A Brazilian artist whose Portuguese lyrics mix devotion with commentary.
For a quick sense of his range, listen to "Beijo No Altar" next to "A Fornalha." One's devotional, the other's a protest song, both feel like the same guy talking.
Igor Joshua's songs like "Beijo No Altar" and "Dias de Elias" center on faith in a way that feels specific to Brazilian spirituality. The track "A Fornalha (Dia Nacional do Combate Ao Trabalho Escravo)" shows he's also willing to address social issues directly. There's a plainspoken quality to his work that avoids grandiosity, even when the themes are big.
He started in Salvador, Bahia, with early 2000s material that's not well-documented. More recent songs like "Como É Grande o Meu Amor Por Você" and "Aquele Dos 30" suggest a continued focus on personal and spiritual themes. The band lineup mentioned includes Igor on vocals with Felipe, Renato, and Vitor.
Keep it compact: a lyric you come back to, a live memory, or the part of the catalog you would point someone toward first.
Sign in to post the first listener note. Reporting stays open to everyone.