IMAGINARY BRAZIL is the new album of the Brazilian composer and keyboardist Corciolli. This is the 33rd album of his career. It features 10 original compositions written for piano, violin and cello, complemented by orchestral arrangements, percussion and synthesizers.

Inspired by the Brazilian imaginarium, Corciolli dialogues within a creative enviroment where influences from European classical music, African rhythms and indigenous sounds, interact in communion, resulting in a crossover that, in its essence, portrays the miscegenation so present in Brazilian culture. The album features the performances of Pablo de León on violin and Raïff Dantas Barreto on cello (spalla and 1st cello of the São Paulo Municipal Symphony Orchestra, respectively) as guest soloists, with contributions from soprano Rose de Souza, percussionists Kabé Pinheiro and Salaberry, acoustic guitarist Camilo Carrara and singer Patricia Bastos.

IMAGINARY BRAZIL presents themes such as Vila Rica, inspired by the life and work of Aleijadinho (“Little Cripple”) – genius of the Latin America baroque; Sonata Cabocla, which describes a day in the life of a “working man” caboclo on the land; Eyes of the Jaguar, music inspired by the secret of fire, which according to an ancient narrative of the Surui people of Rondônia, lived in the eyes of the jaguars, until it was stolen by the Orobab bird. In these imaginary worlds, the artist enters the metaphysical universe, sometimes visiting the silence while glimpsing the loneliness of the human being in Prelúdio Silencioso No. 1, sometimes extolling the saga of the northeastern people, who, while punished in the backlands, live on hope and faith (Into the Backlands); In Relicarium, the artist was inspired by the “sanctuaries” that we build within ourselves in order to keep personal “relics”: memories, secrets and unfulfilled dreams… The composer also proposes a reflection that warns of deforestation and Brazilian forest devastation, aggravated by the carelessness of the authorities (in Tears of the Rainforest); In Quilombo he addresses slavery, from overseas on slave ships, to forced labor on the farms of the rich lords; It portrays the arrival of old navigators in the new world, taking lands that do not belong to them, decimating civilizations and nature in a trail of violence and destruction (in Requiem): With Latin lyrics, extracted from the Christian liturgy, the music extols the funeral of that entire world that lived in forgotten times: “Requiem aeternam dona eis, Domine, et lux perpetua luceat eis” (Grant them eternal rest, O Lord, and may perpetual light shine on them)

IMAGINARY BRAZIL’s most iconic message, however, comes from the Tupi-Guarani lyrics of Arandu Ara – a poem by writer Kaká Werá Jecupé, with an extraordinary rendition by renowned Amapá singer Patricia Bastos:

Arandu Ara
Ape Catu Avá
Tupa Gua Ici Orumã
Ape Etê Tainá Mitan
Ara Coema Kua’a
Arandu Ara Oré Imá

“The wisdom of heaven is the good path of being, that makes the Creator vibrate within itself.
Walk towards the little afternoon star and the wisdom of heaven will be part of you ”

The cover art has been made by award-winning Brazilian illustrator Mauricio Negro, a longstanding friend of the artist. IMAGINARY BRAZIL is available on all digital platforms.

To listen:
YouTube: https://bit.ly/imaginarybrazil_yt
Spotify: https://bit.ly/imaginary_brazil
AppleMusic: https://bit.ly/imaginarybrazil_ap
Deezer: https://bit.ly/imaginarybrazil_dz


Track list:
1. Tears of the Rainforest
2. Vila Rica
3. Eyes of the Jaguar
4. Arandu Ara
5. Quilombo
6. Requiem
7. Prelúdio Silencioso No. 1
8. Into the Backlands
9. Sonata Cabocla
10. Relicarium

Links:
https://www.www.corciolli.com