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Chico Buarque

 
Artist: Chico Buarque
  • Born: 1944
  • Active: '70s, '80s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Latin
  • Instrument: Vocals
  • Representative Albums: "Construção," "Chico Buarque," "Vida"
  • Representative Songs: "Vai Passar," "Atrás da Porta," "Bárbara"

Biography

Of the early stars of MPB (música popular brasileira), Chico Buarque was one of the first to become a certifiable pop star. With his warm, nasally croon, elegant phrasing, and considerable skill at lyric writing, Buarque (who is handsome to boot) became extremely popular with women, who loved his understated sensuality. However, Buarque was uncomfortable playing the role of pop star preferring to be seen as a serious artist. Throughout his career he's managed to have the best of both worlds, but not without some significant bumps along the way. Still, he remains a towering figure in Brazilian pop music, one of the country's greatest singer/songwriters and interpreters of the samba.

Born in Rio de Janeiro in 1944, Buarque spent his early youth in Sao Paulo and Italy. Upon returning to Brazil, Buarque artistic development was greatly enhanced by the friends of his father (the historian Sergio Buarque de Holanda) who were prominent in the early bossa nova movement. Although he immersed himself in music, specifically the new bossa nova sounds of Joao Gilberto, Buarque decided that a college education was more practical and he decided to study architecture at the University of Sao Paulo. That turned out to be a short-lived career choice and it wasn't long before Buarque was cutting classes and hanging out with Sao Paulo's bossa nova cognoscenti.

Buarque was 21 when his career began to take off. He recorded the single "Pedro Pedreiro," composed music for a theatrical production and, perhaps most importantly, had three of his compositions recorded by the undisputed queen of bossa nova Nara Leao. Not an openly polemical performer, Buarque's material did not lack social consciousness, but it did seem stylistically conservative when compared to the late 60s sounds of the tropicalistas such as Caetano Veloso, Gilberto Gil, and Os Mutantes. Despite the charges of aesthetic conservatism leveled against him (by Gil and Veloso) Buarque took a huge career chance in 1968 writing and scoring a bleak, existential play entitled Roda Viva that was critical of obsessive fan culture. The play's pop star protagonist is torn limb from limb, his flesh consumed by his fans. In a move that sounds lifted from Julian Beck's radical Living Theater, the performers would offer the audience pieces of the dead pop star's flesh to eat (it was chicken meat). Needless to say, with a military dictatorship in power this was considered extremely controversial stuff and soldiers were sent out to disrupt performances of Roda Viva, which including destroying sets and assaulting performers, Buarque himself was jailed briefly.

After the disaster of Roda Viva Buarque returned to Italy for a year only to return to Brazil to find most of the stars of tropicalia in exile or severely circumscribed by government censorship. In 1971 he recorded the album Construction which was decided break from his earlier bossa nova records. This was the star of the second half of Buarque's career that saw him writing more intense songs that underneath each complicated lyrical layer was social and political protest. Forced to submit his material to government censors, nearly two-thirds of his material was rejected. And from 1974-1975 the censors approved almost nothing he wrote. On a more positive note the rift between Buarque, Veloso and Gil was settled upon their return to Brazil in 1972 and Buarque went on to record with both of them in the mid-70s. In the 80s, Buarque was given more compositional leeway and recorded some stunning music, along with branching out into other artist endeavors that included writing plays and novels, as well as scoring films, all of this work consistent with his desire to re-examine Brazil's cultural past, it relationship with the present, and its limitless possibilities for the future.

For over 30 years Chico Buarque has been an artist that struggled with pop music and pop stardom. Always challenging, always conscious of cultural history, he remains, deservedly so, a towering figure in Brazilian music. ~ John Dougan, All Music Guide
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Discography: Chico Buarque
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Chico Buarque (Morros Dois Irmanos)

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Chico Buarque (Morros Dois Irmanos)

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Convite Para Ouvir...

