A few years later, in the late '60s, Carlos (counseled by his advisers) changed his style to become the most successful romantic artist in Brazil. Having written (always with Erasmo Carlos) some of the most beautiful songs in this style (such as "Detalhes," "Sua Estupidez," "Jesus Cristo," "Debaixo dos Caracóis dos Seus Cabelos," etc.), Carlos accumulated virtually all possible accomplishments as a highly successful artist, including a solid international career with awards like the Grammy and top positions on Billboard's Latin charts. Though the adherence to a worn-out sentimental formula proved to be affective in commercial terms (more than 70 million albums sold in his career), it ultimately led him to be known, in the '80s and '90s, as a cheesy artist by youngsters and part of the adult listeners. Nevertheless, the mid-'90s witnessed a resurgence of Jovem Guarda talents through tributes of new rockers and Carlos reached the 21st century uncontestedly enjoying his absolute title: the King.
Roberto Carlos was from a lower-middle-class family. At six, he lost one of his legs and began using a prosthesis. At nine, he debuted on his home city's local radio. In 1955, he moved to Niterói (Rio de Janeiro) and then to Lins de Vasconcelos (a suburb of Rio de Janeiro), where he started to get into rock through Bill Haley, Elvis Presley, and Little Richard, at the same time he met Carlos Imperial, also from his hometown, who, as a TV and radio producer, would be of considerable importance to Carlos's early professional years. Two years later, Carlos performed at TV Tupi, singing "Tutti Frutti" (R. Penniman/J. Lubin/D. La Bostrie). In that period, he was scheduled to open a Bill Haley show at the Maracanazinho (Rio), when he became acquainted with Erasmo Carlos (then Erasmo Esteves). In 1958, Carlos met the "Matoso gang," as were known the future artists Tim Maia, Jorge Ben, and the same Erasmo Esteves, among others, who would meet at Matoso Street at Tijuca (a neighborhood of Rio). Carlos, Erasmo, and Tim Maia (together with Edson Trindade, Arlênio Lívio, and José Roberto "China") formed the group the Snacks (later the Sputniks), playing balls and performing on TV (including at Carlos Imperial's Clube do Rock on TV Continental, where Carlos was already a regular). The group was soon dissolved due to the incompatibility between Carlos and Maia.
After working as an extra in several films such as Agüenta o Rojão and Minha Sogra é da Polícia (in which they backed up Cauby Peixoto on one song), Carlos and Erasmo played together in Erasmo's quartet the Snakes until Carlos was called by Imperial to take Carlos Lyra's place in the Os Terríveis band that played Elvis Presley covers on TV shows and live performances contracted by Imperial.
Soon, Carlos left the band to try to become a bossa nova artist. Strongly influenced by João Gilberto in that period, Carlos often tried to "sit-in" at the famous temples Plaza nightclub and the clubs of the Beco das Garrafas, but to no avail. A testimony of his ephemeral and unaccomplished bossa nova phase is Carlos' first album, with "João e Maria" and "Fora do Tom" (both by Imperial). In August 1960, a new release was launched, again in the bossa vein, "Brotinho Sem Juízo" and "Canção do Amor Nenhum" (again, both by Imperial). At the same time, Carlos would participate regularly in shows presented by Imperial, Os Brotos Comandam (TV Continental and Rádio Guanabara) and Festa de Brotos (TV Tupi). In 1961, in the same year in which Carlos recorded his first LP (a derivation toward boleros and ballads, Louco por Você) that earned some acceptance at the time (3,500 copies sold in one year), he accepted the suggestion of the record company CBS and changed his style to youth music, starting to write songs with the composer/lyricist who would become his most important collaborator: Erasmo Carlos. The duo's first hit was Carlos' rendition for an Erasmo version of "Splish Splash" (Bobby Darin), having as the B-side another classic written by them, "Parei na Contramão." The album was recorded and launched in 1963 as Carlos' fifth 78 rpm, accompanied by Renato e seus Blue Caps. It sold 7,500 copies, a modest amount today, but it represented a considerable selling then and the milestone of a new time.
