Supercordas
 Rio de Janeiro’s Supercordas has been getting lots of buzz here in Brazil, and the hype is for good reason, as I can’t stop listening to this awesome five-member band. They call themselves a rock and roll group, but add a late-’60s psychedelia slant and you’ve got their unique brand of nostalgic rock, one that takes you to a time when having long hair and strumming a guitar next to a fire wouldn’t cause you to be the center of ridicule as it sometimes does now. It’s unabashedly country, but done a la-Beatles and a touch of Wilco, and also with plenty of jangly segments that do their darndest to push the good-time vibes. The group released its second album, Seres Verdes ao Redor, last year to critical claim in the country, but I’m rooting that they’ll break the big-in-Brazil barrier and catch on in other places, like CSS and Bonde do Role have done.
Rio de Janeiro’s Supercordas has been getting lots of buzz here in Brazil, and the hype is for good reason, as I can’t stop listening to this awesome five-member band. They call themselves a rock and roll group, but add a late-’60s psychedelia slant and you’ve got their unique brand of nostalgic rock, one that takes you to a time when having long hair and strumming a guitar next to a fire wouldn’t cause you to be the center of ridicule as it sometimes does now. It’s unabashedly country, but done a la-Beatles and a touch of Wilco, and also with plenty of jangly segments that do their darndest to push the good-time vibes. The group released its second album, Seres Verdes ao Redor, last year to critical claim in the country, but I’m rooting that they’ll break the big-in-Brazil barrier and catch on in other places, like CSS and Bonde do Role have done.
