance with respect to the consumer society should be 75 See MALM, Krister. “Music on the Move: Traditions and Mass Mídia”, Ethnomusicology v. 37, no. 03 (1993), cited by Ulhôa, op. cit., 1997, p. 85 and see, also, DIAS, op. cit. 76 Hear the song “Linguagens e costumes” (1999*), on which Hermeto utilizes traditional instruments, such as the zabumba, bamboo flute, whistles, and voice, as well as non-conventional sounds, such as toy dolls, in order to create music that is quite experimental and improvised. Hear, also, the song “Mercosom” (1999*), the title of which is a pun on the word ‘Mercosul’. 32 understood as a broad gesture of rebellion and insubordination, which goes beyound the oral, and addresses various aspects of his personality, which are inextricably linked to Hermeto's musical system. Thus, Hermeto's personality, his music, and the context of which it is a part, are three complementary spaces, which interpenetrate each other like conceptual "dividers", allowing the observer to glimpse unsuspected details, which had been barely visible or invisible until then. In this way, the symbolic architecture of Hermeto Pascoal's residence, its geographic location, the social origins of its residents, frequenters, and visitors, its dietary customs, religious practices, the clothes worn, as well as the music produced, are vital aspects of the ethnomusicological analysis of this article. The location of the house in the humble neighborhood of Jabour, in the suburbs of the city of Rio de Janeiro, far from the South Zone, the beaches and the picture-post card views, revealed to Brazilians and non-Brazilians visiting the house another side of Brazil, quite different from the offical side. Going to Jabour to be present at the rehearsals of Hermeto and Group meant re-entering Brazil through the back door, and in this way, to have access to all that which seemed to be repressed by the ethnic and cultural inferiority complex of Brazilian society: popular cooking, the indigenous caboclos indígenas, black slaves, Umbanda, the popular Catholicism of the Northeasts and spiritism, that is, the most important co-ordinates of the syncretic cosmological system of Hermeto, which cohabit and blend in his singular musical system. “I am not going to advertise a sampler manufacturer!”, bellowed Hermeto 77 during a show at the Circo Voador in Rio de Janeiro during the 1980s, while he was whacking his Ensonic keyboard with his shoe, irritated by its delay in loading cartridges with sounds and animal sounds. It was useless for producer and factotum Mauro Wermelinger to get underneath the three-thousand dollar keyboard, supporting it so it would not fall over because of the blows Hermeto was handing out, because shortly there after Hermeto delivered the coup de grace by pouring a glass of beer over the keyboard, which could resist no longer, and was "fried"... The popular tradition of the Northeast, based on family units, the autonomous activity of artisans, seems to partially explain Hermeto's suspicious attitude in facing the technology of samplers, synthesizers and such, as well as his constant rebellion against owners of radio stations, nightspots 77 I note that the Circo Voador was an important space for alternative and independent artists to present their work during the 1980s in Rio de Janeiro. Hermeto and Group performed countless times in this space. 33 and recording companies. With his experimentation based on popular rural traditions of the Northeast, and retaining the autonomy of the accordeonist and farmer who does not see himself as a musical employee, Hermeto refuses to be an easy source of labor for the cultural industry. For this reason he did not choose to become keyboardist for Miles 78 Davis for the transnational Sony label. In the same way, he continues the tradition of making music in the family, setting himself against the anonymous labor force used by industry in forming a community built on ties of place and family with the musicians of 79 the Group in the house in Jabour, from 1981 to 