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  • Luê Soares

    THE INTEGRATED GLOBAL
    CREATIVE ECONOMY

    promulgated by
    The Brazilian Ministry of Culture

    fomented by
    The Bahian Secretary of Culture

    fomented by
    The Palmares Foundation
    for the promotion of Afro-Brazilian Culture

    fomented by
    The National Foundation of Indigenous Peoples

    I CURATE/pathways out

Network Node

  • Name: Luê Soares
  • City/Place: São Paulo
  • Country: Brazil
  • Hometown: Belém do Pará

CURATION

  • from this node by: Matrix

Life & Work

  • Bio: Luê Soares — player of traditional regional music gone beyond — was born in Belém do Pará in the north of Brazil to Júnior Soares, player and composer of traditional regional music.

Contact Information

  • Management/Booking: [email protected]

Media | Markets

  • ▶ Instagram: luemusica
  • ▶ YouTube Channel: http://www.youtube.com/user/LuNaya1
  • ▶ Spotify: http://open.spotify.com/album/45vKTeECJFPQLSHICKJGaa
  • ▶ Spotify 2: http://open.spotify.com/album/0cMl9dJbZMv5ChBAtFYWCZ

Clips (more may be added)

  • 3:34
    Lue - Garota Ligeira - MINIDocs®
    By Luê Soares
    98 views
  • 4:33
    Luê - Onde Andará Você Terruá Pará 3
    By Luê Soares
    135 views
  • 0:39:11
    Luê no Estúdio Showlivre - Apresentação completa
    By Luê Soares
    137 views
Previous
Next

Luê Soares Curated
pathways in

  • 4 Belém do Pará
  • 4 Brasil, Brazil
  • 4 Cantora-Compositora, Singer-Songwriter
  • 4 Carimbó
  • 4 MPB
  • 4 Rabeca, Fiddle
  • 4 São Paulo
  • 4 Violino, Violin

What's Been Happening?

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  • Luê Soares
    Alicia Svigals → Writer has been recommended via Luê Soares.
    • Feb 17
  • Luê Soares
    Alicia Svigals → Violin has been recommended via Luê Soares.
    • Feb 17
  • Luê Soares
    Alicia Svigals → New York City has been recommended via Luê Soares.
    • Feb 17
  • Luê Soares
    Alicia Svigals → Klezmer Fiddle has been recommended via Luê Soares.
    • Feb 17
  • Luê Soares
    Alicia Svigals → Jewish Music has been recommended via Luê Soares.
    • Feb 17
  • Luê Soares
    Alicia Svigals → Composer has been recommended via Luê Soares.
    • Feb 17
  • Luê Soares
    Esperanza Spalding → Singer has been recommended via Luê Soares.
    • Feb 17
  • Luê Soares
    Esperanza Spalding → Jazz has been recommended via Luê Soares.
    • Feb 17
  • Luê Soares
    Esperanza Spalding → Composer has been recommended via Luê Soares.
    • Feb 17
  • Luê Soares
    Esperanza Spalding → Bass has been recommended via Luê Soares.
    • Feb 17
  • Luê Soares
    BaianaSystem → Salvador has been recommended via Luê Soares.
    • July 26, 2022
  • Luê Soares
    BaianaSystem → Reggae has been recommended via Luê Soares.
    • July 26, 2022
  • Luê Soares
    BaianaSystem → Música Pan Afro-Baiano, Pan Afro-Bahian Music has been recommended via Luê Soares.
    • July 26, 2022
  • Luê Soares
    BaianaSystem → Música Alternativa, Alternative Music has been recommended via Luê Soares.
    • July 26, 2022
  • Luê Soares
    BaianaSystem → Brasil, Brazil has been recommended via Luê Soares.
    • July 26, 2022
  • Luê Soares
    BaianaSystem → Bahia has been recommended via Luê Soares.
    • July 26, 2022
  • Luê Soares
    A category was added to Luê Soares:
    Brasil, Brazil
    • July 11, 2022
  • Luê Soares
    A category was added to Luê Soares:
    São Paulo
    • July 11, 2022
  • Luê Soares
    A category was added to Luê Soares:
    Belém do Pará
    • July 11, 2022
  • Luê Soares
    A category was added to Luê Soares:
    Carimbó
    • July 11, 2022
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  • ENGLISH (pra Portuguese →)
  • PORTUGUÊS (to English →)

