Posts tagged w/ Carnival

Podcast: Using the past tense to discuss Carnival

Posted by Rachel

Carnival Past Tense Podcast

Make sure you check out the BYKI list here.

Today, we’re going to look at the difference between the perfect preterite and the imperfect preterite in the past tense using ser and estar, as well as other verbs. We’ll also be talking about Carnival.

Ontem eu fui assistir o desfile no Sambódromo. Estava muito cheio.
Lá encontrei com meus amigos.

Estavam um pouco bêbados.
Eu estava com muito calor, mas consegui me refrescar bebendo água.
Tirei muitas fotos e gravei três vídeos.

No dia seguinte, fui ao bloco perto da minha casa.

Muitos amigos meus estavam lá.
Curti muito este Carnaval.

First, we need to keep in mind that the perfect preterite form describes an action that took place only once or at a specific time, while the imperfect preterite refers to a temporary state of being or an action taking place over an undefined period of time.

In this first phrase, we find both forms. In the first sentence, “Yesterday I watched the parade at the Sambodrome,” we use the perfect preterite, (fui) since it was an action that took place at a specific time (yesterday). The second phrase, “It was very crowded,” uses the imperfect preterite, since it describes a temporary state of being. Note that assistir means to watch and cheio means crowded or full.

This means, “I met my friends there.” In this case, we use the perfect preterite, since it describes a single action taking place once in the story. Note that to say meet, we say encontrar com (literally, to meet with).

Here, the speaker says, “They were a little drunk.” In this case, we use the imperfect preterite form, since temporary physical states are described with this tense, like being drunk or sick.

This means, “I was very hot, but I managed to keep cool by drinking water.” Note that the phrase to describe being hot is estar com calor, literally, to be with heat, where we use estar in the imperfect preterite, since it is a temporary state of being. To manage, or to successfully do something, is conseguir. In this case, we use the perfect preterite, since it is an action that took place once.

“I took lots of pictures and recorded three videos.” Tirar foto means to take a picture, and gravar video means to film. Here, we use the perfect preterite to indicate the singularity of the action at a specific moment rather than referring to a period of time.

Here, the speaker says, “The next day, I went to a street party near my house.” A bloco is a Carnival parade with a band and singers that make their way through the streets on foot or by truck. Note the use of the perfect preterite to refer to a specific action taken at a specific time.

This means, “Many friends of mine were there.” Here, we use estar in the imperfect preterite, since we are referring to a temporary state over an indefinite period of time. This can be a little tricky, but another way to understand this concept is combining the imperfect and perfect preterite into one phrase, like “Eu estava lá quando ele chegou.” I was there when he arrived.

Finally, this means “I had a lot of fun during Carnival.” Curtir is a slangy verb that means to have fun or to enjoy oneself.

Extra tip: try to think of the perfect preterite as something that happened, as opposed to the imperfect preterite as something that was happening.

 

Carnival in Brazil: Rio de Janeiro

Posted by Rachel

Rio de Janeiro’s Carnival is the best known worldwide. Though the most famous part is the Sambodrome parade, the blocos (street parades) are also the mainstay of Rio’s Carnival.

Over two nights, twelve samba schools parade down the avenue in the Sambodrome for 82 minutes. Judges analyze a number of aspects about each school, including costumes, song, theme, timing, and dancers. Each school picks a different theme and writes a samba to accompany the theme, along with enormous floats and intricate costumes. This year, Salgueiro took the big prize for best school of the year, while Imperio Serrano, which came in last place, will be moved down to the second division of samba schools. Blocos are very popular during Carnival, when groups of musicians and drummers march through the streets or stand on flat bed trucks singing, as revelers follow them through the streets.

This year, there were plenty of newsworthy stories. Before Carnival began, there was an international samba event, when dancers from all over the world came together to show off their samba skills. There was also a pet parade in Copacabana before the famous parades in the Sambodrome. This year, the samba school Grande Rio did a French theme, and dancers from Paris’ Moulin Rouge came to perform in the parade. The city mayor tried to exert control over the city during the Carnival chaos, while thousands took to the streets to attend the blocos. The Bola Preta bloco attracted the biggest crowd, with about a million people in attendance. The two parades of Special Group samba schools went on in all its glory, despite the economic crisis, with elaborate and creative costumes and floats. President Lula attended the first night, the first Brazilian president in fifteen years to do so.