1993. Thus was born the Hermeto Pascoal Family, a community symbolically broadened by the musician in 1996 – when Hermeto turned 60 anos - coming to include all the human beings on the planet through the Calendário do som, according to Hermeto (2000), a musical antidote to violence and wars. His pop look is another characteristic of Hermeto's rebellious and dissonant personality which should not be underestimated. His multi-colored shirts, hats, and long white hair of the albino musician seem to point back to the counterculture and hippies of the 1970s, when Hermeto was in the USA, at the peak of psychodelia, free jazz and experimental classical music. I note that, shortly before his trip to the USA, at the time of the Quarteto Novo and the ideological correctness of the nationalist Geraldo Vandré, Hermeto used to wear a suite and tie and kept his hair quite short. His "new" "1970s" look, added to other unusual factors - such as, for example, the musical use of animal sounds and unconventional sound sources - contributed toward the formation of an "exotic" public image which, on the one hand, gave him fame, and on the other made him a permanent target of criticism from orthodox musicians. Nevertheless, in order to blur categories even further, and shock classical and popular purists, the same irreverent musician who does improvised duets with pigs, dogs, chickens, birds and cicadas, moves freely between the backyard and the concert hall, blending embolada with classical music in compositions for symphony orchestras, big bands, instrumental 80 groups and chamber ensembles in Brazil and abroad. In this sense, much more than 78 Hear the song “Capelinha & Lembranças – dedicada ao irmão de som Miles Davis”, (1999*), in which Hermeto alternates playing the flugelhorn section and acoustic piano, as well as using his voice singing in a pan of water. 79 I thank Prof. Dra. Elizabeth Travassos for her important personal communication relating rural traditions and experimentalism in Hermeto Pascoal. 80 See Hermeto's official site, with passages from songs composed for varied instrumental combinations, as well as the videos posted at YouTube and files made available at 34 mere “exoticism” or “eccentricity”, the clothing of Hermeto is a symbol of the collapse of the composer with musical nationalism, as confirming the statement below: “I do not play Brazilian music. I am Brazilian and very proud for it, but the only label I will ever accept for my music is Universal.”81 It is important to observe that the term Música Universal, with which Hermeto defines his musical system, is ironically the name of the largest recording company on the planet, the Universal Music Corporation. I believe that the concept of "universality" never possessed such opposite meanings. The position of Hermeto Pascoal in the context of the contemporary cultural industry illustrates dramatically the opposition between "art" and "quality" on one side - categories related to the musical field of restricted production, where, among other genres, Hermeto's Música Universal is included - and, on the other hand, "money" and "quantity" - categories related to the musical field of large production, where Universal Music is in the lead. The last disc by Hermeto with the Group which accompanied him from 1981 to 1993 - formed by Itiberê Zwarg, Jovino Santos Neto, Antônio Santana, Márcio Bahia and Carlos Malta - the CD Festa dos deuses (1992), recorded for PolyGram (presently Universal Music), exemplifies the struggle between Hermeto and the majors. Twenty years after having turned down the invitation to be keyboardist in Miles Davis's band for Sony, twelve years after having closed out his contract with Warner Bros. by recording the LP Cérebro Magnético (1980), and after six discs recorded for the independent label Som da Gente, Hermeto saw in the opportunity to record for PolyGram a chance for him and the "boys in the Group" to get some financial return, after a long drought. His dream was to buy, with the proceeds from the new CD, a bus-stage