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indigo
08-27-2007, 06:28 PM
Ok, I know this was released on Brasilian label Segundo Mundo (http://www.segundomundo.com/website_segundomundo/index.html).

You can check Nego Moçambique's website here (http://www.segundomundo.com/website_segundomundo/index_nego.html). and Myspace (http://www.myspace.com/negomoambique)

He's a great talent from hometown who's releasing a new album after some years, it's Hot dancefloor music so you might enjoy it.


some reviews:


http://www.spannered.org/media/images/large/1247.jpg


Nego Moçambique
Freak City Funk

How does electronic music sound in the capital of the Aquarian civilization? Spannered meets Marcelo de Jesus, aka Nego Moçambique.


Bras*lia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bras%C3%ADlia) is not only the planned federal capital of Brazil, a neat display of modern, minimalist buildings designed by architect Oscar Niemeyer (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oscar_Niemeyer) — it is also somewhere that the weird and mystical from Brazil and beyond have called home. According to seers, the place is heavily exposed to cosmic energy, while ufologists say it is a perfect landing point for extraterrestrial visitors, and so organise regular nocturnal watches there in the hope of close encounters. When Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin visited the city in the 60s, just months after becoming the first man in space, he remarked: “...the impression I have is that I'm arriving on a different planet”.

What's more, many esoteric scholars have referred to Bras*lia as the capital of the third millennium’s civilization, or capital of the Aquarian civilization. “Mysticism over here was so big; so many people got into it that today anything related to that can come across as cheesy or cartoonish,” states Marcelo de Jesus, otherwise known as Nego Moçambique. “Man, this place is full of freaks.”

Nego Moçambique has lived in Bras*lia all his life, and it's clear he's absorbed a lot of the city's freakiness. He is an ex-B-boy, ex-graffiti artist and, currently, musician, whose head habitually wanders in places unimaginable to most people. Brazil is a country overrun by the nauseous repetition of musical concepts and approaches, yet Nego Moçambique stands out as a leftfield maverick, a talented original, creating music that is his and no one else’s.

His recently launched second album, La Rumba Computer, confirms everything they say about Nego being slightly off the hook — starting with the CD packaging, whose complexity to manufacture delayed the release. In the end, 2000 elaborately designed cardboard boxes were made; inside, you find a CD in a traditional sleeve and a bunch of coloured plastic wires. The concept and cover art — a surreal collage of several references, half disturbing half amusing — are all Marcelo’s ideas. He has worked a lot in the visual area, but no longer has time for it since his musical career has taken off (his last freelance jobs were illustrations for famous Brazilian left-wing publication Caros Amigos).

According to Nego, his original intention was for the wires to be stuck to the bottom of the box. That couldn’t be done, so they remained loose. “They are like wire leftovers from a gig. But then people started to take the piss out of me saying it looked like modern art.” He tells me over the phone, giggling.

Music-wise the album is a lively party of loose analogue grooves, solid beats, quirky samples, Afro, breaks and funk references, all done with synths and the MPC (as with his visual art, Nego doesn’t use software or computers). There are loony cartoon vocals, sometimes Jamaican sounding, sometimes robotic, rolling out shreds of English, Spanish and Portuguese. “My vocals are like samples”, he explains. “They are like bits of speech, because I don’t speak any of these foreign languages to be honest. It is the voice as instrument.”

Those who have followed his work since his previous and first album, Nego Moçambique

Not only the voice, but the treatment of it too. “In Automatic Love (Fonke Music), I put four of my voices to sing together. Others have doubled vocals, and other lots of phaser and delay. The idea is to leave it sounding really electronic, because this is not music to sing along to — music that you pay attention to the lyrics.”

It is dancefloor music, in other words. This is essential to Marcelo’s work, which is why he thinks of his rocking live PAs as if he were a DJ — i.e. no gaps between the tracks and a constant input of new material. “I’m fiddling with it everyday, I’m always doing something new. It is just like a DJ; I arrive at the club with the night well underway, there ain’t nothing of that “show” glamour, so I have to have material for this kind of situation.” However, he doesn’t just rely on the music to keep the crowd going — his stage antics are an integral part of the appeal: a non-stop succession of wonky-funky moves, karate kicks and robot chops.

One person who was particularly impressed by Nego’s live performances was Gigolo Records’ boss DJ Hell. There was talk that his label was to release La Rumba Computer, but nothing transpired. “It didn’t happen because I didn’t send the final mixes to him,” he explains, in his typical nonchalant, laidback way. “But we are still in touch and he wants me to send new stuff to him.”

My last question refers to his name: where does Nego Moçambique come from? “Ah, it was like this: there was a time when my dad was considered to be an adopted child. Then his real family was discovered and I found out that my real grandmother lived in a favela

“At that time I was reading a lot about slaves and the music they brought with them, and I learned that many came from Moçambique. I was also going through a very militant period, pro-black rights… so, amid all this context, the name appeared.”