ENGLISH (pra Portuguese →)

 


✅—João do Boi
João had something priceless to offer the world.
But he was impossible for the world to find.
So for him, and the world, I built this matrix.
✅—Pardal/Sparrow
PATHWAYS
from Brazil, with love
THE MISSION: Beginning with the atavistic genius of the Recôncavo (per the bottom of this section) & the great sertão (the backlands of Brazil's nordeste) — make artists across Brazil — and around the world — discoverable as they never were before.

HOW: Integrate them into a vast matrixed ecosystem together with musicians, writers, filmmakers, painters, choreographers, fashion designers, educators, chefs et al from all over the planet (are you in this ecosystem?) such that these artists all tend to be connected to each other via short, discoverable, accessible pathways. Q.E.D.

"Matrixado! Laroyê!"
✅—Founding Member Darius Mans
Economist, PhD, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
✅—Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva
President of Brazil


The matrix was created in Salvador's Centro Histórico, where Bule Bule below, among first-generation matrixed colleagues, sings "Chegou a hora dessa gente bronzeada mostrar seu valor... The time has come for these bronzed people to show their worth..."

Music & lyrics (Brasil Pandeiro) by Assis Valente of Santo Amaro, Bahia, Brazil. Video by Betão Aguiar of Salvador.

...the endeavor motivated in the first instance by the fact that in common with most cultures around our planet, the preponderance of Brazil's vast cultural treasure has been impossible to find from outside of circumscribed regions, including Brazil itself...

Thus something new under the tropical sun: Open curation beginning with Brazilian musicians recommending other Brazilian musicians and moving on around the globe...

Where by the seemingly magical mathematics of the small world phenomenon, and in the same way that most human beings are within some six or so steps of most others, all in the matrix tend to proximity to all others...

The difference being that in the matrix, these steps are along pathways that can be travelled. The creative world becomes a neighborhood. Quincy Jones is right up the street and Branford Marsalis around the corner. And the most far-flung genius you've never heard of is just a few doors down. Maybe even in Brazil.

"I am thrilled to receive your email! Thank you for including me in this wonderful matrix."
✅—Susan Rogers
Personal recording engineer: Prince, Paisley Park Recording Studio
Director: Music Perception & Cognition Laboratory, Berklee College of Music
Author: This Is What It Sounds Like: What the Music You Love Says About You

"Many thanks for this - I am  touched!"
✅—Julian Lloyd Webber
That most fabled cellist in the United Kingdom (and Brazilian music fan)

"I'm truly thankful... Sohlangana ngokuzayo :)"
✅—Nduduzo Makhathini
Blue Note recording artist

"Thanks, this is a brilliant idea!!"
✅—Alicia Svigals
Founder of The Klezmatics

"This is super impressive work ! Congratulations ! Thanks for including me :)))"
✅—Clarice Assad
Compositions recorded by Yo Yo Ma and played by orchestras around the world

"Thank you"
(Banch Abegaze, manager)
✅—Kamasi Washington



Bahia is a hot cauldron of rhythms and musical styles, but one particular style here is so utterly essential, so utterly fundamental not only to Bahian music specifically but to Brazilian music in general — occupying a place here analogous to that of the blues in the United States — that it deserves singling out. It is derived from (or some say brother to) the cabila rhythm of candomblé angola… …and it is called…

