Música de Rua

Música de Rua
Studio album by Daniela Mercury
Released July, 1994
Genre Axé, MPB
Label Epic (Sony Music)
Producer Liminha
Daniela Mercury chronology
O Canto da Cidade
(1992)O Canto da Cidade1992
Música de Rua
(1994)
Feijão com Arroz
(1996)Feijão com Arroz1996
Singles from Música de Rua
  1. "Música de Rua"
    Released: 1994
  2. "O Reggae e o Mar"
    Released: 1995
  3. "Domingo no Candeal"
    Released: 1995
  4. "Rosa"
    Released: 1995
  5. "Por Amor Ao Ilê"
    Released: 1996
Professional ratings
Review scores
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Allmusic link

Música de Rua (Portuguese for "Street Music") is the third album by Brazilian axé and MPB singer Daniela Mercury, released in 1994 in Brazil and on October 11, 1994 in North America and Europe through Sony Music.

Música de Rua was released right after the massive success of Mercury's previous album, O Canto da Cidade (1992). It was very well received by the public, having sold over one million copies (achieving a diamond certification) and spreading two number-one singles ("Música de Rua" e "O Reggae e o Mar"). However, Música de Rua was not very well received by the critics who pointed out that the album sounded too similar to Mercury's previous and accused it of being a copycat of her own work. Música de Rua was Mercury's most authoral work until the release of Canibália in 2009.

Track listing

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Música de Rua"Pierre Onassis, Daniela Mercury3:24
2."Vulcão da Liberdade"Tonho Matéria3:33
3."Alegria Ocidental"Mercury, Liminha3:08
4."Tem Amor"Mercury, Liminha4:19
5."Saudade"Angelique Kidjo, John Hebrail/Portuguese version: Mercury3:27
6."Rosa"Onassis3:30
7."O Reggae e o Mar"Rey Zullo, Mercury3:16
8."Rap Repente"Mercury, Ramiro, David, Beto, Cesário, Toni3:32
9."Domingo no Candeal"Lucas Santana, Quito Ribeiro3:43
10."Sempre te Quis"Herbert Vianna4:20
11."Folia de Rei"Carlinhos Brown, Alain Tavares2:53
12."Por Amor ao Ilê"Guiguio2:57
13."Musica de la Calle (Música de Rua)" (International Bonus Track)Onassis, Mercury3:24

Release history

Region Date
Brazil July, 1994
North America October 11, 1994
Europe

References


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