From Greece to MPB: poetry, music and orality

Authors

  • Cláudia Sabbag Ozawa Galindo Universidade Estadual de Londrina

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5433/boitata.2006v1.e30695

Keywords:

Orality, Poetry, Music

Abstract

The greek world “mousiké” denoted a union of melody and verse and represented the principal manner to educate men, and used like a manifestation of a oral culture. By this way, through a oral discurse, in performance, the collective voice was realized. The orality continued to be the preponderant, inlcuding during the Medium Age. Characterisit of the medium songs, the orality was in the origin by the poetry, that was composed to be singing. Until 1400, in all Occident, the writing didn´t influence a lot the poets’ behavior or thought either the public expects, almost everyone illiterate. But the writing, slowly, fixed, like a necessary and natural product of orality. But the oral world satyed alive and in Renascense, several texts were musicated, and in the Simbolism, in the end of the 19h century, Baudelaire tryed to do the worlds had “an essencial musical value”. They looked for a music into the poetry. Times after, in our century, a strong inclination to recuperate the voice in the poetry message arised in the “poetry of the song”. And the musical poetry of five or six centuries of european history extended its effects in several arts of the popular music, in both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, until the 19th century, or until the 20th cenntury. That’s when, in Brazil, “(...) a group of good poets chose the music and not the book how a comunication canal” (SILVA, 1975, p.178)

 

Metrics

Metrics Loading ...

Author Biography

Cláudia Sabbag Ozawa Galindo, Universidade Estadual de Londrina

Doctoral student in the Postgraduate Program in Letters, Universidade Estadual de Londrina

References

CANDIDO, Antonio. Literatura e Sociedade. São Paulo: Companhia Editora Nacional, 1965.

FERNANDES, Frederico. A voz em performance. Assis: EdUNESP, 2003.

GOMES, Álvaro Cardoso. O Simbolismo. São Paulo: Ática, 1994.

MOISÉS, Massaud. A literatura portuguesa através dos textos. São Paulo: Cultrix, 1968.

ONG, Walter. Oralidade e Cultura Escrita. Campinas: Papirus, 1998.

PERRONE, Charles A. Letras e Letras da MPB. Rio de Janeiro: Elo, 1988.

PLATÃO. A República. São Paulo: Nova Cultural, 1997.

SANT’ANNA, Affonso Romano de. Música Popular e Moderna Poesia Brasileira. Petrópolis: Vozes, 1986.

SILVA, Anazildo Vasconcelos da. “A Paraliteratura”. Teoria Literária. Rio de Janeiro: Tempo Brasileiro, 1975.

SPINA, Segismundo. Presença da literatura portuguesa. Era medieval. São Paulo: Difusão Européia do Livro, 1969.

ZUMTHOR, Paul. A Letra e a Voz. São Paulo: Cia. das Letras, 1993.

ZUMTHOR, Paul. Escritura e Nomadismo. São Paulo: Ateliê Editorial, 2005.

Published

2006-09-14

How to Cite

Galindo, C. S. O. (2006). From Greece to MPB: poetry, music and orality. Boitatá, 1(2), 45–61. https://doi.org/10.5433/boitata.2006v1.e30695

Issue

Section

Dossiê