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Os Paralamas do Sucesso

 
Artist: Os Paralamas do Sucesso

Group Members:

Joao Barone, Vital Dias, Herbert Vianna, George Israel, Joao "Fera" Gonsalves, Bi Ribeiro

Similar Artists:

Performed Songs By:

Herbert Vianna, Bi Ribeiro
  • Formed: 1981, Seropédica, Rio de Janeiro, Brazi
  • Genres: Latin
  • Representative Albums: "Arquivo", "Acústico", "Ao Vivo Vamo Batê Lata

Biography

The most successful band in Brazilian rock, Os Paralamas (or Os Paralamas do Sucesso profited from the early experiences of previous bands, consolidating the prosperity of the genre and also opening the way for other groups. With 12 albums released in Brazil and two in Argentina, some of these reaching the one-million mark, the band also has a noted international career.

Paralamas do Sucesso were formed in 1982 by bassist Bi Ribeiro (Felipe Ribeiro, born in 1961, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil), guitarist/vocalist Herbert Vianna (born in 1961, João Pessoa, PB), and drummer Vital Dias, who was replaced the next year by João Barone (born in 1962, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil). The focus of the band was reggae and ska with a rock background.

Ribeiro and Vianna, who lived in Brasília, DF, were acquainted with each other from a young age. Vianna liked to play the electric guitar, but Ribeiro wasn't a musician at the time. In 1978, at 16, Vianna's family came to Rio with him, and Ribeiro arrived the next year. Vianna insisted that Ribeiro buy an electric bass, inviting a high school mate (at the Bahiense), Vital Dias, for the drums. With the three of them enrolling in college in 1980, their rehearsals became sparse. The end of that year found them disenchanted with their undergraduate courses, and they turned to music, inscribing their trio under the name Os Paralamas do Sucesso at the festival of the Universidade Federal Rural do Rio de Janeiro (were Ribeiro was studying) in mid-1981. "Vital e Sua Moto" was one of the registered songs, but all three weren't classified. Even then, they were allowed to play in the breaks, but drummer Dias had abandoned the scene, leaving room for João Barone, who studied zootechnics there. On September 17, 1982, the trio played the same University again, where Dias and Barone were to take turns at the drums. But Dias, probably believing he was not up for the competition, abandoned the setting and the band after two songs.

In late November, the band opened at the Western bar in Rio. At that time they already had some originals, and included Renato Russo's (a friend from Brasília times) songs, like "Química." The response was good, and they recorded their first demo. After trying some vocalists, Vianna decided to take control of the vocal parts. The demo spun quite a bit on the Fluminense FM program Maldita (a radio program that specialized in rock), and the band yielded a packed house in their second season at the Western and an invitation to open a Lulu Santos show at the Circo Voador the following month.

At that point they received invitations from three recording companies -- Warner, Polygram, and EMI-Odeon -- signing with the latter in April and releasing their first single, "Vital e Sua Moto," in June. The song sold 11,000 copies and before the end of the year, their first LP, Cinema Mudo, was released. The trio later regretted doing the album; at the time, they couldn't fight the producer, who decided to top it with keyboards and guitars. But they went on, opening at the New York nightclub Danceteria in that year. O Passo do Lui, released in August 1984, solidified their connections with the new wave reggae proposed by the Police and the English bands Madness and the Beat, among others. The album had the hits "Óculos," "Assaltaram a Gramática," and "Romance Ideal." The band immediately began to play to larger audiences, like the presentation at Barrashopping's Sextas Musicais when they played for 5,000 people, soon followed by the Rock in Rio Festival (January 1985), an event attended by around 250,000 people on each of its five nights. Here, they performed two shows: on January 13 and 15. On June 15 of that year, they did two performances for 17,000 people each at the Gigantinho, in Porto Alegre, RS, receiving in that night the gold record for selling 100,000 copies of O Passo do Lui. In March 1986, they did the first of many Argentinean tours, playing at the Chateau Rock Festival (Cordoba) and at the Paradis nightclub in Buenos Aires. Selvagem, their next album, was released on July 30, 1986. The album, which had been distributed to stores 45 days before, had already sold 300,000 copies.

