Elias Alves came up in Salvador, Bahia, where Afro-Brazilian rhythms were part of the air. He started writing songs that pulled from that local pulse, and in 2019, one of them, "Vai Sacudir," caught on in a big way. The track's simple, danceable hook made it an instant favorite at parties and on playlists, turning Alves from a local act into someone people across Brazil knew.
He followed that with other singles like "Anice Voltou" and "Adeus Guanabara," keeping the energy high but letting the writing show a little more range. The band behind him included Guilherme Oliveira on guitar, Anderson Silva on bass, and Rafael Brito on drums, giving the recordings a live, percussive feel that suited the material. There was some noise about a plagiarism claim in 2020, which he denied, but it didn't slow the music down.
What he's put out since then sticks to the same basic idea: direct, rhythmic songs built for movement, with lyrics that are more street-smart than poetic. It's not complicated stuff, and he doesn't pretend it is. The sound is just Brazilian pop with its roots showing, made by someone who understands what works on a crowded dance floor.
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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