Severino Araujo e Sua Orquestra Tabajara (1956)

11 06 2013

Link original: Severino Araujo e Sua Orquestra Tabajara (1956)
Publicado em: Sunday, November 16, 2008 by zecalouro

SEVERINO ARAUJO E SUA ORQUESTRA TABAJARA

Hello, good evening! This is the end of our short series of orchestra albums, which began a few days ago with Maestro Severino Filho and being closed here by the legendary Orquestra Tabajara, certainly the oldest orchestra in activity in Brazil and perhaps one of the oldest in activity around the world. Orchestra Tabajara was created in 1933, being commanded by Maestro Severino Araujo since 1938. By the way, 2008 landmarks 70 years of Maestro Severino Araujo in front of Orquestra Tabajara.

I would like to thank Carlos Watkins (at comment section) and Marco Antonio Russi (at my personal email) for the identification of Jayme Araujo de Oliveira (Teddy Garner) as Maestro Severino Araujo’s brother. This post is dedicated to these good friends. Now I can finish my article with the information needed about this musician. Let’s see.

This is Severino Araujo e Sua Orquestra Tabajara (1956), for Continental, released in the 10-inch size, but with a running time of 31 minutes, such like a regular 12-inch LP. Maestro Severino Araujo and Orquestra Tabajara deliver instrumental renditions of Brazilian standards and music written by Severino Araujo, which are the ones that I like most, especially 02 – Melodia em Tres Ritmos, featuring a very well played sax and some “batucadas”. Continental did not credit Orquestra Tabajara musicians, but I could find information about the orchestra members around that years, with several renowned musicians, including K-Ximbinho, Del Loro, Geraldo Medeiros, Ze Bodega, among others. Tracks include:

Personnel

Maestro Severino Araujo
(leader, arranger, sax)
Plinio Araujo, Geraldo Medeiros, Porfirio Costa
(piston)
Manoel Araujo, Jose Leocadio, Aurelio Camilo
(trombone)
K-Ximbinho, Ze Bodega, Lourival Clementino, Genaldo Medeiros
(sax)
Jorge Aires
(drums)
Claudio Freire
(piano)
Juvenal
(bass)
Del Loro
(guitar)
Gilberto D’Avilla
(percussion)

Track List

01 – Copacabana (João de Barro / Alberto Ribeiro)
02 – Água Com Açúcar (Severino Araújo)
03 – Na Batida do Samba (Severino Araújo)
04 – Comprando Barulho (Jorge Tavares / Djalma Mafra)
05 – Hoje Ou Amanhã (Norival Reis / Rutinaldo)
06 – Beijos de Mel (Severino Araújo)
07 – Favela (Roberto Martins / Waldemar Silva)
08 – Coco Tará-tá-tá (Geraldo Medeiros)

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Este disco pode ser buscado no Parallel Realities.





Severino Araujo e Orquestra Tabajara – Brasil (1981)

3 08 2012

Link original: Severino Araujo e Orquestra Tabajara – Brasil (1981)
Publicado em: Thursday, September 13, 2007 by zecalouro

Hello, Good Evening! It’s been a hard day’s night, and I’ve been working like a parrot this week. Especially today, managing customers and also working on features to Loronix, amazing features by the way. What a day, I lost a computer an hour ago, not a big deal, but I will need to spend a lot of time fixing it. Life has been really busy down here.

Anyway, better start with something very positive and happy, such like the legendary Orquestra Tabajara by the mighty Maestro Severino Araujo, leader and founder of Orquestra Tabajara. Let’s see.

