Arandu Arakuaa is a Brazilian folk metal band formed in the country's capital, Brasília.[1] It is noted for blending extreme heavy metal with Brazilian folk music, specifically indigenous tunes. Their lyrics also reflect indigenous cultures, referring to their myths and rites.[2] Along with bands Aclla, Armahda, Cangaço, Hate Embrace, MorrigaM, Tamuya Thrash Tribe and Voodoopriest, they form the Levante do Metal Nativo (Native Metal Uprising), a movement gathering bands that mix heavy metal with typical musical elements from that country and/or write lyrics about it.[3]
Arandu Arakuaa | |
---|---|
Origin | Brasília, Distrito Federal, Brazil |
Genres | Folk metal, thrash metal, indigenous music |
Years active | 2008–present |
Labels | MS Metal Records |
Members | Zândhio Huku Andressa Barbosa Guilherme Cezario João Mancha |
Past members | Nájila Cristina Adriano Ferreira Saulo Lucena Lís Carvalho |
Guitarist and founder Zhândio Aquino claims to have been born and raised until the age of 24 near a Xerente territory, in the state of Tocantins, where he came in contact with indigenous music and Brazilian regional music namely (baião, catira, cantiga de roda, vaquejada, etc.).[2] He cites Metallica and Black Sabbath as his influences from the metal side.[2]
History
editArandu Arakuaa means "knowledge of the sky cycles" or "cosmos knowledge" in Tupi–Guarani.[2][4] They began in April 2008 when Zândhio Aquino started to compose songs in Ancient Tupi. After a few unsuccessful attempts with some musicians, the band finally established its final lineup between October 2010 and February 2011 as members Nájila Cristina, Adriano Ferreira and Saulo Lucena became part of the group.[2]
In August 2011, the band performed its first show and released its first demo album in June 2012. Between February and April 2013, they recorded their debut album, Kó Yby Oré (this is our land[5]), released later that year, in September.
Discography
editEP
edit- 2012 - Arandu Arakuaa
- 2021 - Ainãka
Studio albums
edit- 2013 - Kó Yby Oré
- 2015 - Wdê Nnãkrda
- 2018 - Mrã Waze
Singles
edit- 2020 - "Waptokwa Zawré"[6]
- 2020 - "Kaburéûasu"
- 2020 - "Ybytu"
- 2020 - "Am’mrã"
- 2020 - "Kûarasy"
Videos
edit- 2013 - "Gûyrá"
- 2014 - "Aruanãs"
- 2015 - "Hêwaka Waktû"
- 2016 - "Ipredu"
- 2018 - "Huku Hêmba"
- 2018 - "Îasy"
- 2020 - "Waptokwa Zawré"
- 2020 - "Kaburéûasu"
- 2020 - "Ybytu"
- 2020 - "Am’mrã"
- 2022 - "Kûarasy"
Members
edit- Zândhio Huku - guitar, viola caipira, tribal vocals, keyboards, maracá (2008—now)
- Andressa Barbosa - bass, vocals (2018—now)
- Guilherme Cezario - guitar, backing vocals (2018—now)
- João Mancha - drums, percussion (2018—now)
Former Members
edit- Nájila Cristina – vocals, maracá (2011–2016)
- Adriano Ferreira – drums, percussion (2011–2016)
- Saulo Lucena – bass, backing vocals (2011–2018)
- Lís Carvalho - vocals (2018)
Tour members
edit- Karine Aguiar – vocals (2017)
- Ygor Saunier - drums, percussion (2017)
- Pablo Vilela - guitar (2017)
- Juan Bessa - guitar (2014)
References
edit- ^ "Folk Metal - Arandu Arakuaa". Retrieved 27 January 2014.
- ^ a b c d e Dehó, Maurício (14 October 2014). "Banda de Brasília faz metal em tupi para chamar atenção à causa indígena". UOL Música. Grupo Folha. Retrieved 14 October 2014.
- ^ "Levante do Metal Nativo: primeira edição em show do projeto neste sábado". Rock Brigade. 29 January 2016. Archived from the original on 4 January 2017. Retrieved 3 January 2017.
- ^ BBC (20 October 2016). "A banda que toca heavy metal em tupi-guarani". Retrieved 4 December 2019.
- ^ Garcia, Marcos (28 October 2013). "Arandu Arakuaa - Ko Yby Ore". Metal Temple. Retrieved 31 July 2015.
- ^ Babu, Devana (25 March 2020). "Confira os novos clipes de Mandalla's Band, Mofo e Arandu Arakuaa". Correio Braziliense. Diários Associados. Retrieved 6 April 2020.