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Revisitado 70-84

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Carioca [Bonus DVD]

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Pérolas

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Gold

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20 Preferidas

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Chico Ou O Pais da Delicadeza Perdida

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Construcao [Box Set]

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En Español

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Francisco [Bonus DVD]

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Sambista

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Melhores Momentos De Chico & Caetano

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Melhores Momentos De Chico & Caetano

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Favourites

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Chico Buarque de Mangueira 1998

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Cronista

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Amante

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Anos Dourados/Estacao

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Chico Buarque de Hollanda, No. 4 [Japan]

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Serie Sem Limite

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Duetos

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Classic Years

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Minha Historia

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Sinal Fechado

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Almanaque

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Chico 50 Años: O Politico

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Chico 50 Años: O Malandro

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Chico 50 Años: O Trovador

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Malandro [14 Track]

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Malandro [14 Track]

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Ópera Do Malandro

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Batidores

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Para Todos

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Songbook

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Carioca

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Vai Passar

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Essencial

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Primeiros Anos

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Cinema/Saltimbancos/Roda Viva

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Cinema

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Roda Viva

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Saltimbancos

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Clasico/03

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Brazilian Collection

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Instrumental

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Arte de Chico Barque

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Perfil

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Uma Palavra [DVD]

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Anos Dourados

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Estação Derradeira

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Futebol

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Romance

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Novo Millennium

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As Cidades

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Millennium: Chico Buarque

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Per un Pugno Di Samba

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Sonho de Um Carnaval

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As Cidades Ao Vivo

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Romance/O Futebol/Uma Palavra

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Uma Palavra

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Uma Palavra

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Edu Lobo Cambaio

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Antologia

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Chico E As Cidades

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Ao Vivo [1999]

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Ao Vivo [1999]

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Focus [BMG]

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Chico Buarque Songbook, Vol. 5

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Ao Vivo Paris Le Zenith

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Ao Vivo Paris Le Zenith

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Chico Buarque

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Vida

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Francisco

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Francisco

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Chico Buarque (Feijoada Completa)

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Meus Caros Amigos

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Chico Buarque & Maria Bethania Ao Vivo

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Quando o Carnaval Chegar

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Construção

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Chico Buarque de Hollanda, No. 4

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Chico Total

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Chico Buarque Songbook, Vol. 6

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Chico Buarque Storybook, Vol. 8

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Chico Buarque (Pelas Tabelas)

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Chico Buarque de Hollanda

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Wikipedia: Chico Buarque
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Chico Buarque

Chico Buarque performs in 2007
Background information
Birth name Francisco Buarque de Hollanda
Also known as Chico Buarque
Born June 19, 1944 (1944-06-19) (age 65)
Origin Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Occupations Singer, songwriter, writer, Poet, playwright
Instruments Voice, guitar
Years active 1962–present
Website http://www.chicobuarque.com.br

Francisco Buarque de Hollanda (born June 19, 1944 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil), popularly known as Chico Buarque, is a singer, guitarist, composer, dramatist, writer and poet. He is best known for his music, which often includes social, economic and cultural commentary on Brazil and Rio de Janeiro in particular.

Son of the academic Sérgio Buarque de Hollanda, Buarque lived in several locations throughout his childhood, though mostly in Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo and Italy. He wrote and studied literature as a child and came to music through the bossa nova compositions of João Gilberto. He performed music throughout the 1960s as well as writing a play that was deemed dangerous by the Brazilian military dictatorship of the time. Buarque, along with several of his fellow musicians, were threatened by the government and eventually left Brazil in 1970. He moved to Italy again. However, he came back to Brazil in 1971, one year before the others, and continued to record albums, perform, and write, though much of his material was not allowed by government censors. He released several more albums in the 1980s and published three novels in the 1990s and 2000s, all of which were acclaimed critically.

Contents

Biography

Buarque came from a privileged intellectual family background—his father Sérgio Buarque de Holanda was a well-known historian, sociologist and journalist and his mother Maria Amélia Cesário Alvim was a painter and pianist. He is also brother of the singer Miucha. As a child, he was impressed by the musical style of bossa nova, specifically the work of Tom Jobim and João Gilberto. He was also interested in writing, composing his first short story at 18 years old[1] and studying European literature, also at a young age.[2] One of his most consuming interests, however, was playing soccer, beginning at age four, which he still does today.[2] Though he was born in Rio de Janeiro, Buarque spent much of his childhood in Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo and Italy.

