Carlos Cachaça

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Birth nameCarlos Moreira de Castro
Born(1902-08-03)3 August 1902
Died16 August 1999(1999-08-16) (aged 97)
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
GenresSamba
Carlos Cachaça
Birth nameCarlos Moreira de Castro
Born(1902-08-03)3 August 1902
Died16 August 1999(1999-08-16) (aged 97)
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
GenresSamba
Occupation(s)Songwriter, composer
Years active1920s–1980s

Carlos Cachaça (born Carlos Moreira de Castro; 3 August 1902 – 16 August 1999) was a Brazilian samba composer and performer. He was one of the founders of the Mangueira Samba School.[1][2][3]

Cachaça was born and raised in Mangueira in Rio de Janeiro’s North Zone. His nickname derived from the sugarcane liquor cachaça, a drink he enjoyed as a young man. As a teenager, he played the tambourine with local street musicians performing early samba, an Afro-Brazilian style blending percussion and urban themes.[1]

Career

In 1922, Cachaça met fellow composer Cartola. Together they later co-founded the street troupe Arengueiros, which evolved into the Mangueira Samba School in 1928. With Cartola, he composed more than 400 songs, including themes for Mangueira’s carnival parades such as "Pudesse Meu Ideal" and "Alvorada".[1][2] Although he received little financial reward and worked as a railway employee, his music helped establish the samba-enredo style, which remains central to Rio’s carnival.[1]

Later life and death

Legacy

References

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