Samba Chula / Samba de Roda

Mother of Samba… daughter of destiny carried to Bahia by Bantus ensconced within the holds of negreiros entering the great Bahia de Todos os Santos (the term referring both to a dance and to the style of music which evolved to accompany that dance; the official orthography of “Bahia” — in the sense of “bay” — has since been changed to “Baía”)… evolved on the sugarcane plantations of the Recôncavo (that fertile area around the bay, the concave shape of which gave rise to the region’s name) — in the vicinity of towns like Cachoeira and Santo Amaro, Santiago do Iguape and Acupe. This proto-samba has unfortunately fallen into the wayside of hard to find and hear…

There’s a lot of spectacle in Bahia…

Carnival with its trio elétricos — sound-trucks with musicians on top — looking like interstellar semi-trailers back from the future…shows of MPB (música popular brasileira) in Salvador’s Teatro Castro Alves (biggest stage in South America!) with full production value, the audience seated (as always in modern theaters) like Easter Island statues…

…glamour, glitz, money, power and press agents…

And then there’s where it all came from…the far side of the bay, a land of subsistence farmers and fishermen, many of the older people unable to read or write…their sambas the precursor to all this, without which none of the above would exist, their melodies — when not created by themselves — the inventions of people like them but now forgotten (as most of these people will be within a couple of generations or so of their passing), their rhythms a constant state of inconstancy and flux, played in a manner unlike (most) any group of musicians north of the Tropic of Cancer…making the metronome-like sledgehammering of the Hit Parade of the past several decades almost wincefully painful to listen to after one’s ears have become accustomed to evershifting rhythms played like the aurora borealis looks…

So there’s the spectacle, and there’s the spectacular, and more often than not the latter is found far afield from the former, among the poor folk in the villages and the backlands, the humble and the honest, people who can say more (like an old delta bluesman playing a beat-up guitar on a sagging back porch) with a pandeiro (Brazilian tambourine) and a chula (a shouted/sung “folksong”) than most with whatever technology and support money can buy. The heart of this matter, is out there. If you ask me anyway.

Above, the incomparable João do Boi, chuleiro, recently deceased.

 

 

Why Brazil?

 

Brazil is not a European nation. It's not a North American nation. It's not an East Asian nation. It straddles — jungle and desert and dense urban centers — both the equator and the Tropic of Capricorn.

 

Brazil absorbed over ten times the number of enslaved Africans taken to the United States of America, and is a repository of African deities (and their music) now largely forgotten in their lands of origin.

 

Brazil was a refuge (of sorts) for Sephardim fleeing an Inquisition which followed them across the Atlantic (that unofficial symbol of Brazil's national music — the pandeiro — the hand drum in the opening scene above — was almost certainly brought to Brazil by these people).

 

Across the parched savannas of the interior of Brazil's culturally fecund nordeste/northeast, where wizard Hermeto Pascoal was born in Lagoa da Canoa (Lagoon of the Canoe) and raised in Olho d'Águia (Eye of the Eagle), much of Brazil's aboriginal population was absorbed into a caboclo/quilombola culture punctuated by the Star of David.

 

Three cultures — from three continents — running for their lives, their confluence forming a scintillatingly unprecedented fourth. Pandeirista on the roof.

 

Nowhere else but here. Brazil itself is a matrix.

 

PORTUGUÊS (to English →)

 


✅—João do Boi
João tinha algo inestimável pro mundo.
Mas ele era impossível pro mundo encontrar.
Aí para ele, e pro mundo, eu construí este matrix.
✅—Pardal/Sparrow
CAMINHOS
do Brasil, com amor
A MISSÃO: Começando com a atávica genialidade do Recôncavo (conforme o final desta seção) e do grande sertão — tornar artistas através do Brasil — e ao redor do mundo — descobriveis como nunca foram antes.

COMO: Integrá-los num vasto ecosistema matrixado, juntos com músicos, escritores, cineastas, pintores, coreógrafos, designers de moda, educadores, chefs e outros de todos os lugares (você está neste ecosistema?) de modo que todos esses artistas tendem a estar ligados entre si por caminhos curtos, descobriveis e acessíveis. Q.E.D.