The international career of the band, the most expressive until then in the Brazilian rock scene, exploded with another tour to Buenos Aires, Argentina, in the same year, followed by Spain, Paraguay, Uruguay, Portugal, Chile, France, and Switzerland, where, at the Montreux festival on July 4, 1987, they recorded their first live album, D. The album had, along with the keyboard of João "Fera" Gonçalves, George Israel's (Kid Abelha) sax, foretelling a phase where brass sections and keyboard would be incorporated in the Paralamas' sound. The year finished with a prime-time special about the band released by the second largest TV network in Brazil, SBT.

1988 brought an invitation for the band to open a Tina Turner show in Buenos Aires on January 3. Four days later, they opened for UB40 and Simple Minds at Rio's Hollywood Rock festival. In February the band, together with Fera and a brass section (and participation by Charly Garcia) recorded Bora Bora, released on May 27. The band continued to regularly release albums in the late '80s and '90s: Big Bang, 1989; Arquivo, 1990; Os Grãos, 1991; Severino, 1993; Vamo Batê Lata, 1995; Nove Luas, 1996; and Hey Na Na, 1998. In Argentina, the band, highly regarded, released two albums in the '90s which sold very well -- Paralamas and Dos margaritas -- continuing to perform for large audiences there. Vamo Batê Lata, a live CD, sold 800,000 copies in Brazil. In 1997 a box set was released entitled A Pólvora featuring the band's first eight CDs, and a remastering of Abbey Road. Hey Na Na sold one million copies before its release. ~ Alvaro Neder, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Os Paralamas do Sucesso
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Os Paralamas do Sucesso

Os Paralamas do Sucesso performing live in Brasília, on October 2008.
Background information
Origin Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Genres Brazilian rock
New Wave
Post-punk
Reggae
Ska
Years active 1977 - present
Labels EMI
Website Official website
Members
Herbert Vianna
Bi Ribeiro
João Barone
Former members
Vital Dias

Os Paralamas do Sucesso is a Brazilian rock band, formed in Rio de Janeiro in the late 1970s and still active as of 2009. The band are considered one of the "Big Four" of Brazilian rock bands from the 80's, along with Barão Vermelho, Legião Urbana and Titãs. From its very beginning, the band combined reggae with rock, influenced by The Police in the early '80s. Later on, they added horn arrangements and Latin rhythms.

Contents

Influence on Brazilian Rock

In the years of 1987–88, Afro-Bahian rhythms began to influence some of the main bands of Brazilian rock, notably Os Paralamas do Sucesso, creating a break with the original English-oriented, white rock that influenced national groups. [1] The were able to criticize English neocolonialism while they simultaneously created new opportunities for Brazilian rock and a more genuinely national product. Movement toward the “black sound” also followed the explosion of funk, hip-hop, and rap internationally. [1] Throughout its 20 years of existence, the band has kept a regular production of albums and hits, including a few polemic works, such as the song "Luís Inácio (300 Picaretas)" which criticized the Brazilian Congress. [2] The band was able to overcome adversity and make a new sound for Brazilian hip-hop and funk. They are still working today and continue to produce records.

History

1977-1983: The Beginning

Although considered part of the "Gang from Brasília", because they lived there and befriended the local bands, the band's proper birthplace was Rio de Janeiro. Herbert Vianna and Felipe "Bi" Ribeiro were childhood friends and neighbors (Herbert's father was in the military, while Bi's was a diplomat). In 1977, Herbert went to Rio to attend military school, and met Bi once again. They decided to start a band, Herbert with his Fender Stratocaster and Bi (who had no musical training) a bass guitar bought during a trip to England. To the duo, Vital Dias, the drummer, would be added. The group parted ways in 1979 around the time they were busy with university admittance tests, but reunited in 1981.

