Baoba Stereo Club (BSC) are now a quartet. If you’d asked this back in 2009, I would say a duo, and a bit afterwards a trio.The outstanding multi-instrumentalist Maurício Takara is now a full-time member of the band, although this wasn’t the first time they collaborated: what started as a track remix on BSC first EP, culminates on the perfect natural fusion of personalities and styles.
Similar to their Brazilian roots, their music is a reflex of their country, of all the different people living close to them in São Paulo, and the overwhelming combination of Latin rhythms. From the subtle notes of Samba to Bossa, their contemporary style swings between the realms of Contemporary Jazz and Free Jazz, with noticeable hints of what would be a Jazzy-Rock fusion to a more open Instrumental Rock sound. As the Brazilian flag motto, I dare to say that Baoba are a physical representation of “Ordem e Progresso” (“Order and Progress”), naively experimenting through different soundscapes and building one of the most original sounds of Brazil.
In this record, Henrique Diaz signs the guitars, Bruno Gold takes care of the piano, and Paulo Soares handles the percussion and drums. The newcomer Takara, accounts for the trumpet while graciously juggling the synthesizers. The artwork was made by the great plastic artist and cartoonist Rafael Coutinho, famously known for releases at Cia das Letras and pieces at the show Choque Cultural.
Originally released in 2013 in CD and on an extremely limited 10” vinyl of 200 copies, this EP has now been reissued in Europe by A Traineira . A limited edition of 350 copies has been made available for their new European tour, pressed from the original masters in heavyweight vinyl and maintaining the original graphics.
A Traineira