This is Severino Araujo e Orquestra Tabajara – Brasil (1981), for Phonodisc. Orquestra Tabajara is active since 1937 and it is probably the oldest Brazilian orchestra in activity. I think Maestro Severino Araujo and his orchestra need to be released more often, with attention on their several 78 rpm as main performers or backing renowned artists. Tracks include:

01 – Morena Boca de Ouro (Ary Barroso)
02 – Despedida de Mangueira (Aldo Cabral / Benedito Lacerda)
03 – Relembrando o Norte (Severino Araujo)
04 – Pastorinhas (Joao de Barro / Noel Rosa)
05 – Tatu Subiu no Pau (Eduardo Souto)
06 – Zé Pereira (Severino Araujo)
07 – Vassourinhas (Clube Carnavalesco Mixto Vassourinhas)
08 – Paraquedista (Jose Leocadio)
09 – Praça Onze (Herivelto Martins / Grande Otelo)
10 – Puladinho (Severino Araujo)
11 – Maxixando (Geraldo Medeiros / Carvalhinho)
12 – Recife Capital do Frevo (Geraldo Medeiros)

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Não tinha esse disco. Porém, graças ao amigo Martoni, ele pode ser buscado na Rádio Forma e Elenco.  A má notícia é que, coincidentemente, o maestro Severino Araújo faleceu hoje, 03 de agosto de 2012. A notícia está aqui.





Severino Araujo e Sua Orquestra Tabajara – 12 Chorinhos de Severino Araujo (1960)

25 03 2012

Link original: Severino Araujo e Sua Orquestra Tabajara – 12 Chorinhos de Severino Araujo (1960)
Publicado em: Saturday, May 12, 2007 by zecalouro 

Let’s start great today, showing a unique album sent by Caetano Rodrigues and a longtime request from several Loronixers. Maestro Severino Araujo and Orquestra Tabajara made their rendition to the choro genre delivering a blend of choro with big band, on a really delightful set. Let’s check.

This is Severino Araujo e Sua Orquestra Tabajara – 12 Chorinhos de Severino Araujo (1960), for Continental. I was making some research on choro and now I understand something very important, the term “Chorinho” is not well received by Choro fans, thay say chorinho is something different, the choro genre with lyrics. This album does not have lyrics; it is pure instrumental music with Maestro Severino Araujo and his orchestra at their peak. Caetano asks Loronixers to pay special attention to the tracks that he likes most, Mirando-te and Um Chorinho pra Voce. Truly beautiful indeed. Thanks once again Caetano for an album that I never heard such like before. Tracks include:

01 – Um Chorinho Pra Você (Severino Araújo)
02 – Um Chorinho na Aldeia (Severino Araújo)
03 – Um Chorinho Em Montevideo (Severino Araújo)
04 – Puladinho (Severino Araújo)
05 – Oh Clarinete Gostoso (Severino Araújo)
06 – Um Chorinho Em Pinhal (Severino Araújo)
07 – Um Chorinho Delicioso (Severino Araújo)
08 – Mirando-te (Severino Araújo / Aldo Cabral)
09 – Pensando Em Você (Severino Araújo)
10 – Espinha de Bacalhau (Severino Araújo)
11 – Um Chorinho Para Clarinete (Severino Araújo)
12 – Um Chorinho Em Cabo Frio (Severino Araújo)

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Este disco pode ser buscado no Parallel Realities.





Orquestra Tabajara – Severino Araujo e Sua Orquestra Tabajara (2001)

16 03 2012

Link original: Orquestra Tabajara – Severino Araujo e Sua Orquestra Tabajara (2001)
Publicado em: Saturday, April 28, 2007 by zecalouro

Hello, Good Evening! Yesterday we had the amazing Copacabana Palace Movie post and I was confident to say that people would make a great reception to it. I was not wrong. Copacabana Palace is far away the post with the best performance at Loronix with 480 downloads in less than 24 hours. This number is four times above the average. Mr. E, really made a nice contribution.

Now I want your attention for a really special post. I read today that Maestro Severino Araujo made 90 years old for five days ago, April, 23rd and this is the reason I was looking for to make a tribute to a very important Brazilian orchestra, home of many musicians we knew with Loronix and also the oldest Brazilian musical group in activity, the legendary Orquestra Tabajara, active since 1934.