The trio rehearsed in Bi's grandmother's house (which provided inspiration the song "Vovó Ondina é Gente Fina"; meaning "Grandma Ondina's Really Cool") and in a small farm in Mendes, and performed in small venues. The setlist was not serious (with songs like "Pingüins Já Não Os Vejo Porque Não Está na Estação", meaning "I No Longer See Penguins, Because They're Out of Season"), and tried to create a name in the same spirit, the first suggestion being "As Cadeirinhas da Vovó", or "Grandma's Little Chairs". The name "Paralamas do Sucesso" (meaning "Mudflaps of Success") was coined by Bi, and adopted because everyone thinks it funny. In the beginning, Herbert only played guitar and the group had two lead singers, Ronel e Naldo, who left in 1982.

In 1982, Vital was a no-show at a gig and was replaced permanently by João Barone. Vital would later lend his name to the song "Vital e sua Moto", and sent a cassette containing that song and another three to Rádio Fluminense FM Station, a station that was the first to broadcast many bands that would eventually achieve national recognition in Brazil. "Vital" received substantial airplay in the summer of 83, And the Paralamas made their first major appearance opening for Lulu Santos, another popular singer of their generation in the Circo Voador. They also signed a contract with the Brazilian EMI, recording their first album Cinema Mudo (defined by Herbert as "manipulated by the record company people"), and a moderate success.

1984-1990: Breakthrough

In 1984, the album O Passo do Lui, who had an enormous hits sequence (as "Óculos" [Glasses], "Me Liga" [Call Me], "Meu Erro [My Mistake], "Romance Ideal" [Ideal Romance] and "Ska"), was released, leading the band to perform at Rock in Rio. O Passo do Lui is their most critically acclaimed and generally considered their first actual album. Latter on, in 1985, Os Paralamas took part on the gigantic Rock in Rio Concert, where the songs form O Passo do Lui catapulted around the country due to the massive exposure on that stage...

In 1986 they released Selvagem?, an album contrived to escape from the "easy formula" of their last work, since the record company expected them to repeat their recent success on the following work. The album - produced by master mind of Brazilain Rock Liminha (former bass player of legendary OS Mutantes) - incorporated a bold mixture of Reggae, Rock and Afro rhythms, surprisingly becoming their best selling album. Selvagem? generated the hits: "Alagados" (name of a notorious slum_shanty town in Salvador, Bahia), featuring Gilberto Gil and "Melô do Marinheiro" (Rime of the Sailor) as well as "A Novidade" (written by Gil himself) and a cover version of Tim Maia's (Brazilain Black Music Guru) hit "Você". Selvagem? was acclaimed as the most audacious move on the Brazilian Rock scene at that time and is even today recognized as one of the most influential albums in the history of the band and the Brazilian Rock scene. Later that year, Os PAralamas incorporated João Fera - an old friend of João Barone - as the keyboard player of the band.

In 1987, they released D, which was recorded live at the Montreux Jazz Festival in Switzerland. After Montreux, Os Paralamas also played The Olympia France and they toured South America, becoming popular in Argentina, Chile, Uruguay and Venezuela.

They followed Selvagem? up with Bora-Bora (1988), which introduced the use of piano, horns and samplers . The album has social-political songs as "O Beco" (The Alley) and more introspective ones as "Quase Um Segundo" (Almost One Second). Bora-Bora is the first of several attempts of the band in self producing their recordings.

Big Bang (1989) continued in the same vein, with 'happy' songs with a deep social critical messages, like "Perplexo" (Perplexed) and poetical/lyrical ones as "Lanterna dos Afogados" (Lighthouse of the Drowned). Next they released their first compilation Arquivo in 1990, which feature a new version of "Vital e Sua Moto" (Vital and His Motorcycle) - Vital 1990 - and an unreleased song "Caleidoscópio" (Kaleidoscope), that got massive radio play.

1991-1994: Success, only in Argentina

The first half of the 90’s would be dedicated to the experiment and the conquest of the Latin American market. The album Os Grãos (1991, with songs of minor popular appeal, was not a sales success, but it did not affect the band itself. Herbert, Bi and Barone spent three months in London with the producer Phil Manzanera recording Severino (1994), considered by many revewers the “Sgt. Pepper's of 80’s generation” of the Brazilian Rock. In despite of that, the radios did not play the album and the exit for Paralamas was the airport.

