“Latin American”, the singer’s new visual album, recorded at home, proposes a rescue of Brazilian and Latin identity through music, representativeness and inclusion
The singer and songwriter Kell Smith launches your new project, Latin Americana live album recorded live at your home. More than a musical record, the work is positioned as a manifesto of identity, resistance and celebration of cultural diversity. Autistic artist, Kell Smith It reinforces its commitment to representativeness by including interpretation in pounds throughout the project, ensuring greater accessibility.
Inspired by thinkers like Lélia Gonzalez and its concept of “America Ladina”, and in Darcy Ribeirothe album is a gesture of decolonization of the imagination. In times of algorithms and dehumanization, the artist defends live music, with band and “with truth” as an act of resistance that values the power of human presence and imperfection.
The sound of Latin American It reflects the plurality that defends, sewing with mastery samba from root, rap, pagoda, MPB and Bolero-Brega. The six -track repertoire includes a rereading of the classic “Bésame Mucho” until the social denunciation of “Samba da Zenaide” and the partnership with LOCO BANK in “A seed”.
“I dreamed of Latin American. It wasn’t just a job, it was a call,” he reveals Kell. “This work is handicraft, handmade with imperfections that have become beauty. It is having the veins open, but the heart pulsating strong. It is singing what we were, what we are and what we can still be. Because our greatest revolution is the happiness that insists on surviving.”
The manifesto extends to the stage with the homonymous tour, whose objective is to reaffirm the protagonism of Brazilian music. In an initiative to appreciate the local scene, Kell Smith It divides the stage in each city with an artist appointed by the public itself, turning each show into a unique celebration of mixing and collective creation.
“The stage became a territory of re -existence”, concludes the artist. “I am very happy with this choice. Long live Brazilian music and our pulsating Latinity. We are the heart of the world.”
Also read: Life of Ezequiel Neves, mentor of Cazuza, becomes documentary using artificial intelligence
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Source: Rollingstone

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