which could take him and the Group throughout Brazil presenting shows. However, his dream for a traveling ensemble did not materialize, nor the expectations of the Group. The recording company delayed the delivery of the CD, and as a consquence when the European tour intended to launch the disc took place (between September and November of 1992) the product was not available for sale. As yet another proof of the lack of interest for their new hire, PolyGram also did 82 not publicize the official show launching the CD at the Sala Cecília Meireles/RJ, nor http://www.miscelaneavanguardiosa.blogspot.com. See the list of URLs in the appendix. 81 Hermeto in SANTOS NETO, op. cit, 2001, p. 8. 82 I note that the Sala Cecília Meireles is a traditional space for classical music in Rio de Janeiro, which on some occasions hosts popular artists playing choro and instrumental music. Hermeto and Group did not perform frequently in this space. 35 83 made the CDs available to be sold at the Sala during the event. This was the straw that broke the camel's back. Feeling that he had been boycotted, Hermeto did not restrain his irritation during the show, and soon thereafter broke his contract with the powerful transnational recording company PolyGram. Thus, several months after these events, and with no prospect of financial survival, this lineup of the Group broke up. After twelve years of working together, and much music, the Feast of the Gods of the Hermeto Pascoal Family had come to an end. I stated early that Hermeto's professional trajectory in the second half of the twentieth century was somewhat "utopian". The word ‘utopia’ can be defined as “nonplace” or “place that does not exist" and is normally used in the sense of a search for an "idealized" and "fantastic" world, different from the "real world". In his utopia, Hermeto refuses the "real world", the "profane world", and struggles to keep intact the singular authenticity of his "sacred" Música Universal, even in the commercial arena of the contemporary cultural industry, where music loses its artistic "aura" in becoming merchandise. Contesting a space in the popular instrumental music scene, which also includes choro, frevo and jazz, and removed from the national-popular tradition built around samba, bossa nova and MPB, as well as from the Tropicalist avant-garde, the composer, arranger, and experimental multi-instrumentalist Hermeto Pascoal, does not represent a commonplace in the popular music of Brazil. Nevertheless, avoiding the transnational recordings companies and majors through a surprising strategy of cultural resistance, the wizard became a part of post-modernity, passed through the ritual of renovation, and found his public once more in "another world", in the virtual space of the Internet. Perhaps, in this way, he who is considered by many to be the greatest living Brazilian instrumental musician, may finally feel himself to be at home. 83 According to the report by Hermeto Pascoal on 04/10/1998 and by Mauro Brandão Wermelinger and Jovino Santos Neto in February 2008. See bibliography/interviews. 36 THE SYMBOLIC ARCHITECTURE OF THE HOUSE OF THE HERMETO PASCOAL FAMILY First floor Second floor Lesser visibility/Silence Greater visibility/Sound Hermeto Pascoal The Group The neighbors “Salon”/ “house” Concert hall/ “street” Composer Performer/Arranger The public, society The regional / the universal The national The international Urban (middle class)/ South Zone Urban (elites) “Natural” “Conventional” “Nature is the day-to-day" Modal and Atonal Tonal Fusion Olho D’água da Canoa (Alagoas, 1936-1950) Recife, Caruaru, São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro (1950-1970) USA, Switzerland, France, Germany, etc. (1970 - ... ) Autonomous accordeonist Hired performer and arranger Contracted and later independent composer Dances and weddings Radio/ Bars/ Night clubs/ Shows/ LPs / TV/ multinationals Majors, independents/ CDs/ DVDs/ Internet/ ‘piracy’ Indigenous and Afro-Brazilian music, folklore: coco, embolada, forró, benditos, incelenças, maracatu, etc