This is Orquestra Tabajara – Severino Araujo e Sua Orquestra Tabajara (2001), for Warner. This is a compilation issued by Warner Brazil in 2001 that has gone out of print and was never issues again will be our introduction to the 73 years old Orquestra Tabajara. Alvaro Neder from AMG made a really nice Maestro Severino Araujo Biography that will be much better than my best try to describe this great music ensemble. Tracks include:

Maestro Severino Araujo AMG Biography

For more than 60 years, Severino Araújo has been the conductor, arranger, clarinetist, and leader of the Orquestra Tabajara, the most important dance orchestra in Brazil. It is a native version of the Glenn Miller big band (and also doubles clarinet and sax) that plays music from all over the world with a Brazilian swing. Recording more than 100 78 rpm’s (always for Continental), the orchestra’s international career has taken them to play in several countries, especially Argentina, France, and Portugal. With almost 13,000 performances worldwide, they figure in the Guinness Book of World Records as the world’s oldest orchestra still in evidence. The author of “Espinha de Bacalhau” (along with many other all-time hits), one of the eight most performed choros in the entire world, shared the stage with the Tabajara, with the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra in a special performance that became registered in the orchestral history of Brazil.

Araujo’s father, José Severino de Araújo (Sazuzinha), was an instrumentalist, arranger, and band conductor. Several of his sons became musicians: Severino, Manuel (trombone), Plínio (drums), the famous Zé Bodega (tenor sax), and Jaime (saxes). At four, Araujo was already taking musical lessons with his father. He accounts that at that time, he was almost going to sleep when his father, upon finishing a new arrangement, told him that if he waited a while, he would teach him ten new musical lessons. He took the lessons and the next day, he performed all of them; then his father went out and bought him a French method, which oriented Araujo’s self-teaching process. Two years later, at six, he became his father’s assistant in teaching his pupils.

In 1928, Araujo began to take the instruments, beginning with horn and saxophone, soon taking the clarinet. At that time, there wasn’t a Brazilian method for that instrument, so he wrote his own exercises that he gathered, writing the choro “Desconcertante,” a real technical challenge. With his home serving as the band’s headquarters, he learned all of the instruments, with the exception of piano and violin (which didn’t exist in that band). At 12, he performed in public for the first time, playing clarinet with his father’s band. It was when he wrote a dobrado, complete with the arrangement, that he even came to play with the band, but it got lost. Living in nearby cities during that period, in 1930 he returned to Limoeiro, working in the local commerce. In 1933, he moved to Ingá PB, where he worked as a bureaucrat and participated in the local band. In 1936, he moved to João Pessoa PB, and was hired as clarinetist for the state police band, when he was challenged to solo the “Fantasia Traviata” (Verdi), which had not been played for the last 12 years. Having 15 days to study the piece, he performed it in three days, receiving a standing ovation from his bandmates. In that year, he wrote “Espinha de Bacalhau,” and in the next, was hired by Rádio Tabajara as clarinetist and saxophonist. He also served the Army as a first-class musician. At that point, the Orquestra Tabajara had been created four years before by Olegário de Nuna Freire and Jost vön Shosten, under the name Jazz Tabajara. When they were hired by the state government for the state Rádio Tabajara, Araujo was invited by Olegário to be the first clarinetist. Leaving the police band, he assumed his position with the orchestra until December 30, 1938, when Olegário died. Araujo wanted to play, not conduct, but the radio’s direction, together with the outing’s cast of singers and musicians, wanted him to be the conductor, so he accepted. Soon, he moved to Rio with two of the orchestra’s musicians: Geraldo Medeiros and Porfírio Costa. In Rio, he was hired by Rádio PRG-3 as the radio’s arranger and saxophonist for the radio’s Orquestra Marajoara. In 1945, he called to Rio the rest of the Tabajara’s members as the Tabajara had been hired by Rádio Tamoio. Along with an intense performance schedule on all radios of Rio (eight in total at the time), the Tabajara also played balls in upcountry Brazil. That same year, they recorded the first album of the Tabajara, a 78 rpm with his “Um Chorinho em Aldeia.” The next year, he recorded one of the Tabajara’s biggest hits, the choro “Pára-Quedista,” composed and soloed by the band’s trombonist José Leocádio. His samba arrangement of George Gershwin’s “Rhapsody in Blue” made national success, but put him under fire by more exalted nationalists. At that time, he was admitted as conductor to Rádios Tupi and Nacional in Rio. On January 20, 1951, the Orquestra Tabajara opened the TV broadcasts in Brazil, in Rio. The same year, TV Tupi was largely reconstructed after a fire and for its re-opening, the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra was hired, performing together with the Tabajara on December 1, 1951, in a memorable encounter that projected the Tabajara internationally. The next year, the Tabajara toured Europe, having as their crooner Jamelão, who would later become a successful solo singer. In 1955, Araujo was hired as conductor by Rádio Mayrink Veiga, Rio, when he toured Uruguay with the Tabajara, touring Argentina in 1962. In that year, he was hired by TV-Rio, where worked until his retirement in 1968. In 1999, he commemorated 80 years still conducting the Tabajara in their performances throughout Brazil and abroad. “The day the Orquestra Tabajara loses its international status, I will kill it,” he said.

