Coroné Narcisinho / Narcizinho e Sua Gente - O Canto De Iemanjá from Self Titled - RVM (1960s)
There is no information about this particular record on the Interwebs, so I am taking a guess as to when this was published. My sweetheart noted that the woman on the cover has a hairstyle (beehive) and dress more similar to 1950s / early 1960s styles, so it is likely that this LP was released before 1967. I'd guess 1963 - 1965. I have never seen records published on RVM before. RVM seemed to publish records from the early 1960s into the mid 1970s, although I have not found a discography to confirm this, only an odd compilation here and there in that time frame.
O Canto De Iemanjá is a cool track with heaps of haunting reverb. Coroné Narcisinho, sometimes spelled Narcizinho, released a fairly sizable stack of classic records in what I call the silver and bronze ages of forró, ranging from 1960 through the mid 1970s. This particular album is one of his more obscure releases. Hoja Sertaneja, an album that I will feature later in this blog, was a collaboration with multiple artists and was reissued with at least 3 different covers on vinyl. Reissues are very rare for forró records. It is likely that that Hoja Sertaneja was a big hit. This record, called simply Coroné Narcisinho E Sua Gente, was released once and never again.
There is no information about this particular record on the Interwebs, so I am taking a guess as to when this was published. My sweetheart noted that the woman on the cover has a hairstyle (beehive) and dress more similar to 1950s / early 1960s styles, so it is likely that this LP was released before 1967. I'd guess 1963 - 1965. I have never seen records published on RVM before. RVM seemed to publish records from the early 1960s into the mid 1970s, although I have not found a discography to confirm this, only an odd compilation here and there in that time frame.
O Canto De Iemanjá is a cool track with heaps of haunting reverb. Coroné Narcisinho, sometimes spelled Narcizinho, released a fairly sizable stack of classic records in what I call the silver and bronze ages of forró, ranging from 1960 through the mid 1970s. This particular album is one of his more obscure releases. Hoja Sertaneja, an album that I will feature later in this blog, was a collaboration with multiple artists and was reissued with at least 3 different covers on vinyl. Reissues are very rare for forró records. It is likely that that Hoja Sertaneja was a big hit. This record, called simply Coroné Narcisinho E Sua Gente, was released once and never again.
Coroné Narcisinho e Sua Gente - O Canto De Iemanjá from Self Titled - RVM (1960s) |
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