(Man Recordings)
The Sexual Life of the Savages: Underground Post-Punk from Sao Paulo , Brasil
(Soul Jazz)
Village Voice, 2005
by Simon Reynolds
Village Voice, 2005
by Simon Reynolds
Postpunk's seam has gotten severely depleted these last few years.
So it makes sense that genre-mining bands and arcana-excavating archivists are
now moving into the non-Anglophone world. The smart hipster money would surely
have been on Germany
(in the early '80s, a Sprockets-y
wonderland of art-into-pop) as the next gold-rush zone, or maybe Belgium
and Holland
(both rife with Factory-fixated aesthetes). Few would have imagined Brazil
as a contender. But that's precisely what's happened, with the bizarrely
synchronized arrival of two compilations documenting Sao Paulo 's postpunk scene. It's tempting to
imagine a cargo cult scenario: a handful of Liliput and Flying Lizards import
singles arriving to catalyse a mutant subculture, the local bands filling in
the huge aesthetic gaps using their imagination. But given that Sao Paulo, for
all its sub-tropical location, resembles a European city somehow drifted loose
from Continental moorings, far more likely the megalopolis' hip youth (many
descended from German or Italian immigrants) were just totally plugged into
every last thing going down on Ladbroke Grove or the Lower East
Side.
Nao Wave kicks off
with Agenttss' "Agenttss." Released in 1982, it's a historic
single not just for its mélange of then-modish but still thrilling elements
(flanged guitar, synth-bloops) but for being Brazil 's very own Spiral Scratch--a pioneering example of
release-it-yourself autonomy. Throughout both compilations, the foreign
influences are obvious but seldom to a slavish degree, and coordinates get
pleasingly jumbled up. Akira S & As Garotas Que Erraram's "O Futebol'
(on Nao Wave) and "Sobre As Pernas" (on both) respectively resemble
Birthday Party crossed with Martha & the Muffins and a tropicalized Joy
Division, balmy and sweat-stippled rather than cold as the grave. Sexual Life includes a fetching pair
from Fellini, "Rock Europeu" (flinty drone-rock chipped from the same
quarry as Josef K) and "Zum Zum Zazoeira" (garage punk gone
languid in the humidity).
Inevitably, what captivates the Anglo-American ear is the exotic Brazilian tinge that creeps in every so often, whether intentional or not, as with Chance's sultry "Samba Do Morro" (another track on both comps) and Black Future's "Eu Sou O Rio", whose bassline doesn't so much walk disco-style as sashay carnival-style. Approaching the end of its 1982-88 time-span, Nao Wave sags somewhat (theUK 's
Bad Music Era kicking in, with horrors like The Bolshoi becoming reference
points?). And Sexual Life is marred by occasional outbreaks of
"quirky," like Patife's Camper Vannish "Teu Bem." But
overall, language difference notwithstanding, you can easily imagine most of
these tracks getting play-listed by John Peel or working the dancefloor at
Hurrah's.
Inevitably, what captivates the Anglo-American ear is the exotic Brazilian tinge that creeps in every so often, whether intentional or not, as with Chance's sultry "Samba Do Morro" (another track on both comps) and Black Future's "Eu Sou O Rio", whose bassline doesn't so much walk disco-style as sashay carnival-style. Approaching the end of its 1982-88 time-span, Nao Wave sags somewhat (the
1 comment:
Interesting story: The only post punk mexican band that released an album in 1980, Size, was opening for The Police, that could have been their big break, but the mexican musician union sent thugs to hit them and get them off the stage. Because they had something called a sinthesizer which the union said displaced musicians.
https://www.discogs.com/artist/595604-Size-4
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