In 1964, the LP É Proibido Fumar (backed by the Youngsters) had hits with the title track (by Carlos/Erasmo) and with Erasmo's version of "Road Hog" (Gwen/John D. Loudermilk), "O Calhambeque." It sold almost 12,000 copies in 18 months and was considered high-selling then, but still behind the leader Carlos Alberto (a bolero singer), who was selling more than twice as much. Nevertheless, Carlos' nationwide success was ascending, with more and more invitations for TV and radio shows and CBS wanting to take him to Argentina. That year, Carlos recorded the same repertory in Spanish, also backed by the Youngsters, and the album Es Prohibido Fumar was released by the end of 1964 in Argentina. It was planned to also be distributed in Brazil, but as the military government considered anything in Spanish (the language of Fidel Castro and Che Guevara) dangerous to the country, the album was simply taken out of the catalog by the recording company.
In 1965, Carlos was elected the King for the first time by direct vote of the audience in a contest promoted by Antônio Aguillar on his Reino da Juventude show. Later, the title would be confirmed at the highly popular Chacrinha show and it would be his for life.
In the same year, Roberto Carlos Canta Para a Juventude broke all records established by the singer until then, by far surpassing Carlos Alberto and his Amor Perdido. Carlos' album reached fifth place according to IBOPE (a most-accredited public opinion research institute), however, it quickly fell several positions. In fact, he would only have an album at number one of the top parade by the end of the year, with his next LP. Until then, his rising success would sell over 20,000 copies of the double single with "História de um Homem Mau" (reaching fourth place on the charts) and 50,000 copies of his single "Não Quero Ver Você Triste",
On September 5, Roberto Carlos opened the legendary show Jovem Guarda as the main host and also featuring Vanderléa and Erasmo Carlos by his side. The show gave the name and directives to the first musical scene produced especially for Brazilian youth, representing a major cultural/behavioral/commercial breakthrough. After the show debut, Carlos' popularity reached levels unimagined until then. Scoring hits in Argentina and Brazil, Carlos became the best-seller for CBS. A double single with "A Garota do Baile," Carlos reached number two in November, behind the Beatles' "Help!" But his album Jovem Guarda, also launched in November, took only one week to push "Help!" out of number one on the Brazilian charts, selling almost 200,000 copies in one year. "Quero Que Vá Tudo Pro Inferno" became a nationwide hit and with the exception of brief periods of time, it reigned absolute at number one on the top parade during the entire first semester of 1966. After performing in Argentina, Uruguay, and Paraguay — countries in which the Spanish version of "O Calhambeque" continued to have success — Carlos went to Europe in April 1966, singing in Portugal (where "Calhambeque" and "Quero Que Vá Tudo Pro Inferno" were in first place on Lisbon charts). Returning to Brazil, he soon departed for a tour that started in South America, then Central and North America, where he sang in Los Angeles, Miami, and New York, then Europe (London, Paris, Berlin, and Lisbon). Roberto Carlos, released in December 1966 and went right to number one in the second week (remaining there until April 1967), sold 300,000 copies in less than a year. Also in 1967, Carlos starred the feature film Roberto Carlos em Ritmo de Aventura (whose soundtrack sold 300,000 copies, staying at number one from December 17 until June 1968; the film also broke all box-office records until then); won fifth place at the III FMPB (Festival of Brazilian Popular Music of the TV Record, São Paulo) with "Maria, Carnaval e Cinzas," by Luís Carlos Paraná (reaching number one as a single in November); participated in the MIDEM Festival in Cannes, France; and won the Chico Viola trophy for the songs "Quero Que Vá Tudo pro Inferno" and "Esqueça" and for the LP Jovem Guarda. In June of the same year, Carlos departed for a series of shows in Europe, Africa, Asia, and the U.S. In Italy, he participated in the Venice Song Festival.
