Terrakota - Oxalá (Full Album) 2016 - Video
PUBLISHED:  Dec 02, 2016
DESCRIPTION:
TRACKLIST
1. Gira Giro 0:45
2. Jah Flow 5:08
3. Entre o Céu e a Terra 9:00
4. Mexe Mexe feat. Beat Laden 14:59
5. Social Insecurity 18:30
6. Oxalá feat. Vitorino 26:09
7. Bankster 31:22
8. Deserto Amanhã 37:19
9. Heartist 44:01
10. Wari feat. Florian Doucet 49:30
11. Cegueira 54:45
12. Kutch Nahi feat. Mahesh Vinayakram 58:58


Lisbon – Over the past ten years, Terrakota has forged its own pan-African and trans-Atlantic rootsworldkota sound, a style that has travelled the world, always looking for musical fusions within the multi-ethnic cauldron: Afro-Brazilian rhythms, soukouss, reggae, afrobeat, gnawa, influences from India & beyond. On its sixth studio album “Oxalá”, the band embraces its Portuguese roots while diving more deeply into their rock influences.

This newfound love for their Portuguese roots might be a surprise for some, it's just the normal evolution of the band that has lead to this new sound, influenced by the fresh energy of new members and the new process of creation. Terrakota's first albums were inspired by travels to Burkina Faso, Senegal, Mali, Guinea, while also incorporating influences from Latin America. The fourth album is clearly marked by their trip to India. This one is inspired by an internal travel, giving light to Portuguese songs built on top of their Afro-explosive melting pot.

It's not Portuguese chanson but tracks with a more simple structure, always with the typical Terrakota instrumentals that arise from the same cauldron of ideas. Desert blues, Afro-rock, electric batuque, ethnic funk-rock, gnawa, samba & soukouss, sang in Portuguese, while Africa remains the main source, the starting point from where the band looks for the perfect alchemy to get to their trademark modern roots sound, where all borders, distances and barriers are wiped out.

OXALÁ
“Oxalá” is a Portuguese word, of Arabic origin, celebrated in Brazil. It comes from the Arabic expression “inch'allah”, an expression often used in Portuguese (“se Deus quiser”). In Portugal, Oxalá stands for the desire for something to happen. Followers of the Afro-Brazilian religion candomblé know Oxalá or Obatalá as the first orixá (Nigerian yoruba god), creator of the world, men, animals and plants.

One word, one expression but a lot of meaning, a place where many cultures collide and intermingle. A word that comes from the Arabs, who were based in Portugal for centuries and left their marks, before it was introduced in Lusophone countries via the trans-atlantic slave trade. These darkest pages of human history somehow fascinates Terrakota, following the ancient trade routes, but turned upside-down, from the New World back to Africa, drinking from the fantastic musical diversity that has been spread around the world through slavery.

For Terrakota, Oxalá, that desire for something to happen, can be understood as a political statement, a desire for humans to go back to a lifestyle in harmony with the nature that surrounds us, for a world without borders where cultural encounters are the norm, a No Man's Land where no man can claim the land is theirs. The critical status of the human societies and the planet serve as a base for a conscious message to which the band will not renounce.

On this sixth album, the leaders of the Portuguese Afro/world/fusion scene have again invited some special guests to make the music even richer, special people with whom the band has a privileged relationship: traditional Alentejo singer Vitorino, Indian singer Mahesh Vinayakram, French rapper Florian Doucet, beatmaker & producer Beat Laden, Kumpania Algazzara's horn section, and backing vocals by the Lisbon-based Selma Uamusse (Mozambique) & Anastácia Carvalho (Angola), without forgetting a brilliant text by the Angolan rapper Luaty Ikonoklasta.

After parting ways with vocalist Romi and two sabbaticals, Terrakota has added fresh blood with the young and talented singer/multi-instrumentalist Gonçalo Sarmento, the gracious performer/dancer Diana Rego, as well as new drummer Márcio Pinto and percussionist Paulo das Cavernas. These new elements and the extra years of travelling for the veterans have brought Terrakota to an even more mature sound, concising lyrics and the guts to do some songwriting in addition to their explosive Afro-world sound. The Portuguese globetrotters have reached new highs and are ready to take Europe by storm and get back to the international festivals to spread their positive vibes, politically engaged message and energizing musical melting-pot!


Pre-single & videoclip “Mexe Mexe” (April 2016)
New video “Gira Giro” (October 2016) to be followed by “Social Insecurity” (November 2016)

“Oxalá” is an independent release and comes out internationally on the 7th of October, distributed by Altafonte (Portugal, Spain & digital worldwide) and Zephyrus Music (rest of the world).
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