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Caetano Veloso [1971]
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Caetano Veloso [1971] in Franklin, TN
Current price: $15.99
![Caetano Veloso [1971]](https://prodimage.images-bn.com/pimages/0889397741358_p0_v1_s600x595.jpg)
Barnes and Noble
Caetano Veloso [1971] in Franklin, TN
Current price: $15.99
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Size: CD
One look at the doleful expression that
Caetano Veloso
wears on the cover of his third self-titled album, from 1971, and it's clear that the listener is in for a bummer. It's a dead-eyed look that says, "Friend, sit down, have a drink, and listen to my weary tale." And a weary homesick tale it is, for the man who only a few years earlier had been one of the catalysts in a revolution that sent the Brazilian music world on the
psychedelic
Beatles
-lovin' roller coaster of
Tropicalia
was now living in the U.K. in a government-imposed exile. Gone are the Day-Glo flashes of his earlier albums, replaced by the realism of a revolutionary whose dreams have been shuttered. If there was any doubt to the depths of his melancholy,
Veloso
clears it up right away with
"A Little More Blue,"
reflecting on being thrown in jail and declaring that his exile is worse than his Brazilian imprisonment. Even more dismal may be the lovesick tribute to his sister,
"Maria Bethania,"
which plainly spells out his physical and emotional disconnection. It's not all so dismal, though; there are upbeat songs as well, like the acknowledged classic
"London, London"
and the lone Portuguese-sung track,
"Asa Branca."
There are Brazilian touches in the drums and
's phrasing, but the album is more in the tradition of downer
folk
classics like
Bob Dylan
's
Blood on the Tracks
and
Tim Buckley
Happy Sad
. If that seems like heavy company, then seek out this emotionally rich and complex work by an artist who doesn't merely stand on the shoulders of giants -- he is one of the giants. ~ Wade Kergan
Caetano Veloso
wears on the cover of his third self-titled album, from 1971, and it's clear that the listener is in for a bummer. It's a dead-eyed look that says, "Friend, sit down, have a drink, and listen to my weary tale." And a weary homesick tale it is, for the man who only a few years earlier had been one of the catalysts in a revolution that sent the Brazilian music world on the
psychedelic
Beatles
-lovin' roller coaster of
Tropicalia
was now living in the U.K. in a government-imposed exile. Gone are the Day-Glo flashes of his earlier albums, replaced by the realism of a revolutionary whose dreams have been shuttered. If there was any doubt to the depths of his melancholy,
Veloso
clears it up right away with
"A Little More Blue,"
reflecting on being thrown in jail and declaring that his exile is worse than his Brazilian imprisonment. Even more dismal may be the lovesick tribute to his sister,
"Maria Bethania,"
which plainly spells out his physical and emotional disconnection. It's not all so dismal, though; there are upbeat songs as well, like the acknowledged classic
"London, London"
and the lone Portuguese-sung track,
"Asa Branca."
There are Brazilian touches in the drums and
's phrasing, but the album is more in the tradition of downer
folk
classics like
Bob Dylan
's
Blood on the Tracks
and
Tim Buckley
Happy Sad
. If that seems like heavy company, then seek out this emotionally rich and complex work by an artist who doesn't merely stand on the shoulders of giants -- he is one of the giants. ~ Wade Kergan
One look at the doleful expression that
Caetano Veloso
wears on the cover of his third self-titled album, from 1971, and it's clear that the listener is in for a bummer. It's a dead-eyed look that says, "Friend, sit down, have a drink, and listen to my weary tale." And a weary homesick tale it is, for the man who only a few years earlier had been one of the catalysts in a revolution that sent the Brazilian music world on the
psychedelic
Beatles
-lovin' roller coaster of
Tropicalia
was now living in the U.K. in a government-imposed exile. Gone are the Day-Glo flashes of his earlier albums, replaced by the realism of a revolutionary whose dreams have been shuttered. If there was any doubt to the depths of his melancholy,
Veloso
clears it up right away with
"A Little More Blue,"
reflecting on being thrown in jail and declaring that his exile is worse than his Brazilian imprisonment. Even more dismal may be the lovesick tribute to his sister,
"Maria Bethania,"
which plainly spells out his physical and emotional disconnection. It's not all so dismal, though; there are upbeat songs as well, like the acknowledged classic
"London, London"
and the lone Portuguese-sung track,
"Asa Branca."
There are Brazilian touches in the drums and
's phrasing, but the album is more in the tradition of downer
folk
classics like
Bob Dylan
's
Blood on the Tracks
and
Tim Buckley
Happy Sad
. If that seems like heavy company, then seek out this emotionally rich and complex work by an artist who doesn't merely stand on the shoulders of giants -- he is one of the giants. ~ Wade Kergan
Caetano Veloso
wears on the cover of his third self-titled album, from 1971, and it's clear that the listener is in for a bummer. It's a dead-eyed look that says, "Friend, sit down, have a drink, and listen to my weary tale." And a weary homesick tale it is, for the man who only a few years earlier had been one of the catalysts in a revolution that sent the Brazilian music world on the
psychedelic
Beatles
-lovin' roller coaster of
Tropicalia
was now living in the U.K. in a government-imposed exile. Gone are the Day-Glo flashes of his earlier albums, replaced by the realism of a revolutionary whose dreams have been shuttered. If there was any doubt to the depths of his melancholy,
Veloso
clears it up right away with
"A Little More Blue,"
reflecting on being thrown in jail and declaring that his exile is worse than his Brazilian imprisonment. Even more dismal may be the lovesick tribute to his sister,
"Maria Bethania,"
which plainly spells out his physical and emotional disconnection. It's not all so dismal, though; there are upbeat songs as well, like the acknowledged classic
"London, London"
and the lone Portuguese-sung track,
"Asa Branca."
There are Brazilian touches in the drums and
's phrasing, but the album is more in the tradition of downer
folk
classics like
Bob Dylan
's
Blood on the Tracks
and
Tim Buckley
Happy Sad
. If that seems like heavy company, then seek out this emotionally rich and complex work by an artist who doesn't merely stand on the shoulders of giants -- he is one of the giants. ~ Wade Kergan




![1967 [1971]](https://prodimage.images-bn.com/pimages/0730167317238_p0_v2_s600x595.jpg)