"Matrixado! Laroyê!"
✅—Membro Fundador Darius Mans
Economista, doutorado, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
✅—Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva
Presidente do Brasil


O matrix foi criado no Centro Histórico de Salvador, onde Bule Bule no clipe, entre colegas da primeira geração no matrix, canta "Chegou a hora dessa gente bronzeada mostrar seu valor..."

Música & letras (Brasil Pandeiro) por Assis Valente de Santo Amaro, Bahia. Vídeo por Betão Aguiar de Salvador.

...o empreendimento motivado na primeira instância pelo fato de que em comum com a maioria das culturas ao redor do nosso planeta, a preponderância do vasto tesouro cultural do Brasil tem sido impossível de encontrar fora de regiões circunscritas, incluindo o próprio Brasil.

Assim, algo novo sob o sol tropical: Curadoria aberta começando com músicos brasileiros recomendando outros músicos brasileiros e avançando ao redor do globo...

Onde pela matemática aparentemente mágica do fenômeno do mundo pequeno, e da mesma forma que a maioria dos seres humanos estão dentro de cerca de seis passos da maioria dos outros, todos no matrix tendem a se aproximar de todos...

Com a diferença que no matrix, estes passos estão ao longo de caminhos que podem ser percorridos. O mundo criativo se torna uma vizinhança. Quincy Jones está lá em cima e Branford Marsalis está ao virar da esquina. E o gênio distante que você nunca ouviu falar tá lá embaixo. Talvez até no Brasil.

"Obrigada por me incluir neste matrix maravilhoso!"
✅—Susan Rogers
Engenheiro de gravação pessoal para Prince: Paisley Park Estúdio de Gravação
Diretora: Laboratório de Percepção e Cognição Musical, Berklee College of Music
Autora: This Is What It Sounds Like: What the Music You Love Says About You

"Muito obrigado por isso - estou tocado!"
✅—Julian Lloyd Webber
Merecidamente o violoncelista mais lendário do Reino Unido (e fã da música brasileira)

"Estou realmente agradecido... Sohlangana ngokuzayo :)"
✅—Nduduzo Makhathini
Artista da Blue Note

"Obrigada, esta é uma ideia brilhante!!"
✅—Alicia Svigals
Fundadora do The Klezmatics

"Este é um trabalho super impressionante! Parabéns! Obrigada por me incluir :)))"
✅—Clarice Assad
Composições gravadas por Yo Yo Ma e tocadas por orquestras ao redor do mundo

"Thank you"
(Banch Abegaze, empresário)
✅—Kamasi Washington


A Bahia é um caldeirão quente de ritmos e estilos musicais, mas um estilo particular aqui é tão essencial, tão fundamental não só para a música baiana especificamente, mas para a música brasileira em geral - ocupando um lugar aqui análogo ao do blues nos Estados Unidos - que merece ser destacado. Ela deriva (ou alguns dizem irmão para) do ritmo cabila do candomblé angola... ...e é chamada de...

Samba Chula / Samba de Roda

Mãe do Samba... filha do destino carregada para a Bahia por Bantus ensconced dentro dos porões de negreiros entrando na grande Bahia de Todos os Santos (o termo refere-se tanto a uma dança quanto ao estilo de música que evoluiu para acompanhar essa dança; a ortografia oficial da "Bahia" - no sentido de "baía" - foi desde então alterada para "Baía")... evoluiu nas plantações de cana de açúcar do Recôncavo (aquela área fértil ao redor da baía, cuja forma côncava deu origem ao nome da região) - nas proximidades de cidades como Cachoeira e Santo Amaro, Santiago do Iguape e Acupe. Este proto-samba infelizmente caiu no caminho de difíceis de encontrar e ouvir...

Há muito espetáculo na Bahia...

Carnaval com seu trio elétrico - caminhões sonoros com músicos no topo - parecendo semi-reboques interestelares de volta do futuro...shows de MPB (música popular brasileira) no Teatro Castro Alves de Salvador (maior palco da América do Sul!) com total valor de produção, o público sentado (como sempre nos teatros modernos) como estátuas da Ilha de Páscoa...

