A band that brought forró to a wider audience with live albums and hits like 'Vaqueiro Desmantelado'.
For a quick sense of their style, 'Vaqueiro Desmantelado' and 'Mulher Doideira' do the job. They're straightforward forró tracks that got people dancing.
They started in 2002 when forró wasn't mainstream, and their 2004 live album 'Aviões do Forró ao Vivo' helped change that. Songs like 'Vaqueiro Desmantelado' and 'Não É Nada Disso (Bicicreta)' became staples in Brazil, showing how they stuck with the genre. Their lineup shifts, including vocalists Solange Almeida and Xand Avião, kept the sound evolving without losing its roots.
Formed in Fortaleza in 2002, they built a following despite skepticism about forró. The 2004 live album pushed them into wider recognition, and they've released volumes like 'Aviões do Forró Vol. 2' in 2005 and 'Aviões do Forró Vol. 10' in 2017. A 2012 legal dispute over management rights marked one of their few public stumbles.
Keep it compact: a lyric you come back to, a live memory, or the part of the catalog you would point someone toward first.
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