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Book Cover
Streaming video

Title Bitori : on tour / une production, la Huit ; en coproduction avec Banlieues Bleues et Trace TV ; un film de Guillaume Dero
Published Paris, France : Qwest TV, 2017

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Description 1 online resource (58 minutes)
Summary Considered subversive by colonial powers and satanic by the Catholic Church, the funaná music style was repressed until Cape Verde's independence in 1975. One of its most eminent performers, Victor Tavarès dit Bitori, even waited until he was 55 years old to record his first album in 1997. Since then, he has rehabilitated the tradition by practising the diatonic accordion, which is its characteristic instrument, in the company of a bouncing, jangly rhythm that is marked by the presence of a ferrinho - an iron bar that is struck and scraped by a metal rod. Here, at the 2017 Banlieues Bleues Festival in Paris, Bitori remains impassive, chewing on a toothpick, whilst his audience float into a trance. Push back the furniture, you're gonna be dancing in your own living room! **Eric Delhaye**
Notes Title from title screen (viewed December 15, 2022)
Performer Bitori, accordion, harmonica ; Chando Graciosa, vocals, ferrinho ; Danilo Tavares, vocals, electric bass guitar ; Miroca Paris, vocals, percussion ; Toy Paris, vocals, drums
Event Recorded Salle des Malassis de Bagnolet March 10, 2017
Notes Sung and spoken in Portuguese and Cape Verde Creole
Subject Funana (Music) -- Cabo Verde
Folk songs, Portuguese -- Cabo Verde
Folk songs, Portuguese
Funana (Music)
Cabo Verde
Genre/Form Concert films
Folk songs
Funana (Music)
Concert films.
Funana (Music)
Folk songs.
Concerts filmés.
Funana (Musique)
Chansons folkloriques.
Form Streaming video
Author Bitori, instrumentalist
Dero, Guillaume, filmmaker
Huit Production, production company.
Trace TV (Firm), production company
Qwest TV, publisher.
Banlieues Bleues (Music festival), production company.
Other Titles Bitori