Sister of the also popular and renowned singer and composer Caetano Veloso, she began her artistic career in 1963, appearing in the play "Boca de Ouro" by Nelson Rodrigues. A song about the play was written by Caetano Veloso, who opened the show singing a samba track by Ataulfo Alves. That year she met Gilberto Gil, Gal Costa, Tom Zé, Djalma Correa, Pitti, Alcivando Luz and Fernando Lona in Salvador, with whom she performed at the commemorations inaugurating the Vila Velha de Salvador theatre in 1964 in the shows "Nós por exemplo" and "Nova bossa velha, velha bossa nova". In 1964 she also appeared in "Mora na Filosofia", her first solo show, when she met Nara Leão. As 1965 she replaced the muse of bossa nova in the show at Teatro Opinião (Rio de Janeiro), sharing the stage with Zé Kéti and João do Vale. She stood out for her stirring interpretation of the song "Carcará". In 1965 she also recorded her first record, a single containing the tracks "Carcará" and "É de manhã", the first recording of Caetano Veloso’s composition. That same year she released a double single with the songs "Carcará", "No carnaval", "Mora na filosofia" and "Só eu sei", followed by her debut album "Maria Bethânia" and the record "Maria Bethânia canta Noel Rosa". That year she also performed in the show Arena canta Bahia, directed by Augusto Boal, alongside Gal, Gil, Caetano, Pitti and Tom Zé. Also under the direction of Boal, the same group performed the show Tempo de Guerra. In 1996 she shared the stage of Teatro Opinião with Vinícius de Moraes and Gilberto Gil, presenting the show "Pois é". In 1967 she released the album "Edu & Bethânia" with Edu Lobo. She appeared in the shows "Yes, nós temos Maria Bethânia" (Bolso theatre, Rio de Janeiro) and "Comigo me desavim" (Miguel Lemos theatre, Rio de Janeiro) and "Brasileiro profissão esperança", by Paulo Pontes, directed by Bibi Ferreira, at the Casa Grande theatre (Rio de Janeiro). In 1971 she recorded the album "A tua presença", which was praised by the select critics. In 1971 the show "Rosa dos ventos" premiered at Teatro da Praia (Rio de Janeiro), directed by Fauzi Arap and she released the album of the same name. In 1972 she appeared alongside Chico Buarque and Nara Leão in the film "Quando o carnaval chegar" by Cacá Diegues. After another trip to Europe, she launched the album "Drama - anjo exterminado" also that year. In 1973 the show Drama, luz da noite premiered at Teatro da Praia, directed by Antônio Bivar and Isabel Câmara, from which arose the record "Luz da noite". The following year she commemorated ten years in the music business with the show "A cena muda", directed by Fauzi Arap, at the Casa Grande Theatre (Rio de Janeiro). The show led to a live record of the same name. In 1975 she performed a lengthy season with Chico Buarque at the Canecão (Rio de Janeiro). In 1976 she recorded the album "Pássaro proibido" which earned her first gold record. Also that year she got together with Caetano, Gil and Gal, forming the group Os Doces Bárbaros. In 1977 she released the album "Pássaro da manhã", for which she received the second gold record of her career. That year she was considered one of the bestselling singers in Brazil, which opened new doors in the record industry. In 1978 she starred in the show "Maria Bethânia e Caetano Veloso ao vivo" alongside her brother. Also that year the album "Álibi" was released, which earned her third gold disk. In 1979 she recorded the album "Mel". She released a series of records in the following decades: "Alteza" (81), "Maria" (88), "Memória da pele" (89), "Olho d’água" (92), "As canções que você fez pra mim" (93), only recording records by Roberto and Erasmo Carlos Âmbar (96), "Imitação da vida" (97) and "A força que nunca seca" (99). In 1994 she performed alongside Caetano Veloso, Gal Costa and Gilberto Gil, in the show "Doces Bárbaros na Mangueira", reference to the tribute made to them by this samba school, with the theme "Atrás da verde e rosa só não vai quem já morreu". In 2000, she recorded limited-edition album "Cânticos, preces, súplicas à Senhora dos Jardins do Céu". In 2001, she recorded the album "Maricotinha", containing the tracks "Moça do sonho" (Edu Lobo and Chico Buarque), from the musical "Cambaio, Primavera" (Carlos Lyra and Vinícius de Moraes), "Quando você não está aqui" (Herbert Vianna and Paulo Sérgio Valle), "Antes que amanheça" (Chico César and Carlos Rennó) and "Se eu morresse de saudade" (Gilberto Gil), among others, in addition to the title track, by Dorival Caymmi. She released the record a special show at the Canecão (Rio de Janeiro). The show included appearances by Caetano Veloso, Carlos Lyra, Chico Buarque, Nana e Danilo Caymmi, Adriana Calcanhoto and Gilberto Gil, among other artists. Also in 2001, in commemoration of her 35 years in the music business, she returned to the Canecão in the show "Maricotinha", which led to the double album "Maricotinha ao vivo". On December 8 that same year, she performed before 100,000 people on Copacabana beach alongside Caetano Veloso, Gilberto Gil and Gal Costa in the show "Doces Bárbaros", which concluded the project Pão Music. In 2003 the show presented in 2001 at the Canecão was released on the DVD "Maricotinha ao vivo", directed by André Horta. In 2003 she was also nominated for the Multishow Award in the categories Best Show and Best Album for "Maricotinha ao vivo". Also that year she created her own label, Quitanda, in partnership with record company Biscoito Fino, inaugurated the company by releasing the album "Brasileirinho", containing songs about religion and Brazil, with guest appearances by Nana Caymmi, Miúcha, Denise Stoklos and Ferreira Gullar, in addition to the groups Tira Poeira and Uakti, and the album "Vozes da Purificação", the first song recorded by Dona Edith do Prato. In 2004 she received the Tim Award in the categories Best Singer, Best Record and best visual MPB project, the Rival BR Award in the category Best Album, and the Academia Brasileira de Letras Award in the category Best Singer, in addition to being nominated for the Latin Grammy. That same year she produced and appeared as a singer alongside other artists on the album "Namorando a Rosa", a tribute record to violinist Rosinha de Valença, released by her Quitanda label. In 2005 she released the album Que falta você me faz, recording works by Vincius de Moraes, in partnership with Tom Jobim, Chico Buarque, Carlos Lyra, Baden Powell, Toquinho, Adoniran Barbosa and Jards Macalé. That same year she appeared at Canecão (Rio de Janeiro) in the show "Tempo Tempo Tempo Tempo - Uma homenagem a Vinícius de Moraes". In 2005 she also received the Golden Music Dolphin Award from the Rio de Janeiro State Culture Council.