In 1968, Carlos left Jovem Guarda, which due to his absence would soon cease to exist. His departure was a result of a mature decision to migrate from a youth idol profile to that of a romantic singer. In the same year, Carlos won the San Remo Festival (XVIII Festival della Canzone Italiana) with "Canzone Per Te" (Sergio Endrigo) and starred the film O Diamante Cor-de-Rosa (also a box office success), opening his own show Roberto Carlos à Noite (TV Record) on March 15. As a romantic singer, Carlos had several hits in the 1970s that still had his creative impetus, such as "Sua Estupidez," "As Flores do Jardim de Nossa Casa," "Jesus Cristo," "Amada Amante," "Detalhes," "Debaixo dos Caracóis dos Seus Cabelos," "A Montanha," "A Proposta," "Além do Horizonte," "Olha," "Amante à Moda Antiga," and "A Ilha" (all with Erasmo), along with "Como Vai Você?" (Antônio Marcos/Mário Marcos), and two songs written by Caetano Veloso especially for him, "Como Dois e Dois" and "Muito Romântico." In that decade, Carlos also consolidated his international career doing regular shows in the U.S., Europe, and Latin America. In the year of 1970, he did his first show at the prestigious Canecão, which would be the first of his highly successful annual seasons at the most important Carioca hall in terms of media resonance. In the early '70s, Carlos became the top record-selling Brazilian artist, a position he would keep for many consecutive years. After 1976, his albums were selling over 1,000,000 copies. His 1977 album Roberto Carlos, with "Falando Sério," sold 2.2 million copies. His 1978 show also beat all records, with 250,000 spectators in six months throughout Brazil, while the album with "Café da Manhã," "Força Estranha," and "Lady Laura" sold 1.5 million copies.
In the '80s, Carlos also started to record in English and French (he had already recorded albums in Spanish, Italian, and, naturally, Portuguese), having won the Globo de Cristal trophy, awarded by CBS to Brazilian artists who sell more than five million copies outside Brazil. At the same time, his albums continued to break records in his country. "Caminhoneiro" (1984) was aired 3,000 times in a single day, another record soon beaten by his own "Verde e Amarelo" (1985), with 3,500 spins. In 1986, he had success at Radio City Music Hall (New York, NY) and, two years later, won the Grammy as the Best Latin American Pop singer. In 1989, his Sonrie reached first place on Billboard's Latin chart.
In the 1990s, Roberto Carlos became the first Latin American artist to sell more albums than the Beatles (in 1994, having by then sold over 70 million copies of his albums). In the mid-'90s, with the retro Jovem Guarda wave, Carlos, who was worn out among the younger generations who had only known his romantic and sentimental hits directed at a middle-aged audience, had his importance recuperated by young rockers such as Cássia Eller, Chico Science & Nação Zumbi, Barão Vermelho, and Skank, who recorded Rei, a tribute to him with his old Jovem Guarda hits.
In 1998, his second wife Maria Rita discovered she had cancer (she would die in 1999), which shattered his peace of mind. Trying to keep on with his career, Carlos continued to record and perform after one year of reclusion. In 2001, he broke his contract with Sony (ex-CBS), the recording company through which he had released a vast majority of his albums, due to commercial reasons related to his wife's demise.
Jovens Tardes De Domingo
Roberto Carlos Lyrics
Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴ Line by Line Meaning ↴
O tempo que passou
O tempo passa tão depressa
Mas em mim deixou
Jovens tardes de domingo
Tantas alegrias
Velhos tempos
Belos dias
Pra falar de amor
Carrões e gente numa festa
De sorriso e cor
Jovens tardes de domingo
Tantas alegrias
Velhos tempos
Belos dias
Hoje os meus domingos
São doces recordações
Daquelas tardes de guitarras
Sonhos e emoções
O que foi felicidade
Me mata agora de saudade
Velhos tempos
Belos dias
Velhos tempos
Belos dias
Hoje os meus domingos
São doces recordações
Daquelas tardes de guitarras
Flores e emoções
O que foi felicidade
Me mata agora de saudade
Velhos tempos
Belos dias
Velhos tempos
Belos dias
Velhos tempos
Belos dias
The lyrics to Roberto Carlos's song "Jovens Tardes De Domingo" reminisce about the simple pleasures of youth, particularly the joy of spending Sunday afternoons with friends, listening to music and enjoying the company of loved ones. The singer speaks of the passage of time but carries with him the memories of those days, which were full of happiness, love, and the beauty of youth.
He remembers the music, which was simple yet effective in expressing the emotions of young love, and the sight of cars and people at parties, all smiling and full of color. The singer longs for those days, as the memories of those happy times are now bittersweet reminders of what once was and can no longer be regained.
The last verse speaks of the singer's present-day Sundays, which are now sweet memories of those days gone by, full of guitars, flowers, and emotions. The singer's memories of youth provide him with a sense of nostalgia and longing, as the beauty of those days can never be replicated.
This song has a distinct feeling of wistfulness and nostalgia that resonates with listeners both young and old. It speaks of the universal themes of youth, love, and the passage of time, and captures the essence of what it means to grow up and move on from one's past.
