Thursday, 18 February 2010

Sambodromo, Carnaval and blocos.


These Brazilians are crazy, as Asterix would say. Despite being present in some of the final preparations and rehearsal before the final three days I did not expect what came on Saturday, Sunday and Monday.

Saturday we were at the Sambodromo for the first night of the parade. I'd seen it on the telly before but this was something else. First of all the loudness and the power of Samba blows your socks off! I literally could not stay still, seriously. I was photographing outside of it earlier on for hours but when I went in I was on a different planet. Despite being the first night with not the best schools that compete for the top award, it was so passionate and exciting I'm wondering how it could be topped! Four hours of non stop dance they were and they felt like minutes.
 Sunday and Monday we were back at the Sambodromo on two occasions, one of which was at 5 in the morning, right as Beija Flor was finishing. That being the Samba school we visited at their final rehearsal I was obviously a bit partisan. At that time in the morning, still dark but the sunrise only minutes away, dancers in all imaginable colours, exhausted and overwhelmed, were fleeing the Sambodromo in waves. More than 4000 per School that is. There was so much going on, with so many people dropping costumes everywhere, floats and statues, accessories, headgear and some pretty funny horse and ant-shaped costumes lying around and the ever present street vendors on their last push of the day that I thought I was in a real battlefield, albeit in Middle Earth or something. And before I could gather myself together and take it all in, it was dawn and most people were gone, like ghosts that disappear in daytime and all was left was their armory. On the way back after 7, the previous night's blocos were just about finishing in Lapa and some new ones were just being set up in Ipanema. Bodies everywhere. There were more battles to be won I thought.
They are crazy these Brazilians.

Saturday, 13 February 2010

Carnaval Week.

It has been an incredibly busy 4 days since I arrived! Carnaval Week started in earnest last night and the city is ablaze. Blocos (street parties) in every neighborhood, final rehearsals for the Samba schools, frantic work on the floats, the Children's Carnaval tonight and so much more.

Two Samba school rehearsals on consecutive nights have blown my mind away! (And not just any schools, the past two winners) These probably were the best parties I've been at for a very long time! The music was making your bones rattle, your legs were going wild, your feet and arms were unaccounted for and the smells, the sweat, the passion! The girls were dancing to heaven and the boys in the Bateria were giving the thunderous rhythm, with their eyes fixed on the dancers of course. And the neighborhood was exploding. These were two nights of blood, sweat and Samba!

Then the blocos. Everything saturated by a frantically partying army. Everything. The cashier lady at the supermarket, the taxi drivers, the teenagers and the old people, the packed buses in a rave, everybody dancing to the Samba. Then the Children's  Carnaval at the Sambodromo. Colours and noise, smells and the beauty all around you. Everything's in place for the first night tomorrow. I can't wait.

But the most striking thing of all is the people. The beautiful, smiling people of this city. This city that makes you feel sexy and smile and fall in love! It's all to their credit.

Friday, 12 February 2010

Rio baby!

I apologize for the time since the last update, but Rio has it's own rhythm. Especially during the Carnaval! No time to spare, no time to waste! I'll try to be back with you asap!

Now if you excuse me....

Saturday, 6 February 2010