...glamour, glitz, dinheiro, poder e publicitários...

E depois há de onde tudo isso veio... do outro lado da baía, uma terra de agricultores e pescadores de subsistência, muitos dos mais velhos incapazes de ler ou escrever... seus sambas precursores de tudo isso, sem os quais nenhuma das anteriores existiria, suas melodias - quando não criadas por eles mesmos - as invenções de pessoas como eles, mas agora esquecidas (pois a maioria dessas pessoas estará dentro de um par de gerações ou mais), seus ritmos um constante estado de inconstância e fluxo, tocados de uma forma diferente (a maioria) de qualquer grupo de músicos do norte do Trópico de Câncer... fazendo com que o martelo de forja do Hit Parade das últimas décadas seja quase que doloroso de ouvir depois que os ouvidos se acostumam a ritmos sempre mutáveis, tocados como a aurora boreal parece...

Portanto, há o espetáculo, e há o espetacular, e na maioria das vezes o último é encontrado longe do primeiro, entre o povo pobre das aldeias e do sertão, os humildes e os honestos, pessoas que podem dizer mais (como um velho bluesman delta tocando uma guitarra batida em um alpendre flácido) com um pandeiro (pandeiro brasileiro) e uma chula (um "folksong" gritado/cantado) do que a maioria com qualquer tecnologia e dinheiro de apoio que o dinheiro possa comprar. O coração deste assunto, está lá. Se você me perguntar de qualquer forma.

Acima, o incomparável João do Boi, chuleiro, recentemente falecido.

 

 

Por que Brasil?

 

O Brasil não é uma nação européia. Não é uma nação norte-americana. Não é uma nação do leste asiático. Compreende — selva e deserto e centros urbanos densos — tanto o equador quanto o Trópico de Capricórnio.

 

O Brasil absorveu mais de dez vezes o número de africanos escravizados levados para os Estados Unidos da América, e é um repositório de divindades africanas (e sua música) agora em grande parte esquecido em suas terras de origem.

 

O Brasil era um refúgio (de certa forma) para os sefarditas que fugiam de uma Inquisição que os seguia através do Atlântico (aquele símbolo não oficial da música nacional brasileira — o pandeiro — foi quase certamente trazido ao Brasil por esse povo).

 

Através das savanas ressequidas do interior do culturalmente fecundo nordeste, onde o mago Hermeto Pascoal nasceu na Lagoa da Canoa e cresceu em Olho d'Águia, uma grande parte da população aborígine do Brasil foi absorvida por uma cultura caboclo/quilombola pontuada pela Estrela de Davi.

 

Três culturas - de três continentes - correndo por suas vidas, sua confluência formando uma quarta cintilante e sem precedentes. Pandeirista no telhado.

 

Em nenhum outro lugar a não ser aqui. Brasil é um matrix mesmo.

 