Line by Line Meaning
Eu me lembro com saudade
I remember nostalgically
O tempo que passou
Of the time that has gone by
O tempo passa tão depressa
Time goes by so quickly
Mas em mim deixou
But it left its mark on me
Jovens tardes de domingo
Young Sunday afternoons
Tantas alegrias
So many joys
Velhos tempos
Old times
Belos dias
Beautiful days
Canções usavam formas simples
Songs used simple forms
Pra falar de amor
To speak of love
Carrões e gente numa festa
Cars and people at a party
De sorriso e cor
With smiles and colors
Hoje os meus domingos
Today my Sundays
São doces recordações
Are sweet memories
Daquelas tardes de guitarras
Of those afternoons with guitars
Sonhos e emoções
Dreams and emotions
O que foi felicidade
What was happiness
Me mata agora de saudade
Now kills me with nostalgia
Velhos tempos
Old times
Belos dias
Beautiful days
Velhos tempos
Old times
Belos dias
Beautiful days
Velhos tempos
Old times
Belos dias
Beautiful days
Contributed by Joshua H. Suggest a correction in the comments below.
Margarida
Roberto Carlos bom dia!
SAIBA ! Que é muito BOM. Acordar ouvindo todos os dias as suas lindas e maravilhosas canções.
E qundo ouvimos estas antigas canções dos anos 60 .* A nossa alma agradeçe*, O nosso corpo rejuvenesce*. Nesses momentos.O passado vem para o presente. E o presente vai para o passado. E um lindo filme que passa em nossas cabeças. Das *JOVENS TARDES DE DOMINGOS. QUE JAMAIS ESQUECEREMOS.
A TURMA DOS 60 TÕES
AGRADECEM. VC É D +++.
A TODOS com CARINHO um LINDO DOMINGO cheio de ALEGRIA E PAZ.
😍😎😘🤗😉
Da NORDESTINA PE ⛱️
Eliana Vietri
Eu me lembro com saudade
O tempo que passou
O tempo passa tão depressa
Mas em mim deixou
Jovens tardes de domingo
Tantas alegrias
Velhos tempos
Belos dias
Canções usavam formas simples
Pra falar de amor
Carrões e gente numa festa
De sorriso e cor
Jovens tardes de domingo
Tantas alegrias
Velhos tempos
Belos dias
Hoje os meus domingos
São doces recordações
Daquelas tardes de guitarras
Sonhos e emoções
O que foi felicidade
Me mata agora de saudade
Velhos tempos
Belos dias
Velhos tempos
Belos dias
Hoje os meus domingos
São doces recordações
Daquelas tardes de guitarras
Flores e emoções
O que foi felicidade
Me mata agora de saudade
Velhos tempos
Belos dias
Velhos tempos
Belos dias
Velhos tempos
Belos…
Ulysses Pedroso Ferreira
Homenagem ao inesquecível Erasmo Carlos que compôs esta linda canção junto com o Roberto Carlos
Vilagran & Delavy - Oficial
Jovens Tardes de Domingo, a Jovem Guarda, tenho 16 anos e amo as músicas do Roberto Carlos, principalmente as dele na época da Jovem Guarda, músicas dele com o Erasmo, eu queria ter nascido nessa época
Suzana Maria
Prá quem é romântica, não importa a idade de 16 anos. As músicas do Roberto Carlos é para todas às épocas...
Sergio Mazer
Se perdeu uma epoca boa de jovem
antonio ferreira
É raro ver jovens fazendo esse tipo de comentário. Aquela época, realmente era muito boa. Brincávamos sem medo das drogas, crimes infames, etc... Parabéns. Pelo visto você não aderiu ao vandalismo musical, dá valor as coisas bonitas 👏👏👏👏👏
Jose Pereira
@Marizete Regina bbbb4bbb
Antonio Carlos Candido
Tenho 67 anos tenho muita saudades daqueles tempos dourados, ouçam a música com a Joelma da jovem Guarda aqueles tempos.
Angelo Marsari
O que foi felicidade hoje nos mata de saudades... velhos tempos , belos dias.. verdade ..
FRANCISCO MIRANDA
Vivi e guardo com muito amor estes momentos, lindos " Belas tardes de Domingo".
Conceição Monte
Essa música já tem 42 anos, e parece tão atual! Muitas lembranças dessa época 😞