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Ave Sangria

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Ave Sangria
Musicians on stage with several spotlights above them
Marco Polo and Anjo Gabriel band representing Ave Sangria at the 2011 Psicodália festival
Background information
OriginRecife, Pernambuco, Brazil
Genres
Years active1969–1974, 2014–present
LabelsRCA
MembersMarco Polo
Ivson Wanderley
Almir de Oliveira
Zé da Flauta
Júnior do Jarro
Gilú Amaral
Juliano Holanda
Past membersIsrael Semente Proibida
Agrício Noya
Ivson Wanderley
Paulo Rafael
Websitewww.avesangria.com

Ave Sangria is a Brazilian rock band and one of the leading names of the 1970s psychedelic music scene of Pernambuco, along with Alceu Valença, Flaviola e O Bando do Sol, Lula Côrtes, Marconi Notaro and Lailson.[1][2]

History

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1970s

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Most members were born and raised in Vila dos Comerciários, a poor neighborhood of Recife. In 1968, bassist Almir de Oliveira met singer Marco Polo and together they became the band's songwriters. Oliveira would play covers in local parties but he was willing to write original material, and so was Polo.[3]

Initially called Tamarineira Village (after neighborhoods Greenwich Village in New York City and Tamarineira in Recife), the group performed under that name in 1973 in Salvador, Natal and João Pessoa.[3]

They changed their name following a suggestion from a gypsy woman that they met in the countryside of Paraíba.[4] Their initial line-up consisted of Marco Polo (lead vocals), Ivson Wanderley (lead and acoustic guitars), Paulo Raphael (rhythm and acoustic guitars, synthesizer, lead vocals), Almir de Oliveira (bass), Israel Semente (drums) and Agrício Noya (percussion). With this line-up they recorded their debut, self-titled album in Rio de Janeiro in May 1974; it was released in June of the same year.[3]

The album was only sold for 1,5 month until it was censored by the Brazilian military government[2] due to the lyrical content of the song "Seu Waldir".[5] The cover also underwent changes, its original concept being described by the members as a "drag queen parrot".[6]

The last performances by the band happened at Teatro de Santa Isabel in downtown Recife,[7] on 28 and 29 December 1974.[3]

The band, represented by Marco Polo, did a special performance in the 2011 Psicodália festival, accompanied by the group Anjo Gabriel.[8]

Reunion after 40 years

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In 2014, the band reunited for a series of shows celebrating the 40th anniversary of its debut album.[9] The first one took place in 2 September at the Teatro de Santa Isabel. They also performed at the 2015 Psicodália, in Santa Catarina.[5] Also around this time, their debut album was re-released in CD and LP formats; they also released a recording of their Perfumes y baratchos, their last.[7]

On 26 April 2019,[5] 45 years after their debut, they released a second album titled Vendavais, featuring three original members: Almir de Oliveira, Marco Pólo and Paulo Rafael (who would die in 2021). The album consisted of 11 original songs, composed between 1972 e 1974 and unreleased since then.[9] It was released one of the 25 best Brazilian albums of the first semester of 2019 by the Associação Paulista de Críticos de Arte.[10]

Members

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Current

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  • Marco Polo - vocals (1969–1974, 2014–present)
  • Almir de Oliveira - guitar, acoustic guitar, bass (1969–1974, 2014–present)
  • Júnior do Jarro - drums (2014–present)
  • Gilú Amaral - percussion (2014–present)
  • Juliano Holanda - bass (2014–present)

Former

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  • Israel Semente - drums, percussion and backing vocals (1969–1974; died in 1990)
  • Agrício Noya - percussion (1969–1974; died in 2015)
  • Ivinho - guitar (1969–1974, 2014–2015, his death)
  • Paulo Rafael - guitar (1969–1974; 2014–2021, his death)[11]

Touring members

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  • Zé da Flauta - western concert flute
  • Ebel Perrelli - percussion (2011–present)
  • Nando Barreto - bass and backing vocal (2011–present)
  • Jerimum - percussion (2011)
  • Marco da Lata - bass and backing vocals (2011)
  • Cris Rás - guitar (2011)
  • André Sette - keyboards (2011)
  • Rodrigo Duplicata - drums (2011)
  • Breno Lira - guitar (2011)
  • Cassio Sette - keyboards and backing vocals (2011)
  • Wellington Santana - bass and backing vocals

Discography

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Studio albums

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  • 1974 - Ave Sangria - RCA
  • 2019 - Vendavais

Live albums

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  • 1974 - Perfumes e Baratchos

Singles

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  • 1974 - "O Pirata" - RCA
  • 1975 - "Lá Fora" - RCA
  • 2020 - "Janeiro"

Bootlegs

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  • 2009 - Tamarineira Village 1975 - ao vivo em Recife - CD Kopka

References

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  1. ^ "Ave Sangria". Dicionário Cravo Albin da Música Popular Brasileira. Archived from the original on 7 February 2014. Retrieved 10 March 2013.
  2. ^ a b Nunes, Gabriel. "13 "heróis desconhecidos" do rock nacional Ave Sangria - "Geórgia, A Carniceira" (1974)". Rolling Stone Brasil. Grupo Spring de Comunicação. Archived from the original on 29 June 2017. Retrieved 16 June 2017.
  3. ^ a b c d "Ave Sangria: o voo e a queda dos ícones da psicodelia nordestina". NOIZE | Música do site à revista. 2014-09-02. Retrieved 2021-05-30.
  4. ^ "Ave Sangria lançará disco ao vivo com último show histórico de 1974". Revista O Grito!. UOL. 8 August 2014. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016.
  5. ^ a b c Continente, Revista. "Ave Sangria retoma seu voo em 'Vendavais'". Revista Continente (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 2021-05-30.
  6. ^ Camila Holanda e Marcos Sampaio (4 October 2011). "Ave Sangria: um escândalo psicodélico pernambucano". O Povo. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016.
  7. ^ a b Continente, Revista. "Ave Sangria: O desbunde, 40 anos depois". Revista Continente (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 2021-05-30.
  8. ^ Essinger, Silvio (29 March 2014). "A psicodelia pernambucana revivida no palco". O Globo. Grupo Globo. Retrieved 3 March 2022.
  9. ^ a b "Ave Sangria, cultuada banda psicodélica da década de 1970, lança o primeiro álbum em 45 anos". G1 (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 2021-05-30.
  10. ^ Antunes, Pedro (16 August 2019). "Os 25 melhores discos de 2019 até agora, segundo a APCA [LISTA]". Rolling Stone Brasil. Grupo Perfil. Retrieved 2 January 2021.
  11. ^ "Morre aos 66 anos Paulo Rafael, guitarrista de Alceu Valença". G1. Retrieved 22 August 2021.
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