All the time, it's the national music but especialy around carnival time.
Wiki User
∙ 15y agoWiki User
∙ 12y agoin Brazil you can hear it and you can buy albums. that is what i have heard.
Wiki User
∙ 12y agoWhen they hear Brazilian Rap Beats! Ha Ha Ha....!
Wiki User
∙ 12y agoBrazil... somewhere.
Wiki User
∙ 11y agoi don't know ask your teacher
Wiki User
∙ 11y agorymth beat.
Anonymous
who elts is here to help who their homework
There are well over 200 community samba bands in the UK but very few of them play what would be recognised in Brasil as samba. You can hear real samba being played in London at Notting Hill Carnival on the lasty Monday of every August. Most of the bands are Caribbean, but there is some Brazilian samba too.
When they hear Brazilian Rap Beats! Ha Ha Ha....!
Even in the loudest music in a samba band you can still hear the clear and sahrp sound of the Agogo Bells.
t is normally fast and has a fast beat and tempo. Actually samba can also be slow. What makes it sound different from other types of music is the specific samba swing. By this I mean not speed or enery or tightness, but the fact that half of the notes in a bar always fall slightly off the beat, in a very consistant pattern. The swing stays the same throughout all of the instruments and variations of patterns, and is held by the melody too. It is the swing that gives samba its addictive feel. The samba swing is not the same as Jazz or latin swing, which have different offbeats. The swing cannot be annotated by conventional means so you can't learn it by reading musical notation, but you can hear it clearly in samba recordings. It derives from the African origins of samba music, which grew out of a complex mix of African music, marches and the polka. There is some great historical material on Youtube - try looking up anything by Clara Nunes, or Cartola. The modern samba schools in Rio play a much faster samba with more emphasis on percussion - you can also find these well illustrated on youtube - search for "ensaio tecnico na avenida". This bateria samba is so fast you can hardly hear the swing but it's there - without it the music would just sound like a march. Not all Brazilian traditional music is samba, there are many other styles such as Maracatu and samba reggae which sound quite different, having a slightly different swing, different orchestration and a very different cultural tradition.
the music is good it is a lot of beat music with some lyric if you want to hear one you can downlaod magdalena by sergio mendez...=D
There are well over 200 community samba bands in the UK but very few of them play what would be recognised in Brasil as samba. You can hear real samba being played in London at Notting Hill Carnival on the lasty Monday of every August. Most of the bands are Caribbean, but there is some Brazilian samba too.
weddings or festivals
Rio Carnival
When they hear Brazilian Rap Beats! Ha Ha Ha....!
Even in the loudest music in a samba band you can still hear the clear and sahrp sound of the Agogo Bells.
Describe the sequence of events that enable us to hear
One would expect to hear a representation of some actual fact or truth. Told in such a manner that the listener could associate with events in real life.
t is normally fast and has a fast beat and tempo. Actually samba can also be slow. What makes it sound different from other types of music is the specific samba swing. By this I mean not speed or enery or tightness, but the fact that half of the notes in a bar always fall slightly off the beat, in a very consistant pattern. The swing stays the same throughout all of the instruments and variations of patterns, and is held by the melody too. It is the swing that gives samba its addictive feel. The samba swing is not the same as Jazz or latin swing, which have different offbeats. The swing cannot be annotated by conventional means so you can't learn it by reading musical notation, but you can hear it clearly in samba recordings. It derives from the African origins of samba music, which grew out of a complex mix of African music, marches and the polka. There is some great historical material on Youtube - try looking up anything by Clara Nunes, or Cartola. The modern samba schools in Rio play a much faster samba with more emphasis on percussion - you can also find these well illustrated on youtube - search for "ensaio tecnico na avenida". This bateria samba is so fast you can hardly hear the swing but it's there - without it the music would just sound like a march. Not all Brazilian traditional music is samba, there are many other styles such as Maracatu and samba reggae which sound quite different, having a slightly different swing, different orchestration and a very different cultural tradition.
the music is good it is a lot of beat music with some lyric if you want to hear one you can downlaod magdalena by sergio mendez...=D
Roll Of Thunder Hear My Cry is not a true story but is based on true events.
You would hear a rebuttal in a court room.
'The Stars and Stripes Forever' is likely to be played on patriotic occasions, when marching bands perform, and at formal military ceremonies.