3 Lugares Diferentes

3 Lugares Diferentes
Studio album by Fellini
Released 1987
(re-released in 1995)
Recorded 1987
Genre Post-punk
Label Baratos Afins
Producer Luiz Calanca
Fellini chronology
Fellini Só Vive 2 Vezes
(1986)
3 Lugares Diferentes
(1987)
Amor Louco
(1990)
Cadão Volpato chronology
Fellini Só Vive 2 Vezes
(1986)
3 Lugares Diferentes
(1987)
Amor Louco
(1990)

3 Lugares Diferentes (Portuguese for 3 Different Places) is the third studio album by Brazilian post-punk band Fellini. It was released in 1987, and was their last album to be released under the Baratos Afins imprint. Fans (and as well as Cadão Volpato himself) consider this to be Fellini's best album. It was also re-released in CD form in 1995 (like the two previous Fellini albums).[1]

Although Ricardo Salvagni returned to Fellini in this album (both him and guitarist Jair Marcos were absent from the band during the recording of the previous album), Jair Marcos did not, and thus was temporarily replaced by Thomas Pappon's brother Tancred.

Original founding Fellini member Minho K. (real name: Celso Pucci) provides some backing vocals in this album.

The track "Pai" opens with excerpts of narration by famous English disc-jockey John Peel.

Track listing

All lyrics written by Cadão Volpato; all music composed by Thomas Pappon, Ricardo Salvagni and Cadão Volpato.

No. TitleEnglish title Length
1. "Ambos Mundos"  Both Worlds 4:09
2. "Rosas"  Roses 3:37
3. "La Paz Song"    2:34
4. "Teu Inglês"  Your English 3:35
5. "Zum Zum Zum Zazoeira"  [2] 5:35
6. "Pai"  Father 3:29
7. "Valsa de la Revolución"  Revolution Waltz 1:58
8. "Massacres da Coletivização"  The Massacres of Collectivization 3:02
9. "Rio-Bahia/Lavorare Stanca"    5:15
10. "Onde o Sol se Esconde"  Where the Sun Is Hiding 3:39
1995 CD re-release bonus tracks
No. Title Length
11. "Zum Zum Zum Zazoeira" (live) 5:23
12. "Ambos Mundos" (live) 3:10
13. "Teu Inglês/Aeroporto" (live) 16:28

Notes

Personnel

Fellini
Additional personnel
Miscellaneous staff

References

  1. Interview with Jair Marcos, Thomas Pappon e Cadão Volpato (Portuguese)
  2. "Zazoeira" is a Portuguese-language slang term that means "noise", while "zum zum" would be the equivalent of "buzz".

External links

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