  • Lucian Ban Composer
  • Molly Jong-Fast New York City
  • J. Velloso Brazil
  • Oded Lev-Ari New York City
  • Victor Wooten Composer
  • Sérgio Machado Cineasta, Filmmaker
  • Kim André Arnesen Choral Works
  • Samba de Nicinha Bahia
  • Marc Ribot Soul
  • Mônica Salmaso Brazil
  • Questlove Multi-Instrumentalist
  • Sierra Hull Singer-Songwriter
  • Rick Beato Multi-Instrumentalist
  • Niwel Tsumbu Congo
  • Marc Ribot Writer
  • Catherine Russell New York City
  • Guiga de Ogum Ijexá
  • Arthur Verocai Rio de Janeiro
  • James Martin Brass Band
  • Missy Mazolli New York City
  • Paolo Fresu Bologna, Italy
  • Neo Muyanga African Music
  • John McEuen Singer-Songwriter
  • Luques Curtis Jazz
  • China Moses Jazz
  • Joshua Abrams Bass
  • João Bosco Singer-Songwriter
  • Oscar Peñas New York City
  • Jorge Glem Composer
  • Booker T. Jones Soul
  • Fabian Almazan Composer
  • Justin Stanton Keyboards
  • Martín Sued Buenos Aires
  • Nick Douglas Comedy Writer
  • Catherine Bent Choro
  • Vincent Herring Jazz
  • Sam Wasson Cultural Historian
  • Mika Mutti Composer
  • Gabriel Grossi Brazil
  • Rose Aféfé Bahia
  • Beeple VJ Loops
  • Luciano Calazans Bass
  • Guilherme Varella Advogado, Lawyer
  • Martin Shore Memphis, Tennessee
  • Ryan Keberle Jazz
  • Frank Olinsky Artist
  • Bobby Sanabria Manhattan School of Music Faculty
  • Dan Trueman Composer
  • Helado Negro Ecuador
  • João Rabello Rio de Janeiro
  • Brian Cross aka B+ Brazilian Music
  • Diego Figueiredo Violão, Guitar
  • JD Allen New York City
  • Mark Markham Piano
  • Courtney Pine Composer
  • Nomcebo Zikode Singer-Songwriter
  • Marcus Miller Jazz
  • Jonga Cunha Percussion
  • Fabrício Mota Baixo, Bass
  • Menelaw Sete Pintor/Painter
  • Tonho Matéria Bahia
  • Joyce Moreno Bossa Nova
  • Eder Muniz Arte da Rua, Street Art
  • Terence Blanchard Trumpet
  • Mike Compton Old-Time Music
  • Stuart Duncan Nashville, Tennessee
  • Rudy Royston Percussion
  • Julie Fowlis Singer
  • Jau Singer-Songwriter
  • Gearóid Ó hAllmhuráin Uilleann Pipes
  • Márcio Bahia Rio de Janeiro
  • Chick Corea Jazz
  • David Castillo New Orleans
  • Maciel Salú Singer
  • Anna Mieke Irish Folk Music
  • Robert Glasper Piano
  • Raynald Colom Flamenco
  • Jorge Ben Brazil
  • Joe Lovano Author
  • Virgínia Rodrigues Salvador
  • Cinho Damatta Cantor-Compositor, Singer-Songwriter
  • Zakir Hussain Indian Classical Music
  • Kaia Kater Singer-Songwriter
  • Caetano Veloso Singer-Songwriter
  • Dani Deahl DJ
  • Gabrielzinho do Irajá Singer
  • Lula Moreira Brazil
  • Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva Servidor Público, Public Servant
  • Edgar Meyer Double Bass
  • Vânia Oliveira Salvador
  • Heriberto Araujo Amazon
  • Amit Chatterjee Vocalist
  • Miles Okazaki Guitar
  • Luiz Santos Multi-Instrumentalist
  • John Zorn Record Label Owner
  • Manassés de Souza Ceará
  • Zé Katimba GRES Imperatriz Leopoldinense
  • Michael Garnice Writer
  • Trombone Shorty Trumpet
  • Michelle Mercer Music Critic
  • Alexandre Vieira Brasil, Brazil
  • Carrtoons Multi-Instrumentalist
  • Kazemde George Saxophone
  • Adriano Giffoni Rio de Janeiro
  • Rez Abbasi Jazz
  • Judith Hill Singer-Songwriter
  • Otmaro Ruiz Los Angeles
  • Paulão 7 Cordas Choro
  • Bill Callahan Singer-Songwriter