 

Carnival in Brazil: Salvador

Posted by Rachel

This week, we’re looking at the different Carnival celebrations in Brazil. Today, we’re going to look at Carnival in Salvador, in the northern state of Bahia.

Salvador’s Carnival is one of the largest outdoor celebrations in the world, attracting nearly three million people every year for the six day festival. In this city, huge crowds follow the trio elétrico, a group of musicians on top of a large truck that winds through the streets. People also sit in the grandstands and watch the trios parade.

The trio was first seen in 1929, when singer Dodô performed on top of a Ford. Today, large, open bed trucks are used.

Salvador is famous for several types of music including axé, an upbeat, frenetic genre and samba reggae, a mixture of African percussion, samba, and reggae. Today, the most famous performers who dominate the trios are Daniela Mercury, Ivete Sangalo, Claudia Leitte, Chiclete com Banana, and Olodum. There are also blocos afros, bands of people dressed in traditional African costumes playing percussion music in the streets.

New from this year’s Carnival in Salvador:

Daniela Mercury falls during show

Chiclete com Banana singer called Barack Bell

Photos from trios in 2009

Listen to this year’s Carnival songs from Salvador

 

Carnival in Brazil: São Paulo

Posted by Rachel

This week, we’re looking at different Carnival celebrations throughout Brazil. Today, we’re going to look at Carnival in São Paulo.

Carnival in São Paulo is very similar to Carnival in Rio de Janeiro. Percussion bands leading parades of revelers through the streets called blocos are common, which began in the early 1900s.

Samba schools first originated in the 1950s, many of which were composed of migrants from the countryside when the coffee industry went into decline. Samba schools are made up of composers, singers, dancers and percussionists that perform samba during Carnival. One unique thing about these schools is that several of them originated from soccer fan clubs, like the Gavioes.

Now, São Paulo’s samba schools perform in the Anhembi Sambodrome, designed by architect Oscar Niemeyer. There, they compete for the honor of best school. Fourteen of the premier schools compete over two nights, the Friday and Saturday before Ash Wednesday. There are two hundred samba schools and blocos in São Paulo city. Vai-Vai is the city champion with 13 wins.

News from this year’s Carnival in SP:

Fifty year-old woman tries to break world’s record for samba school performances

Candomble leaders pray for spiritual protection in the Sambodrome

Expositions open to document the history of Carnival in Sao Paulo

Samba schools and blocos complain about city funding

 

Carnival in Brazil: Recife

Posted by Rachel

Carnival began this past weekend across Brazil and though it officially lasts until Tuesday, some festivities continue throughout the week. So this week, we’ll take a look at the different Carnival celebrations throughout the country.

Today, we’re going to look at Recife’s Carnival.

The celebrations in Pernambuco’s capital and its immediate neighbor, Olinda, are known for being one of the finest traditional Carnivals in Brazil and one of the few that is completely free to the public. It also has the largest Carnival street band in the world, the Galo da Madrugada, that attracts 1.5 million revelers. This type of band is known as a bloco, a group of percussionists and singers that lead revelers through the streets.

Unlike Rio’s large samba schools, the city has small groups of friends and family that perform together. Along with samba, Recife’s celebration features other types of music like maracatu and frevo, music that developed in the Northeast. It is also famous for using bonecos gigantes, giant dolls, which are carried throughout the streets during the celebration.

This year, Recife and Olinda continued the Carnival tradition. The Galo da Madrugada attracted over a million partiers in costume, with several people dressed up as Barack Obama, Fidel Castro, and Brazilian president Lula. Obama also appeared as a giant doll, along with dolls made in the likeness of famous Brazilian singers, writers, TV personalities and athletes, like Pelé. Dilma Roussef, a high-level government official, attended the festivities.

News Links:

Galo da Madrugada (video, photos, text)

Bonecos gigantes (photos and text)

Dilma in Olinda (photos and text)