Popular – samba, choro, baião, frevo, radio orchestras, regionals, bossa nova, jazz, Quarteto Novo, MPB, Tropicália International - American jazz and free jazz, avant-garde classical music and experimental music, Airto and Flora Purim. Straw hat Suíte and tie, hair quite short Multi-colored shirts, long hair, felt hats Pé-de-bode eight bass accordeon, flauta de mamona, carrillon of pieces of iron, percussion Piano, contrabass, flute, sax, guitar, accordeon, baritone horn, electronic keyboards (DX-7, Fender Rhodes piano), etc. Orchestra and big band on the first disc under his name, from 1972, Hermeto Pascoal: Brazilian Adventure Floriano the parrot, pássaros, the dogs Princesa, Spock, Bolão, the music of speech (“aura music”), nonconventional sound sources Conventional instruments played in unconventional ways, non-conventional percussive sound sources (pots, wooden shoes) Orchestra of tuned bottles on his firs disc, animal sounds, sound objects, "aura music" The kitchen guarded by Dona Ilza The Hermeto Pascoal Family . The and the family made up of the couple “boys” of the Group and the producer and and the six children factotum Mauro Brandão Wermelinger The foreign musicians with whom Hermeto played (Miles Davis), and the Brazilian and international visitors “Back of the house”/ “yard” Rural (lower class)/ West Zone The space outside the house Visible through the windows on the 2nd. floor “Devotion” (“aura”) Commercial arena “Ambition” (merchandise) The hidden - Holy space, popular Catholicism, Afro-Brazilian religions and spiritism. The messages of the "Gift", Universal music The visible, offical Catholicism, Brazilian society, the capitalist system, the multi-national recording companies Profane space, the transnational culture industy, the Universal Music Corporation “Missa dos Escravos”*, “Forró alagoano”*, “Papagaio alegre”, “Ilza na feijoada”, “Aula de natação”, Calendário do som* “Chorinho para ele”*, “Briguinha de músicos malucos”, “Frevo em Maceió”, “Carinhoso”*, “Mestre Radamés” “Zurich”, “Montreux”*, “Arapuá”, “Suite Mundo Grande”, “Sinfonia em quadrinhos”, “Sinfonia do Alto da Ribeira” Dona Ilza's feijoada, on Saturdays, would bring together the whole Família. 37 Acknowledgments I thank to the teacher, musician and producer Mauro Brandão Wermelinger, for the interviews he kindly gave me on 24/01/2008 and 17/02/2008. Pianist and composer Jovino Santos Neto, for the important information sent through the mail. Musician and researcher Ricardo Sá Reston for the data about some pioneering recordings of Hermeto Pascoal, and finally to researcher of Brazilian music, Prof. Dr. Sean Stroud, for his valuable comments of an initial version of this article. 6 – SOURCES 6.1 – BIBLIOGRAPHY ANDRADE, Mário de. Ensaio sobre a música brasileira. Belo Horizonte: Editora Itatiaia, 1928, [2006], 5ª edição. ANDRADE, Oswald de. O manifesto antropófago. In: TELES, Gilberto Mendonça. Vanguarda européia e modernismo brasileiro: apresentação e crítica dos principais manifestos vanguardistas. 3ª ed. Petrópolis: Vozes; Brasília: INL, 1976. ARAÚJO, Paulo César de. Eu não sou cachorro não. Rio de Janeiro: Record, 2005. ____ . Roberto Carlos, em detalhes. São Paulo: Editora Planeta, 2006. BECKER, Howard. “Mundos artísticos e tipos sociais”. In: VELHO, Gilberto (org.). Arte e sociedade – ensaios de sociologia da arte. Rio de Janeiro: Jorge Zahar, 1977, p. 9-25. CALADO, Carlos. O Jazz como espetáculo. São Paulo, Perspectiva. 1990, p. 121-2. ____ . Tropicália: a história de uma revolução musical. São Paulo, Editora 34, 1997, p. 106-13. CAMPOS, Augusto de. Balanço da bossa e outras bossas. São Paulo: Editora Perspectiva, 1993. CAZES, Henrique. Choro, do quintal ao Municipal. São Paulo: Edit. 34, 1998. COSTA-LIMA NETO, Luiz. A música experimental de Hermeto Pascoal e Grupo (1981-1993): concepção e linguagem. Dissertação de mestrado, UNIRIO, 1999. ____ . ‘The experimental music of Hermeto Pascoal e Grupo (1981-1993): a musical system in the making’. In: REILY, Suzel Ana. British Journal of Ethnomusicology, 9/i, “Brazilian Musics, Brazilian identities”. Inglaterra: British Forum for Ethnomusicology 2000, p. 119-142. http://www.open.ac.uk/Arts/music/mclayton/bje9-1finalpdf.PDF CYNTRÃO, Sylvia Helena (org.). A forma da festa, Tropicalismo: a explosão e seus estilhaços. Brasília, Editora UNB, 2000. DAPIEVE, Arthur. BRock: o rock brasileiro dos anos 80. São Paulo: Editora 34, 2000 (5ª edição), [1995], p. 55. 