Two brothers from Goiás whose romantic harmonies defined Brazilian country music for decades.
If you want to understand their appeal, start with 'Noite de Tortura' or 'É o Amor.' That's the sound that made them.
Their 1992 live album 'Ao Vivo' connected with Brazilian audiences in a way their debut hadn't, with songs like 'É o Amor' and 'Numa Sala de Reunião' becoming sertanejo staples. You can hear their approach in tracks like 'Noite de Tortura' and 'Fala Sério' - straightforward expressions of longing delivered through close harmonies and melodic guitar work. The sound isn't ornate, but it's direct and clear, which helped it find a wide audience that's stuck with them through personal scandals and career milestones alike.
They began performing together in the early 1990s, brothers from Pirenópolis, Goiás. Their 1991 debut carried their name, but it was the 1992 live album that really connected. They kept recording through personal scandals and marked a career milestone with the 2020 release 'Na Estrada 40 Anos.'
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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