Vocalist of the group Aláfia, Xenia França transits for soul, jazz, R&B and references to the African culture in “Xenia”, her first solo LP.
“Look inside my eyes, look at my face. You will see I lived a lot, you think I did have not seen anything.”
Nina Becker’s new work is a kind of samba-jazz, in which the singer put voices with pianos, sweet melodies and contained guitars.
Domenico Lancellotti continues his search for the unexpected in this second work. He is an artist who seems to have no fear of playing with new possibilities even without knowing what kind of possibility it is.
Ayrton Montarroyos gained attention in 2015 when he participated in the television program The Voice Brasil.
To make “Flores & cores”, the 27th album in his career, Guilherme Arantes revisited and updated songs that he did in the 1970s and 1980s without losing the essence of them.
Linn da Quebrada made perhaps the most cheeky and political album in Brazil in 2017. In “Pajubá”, she mixes rap, funk, electronic and even a little rock to sing about the difficulty and reality of being gay and transexual in the Brazilian peripheries.