38 DIAS, Márcia Tosta. Os donos da voz: Indústria fonográfica brasileira e mundialização da cultura. São Paulo: Boitempo Editorial, 2000, p. 41-3. FAVARETTO, Celso. Tropicália, alegoria, alegria. São Paulo: Ateliê Editorial, 1996, p. 106. FRANÇA, Inácio. “Hermeto Brasileiro Universal”. Revista Continente, agosto de 2004, p. 8-17. GARCIA, Renata. A música livre de Hermeto Pascoal. Revista [email protected]. Londres, p. 27. GEERTZ, Cliford. A interpretação das culturas. Rio de Janeiro: LTC, 1989, p. 13-41. GONÇALVES, Mário e EDUARDO, Carlos. “Vivendo música”. Rio de Janeiro: Revista Backstage. 1998, 39: 46-57. GRAHAM, Laura R.. Performing Dreams: Discourses of Immortality Among the Xavante of Central Brazil. EUA: University of Texas Press, 1995. MARCONDES, Marcos Antônio et alli. Enciclopédia da música Brasileira, erudita, folclórica e popular. São Paulo: PubliFolha, 1998, p. 606-607. NAPOLITANO, Marcos. A síncope das idéias: a questão da tradição na música popular brasileira. São Paulo: Editora Fundação Perseu Abramo, 2007: 18, 69, 87-98, 114-29. NUNES, Santuza Cambraia. O violão azul. Rio de Janeiro: Fundação Getúlio Vargas, 1998, 1ª edição. NYMAN, Michael. Experimental music: Cage and beyond. London: Studio Vista, 1974. PASCOAL, Hermeto. . Zabumbê-bum-á. Encarte do CD. Brasil: Warner [1979], 2001, CD WEA 092741436-2. ____ . Hermeto e Grupo. Contracapa do LP. Som da Gente, outubro de 1982. ____ . Revista Jazz Magazine, 1984. ____ . Revista Backstage, Áudio/Música/Instrumentos. Rio de Janeiro: H. Sheldon de Mkt., no. 39, fev. 1998, p. 46-59. ____ . Jornal do Brasil. “As máximas do mago”, 19/05/1998. ____ . O Calendário do som. São Paulo: Itaú Cultural / Editora Senac, 2000, p. 16-9. REILY, Suzel Ana. ‘Macunaima’s music: National Identity and Ethnomusicological Research in Brazil’ In: STOKES, Martin (edit.). Ethnicity, Identity and Music, the musical construction of place. Oxford: Berg Publishers, 1994, p. 71-96. ____ . ‘Introduction’, British Journal of Ethnomusicology, 9/i, “Brazilian Musics, Brazilian identities”. British Journal of Ethnomusicology 9/i. Inglaterra: British Forum 39 for Ethnomusicology, 2000, p. 1-10. ____ . Voices of the Magi: Enchanted Journeys in Southeast Brazil. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, Ltd, 2002, p. 11-17. RODRIGUES, Macedo. “Uma música por dia”. Rio de Janeiro: O Globo, 1990, pg. 03. SANDRONI, Carlos. O Feitiço decente: transformações do samba no Rio de Janeiro. Rio de Janeiro: Editora Jorge Zahar, 2001. SANTOS NETO, Jovino. Tudo é som: the music of Hermeto Pascoal. USA: Universal Edition, 2001, p. 5-12. SODRÉ, Muniz. Samba, o dono do corpo. Rio de Janeiro: Editora Mauad, 2007, 2ª. Edição, [1979], p. 9-18. SQUEFF, Enio, WISNIK, Jose Miguel. O Nacional e o Popular na Cultura brasileira. São Paulo: Editora Brasiliense, 1982. STROUD. Sean James. Disco é cultura: MPB and the defense of Tradition in Brazilian Popular Music. Tese de Doutorado. London: King’s College, University of London, 2005. TRAVASSOS, Elizabeth. Comunicação pessoal. ____ . Modernismo e música brasileira. Rio de Janeiro: Jorge Zahar Editor, 2000, p. 08. ____. “O avião brasileiro: a análise de uma embolada”. In: TRAVASSOS, Elizabeth, MATOS, Cláudia Neiva de, e MEDEIROS, Fernanda Teixeira de. Ao encontro da palavra cantada, poesia, música e voz. Rio de Janeiro: 7 Letras, 2001, p. 89-103. TREECE, David. Journal of Latin American Studies no. 35 (reviews). Londres: King’s College, 2003, p. 207-13. ULHÔA, Martha Tupinambá de. “Nova história, velhos sons. Notas para ouvir e pensar a música brasileira popular”. In: Debates: Cadernos do Programa de Pós-Graduação