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Background Information
The rhythms of samba bands are heard everywhere in Brazil. All
kinds of different percussion instruments are thumped, tapped and
scraped to make shifting patterns of overlapping sound. The great
thing about it is that everyone can join in and find their own
rhythm. There are even samba schools to learn about the music and
dance moves, and competitions for the best dance school. In the
city of Rio de Janeiro, there's a stadium devoted to samba
competitions – the Sambodrome.
Rio is a big, exciting city, but it has more than its fair share
of problems. Drugs and gun crime have made life very difficult.
There are many street kids, with no homes or families. The poorest
areas of the city are called favelas or 'shanty towns', where
people make homes from whatever scrap materials they can find.
Vigário Geral is a shanty town in Rio de Janeiro –
and that's where the kids' band AfroLata comes from. In 1993,
masked men came to Vigário Geral and gunned down 21 innocent
people, including two children. Since then, the people of the
favela have tried to give the place a new start. AfroLata have been
part of this, bringing some hope, colour and happiness to the lives
of kids in a tough area. The band now has over 20 members, who
began by making their own percussion instruments from scrap.
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