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Guns and roses: bossa nova and Brazil's music of popular protest, 1958–681

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 November 2008

Extract

When the Brazilian Antônio Carlos (Tom) Jobim died in December 1994, twentieth-century Western music lost one of its greatest popular songwriters. That may be a contentious assertion, and one open to endless debate, if his work is to be judged against that of the other major composers of the age on purely aesthetic grounds. It is indisputable, though, if the criteria are Jobim's role as a founder and leading songwriter of the bossa nova movement, given the influence of that tradition within Brazil and beyond, and as Latin America's most successful musical export (Treece 1992).

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1997

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