Camilo Rocha is editor of Brazilian music site rraurl.com (http://rraurl.uol.com.br/home/index.php)


La Rumba Computer by Nego Moçambique is out now on
Segundo Mundo (http://www.segundomundo.com/website_segundomundo/index.html)(2005), and through the hundreds of live PAs he has done up and down Brazil, will notice that Marcelo has been using his voice more and more. “The reason is that before I didn’t think it was cool to use my voice — I used to think people wouldn’t get into it. I didn’t think my voice was a big deal myself, but now it is really important.” in Petropólis (near Rio de Janeiro). So my family has all the shades of black, from car tyre, through me, to people who have Afro-descendant features but totally white skin.”

indigo
08-27-2007, 06:29 PM
from: http://www.stylusmagazine.com/review...a-computer.htm


Rumba is originally an African rhythm, but Cubans made it famous. Similarly, Brazil’s own slave music mutated after it came here into samba and other cadences like maracatu and mangue. As such, it shouldn’t be all that much of a surprise to hear how producer Marcelo de Jesús—aka Nego Moçambique—has managed to imbue his second release with the diaspora of Africa, be it Nigerean Afrobeat, Afrika Baambata’s “Planet Rock,” legendary Brazilian slave rebel Zumbi, or Herbie Hancock’s Headhunters. He’s just taking what’s been handed to him and refashioning it into exciting new forms.

Nego Moçambique’s first release in 2003 was a more minimal affair, a non-stop funky layering of loops and samples over skipping house beats. It had an infectious quality and the inventive use of a Gilberto Gil sample on “Gil Para B-Boys” rightfully garnered the CD some attention, leading to festival appearances at both Mutek and Sonar. And now here we are, four years on with the follow-up, La Rumba Computer being the upshot of the continuous honing and tweaking of his live set from the last few years.

One apparent reason for the long interval between releases? The packaging. Seriously. The CD comes in an elaborately designed oversized box, which when opened presents what seems to be a random collection of fluorescent plastic tubes—a mini-rave in a box. All this extravagance must be costing São Paulo label Segundo Mundo a small fortune in production and distribution, nonetheless, they should also be lauded for their commitment to releasing the new wave of electronic artists coming from Brazil, artists such as electrobreaks maven DJ Vidal, funky housers Jamanta Crew, and electro duo No Porn.

Even though these artists are very much part of a new wave, however, they all look back to previous forms for inspiration. Nego, for instance, builds on the house and breaks of his debut and is now taking on the ‘70s and jazz funk sounds of his heroes: Eumir Deodato, Herbie Hancock, Tim Maia, Parliament/Funkadelic, Carl Craig. This is no urban pose; from these influences he has crafted a crisp contemporary robotic Afro-funk.

Despite this, Nego can’t let go completely of the brittle plangent electro breakbeats that carry his tracks, they pop up more often than not, undergirded by plump basslines taken directly from Bernard Edwards’ book of disco licks.

Elsewhere, the African chanting on the title track immediately evokes rumba. (Mixed with the album’s potpourri of English, Portuguese, and Spanish, it help further engenders a sense of Esperanto-esque misplacement.) And Nego makes an attempt at blending highlife with house in the closer, “Afrikan,” in which the spirit of Fela is raised, farfisa organ meandering included.

The only real issue? Whereas Nego’s debut effort was largely vocal free, here he seems to be straining his newly found vocal cords. I suspect this is because love has found a way—there are many odes to an unnamed fancy. Despite how bad it gets sometimes, Nego does have fun with it: in “Sex Bomb” he sleazily asks us if we want to try “this super Brazilian lover.”

La Rumba Computer could be viewed as an imaginary soundtrack to an unmade break dance movie, its infusion of breaks, funk, and fun demonstrate just what a talented producer this young man from Brasilia is.

fabiofal
08-28-2007, 08:18 AM
thanks for this, indigo; and here's a set found on his site:

http://www.segundomundo.com/website_segundomundo/versaofull.mp3

indigo
08-28-2007, 09:37 AM
thanks for this, indigo; and here's a set found on his site:

http://www.segundomundo.com/website_segundomundo/versaofull.mp3

WoW man, that's the one i was after to share with you fellas, love the intro!

this is a Live PA he did in São Paulo maybe in 2004... it's singing live ;)

fabiofal
08-28-2007, 10:25 AM
WoW man, that's the one i was after to share with you fellas, love the intro!

this is a Live PA he did in São Paulo maybe in 2004... it's singing live ;)

;) :-D

fabiofal
08-28-2007, 03:55 PM
like that mix a lot :cool:

indigo
08-29-2007, 01:27 PM
;)

i'll try to check the new album and send some review or maybe a link, haven't checked it myself... some pics: