When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Samba (Brazilian dance) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samba_(Brazilian_dance)

    Samba is a lively dance of Afro-Brazilian origin in 2/4(2 by 4) time danced to samba music. The term "baby" originally referred to any of several Latin duet dances with origins from the Congo and Angola. Today Samba is the most prevalent dance form in Brazil, and reaches the height of its importance during the festival of Carnaval. [1]

  3. Samba school - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samba_school

    A samba school (Portuguese: Escola de samba) is a dancing, marching, and drumming (Samba Enredo) club. They practice and often perform in a huge square- compounds ("quadras de samba") and are devoted to practicing and exhibiting samba , an Afro-Brazilian dance and drumming style.

  4. Brazilian dance craze created by young people in Rio’s ...

    www.aol.com/news/brazilian-dance-craze-created...

    It all started with nifty leg movements, strong steps backwards and forwards, paced to Brazilian funk music. The passinho, a dance style created in the 2000s by kids in Rio de Janeiro’s favelas ...

  5. Rio Carnival - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rio_Carnival

    Incorporated into every aspect of the Rio Carnival are dancing and music. The most famous dance in brazilian carnival is samba. The samba remains a popular dance not only in carnival but in the ghettos outside of the main cities. These villages keep alive the historical aspect of the dance without the influence of the western cultures. [21]

  6. Sambadrome Marquês de Sapucaí - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sambadrome_Marquês_de...

    In December, the samba schools begin holding technical rehearsals at the Sambadrome, leading up to Carnival. A panoramic shot taken from the top of Sector 9 during the Grupo de Acesso A parade. The school parades from the right to the left, with the arch visible at the end. The VIP camarote seating is visible across the way.

  7. Dona Neuma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dona_Neuma

    Neuma Gonçalves da Silva (8 May 1922 – 17 July 2000) was a Brazilian samba dancer. She began dancing samba in a small group at age seven and was president of the Mangueira samba school for multiple terms, establishing the institution's children's and female's wings.

  8. Samba - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samba

    For the samba musicians from the hills of Rio, samba was the last Brazilian stage of Angolan drumming that they proposed to teach to Brazilian society through samba schools. [159] This generational conflict, however, did not last for long, and Estácio's samba established itself as the rhythm par excellence of Rio's urban samba during the 1930s.

  9. Portela (samba school) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portela_(samba_school)

    The Grêmio Recreativo Escola de Samba Portela or Portela for short, is a traditional samba school, founded in 1923, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The school has the highest number of wins in the top-tier Rio parade , with 22 titles in total, including the 2017 Carnival parade.