Before becoming a musician, Buarque decided at one point to study architecture at the University of São Paulo, but this choice did not lead to a career in that field; for Buarque often skipped classes.[3]

He made his public debut as musician and composer in 1964, rapidly building his reputation at music festivals and television variety shows when bossa nova rhythm came to light and Nara Leão recorded three of his songs.[3] His eponymous debut album exemplified his future work, with catchy sambas characterized by inventive wordplay and an undercurrent of nostalgic tragedy. Buarque had his first hit with "A Banda" in 1966, written about a marching band, and soon released several more singles.[2] Although playing bossa nova, during his career, samba and Música Popular Brasileira would also be widely explored. Despite that, Buarque was criticized by two of the leading musicians at the time,Caetano Veloso and Gilberto Gil as they believed his musical style was overly conservative.[3] However, an existentially themed play that Buarque wrote and composed in 1968, Roda Viva ("Live Cycle"), was frowned upon by the military government and Buarque served a short prison sentence because of it.[3] He left Brazil for Italy for 18 months in 1970, returning to write his first novel in 1972, which was not targeted by censors.[1]

At this time his thinly-veiled protest single "Apesar de Você" ("In spite of You" --in reference to the military dictatorship)was also produced. [4] ("In spite of you") was overlooked by the military censors, becoming an important anthem in the democratic movement. After selling over 100,000 copies, the single was eventually censored and removed from the market. At one point in 1974, the censors banned any song authored by Chico Buarque. Then, he created a pseudonym, naming himself "Julinho da Adelaide", complete with life history and interviews to newspapers. "Julinho de Adelaide" authored songs such as "Jorge Maravilha" and "Acorda amor" before he was outed in Jornal do Brasil news story.[5] Buarque also wrote a play named Calabar, about the Dutch invasion of Brazil in the seventeenth century, drawing parallels with the military regime.[6] Despite the censorship, songs such as "Samba de Orly" (1970), "Acorda amor" (1974, as "Julinho da Adelaide") manifested Buarque's continuing opposition to the military regime.

During the 1970s and 1980s, he collaborated with filmmakers, playwrights, and musicians in further protest works against the dictatorship. Buarque approached the 1983 Concert for Peace in Nicaragua as a valid forum to vocalize his strong political views. Throughout the decade, he crafted many of his songs as vehicles to describe the re-democratization of Brazil. The Concert for Peace in Nicaragua was one in a concert series known as the "Central American Peace Concerts." These concerts featured various Latin American artists. The political turmoil that plagued this era were expressed in many of Buarque's songs.[7][8] He later wrote Budapeste, a novel that achieved critical national acclaim and won the Prêmio Jabuti,[9] a Brazilian literary award comparable to the Man Booker Prize.

"Cálice"

During Brazil's military coup d'état of 1964, Buarque wrote about the events which transpired and avoided censorship by using cryptic analogies and wordplay. For example, in the song "Cálice" ("Chalice", or Jesus' Last Supper "Cup") he takes advantage of the homophony between the Portuguese imperative "shut your mouth" --cale-se-- and "chalice" --cálice-- to protest censorship against freedom of speech by the dictatorship, disguised as the Gospel narrative of Jesus' Gethsemani prayer to the Father to pass from Him the chalice of bloody death probation:

Lyrics (in Portuguese)

Pai, afasta de mim esse cálice
De vinho tinto de sangue.
Como beber dessa bebida amarga
Tragar a dor, engolir a labuta.
Mesmo calada a boca, resta o peito
Silêncio na cidade não se escuta.
De que me vale ser filho da santa
Melhor seria ser filho da outra
Outra realidade menos morta
Tanta mentira, tanta força bruta.

