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Capoeira Featured in 100 Plus Commercial

March 15, 2006 | By Tartaruga in web



Intructor Rafael Barbosa Rosario of Bantus Capoeira Malaysia performs a few Capoeira moves (virtually) underwater for an isotonic drink commercial.

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How not to act when visiting a new group

March 26, 2006 | By Raposa in journals

Last week, an acquaintance of mine, let's call him "Lou" asked me where and when my angola group held classes, because he was interested in training. Lou is a fellow foreigner in Brazil (though not from the same country as me) and capoeirista of 5-6 years experience in a well-known and excellent contemporanea capoeira group. I gave him the info and he showed up at the next angola class and proceeded to make an idiot out of himself.

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NPR Capoeira Broadcast

March 02, 2006 | By admin in web

National Public Radio (NPR) did a broadcast on February 20th about Capoeira Angola and Mestre Joao Grande. Definitely worth checking out here. UPDATE March 3, 2006 - They added some more info and some great video as well.

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Developing "Expression"

February 25, 2006 | By Raposa in journals

Lately Daniel (my capoeira angola instructor) has been telling me to "work on expression" in my movements. Ever since I started training with him, he's periodically mentioned that I'm doing the movements correctly but with not enough expression, or with the wrong type of expression - i.e. regional/contemporanea expression as opposed to angola expression. The whole "expression" thing sometimes irks me, for a few reasons...

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A Capoeira Music Podcast

February 19, 2006 | By admin in web

OK, this is a little old - like from last year - but I just came across it - a nice podcast about capoeira influenced music over at Mr. Pipson's Incredible Podcasts which features "A deep journey featuring tracks from Bossa and Samba Classics to Baile Funk and electronic breaks." Worth checking out for some neat ear candy.

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Learning Portuguese for capoeira, a primer

February 14, 2006 | By julien in journals

(This is a reprint from my capoeira blog, JogoLog. I have gotten a lot of positive comments on it, so I figured I'd reprint it here.)

For those interested, I thought I might write a brief primer of my experiences learning Brazilian Portuguese for the purpose of immersing myself in the culture of capoeira. I suppose these tips could work for the acquisition of any language, although I suspect it may be more appropriate for romance languages, or at least, those of an Indo-European origin.

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Capoeira in Popular Culture

January 30, 2006 | By Raposa in journals

In the last few years, we've seen an exponential increase in the number of capoeira's appearances in the media. Capoeiristas are divided on this issue: some celebrate capoeira's increasing recognition and popularity, while others worry that this process will bring about fundamental and damaging changes to the art.

Those who are in favor view any appearance of capoeira in popular culture as beneficial. They claim that capoeira's increased visibility helps advertise the art and encourage people to join. At the other end of the spectrum are those who argue that the media dilutes capoeira and presents a false image of it. They tend to accuse capoeiristas who are involved in these endeavors of "selling out," of sacrificing the art's traditions in order to make a few bucks. There's also the fear that capoeira will become the next trendy workout and end up a pale, commercialized version of its former deep and intricate self.

My own point of view falls somewhere in the middle. Allow me to elaborate some of my thoughts on this tough (and often touchy) issue.

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The Challenge Part II

January 25, 2006 | By Travado in journals

Fast Forward another 5 years. I was working at a group home on the third shift. Me and this co-worker named Big Dave, both hailed from NYC. Both of us grew up slapboxing with our peers. For those that don't know, slapboxing is just that: boxing with open hands. It allowed us to learn how to box (or throw the hands as we used to say) in almost realistic situations. Of course, sometimes slapboxing turned into real fist fights but most young Black and Latino males who grew up in the boroughs of New York City all the way up until the dawn of the young punk with a gun learned how to box through slapboxing.

"That capoeira ain't gonna save you know is it?..."

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On Songs, Part II - Why They Should Stay in Portuguese

January 21, 2006 | By Raposa in journals

Capoeiristas fall into two camps when it comes to singing capoeira songs in other languages. The people who are against it say that Portuguese is the traditional language of capoeira songs and we should preserve that tradition. They argue that the individual should change in order to learn capoeira, not change capoeira in order to suit the individual. Those who are in favor of singing in other languages say that capoeira has always evolved to adapt to its environment, and as capoeira spreads to other countries and cultures, non-Brazilian capoeiristas should be able to freely express themselves in their own languages. They argue that Portuguese wasn't the native language of capoeira's African creators, so why should we stick to it as "tradition"?

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NYC Event for African Visual Culture

January 17, 2006 | By admin in news

Artificial Afrika

OK, so this isn't directly capoeira related, but the show was put together by Prof. C. Daniel Dawson who is well known in capoeira scholarly circles and Vernon Reid of the Grammy Award winning rock band Living Colour, and well, I think if you're a capoeira player and in the New York area you should check out the exhibition of Artificial Afrika coming late January at G.A.S..

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