Norberto Lobo

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Ayrton Senna 02:53 Tools
Pata Lenta 04:45 Tools
Vento em Polpa 03:23 Tools
Brisa Biónica 04:31 Tools
Marquise Quântica 01:36 Tools
Sra do Monte 05:32 Tools
Unravel 03:06 Tools
Zumbido Azedo 02:01 Tools
Samantra 03:04 Tools
Do Alto da Faia 03:33 Tools
Lúcia Lima 02:16 Tools
Enzo Fought Back 01:28 Tools
Mudar De Bina 03:40 Tools
Vudu Xaile 02:10 Tools
Valsa da Greve Geral 03:38 Tools
Rua da Palma Blues 02:24 Tools
Golden Pony Blues 06:59 Tools
Rustenburger Str 01:19 Tools
Balada para Lhasa 03:08 Tools
A Cor do Demo 06:59 Tools
Morte Da Bezerra 01:10 Tools
cantiga da ceifa 04:19 Tools
Lottumstr. 03:32 Tools
Lisboa Ginásio 01:35 Tools
Charleston para Jack 04:15 Tools
Chuva ácida (Darque) 02:46 Tools
Laura 04:15 Tools
Festa do Fim da Folque 03:07 Tools
Ó Ribeira 03:25 Tools
Jogo Do Bicho 02:29 Tools
Fio Mental (Oiã) 02:50 Tools
Fonte Santa 03:44 Tools
mudar de vida 03:07 Tools
Chao Min de Luz 01:53 Tools
Maga Raga 02:51 Tools
Aconchego Solar 03:35 Tools
Requiem para as Abelhas 02:22 Tools
Mel Azul (Moebius) 02:43 Tools
Shibuya Girls Parte I 02:22 Tools
Fala Mansa 03:21 Tools
Haiku para Mike 01:01 Tools
Shibuya Girls Parte II 02:53 Tools
Tous Les Lapins 02:53 Tools
Kasuari 02:53 Tools
Aaaaaaa 02:53 Tools
Fran 02:53 Tools
Pen Ward 02:53 Tools
himmelstorm 02:53 Tools
Fornalha 02:53 Tools
Musgo Na Voz 02:53 Tools
Maryam 02:53 Tools
Eu amo 02:53 Tools
Olarias 02:53 Tools
Violynn 02:53 Tools
Bahííía 02:53 Tools
Mogul de Jade 02:53 Tools
Tak for Sherman 02:53 Tools
Castorium 02:53 Tools
Arpa 02:53 Tools
Magari 02:53 Tools
Enchiridion 02:53 Tools
Bragança 02:53 Tools
Canção do João 02:53 Tools
Taco Belo 02:53 Tools
Quinta do Rio 02:53 Tools
Figueira 02:46 Tools
Noel Rosa 02:53 Tools
Charada 02:46 Tools
Legionella 02:46 Tools
Colheres 04:17 Tools
Oma 04:17 Tools
Slowz 04:17 Tools
Nariz 02:53 Tools
Muxama 04:17 Tools
Oumuamua 02:46 Tools
Anona 04:17 Tools
Estrela 02:46 Tools
Escabeche de Ternura 02:46 Tools
Aphelion 02:53 Tools
Anecóica 02:46 Tools
Solstício 04:17 Tools
Solesticio 04:17 Tools
Faixa 1 02:53 Tools
Solestício 02:46 Tools
Chuva Ácida 02:46 Tools
Faixa 7 02:53 Tools
Faixa 4 02:53 Tools
Faixa 6 02:53 Tools
Enchilada 02:46 Tools
Faixa 5 02:46 Tools
Faixa 3 02:46 Tools
Faixa 8 02:46 Tools
Faixa 9 02:46 Tools
Lúcia Limã 02:46 Tools
Vudu Xailê 02:46 Tools
Faixa 2 02:46 Tools
Faixa 10 02:46 Tools
Lucia Lima 02:46 Tools
Festa do fim do folque 02:46 Tools
Senhora do Monte 04:17 Tools
Marquise Quantica 04:17 Tools
Brisa Bionica 04:17 Tools
Marquise Quвntica 04:17 Tools
Brisa Biуnica 04:17 Tools
  • 123,497
    plays
  • 4,528
    listners
  • 123497
    top track count

Norberto Lobo is a Lisbon-based musician and Mudar de bina is his first solo album. It’s a record centred almost exclusively on the sound of the acoustic guitar and therefore on the expressive abilities of Norberto Lobo as a guitarist. In these days of ‘polished’ music production it became easy to forget the eminently physical character of a significant part of musical creation. Records like Mudar de bina contribute in some way to revert this tendency. The production gimmicks are minimal and aim only at adjusting this music to its natural environment, which is precisely its physical, human and popular nature. The album was literally recorded between home and the streets and its listening reveals in an almost self-evident way just how much sense it makes that it was so. The evoked melodies, the somewhat complex harmonies (due in part to the nature of the instrument itself) and the simple and straightforward execution create an air of intimacy and a certain melancholy tone that could be labelled as “homely”; and yet, there is also a vital force, a vigour in the attack and an healthy distancing from over-sentimental moods that clearly approach this record to the “streets”. The music itself is based on a modern appropriation of several elements of solid and multicultural tradition. In this disengaged revision of the past resides the biggest respect Norberto Lobo could vote to that same tradition he “dishonours” – be it that of our Portuguese popular music, be it the legacy of John Fahey and the “school” associated with Takoma Records. On the other hand, the elemental assumption of the instrument, with its strengths and limitations, and the primal joy of producing sound and feeling it as physical vibration seem to transfer themselves to the listener and communicate with him on that level of fruition that we might say seemed lost, or at least numbed, by the way we’ve gotten used to listening to music: consuming it, more than appreciating it. Not that this music is “hard”; on the contrary, the way it is worked – the alternating bass, the vigour of the harmonies, the density of the arpeggiated parts, the brightness of the melodic lines – places its appreciation beyond the level of shear intellectual evaluation, thus once more approaching these recordings to the music of a popular nature (two of the songs are actually variations on popular melodies). In this music both elements of contemplative nature and others revealing a more humorous and joyful tone share space in perfect harmony; the same thing happens with the elements of tradition and others of inevitable – and desirable – modernity. But never the general tone of this set of recordings falls in the mere “post-modern” use of those elements of tradition or in a shallow hiding of its debt towards them. On the contrary, the assuming of those musical elements that somehow became a part of our popular lexicon is candid and fundamentally joyful, even in its “homely” register; and that’s how this record ends up sounding. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.