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That covers compilation, featuring the likes of theNationalandArcade Fire, benefited Aids awareness charity the Red Hot Organisation. Now the fund-raising body is aiming to repeat that success with a mash-up of the cream of contemporary indie and late 1960s Brazilian tropicalia, a vibrant combination of psych, funk and leftist politics.
'Red Hot + Rio 2' is the follow-up to a 1996 release that featured a mix of artists, includingDavid ByrneandStereolab, tackling the nation's bossa nova heritage. In Rio-based newspaper O Globo,quoted on the Red Hot Web site, executive producer Beco Dranoff explains the inspiration behind the charity's latest release.
"There is a great parallel between the Brazilian musical movement of the late Sixties and what one hears and produces today,"he says."Tropicalia was a crucial movement, which preached that everything would end up mixing: music, culture, fashion, movies, etc. It was a bold vision that became reality. Today everything in the world is interconnected, and so tropicalia becomes deeply relevant."
Pitchfork, meanwhile, is streaming one of the new tracks --Beirut's cover of Caetano Veloso's 'O Leaozinho,' tackled with conviction in the original Portuguese. Also lined up are previous Red Hot contributors, namelyDirty ProjectorsandJose Gonzalez, plusBeck,John Legend,Devendra Banhart,Of MontrealandNeon Indian.
'Red Hot + Rio 2' is scheduled for release on June 28.
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