Lua Vermelha
Maria Bethânia Lyrics
Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴ Line by Line Meaning ↴
Quase sem amor
Minha luz alheia
Brilho sem calor
Lua vermelha
Branca lua preta
Lambe a minha orelha
Com a sua cor
Lua vermelha
Dez da madrugada
Sapos na calçada
De nenhum país
Lua vermelha
Noite sem Luís
Toda sertaneja
Eu sempre te quis
Eu sempre te quis
Minha namorada
Flor desabrochada
Leite de pequim
Lua vermelha
Noite que menstrua
Lua lua lua
Por cima de mim
Lua vermelha
Pedra que flutua
Que ilumina o poste
Que ilumina a rua
Lua vermelha
Meia de Luís
Toda sertaneja
Eu sempre te quis
Eu sempre te quis
Lua vermelha
Ave flecha pluma
Pérola madura
Sono do dragão
Lua vermelha
Só uma centelha
Dura enquanto dura
Bolha de sabão
Lua vermelha
Fora da bandeira
Bola japonesa
No céu do sertão
Lua vermelha
Negra de Luís
Toda sertaneja
Eu sempre te quis
Eu sempre te quis
Eu sempre te quis
Eu sempre te quis
Eu sempre te quis
The song "Lua Vermelha" by Maria Bethania is a vivid and evocative portrayal of the power and mystery of the moon at night, as well as a reflection on the complexities of love and desire. The first stanza sets the tone with the image of a red moon, almost without love or warmth, shining down like a distant, unfamiliar light. The moon is described as white, and yet black, and it licks the singer's ear with its strange color. The second stanza reinforces the otherworldly atmosphere with the presence of frogs and a deserted street in the dead of night, suggesting a liminal space between the mundane and the magical. The singer longs for the moon, always present yet always distant, and for a lover who may not even exist.
The next verses continue to describe the moon in a variety of images and metaphors, as a floating rock that illuminates the street lamps and the town, as a red bubble that exists only temporarily, as a strange Japanese ball in the sky of the sertão (a region in Brazil), and as a sleeping dragon whose dreams are the stuff of myth and legend. The final repetition of "Eu sempre te quis" (I always wanted you) suggests that the singer's desire and yearning for connection transcends conventional barriers of time, place, and identity, and that the elusive beauty of the moon and the human heart are forever linked.
Line by Line Meaning
Lua vermelha
The red moon
Quase sem amor
Almost without love
Minha luz alheia
My foreign light
Brilho sem calor
Glow without warmth
Lua vermelha
The red moon again
Branca lua preta
White black moon
Lambe a minha orelha
Licks my ear
Com a sua cor
With its color
Dez da madrugada
Ten in the morning
Sapos na calçada
Frogs on the sidewalk
De nenhum país
From no country
Noite sem Luís
Night without Luis
Toda sertaneja
All country
Eu sempre te quis
I always wanted you
Minha namorada
My girlfriend
Flor desabrochada
Blossomed flower
Leite de pequim
Milk from Beijing
Noite que menstrua
Night that menstruates
Lua lua lua
Moon moon moon
Por cima de mim
Above me
Pedra que flutua
Floating stone
Que ilumina o poste
That lights up the post
Que ilumina a rua
That lights up the street
Meia de Luís
Luis's sock
Ave flecha pluma
Bird arrow feather
Pérola madura
Mature pearl
Sono do dragão
Dragon's sleep
Só uma centelha
Just a spark
Dura enquanto dura
Lasts while it lasts
Bolha de sabão
Soap bubble
Fora da bandeira
Outside the flag
Bola japonesa
Japanese ball
Negra de Luís
Black of Luis
Eu sempre te quis
I always wanted you
Eu sempre te quis
I always wanted you
Eu sempre te quis
I always wanted you
Eu sempre te quis
I always wanted you
Eu sempre te quis
I always wanted you
Contributed by Luke C. Suggest a correction in the comments below.
Pryncyppe
Que arranjos mais sofisticados essa canção tem. Amo essa álbum.
Elizabeth
Dura, enquanto, dura, que realidade, cantada e encantada por nossa Deusa da música !😘
Francisca Vitória
Linda canção e Maria Bethânia a torna poética!
Madeleide Weiner
Amo Bethânia ❤
milton carmo
Bethânia, a voz ❤❤❤
Marilynn Nascimento
Eu amooo essa música,essa mulher!
Raquel Pinto Da Silva
Linda, linda canção! Parabéns Bethânia!
Iran Melo
Essa música me comove muito.
Bruno
musica para a eternidade....
MARIA ELENA SEPULVEDA
Tenía este compac, me lo robaron, y nunca más lo oí hasta ahora después de muchos años, muuuuuuuchas gracias por este regalo.