3:14

Slow tempo sets a meditative tone with viola caipira fingerpicking, backed by sparse acoustic guitar, The arrangement is intimate, letting deep male vocals take center stage, Occasional minor key chord changes and gentle percussive brushwork evoke melancholic, existential folk moods
3:09

This Moda de Viola features gently syncopated viola caipira arpeggios in a traditional Ritmo de Cururu, Strophic structure supports expressive male vocals, backed by soft percussion and honeyed accordion, Melancholy melodic turns and lingering bass notes deepen the devotional folk texture
3:09

Acoustic moda de viola opens with interwoven steel-string guitars in drop-D tuning, propelled by cururu’s syncopated 2/4 groove, Sparse bass notes ground each verse, while subtle percussive tapping highlights phrasing, The male vocal delivery is articulate and dynamic, supported by bittersweet, modal viola countermelodies and brief accordion fills, weaving a textured, intellectual, and slightly sardonic folk atmosphere
2:39

Driven by acoustic viola caipira, the track opens with syncopated cururu rhythms and raw, percussive strumming, Sparse hand percussion and upright bass accentuate the dry texture, The arrangement leaves space for expressive male vocals, using call-and-response and agile tempo shifts
3:53

Upbeat Brazilian Cateretê led by virtuoso 10-string Viola Caipira fingerpicking and percussive acoustic guitar strumming, A driving, syncopated beat features handclaps, foot-stomps, triangle, and reco-reco, Narrative male vocals, articulate and ironic, deliver a humorous story, Playful instrumental breaks highlight Accordion and regional percussion, Rustic, energetic folk atmosphere with a traditional groove
3:01

This dramatic Moda de Viola opens with tense, fingerpicked acoustic guitar, establishing a storytelling mood, Rasqueado strums intensify the toada rhythm, supporting a call-and-response vocal dialog, Sparse percussion and subtle bass deepen the tension, while guitar flourishes punctuate shifts in narrative
4:27

A dark, atmospheric track rooted in Pantanal folklore, The intro features the hollow, woody sound of a Viola de Cocho playing a dissonant ponteio (fingerpicking), accompanied by the deep, vibrating bordões (bass strings) of an acoustic guitar, A mournful Rabeca (Brazilian fiddle) enters with a screeching, tension-building melody like a rusty door hinge, The rhythm is a slow, heavy Cururu, dragging like footsteps in mud, Background textures include the "respiration" of an old Gaita (accordion), The vocals are deep, whispered, and fearful, delivering a narrative of claustrophobia
3:34

O Aleph
v5
This fast chamamé features a driving, hypnotic rhythm led by virtuoso viola caipira weaving intricate melodic runs over a tightly syncopated 10-string guitar groove, Clean production highlights crisp percussion and fast, softly articulated male vocals, all buoyed by melodic interlocking lines