In 1992, they released in the Latin American countries the compilation Paralamas, with versions in Spanish of their hits, what opened for them the markets that they had been visiting repeatedly since 1986. They started being each time more requested for shows, due to the great success of the Spanish version of Severino baptized Dos Margaritas.

1995-2000: Back to the hit parades

But the excellent tour of Severino throughout Brazil confirmed that Paralamas does not need to have a song on the hit parades to attract the audience, so they decided to release Vamo Batê Lata (1995). Attached there was a four track bonus CD. The explosion of one of tracks Uma Brasileira, a Herbert and Carlinhos Brown partnership, with the special participation of Djavan, led the trio back to the mega success. A second song Luiz Inácio (300 picaretas) would lead the band to the politician news after being forbidden to play it in a show in Brasilia, under allegation that the song wounded the honor of the noble members of the Chamber House. The song referred to a declaration of the current Brazilian president, at the time a Federal Deputy, that in the National Congress there were some honored men and 300 tramps. Herbert detonated the political class at that time.

In 1995, Paralamas initiated a pull in the MTV Video Music Brazil that would take them to gather up 11 prizes up to 1999. In that year, the video Uma Brasileira got the awards for the best pop video and the video of the audience.

From there on Paralamas sailed in the rhythm of success with two more studio albums: Nove Luas (1996) – with the tracks Lourinha Bombril (awarded with the best video of the year, best edition and direction in the MTV Video Music Brazil (VMB) and Busca Vida (best video of the year in the VMB) – and Hey Na Na (1998) – with the tracks Ela Disse Adeus (five awards in the VMB: best video of the year, best pop video, best direction, photograph and direction of art) and O Amor não Sabe Esperar with the participation of Marisa Monte. The video Depois da Queda o Coice gained the VMB for the best edition.

In 1999, it was the time for a project that they have dreamt of during the entire decade, the album MTV Unplugged. Instead of making a revision of their career through the successes, they opted by a repertoire dominated by significant songs that had not received the due attention (Bora Bora, Vai Valer and Trem da Juventude) with homage to Chico Science and the group Legião Urbana, the new song Sincero Breu and Um Amor Um Lugar, recorded before by Fernanda Abreu. The CD sold more than 500 thousand copies and gained the Latin Grammy for the best Brazilian rock album.

The victorious Unplugged tour was extended until the end of 2000, when the trio released the compilation Arquivo II, that brought the unpublished Aonde quer que eu vá, a Herbert Vianna and Pablo Sergio Valle partnership, one of the great composers of the Brazilian Popular Music (MPB).

At that time, Paralamas announced a six month stop for vacations and a reformulation in the sound of the group, after almost two decades of career. The plans pointed to a new rock album and, primordially, in trio.

2001-2006: An accident, not the end

This CD was recorded and is titled Longo Caminho [Long Way], but the tragic accident that Herbert suffered on February 4 2001, left the Brazilian music in mourning. The fall of the small plane in the Angra dos Reis Bay, Rio de Janeiro, when he was on the way to Dado Villa Lobos home, killed his wife, Lucy Needham Vianna and it left him between life and death. The entire country followed Herbert’s fight for survival in the hospital Copa D’Or, in Copacabana, Rio de Janeiro.

It has been a difficult journey due to his partial recovery since the accident: Herbert is in a wheel chair and has not yet fully recovered from nerve and brain damage. Despite all handicaps, his musical talent was not incapacitated and, on October 2002, he started rehearsals with the complete band in his home studio. The result was so good that it led, gradually, to the new CD with songs composed before the accident.

In 2005 they released Hoje [Today].

In 2009 they released Brasil Afora [Around Brazil], which was first avaitable for digital download (with one song to me) and soon after released on CD.