em música. UNIRIO. Rio de Janeiro: 1997, p. 80-100. ____ . ."Música romântica in Montes Claros: inter-gender relations in Brazilian popular song." In: REILY, Suzel Ana, (org.). British Journal of Ethnomusicology 9/i. Inglaterra: British Forum for Ethnomusicology, 2000, p. 11-40. ULLOA, Alejandro. Pagode, a festa do samba no Rio de Janeiro e nas Américas. Rio de Janeiro: MultiMais Editorial, 1998. VIANNA, Hermano. O Mundo funk carioca. Rio de Janeiro: Editora Jorge Zahar, 1988. ____ . O mistério do samba. Rio de Janeiro: Editora Jorge Zahar, 1995. WISNIK, José Miguel. O som e o sentido: uma outra história das músicas. São Paulo: Companhia das Letras, 1999, p. 209-211. 40 6.2 - INTERVIEWS Carlos Malta, 26/03/1998 Hermeto Pascoal, 10/11/1997 e 04/10/1998 Itiberê Zwarg, 04/10/1998 Jovino Santos Neto, 10/06/1997, 18/08/1998, 17/02/2008 e 25/02/2008a Márcio Bahia, 12/02/1998 e 02/10/1998 Mauro Brandão Wermelinger, 24/01/2008 e 17/02/2008a 6.3 - DISCOGRAPHY CITED IN THE ARTICLE Os Cinco-pados. 1964. Heraldo do Monte. Chantecler, CMG 2300. Sambrasa Trio. 1966. Beatles. Sgt. Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band. EMI (1967). Quarteto Novo. CD EMI, EMIBR 827 497-2, [1967]. Natural Feelings. Com Airto e Flora Purim, Buddah Records, 1970. Seeds on the ground. Com Airto e Flora Purim, One way Records, 1971. Hermeto Pascoal: Brazilian Adventure. CD. Muse Records [Cobblestone/Buddah Records], MCD 6006, 1972. A música livre de Hermeto Pascoal. LP PolyGram, PLG BR 8246211, 1973. Slaves Mass. Warner Bros. CD 73752-2, 1977 [2004]. Zabumbê-bum-á. CD WEA Brasil, 1978. Hermeto Pascoal ao vivo em Montreux CD. WEA Brasil, 092741435-2, [1979]. Cérebro magnético. WEA 092741434-2, [1980]. Hermeto Pascoal e Grupo. CD. Som da Gente.SDG 010/92, 1982. Lagoa da Canoa – Município de Arapiraca. CD. Som da Gente, SDG 011/92, 1984. Brasil Universo. CD. Som da Gente, SDG 012/93, 1985. Só não toca quem não quer. CD. Som da Gente. SDG 001/87, 1987. Por diferentes caminhos. Som da Gente, 1989. Mundo Verde Esperança. Não lançado, 1989. 41 Festa dos Deuses. CD. PolyGram, PLGBR 510 407-2, 1992. Eu e eles. CD. Selo Rádio MEC, 1999. Mundo Verde Esperança. CD. Selo Rádio MEC, 2002. Chimarrão com rapadura. CD independente, 2006. Itiberê Orquestra Família. Calendário do Som. CD duplo. Gravadora Maritaca, 2005. 6.4 - DVD KAURISMAKI, Mika. Brasileirinho: grandes encontros do choro contemporâneo. DVD, Rob digital/Studio Uno. 6.5 – URLS http://www.hermetopascoal.com.br http://www.miscelaneavanguardiosa.blogspot.com http://br.youtube.com/watch?v=pnHs057-aqQ http://br.youtube.com/watch?v=2GWO1hW8CIc&feature=related http://br.youtube.com/watch?v=NQ_BiscK9ZE&feature=related http://br.youtube.com/watch?v=SrgveUpwCnM&feature=related http://br.youtube.com/watch?v=lqKMEdCPons&feature=related http://br.youtube.com/watch?v=Y10Ewgcqky8&feature=related http://br.youtube.com/watch?v=W821bgUU_mY&feature=related http://br.youtube.com/watch?v=EPEea11HtTg&feature=related http://br.youtube.com/watch?v=isIUdaxrbdM&feature=related http://br.youtube.com/watch?v=lWixiKYWv1A http://br.youtube.com/watch?v=Le-4C2TqP6k&feature=related http://br.youtube.com/watch?v=8p8C0AfFSQ0&feature=related http://www.camara.gov.br/internet/TVcamara/default.asp?selecao=MAT&velocidade=1 00k&Materia=48715 http://www.camara.gov.br/internet/TVcamara/default.asp?selecao=MAT&velocidade=1 00k&Materia=48949 http://www.camara.gov.br/internet/TVcamara/default.asp?selecao=MAT&velocidade=1 00k&Materia=48950 http://www.orkut.com/CommMsgs.aspx?cmm=10980&tid=2489510022838154349&k 42 w=entrevista http://alltribes.blogspot.com/search/label/HERMETO%20PASCOAL http://www.allmusic.com http://www.memoriamusical.com.br http://www.abracadabra-br.blogspot.com http://www.dicionariompb.com.br http://www.museuvillalobos.org.br/villalob/biografi/villaeua/index.htm http://www.modernsound.com.br/default2.asp http://www.Submarino.com.br http://www.frevo.pe.gov.br/arranjadores.htm http://www.brasil.net.co.uk http://abracadabra-br.blogspot.com/2007/02/os-cinco-pados-os-cinco-pados-1965here.html