  • Chris Boardman Producer
  • Colson Whitehead Short Stories
  • Paulinha Cavalcanti Cavaquinho
  • James Martins Brasil, Brazil
  • Gerônimo Santana Trombone
  • Paulão 7 Cordas Brazil
  • Pedrão Abib Salvador
  • Christopher Wilkinson Screenwriter
  • Mingo Araújo Brazil
  • Steve Bailey Berklee College of Music Faculty
  • Armandinho Macêdo Choro
  • David Sacks Washington, D.C.
  • Giveton Gelin Trumpet
  • Shanequa Gay Multimedia Artist
  • Ron Miles Trumpet
  • Issa Malluf North African Percussion
  • Chris McQueen Guitar
  • Mandisi Dyantyis Composer
  • Kíla Multi-Cultural
  • Michael League Brooklyn, NY
  • Dale Farmer Appalachian Music
  • David Simon Writer
  • Isaias Rabelo Jazz
  • Casa Preta Teatro, Theater
  • Dan Trueman Princeton University Faculty
  • Harold López-Nussa Havana
  • Ry Cooder Record Producer
  • Carol Soares Samba de Roda
  • Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Essayist
  • Chano Domínguez Piano
  • Walter Smith III Saxophone
  • Arturo Sandoval Piano
  • Zeca Baleiro Maranhão
  • Robin Eubanks Jazz
  • Daru Jones Record Producer
  • Nicholas Payton Writer
  • Gerson Silva Bahia
  • Matt Glaser Bluegrass
  • Burhan Öçal Percussion
  • Pasquale Grasso Guitar
  • Sierra Hull Nashville, Tennessee
  • Omari Jazz Brainfeeder
  • Maria Struduth Cachoeira
  • Lakecia Benjamin Ropeadope
  • Jon Batiste New York City
  • Will Holshouser Jazz
  • Rebeca Omordia London
  • Steve Abbott London
  • Lionel Loueke African Music
  • Jeff Tweedy Singer-Songwriter
  • Tommaso Zillio Metal
  • Dieu-Nalio Chery Photojournalist
  • Niwel Tsumbu Singer
  • Eamonn Flynn Funk
  • Welson Tremura Choro
  • Sanjay K Roy India
  • Joshue Ashby Afro-Caribbean Music
  • Isaiah J. Thompson Composer
  • Terell Stafford Classical Music
  • Ana Moura Fado
  • Chief Xian aTunde Adjuah Record Producer
  • Keita Ogawa Brooklyn, NY
  • Joe Lovano Composer
  • Nação Zumbi Rap
  • Cécile McLorin Salvant Illustrator
  • Jorge Washington Actor
  • Nelson Ayres Brazil
  • Thundercat Bass
  • Philip Watson Writer
  • David Ritz Los Angeles
  • David Kirby Writer
  • Errollyn Wallen Piano
  • Paul Anthony Smith Picotage
  • Cássio Nobre Guitar
  • Carlos Malta Saxophone
  • María Grand Singer
  • Danilo Brito Bandolim
  • Mika Mutti Los Angeles
  • Ana Luisa Barral Salvador
  • Giovanni Russonello Electoral Politics
  • Martyn Techno
  • Danilo Pérez Piano
  • John Waters Playwright
  • Jorge Aragão Rio de Janeiro
  • Carlos Prazeres Música Classica, Classical Music
  • Abhijith P. S. Nair Indian Fusion
  • Giovanni Russonello Journalist
  • Gel Barbosa Produtor Musical, Music Producer
  • Gabriel Geszti Brasil, Brazil
  • David Chesky New York City
  • Jill Scott Spoken Word
  • Bill Laurance Classical Music
  • Mart'nália Percussion
  • Olga Mieleszczuk Yiddish Folk Songs
  • Sunna Gunnlaugs Jazz
  • Guto Wirtti Samba
  • Léo Rodrigues Pandeiro
  • Karsh Kale कर्ष काळे EDM
  • Tray Chaney Songwriter
  • Carlos Henriquez Latin Jazz
  • Zachary Richard Guitar
  • Michel Camilo Dominican Republic
  • Nara Couto Bahia
  • Antonio Adolfo Piano
  • J. Pierre Muralist
  • Damon Krukowski Indie Folk
  • Cláudio Jorge MPB
  • Bianca Gismonti Rio de Janeiro
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