Como é difícil acordar calado
Se na calada da noite eu me dano
Quero lançar um grito desumano
Que é uma maneira de ser escutado
Esse silêncio todo me atordoa
Atordoado eu permaneço atento
Na arquibancada pra qualquer momento
Ver emergir o monstro da lagoa

De muito gorda a porca já não anda
De muito usada a faca já não corta
Como é difícil, pai, abrir a porta
Essa palavra presa na garganta
Esse pileque homérico no mundo
De que adianta ter boa vontade
Mesmo calado o peito, resta a cuca
Dos bêbados do centro da cidade

Talvez o mundo não seja pequeno
Nem seja a vida um fato consumado
Quero inventar o meu próprio pecado
Quero morrer do meu próprio veneno
Quero perder de vez tua cabeça
Minha cabeça perder teu juízo
Quero cheirar fumaça de óleo diesel
Me embriagar até que alguém me esqueça

Translation

Father, pass away from me this chalice
of wine tinted with blood!
How to survey this bitter drink
Inhale the pain, swallow the drudgery.
Even if the mouth is shut, the heart still remains
Silence in the city is not heard.
For what is it worth for me to be the son of the holy mother
Best were I born to another one
Another reality less lethal
Without so many lies and repression.

How hard it is to wake up and notice you cannot open your mouth
If I pang in the quiet of night
I desire to release a wild scream
Which would be a way to be heard
All of this silence makes me dizzy
Dazed, I remain attentive
In the expectation of, at any moment,
To see the monster of the lake emerge

From so much fat, the hog no longer walketh
From so much use, the knife hath gone dull
How hard it is, father to open the door
With this word stuck in the throat
This Homeric world drunkeness
What's the advantage of having good will?
Even if the heart is silenced, consciousness remains
Of all the drunkards in the center of the city

Perhaps the world isn't that small
Nor is life a consummated fact
I desire to invent my own sin
I wanna die from my own poison!
And disconnect my mind from yours once and for all!
May my head lose your way of thinking
I wanna sniff diesel fume
And get intoxicated until I'm forgotten!

Discography

  • 1966: Chico Buarque de Hollanda (Vol. 1)
  • 1966: Morte e Vida Severina
  • 1967: Chico Buarque de Hollanda (Vol. 2)
  • 1968: Chico Buarque de Hollanda (Vol. 3)
  • 1969: Umas e outras - compacto
  • 1969: Chico Buarque na Itália
  • 1970: Apesar de você
  • 1970: Per un pugno di samba
  • 1970: Chico Buarque de Hollanda (Vol. 4)
  • 1971: Construção
  • 1972: Quando o carnaval chegar
  • 1972: Caetano e Chico juntos e ao vivo
  • 1973: Chico canta
  • 1974: Sinal fechado
  • 1975: Chico Buarque & Maria Bethânia ao vivo
  • 1976: Meus caros amigos
  • 1977: Cio da Terra compacto
  • 1977: Os saltimbancos
  • 1977: Gota d'água
  • 1978: Chico Buarque (Samambaia)
  • 1979: Ópera do Malandro
  • 1980: Vida
  • 1980: Show 1º de Maio compacto
  • 1981: Almanaque
  • 1981: Saltimbancos trapalhões
  • 1982: Chico Buarque en espanhol
  • 1983: Para viver um grande amor
  • 1983: O grande circo místico
  • 1984: Chico Buarque (Vermelho)
  • 1985: O Corsário do rei
  • 1985: Ópera do malandro
  • 1985: Malandro
  • 1986: Melhores momentos de Chico & Caetano
  • 1987: Francisco
  • 1988: Dança da meia-lua
  • 1989: Chico Buarque
  • 1990: Chico Buarque ao vivo Paris le Zenith
  • 1993: Para Todos
  • 1995: Uma palavra
  • 1997: Terra
  • 1998: As cidades
  • 1998: Chico Buarque da Mangueira
  • 1999: Chico ao vivo
  • 2001: Chico e as cidades (DVD)
  • 2001: Cambaio
  • 2002: Chico Buarque – Duetos
  • 2003: Chico ou o país da delicadeza perdida (DVD)
  • 2005: Meu Caro Amigo (DVD)
  • 2005: A Flor da Pele (DVD)
  • 2005: Vai passar (DVD)
  • 2005: Anos Dourados (DVD)
  • 2005: Estação Derradeira (DVD)
  • 2005: Bastidores (DVD)
  • 2006: O Futebol (DVD)
  • 2006: Romance (DVD)
  • 2006: Uma Palavra (DVD)
  • 2006: Carioca (CD + DVD with the documentary Desconstrução)
  • 2007: Carioca Ao Vivo

