Filtering by Tag: Brazil

Meet the Brazilian Musicians Leading Bahia’s Afrofuturism Movement

Credit: BAIANASYSTEM

Credit: BAIANASYSTEM

By: Felipe Maia

“In Salvador, we see the future in the representations of the past, so you are the future because you can keep the present renewed: the ancestrality is the future,” says Russo Passapusso, the lead singer and creative mind behind BaianaSystem. The band was born in 2009 and has become one of the main exponents of Brazilian music in the past few years. Layering Jamaican music into patterns and textures sourced from the black diaspora, Russo Passapusso and his bandmates have carved their place in the Brazilian music scene between the deliberately pop and the strictly alternative. The crowds at their gigs engage in death metal circle pits and West-African stomping, while chanting singing fervently to the band’s tunes.

I first met Russo when he was toasting as an MC for the local sound system MiniStereo Público. It was lemanja Day, a century-old celebration that takes place every February 2nd at Rio Vermelho beach, in Salvador.

Read more: https://remezcla.com/features/music/artists-bahia-afrofuturism/

The US Confederate flag continues to ignite racial tensions—in Brazil

Credit: Jordan Brasher

Credit: Jordan Brasher

By Jordan Brasher

Brazil has a long, strange relationship with the United States Confederacy. 

After the Civil War ended in 1865, ending slavery in the United States, some 8,000 to 10,000 Southern soldiers and their families left the vanquished Confederacy and went to Brazil. 

There, slavery was still legal. Roughly 40% of the nearly 11 million Africans forcibly brought across the Atlantic between 1517 and 1867 went to work on sugarcane plantations in Brazil. It was the last country in the Western Hemisphere to formally abolish slavery, in 1888—23 years after the United States.

Legal slavery may have been a draw for the Confederate soldiers who migrated to Brazil after abolition. 

Brazilian political economist Célio Antonio Alcântara Silva analyzed letters sent to Brazilian consulates and vice-consulates in the United States at the end of the Civil War and found that 74% of Southerners inquiring about emigration were slaveowners.

Read more: https://theconversation.com/brazils-long-strange-love-affair-with-the-confederacy-ignites-racial-tension-115548