• 6 months ago
"Eu sou O Rio", debut album by the band Black Future, appeared on all lists of the best releases of the year it was rele | dG1fcFkyOHdZVVBEUDQ
Transcript
00:00The future is not in him, Gudo.
00:09Much of what was produced in the 80s today sounds timeless, out of date,
00:15because you don't have a contemporary counterpart that does the same thing.
00:20You don't have a band that does today more or less the same thing that,
00:25for example, Black Future did.
00:27The cool thing is that in this fight between São Paulo and Rio,
00:31Black Future disorganizes the existence of Black Future,
00:35disorganizes this discussion forever.
00:53Black Future has to do with a lens,
00:55a lens that you stay like this, an angle, that you choose the side,
00:59the situation, you keep going around, sometimes you don't choose anything,
01:03but you keep it on, the machine.
01:06But at the same time they were very, very vandals too,
01:11so it wasn't, it was a slap, it was a criticism that spoke of the barbarities,
01:16it was a bit of a surumbatic, it's all over, everyone is going to die.
01:21Punk was a hot potato.
01:23Suddenly, from people who didn't expect it,
01:27from a bunch of guys who didn't expect it to be inserted,
01:30because the idea was like this, who was inserted in the information,
01:33it was your area, it was the middle class, it had always been like this,
01:36since Bill Haley and his comments.
01:38The first feeling it gave me was chaos, man.
01:40I said, damn it, this is chaos.
01:42But it looked like Lapa's face to me, because if we go see Lapa today,
01:46the way he's dressed up, beautiful and all,
01:48but Lapa 20 years ago was like that.
01:51There's a challenge here, I think they're challenging
01:55what was happening on the radio at the time.
02:21.

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