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Brazil a Todo Vapor

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Download links and information about Brazil a Todo Vapor by Gal Costa. This album was released in 1971 and it belongs to World Music, Latin genres. It contains 19 tracks with total duration of 01:07:36 minutes.

Artist: Gal Costa
Release date: 1971
Genre: World Music, Latin
Tracks: 19
Duration: 01:07:36
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Coração Vagabundo (Ao Vivo) 3:44
2. Luz do Sol (Ao Vivo) 5:22
3. Como 2 e 2 (Solo) 2:45
4. Mal Secreto (Ao Vivo) 5:02
5. Falsa Baiana (Ao Vivo) 5:34
6. Antonico (Ao Vivo) 4:46
7. Sua Estupidez (Ao Vivo) 4:02
8. Fruta Gogóia (Ao Vivo) 1:06
9. Vapor Barato (Ao Vivo) 8:37
10. Dê um Rolê (Ao Vivo) 4:05
11. Pérola Negra (Ao Vivo) 4:44
12. Fruta Gogóia (Acapella) 0:40
13. Como 2 e 2 (Ao Vivo) 4:32
14. Hotel das Estrelas (Ao Vivo) 4:30
15. Assum Preto (Ao Vivo) 3:49
16. Bota a Mão Nas Cadeiras (Ao Vivo) 1:09
17. Maria Bêthania (Ao Vivo) 0:44
18. Chuva, Suor e Cerveja (Ao Vivo) 1:59
19. Charles Anjo 45 (Ao Vivo) 0:26

Details

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A Todo Vapor is a really fascinating live document of Gal Costa from the early '70s where she proved to be as exciting and diverse on-stage as she was at that time in the studio. The first seven tracks (of 18) feature Costa alone, accompanied by only her own acoustic guitar and the performances are dramatic, intimate, precise, emotional, and stunningly clear. These tracks display her voice perfectly, pushing up front all of the natural characteristics of Costa's incredibly strong pipes in with the urgent beauty one can only obtain from a live performance. A Todo Vapor would've been a fine set with only these tracks, but the real treat comes in about halfway through the eight-minute epic, "Vapor Barato," when out of nowhere, her band joins in and turns the slow, intimate descending progression into a scorching lament with Costa wailing over the top, showcasing her impressive dexterity and emotional fervor. This intensity and incredible form continue throughout the rest of the recording; the band is tight and progressive, experimental and dynamic — actually quite mad — similar to her band on her two self-titled records from 1969, so it's no surprise that the group brings inconceivable brilliance to "Pérola Negra," "Chuva, Suor E Cerveja," and others as well as churning out a particularly inspired version of "Hotel das Estrelas." The recording quality isn't bad for the time, but it does suffer from some poor editing between songs. Still, A Todo Vapor is a great document to add to further expand the character of Gal Costa.