Other works

Books
  • 1966: A Banda (Songbook)
  • 1974: Fazenda Modelo
  • 1979: Chapeuzinho Amarelo
  • 1981: A Bordo do Rui Barbosa
  • 1991: Estorvo
  • 1995: Benjamin
  • 2003: Budapeste
  • 2009: Leite Derramado
Plays
  • 1967/8: Roda Viva
  • 1973: Calabar (coauthored with Ruy Guerra)
  • 1975: Gota d'água
  • 1978: Ópera do Malandro (based on John Gay's Beggar's Opera and Bertold Brecht's Threepenny Opera)
  • 1983: O Grande Circo Místico
Film
  • 1972: Quando o carnaval chegar (coauthor)
  • 1983: Para viver um grande amor (coauthor)
  • 1985: Ópera do Malandro
  • 2009: Budapeste (based on his book)

References

  1. ^ a b Hunt, Jemima (2004-07-18). "The lionised king of Rio". The Observer (Guardian Media Group). http://books.guardian.co.uk/departments/generalfiction/story/0,,1263492,00.html. Retrieved 2008-03-24. 
  2. ^ a b c de Haan, Maarten (August 2006). "Chico Buarque". Artist Interviews. http://www.artistinterviews.eu/?page_id=12&parent_id=22/. Retrieved 2008-03-24. 
  3. ^ a b c d Dougan, John. "Biography". Allmusic. All Media Guide. http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:aifwxqw5ldje~T1. Retrieved 2008-03-23. 
  4. ^ de Sousa, Dolores Puga Alves (October/November/December 2004). "Os Sessenta Anos de um Artista: "Chico Buarque do Brazil", Organização de Rinaldo de Fernandes" (in Portuguese). Fênix: Revista de História e Estudos Culturais 1 (1). ISSN 1807-6971. 
  5. ^ Motta, Nelson (2000) (in Portuguese). Noites Tropicais - Solos, Improvisos e Memórias Musicais. Rio de Janeiro, Brazil: Editora Objetiva. ISBN 85-7302-292-2. 
  6. ^ Martins, Christian Alves (July/August/September 2007). "Tempos de Intolerância: Chico conta Calabar" (in Portuguese). Fênix: Revista de História e Estudos Culturais 4 (3). ISSN 1807-6971. http://www.revistafenix.pro.br/vol1christian.php?PHPSESSID=7ea35a2912813498997d554b31e66f3a. Retrieved 2008-03-23. 
  7. ^ Béhague, Gerard (Spring/Summer 2006). "Rap, Reggae, Rock, or Samba: The Local and the Global in Brazilian Popular Music (1985–95)". Latin American Music Review 27 (1): 79–90. doi:10.1353/lat.2006.0021. http://muse.jhu.edu/login?uri=/journals/latin_american_music_review/v027/27.1behague08.html. 
  8. ^ Gonzalez, Mike (May 1987). "April in Managua: The Central American Peace Concert". Popular Music 6 (2): 247–249. doi:10.1017/S0261143000006061. http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0261-1430(198705)6%3A2%3C247%3AAIMTCA%3E2.0.CO%3B2-Z. 
  9. ^ "Chico Buarque ganha Prêmio Jabuti com Budapeste" (in Portuguese). O Globo (Câmara Brasileira do Livro). 2004-09-10. http://www.cbl.org.br/content.php?recid=1342&type=N. Retrieved 2008-03-23. 

External links


 
 
Learn More
Caetano e Chico: Ao Vivo na Bahia (1972 Album by Caetano Veloso e Chico Buarque)
Pano Pra Manga (1996 Album by Rosa Passos)
Francisco [Bonus DVD] (2004 Album by Chico Buarque)

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