Discography

Studio albums

Live albums

Compilations

Singles

Year Single Album
1984 "Óculos" O Passo do Lui
"Meu Erro" O Passo do Lui
"Ska" O Passo do Lui
1985 "Me Liga" O Passo do Lui
1986 "Alagados" Selvagem?
"Você" Selvagem?
"Melô do Marinheiro" Selvagem?
1988 "Quase Um Segundo" Bora-Bora
"O Beco" Bora-Bora
1990 "Lanterna dos Afogados" Big Bang
1991 "Tendo a Lua" Os Grãos
1992 "Sábado" Os Grãos
1996 "La Bella Luna" Nove Luas
"Lourinha Bombril" Nove Luas
2002 "O Calibre" Longo Caminho
"Cuide Bem do Seu Amor" Longo Caminho
2004 "Uns Dias" (feat. Frejat) Uns Dias Ao Vivo
2009 "A Lhe Esperar" Brasil Afora
"Meu Sonho" Brasil Afora

Awards

Latin Grammy Awards

Prêmio Multishow de Música Brasileira

MTV Video Music Brasil

  • 1995: Best Pop Video - "Uma Brasileira" [10]
  • 1995: Viewer's Choice - "Uma Brasileira" [10]
  • 1996: Video of the Year - "Lourinha Bombril" [11]
  • 1996: Best Video Director - "Lourinha Bombril" [11]
  • 1996: Best Edited Video - "Lourinha Bombril" [11]
  • 1997: Video of the Year - "Busca Vida" [12]
  • 1998: Video of the Year - "Ela Disse Adeus" [13]
  • 1998: Best Video Director - "Ela Disse Adeus" [13]
  • 1998: Best Art Direction - "Ela Disse Adeus" [13]
  • 1998: Best Photography - "Ela Disse Adeus" [13]
  • 1998: Best Pop Video - "Ela Disse Adeus" [13]
  • 1999: Best Edited Video - "Depois da Queda o Coice" [14]
  • 2008: Dream Band - Bi Ribeiro (bass) and João Barone (drums) [15]
  • 2009: Best Live Performance [16]

Line-up

Since 1983 the line-up of the band consists of:

References

  1. ^ a b Behague, Gerard. "Rap, Reggae, Rock, or Samba: The Local and the Global in Brazilian Popular Music (1985-95)." Latin American Music Review 27, no. 1 (Spring/Summer 2006): 79-90.
  2. ^ “Paralamas do Sucesso.” All Brazilian Music. 2000. http://cliquemusic.uol.com.br/en/Artists/Artists.asp?Status=ARTISTA&Nu_Artista=451. Access date February 14, 2008.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Curiosidades - Vendas de Discos http://www.paralamasforever.com/curiosidade.htm#discos
  4. ^ a b c d e f g ABPD | Associação Brasileira de Produtores de Disco http://www.abpd.org.br/certificados_interna.asp
  5. ^ Grammy Latino 2000 http://www.paralamasforever.com/grammy.htm
  6. ^ Grammy Latino 2003 http://www.paralamasforever.com/grammy.htm
  7. ^ Grammy Latino 2006 http://www.paralamasforever.com/grammy.htm
  8. ^ Grammy Latino 2007 http://www.paralamasforever.com/grammy.htm
  9. ^ a b c d e f Curiosidades - Prêmio Multishow http://www.paralamasforever.com/curiosidade.htm
  10. ^ a b VMB 1995 http://www.paralamasforever.com/vmb.htm
  11. ^ a b c VMB 1996 http://www.paralamasforever.com/vmb.htm
  12. ^ VMB 1997 http://www.paralamasforever.com/vmb.htm
  13. ^ a b c d e VMB 1998 http://www.paralamasforever.com/vmb.htm
  14. ^ VMB 1999 http://www.paralamasforever.com/vmb.htm
  15. ^ VMB 2008 http://www.paralamasforever.com/vmb.htm
  16. ^ VMB 2009 http://www.paralamasforever.com/vmb.htm

External links

Awards and achievements
Preceded by
no winner
Cássia Eller
Charlie Brown Jr.
Latin Grammy Award for Best Brazilian Rock Album
2000
2003
2006
Succeeded by
Rita Lee
Skank
Lobão

 
 
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