Track List

01 – Chega de Saudade
02 – Para-quedista
03 – Morena Boca de Ouro
04 – Relembrando o Norte
05 – Despedida de Mangueira
06 – Espinha de Bacalhau
07 – Vassourinhas
08 – Dora
09 – Baiao
10 – Moreninha da Praia
11 – Recife, Capital do Frevo
12 – Foi Ela
13 – Um Chorinho em Aldeia
14 – Maracatu Sururu

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Não tinha esse disco. Porém, graças aos amigos Bili e Martoni, ele agora está disponível na Rádio Forma e Elenco.





Severino Araujo – Orquestra Romantica de Severino Araujo – Teleco Teco em Cordas (1960)

16 01 2012

Link original: Severino Araujo – Orquestra Romantica de Severino Araujo – Teleco Teco em Cordas (1960)
Publicado em: Monday, February 19, 2007 by zecalouro

I have been accumulating requests from friends to make the first post of one of the most famous Brazilian orchestra, Orquestra Tabajara, active since 1933. However, I never could find a record in good condition of out of print to show Loronixers. This post should partially fix this issue, a solo record from a Maestro that has his musical career with a tight connection with Orquestra Tabajara, which he is the leader since the foundation in 1933, Maestro Severino Araujo.

This is Severino Araujo – Orquestra Romantica de Severino Araujo – Teleco Teco em Cordas (1960), for Continental, a nice Severino Araujo album, probably unknown to the many fans of Orquestra Tabajara. Teleco Teco em Cordas blends Samba Rhythms with orchestra strings, all arranged by Severino Araujo.

If you have a Orquestra Tabajara LP to share if Loronixers, please get in touch, the Orquestra Tabajara was very important to Brazilian music throughout many decades. Several renowned musicians has participated in the orchestra on different times, such as K-Ximbinho, Ze Bodega, Julinho, Ed Maciel, among others. Tracks include:

01 – Você Passou (Nazareno de Brito / Alcyr Pires Vermelho)
02 – Fechei a Porta (Sebastião Mota / Ferreira dos Santos)
03 – Rí (Luis Antônio)
04 – O Amor e a Rosa (Pernambuco / Antônio Maria)
05 – Império do Samba (Zé da Zilda / Zilda do Zé)
06 – Juras Eu Fiz (Severino Araújo)
07 – Agora É Cinza (Alcebíades Barcelos “Bide” / Armando “Marçal”)
08 – A Saudade Não Foi Leal (Norival Reis / Jorge Duarte)
09 – O Trem Atrazou (A. Vilarinho / Estanislau Silva / Paquito)
10 – Noites Vazias (Waldir Finotti / Gilson Santomauro)
11 – Favela (Roberto Martins / Waldemar Silva)
12 – Brasil (Benedito Lacerda / Aldo Cabral)

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Não tinha esse disco. Porém, graças aos amigos Eliane e Martoni, ele agora pode ser buscado na Rádio Forma e Elenco.