
Some days, while out trawling the internets for tid-bits, I'm expecting to find references to Barack Obama all over the place, but at other times his name never enters my mind as being relevant to the topic under scrutiny. Surprising to find his name, then, while searching for information on Manhã de Carnaval, (Morning of the Carnival) the piece I'd decided would be a good candidate for The Song Not the Singer slot. Various versions have emerged since the late 50s when it was written by Luiz Bonfá.
It was composed for the movie Orfeu Negro (Black Orpheus) a Brazilian/French/ Portuguese production which won Grand Prize at the 1959 Cannes Film Festival, an Oscar for Best Foreign film and a Golden Globe. The film is a transposition of the Greek myth of Orpheus and Eurydice to 1950s Rio, Brazil at Carnival time.
Obama?
Well, I learned that in his autobiography "Dreams From My Father", Barack Obama recounts how while he was studying in New York his mother and sister visited the city, sometime in the early 1980s. During their visit his mother noticed that Black Orpheus was showing at a local cinema and wanted them all to go see it. It had been the first foriegn film she'd seen, as a teenager. She had thought it "the most beautiful thing I had ever seen."
Barack wasn't impressed. He wrote:
Well now. I must strive not to be judgemental. But damn - it was a film - a piece of art! It was never meant to be social commentary! From the clips I've seen (see below) there was no stereotyping of the unfortunate kind African Americans were used to seeing about their race in some early American movies. This movie seems to portray life exactly as it was for some Brazilians at that time, and showed their joie de vivre in spite of poverty and challenges.
I'd have felt like giving young Barack a slap up the side of the head when he decided he wanted to leave halfway through the show, had I been his Mum...."don't be such a self-absorbed prig our Barry, get with the dang music why don't ya?!"
Sun, Mercury, Uranus and North Node of Moon all in Leo. Yep! A dope slap might have sorted out that egotistical narcissitic streak of his !
Okay - that's out of the way.
Back to Luiz Bonfá's gorgeous melody, Manhã de Carnaval. Portuguese lyrics are by Antonio Maria, various lyrics in other languages have emerged year by year. One of the best known English language versions is A Day in the Life of a Fool. Personally I think the melody is best left without lyrics and played to perfection in any number of variations of instrumental combinations.
The timeless music is considered to have helped establish the Bossa Nova movement in the late 1950s. It's now considered a jazz standard, still performed regularly, around the world, by musicians of several genres, sometimes with vocal, sometimes as an instrumental or solo piece.

Bonfá was born in Rio de Janiero on 17 October 1922. Four personal planets in Libra, ruled by Venus, planet of the arts is his defining astro-signature. I'm not a bit surprised that his music is so beautifully melodic.
Here's a video containing some brief clips from Black Orpheus, including the song in its original setting:
Background:
Three different renditions of Manha de Carnaval
Toots Thieleman harmonica/guitar - I like this one a lot.
Paul Desmond Quartet - featuring Desmond on clarinet - the husband's favourite.
Susannah McCorkle - a lovely vocal version - part English, Part.. erm Portuguese(?)
Her voice was gorgeous.

It was composed for the movie Orfeu Negro (Black Orpheus) a Brazilian/French/ Portuguese production which won Grand Prize at the 1959 Cannes Film Festival, an Oscar for Best Foreign film and a Golden Globe. The film is a transposition of the Greek myth of Orpheus and Eurydice to 1950s Rio, Brazil at Carnival time.
Obama?
Well, I learned that in his autobiography "Dreams From My Father", Barack Obama recounts how while he was studying in New York his mother and sister visited the city, sometime in the early 1980s. During their visit his mother noticed that Black Orpheus was showing at a local cinema and wanted them all to go see it. It had been the first foriegn film she'd seen, as a teenager. She had thought it "the most beautiful thing I had ever seen."

Barack wasn't impressed. He wrote:
"We took a cab to the revival theatre where the movie was playing. The film, a groundbreaker of sorts due to its mostly black, Brazilian cast, had been made in the fifties. The storyline was simple: the myth of the ill-fated lovers Orpheus and Eurydice set in the favelas of Rio during carnival, in Technicolor splendour, set against scenic green hills, the black and brown Brazilians sang and danced and strummed guitars like carefree birds in colourful plumage. About halfway through the movie I decided I'd seen enough, and turned to my mother to see if she might be ready to go. But her face, lit by the blue glow of the screen, was set in a wistful gaze. At that moment I felt as if I were being given a window into her heart, the unreflective heart of her youth. I suddenly realised that the depiction of the childlike blacks I was now seeing on the screen, the reverse image of Conrad's dark savages, was what my mother had carried with her to Hawaii all those years before, a reflection of the simple fantasies that had been forbidden to a white, middle-class girl from Kansas, the promise of another life: warm, sensual, exotic, different."
Well now. I must strive not to be judgemental. But damn - it was a film - a piece of art! It was never meant to be social commentary! From the clips I've seen (see below) there was no stereotyping of the unfortunate kind African Americans were used to seeing about their race in some early American movies. This movie seems to portray life exactly as it was for some Brazilians at that time, and showed their joie de vivre in spite of poverty and challenges.
(Note: I'd stored this completed post in my drafts some days before we went to the flicks to see The Help.Odd, then, that a similar sentiment arose there. See Sunday's post.)

Sun, Mercury, Uranus and North Node of Moon all in Leo. Yep! A dope slap might have sorted out that egotistical narcissitic streak of his !
Okay - that's out of the way.
Back to Luiz Bonfá's gorgeous melody, Manhã de Carnaval. Portuguese lyrics are by Antonio Maria, various lyrics in other languages have emerged year by year. One of the best known English language versions is A Day in the Life of a Fool. Personally I think the melody is best left without lyrics and played to perfection in any number of variations of instrumental combinations.
The timeless music is considered to have helped establish the Bossa Nova movement in the late 1950s. It's now considered a jazz standard, still performed regularly, around the world, by musicians of several genres, sometimes with vocal, sometimes as an instrumental or solo piece.


Here's a video containing some brief clips from Black Orpheus, including the song in its original setting:
Background:
As in the Greek legend, Orpheus is a legendary minstrel among his neighbors in the slums above Rio. He also works as a streetcar driver, where he first meets a naive county girl, named Eurydice. She has run to the city to escape from a jealous suitor that means to kill her. Orpheus protects her, and they fall in love. Death finally catches her but unlike the snake in the Greek myth, in the film she's bitten by the electrical sting of a hot cable-car wire. Inconsolable over his loss, Orpheus searches for her in the land of the dead. The underworld in Rio is the Bureau of Missing Persons and a Macumba ceremony, where Orpheus attempts to contact her spirit. With the help of Hermes, Orpheus is finally guided to the city morgue where he finds his deceased love. Despite it's tragic ending, the film ends on a happy note with the children singing "Samba de Orfeu." The legend of Orpheus and Eurydice lives on.
Three different renditions of Manha de Carnaval
Toots Thieleman harmonica/guitar - I like this one a lot.
Paul Desmond Quartet - featuring Desmond on clarinet - the husband's favourite.
Susannah McCorkle - a lovely vocal version - part English, Part.. erm Portuguese(?)
Her voice was gorgeous.