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'''Ratos de Porão''' (Portuguese for "Basement Rats") is a Brazilian [[crossover thrash]] band from [[São Paulo]]. They were formed in 1981, toured South America, North America, Asia and Europe, and still continue to play today. Their core lineup of [[João Gordo]] on vocals and Jão on drums and later guitars has remained since virtually the band's beginning.
'''Ratos de Porão''' (Portuguese for "Basement Rats") is a Brazilian [[crossover thrash]] band from [[São Paulo]]. They were formed in 1981, toured South America, North America, Asia and Europe, and still continue to play today. Their core lineup of [[João Gordo]] on vocals and Jão on drums and later guitars has remained since virtually the band's beginning.

Lead singer João Benedan (better known as João Gordo) is a former well-known [[VJ (media personality)|VJ]] on [[MTV Brasil]] and later worked at [[Rede Record]] in a comedy TV show called: "Legendários" (Portuguese for "Legendaries"). He now has a YouTube channel where he hosts a talk show and cooks vegan food, called Panelaço.


== History ==
== History ==

Revision as of 12:52, 1 July 2022

Ratos de Porão
Ratos de Porão in 2016
Ratos de Porão in 2016
Background information
OriginSão Paulo, Brazil
Genres
Years active1981–present
MembersJoão Gordo
Jão
Juninho
Boka
Past membersBetinho
Mingau
Jabá
Walter Bart
Pica-Pau
Fralda
Spaghetti
Chiquinho
Websiterdpeido.com.br

Ratos de Porão (Portuguese for "Basement Rats") is a Brazilian crossover thrash band from São Paulo. They were formed in 1981, toured South America, North America, Asia and Europe, and still continue to play today. Their core lineup of João Gordo on vocals and Jão on drums and later guitars has remained since virtually the band's beginning.

History

Early days

Ratos de Porão, or simply "RxDxPx", was formed in November 1981, existing in the Brazilian (São Paulo city) punk rock scene (alongside bands such as Olho Seco, Cólera, Inocentes, Garotos Podres, and Lobotomia). Directly influenced by the UK 82 hardcore bands such as Discharge, Charged G.B.H., The Varukers and Swedish and Finnish bands such as Anti-Cimex and Kaaos, they started to write songs that criticized Brazilian society, a revolutionary concept at the time. Their sound is regarded as one of the rawest of their scene (because other bands such as Cólera and Garotos Podres were more 'punk rock' sounding than 'hardcore punk').

Their first album was released in 1983 and was titled Crucificados pelo sistema. Released on the Ataque Frontal label, it was one of the best-selling hardcore albums to come out of the country, and was soon considered a punk classic worldwide. The line up was João Gordo (vocals), Mingau (guitar – later in many punk and pop bands in Brazil), Jabá (bass) and Jão (drums). Soon after, with the fall of the São Paulo punk scene (because of associated gang violence), the band split up and since then João Gordo has been accused of selling out and betraying the DIY ethics of the hardcore punk movement for several alleged reasons; he has said, "I'm a traitor since 1983, because I told the guys I played hardcore, not punk. Then, I got labelled.(...)That's a stigma".[1]

Initial crossover thrash era

In 1985, RxDxPx came back, but with a different line up and sound. They brought thrash metal to their music, influenced by bands such as Slayer, Exodus, Kreator and hardcore bands around the world that were also transitioning to a more thrash metal sound, like Suicidal Tendencies, D.R.I., English Dogs, Cro-Mags, Agnostic Front and others (including Brazilian bands such as Lobotomia and Armagedom). Jão switched over to playing guitar, and an old punk named Spaghetti (who later adopted a thrash metal sound) replaced him on drums. Subsequently, they released the Descanse Em Paz album on Baratos Afins in 1986.

With their new sound, they began to associate more with heavy metal bands, becoming friends with longtime RxDxPx fans Sepultura and other bands of the Brazilian 1980s metal scene, including Korzus and Anthares. Their next studio release with Baratos Afins Records, 1987's Cada Dia Mais Sujo e Agressivo, was also released in an English-language version (Dirty and Aggressive) (the band feared that their English was so grammatically inaccurate that many of their native English speaking fans might ridicule their translated lyrics).[citation needed] This release continued the band's D-beat drum tempos.

In 1989, they signed to Roadrunner Records at the urging of Igor Cavalera of Sepultura, who played one of the band's tapes for the label's executives. RxDxPx then went to Germany to record their next studio LP, Brasil. With Harris Johns of Voivod and Tankard producing, the band's production quality improved substantially in contrast to their previous releases; the instrumentation was noticeably more technical.

In 1990, they returned to Germany to record their last album with the 'classic' line-up of João Gordo, Jão, Jabá and Spaghetti. With Harris Johns acting again as producer, their next album titled Anarkophobia was met with criticism by some fans for being the band's most metallic release to date, having considerably more complex and lengthy song compositions and more technical musicianship. Nevertheless, Anarkophobia increased their profile within the worldwide metal scene of the early 1990s.

But in mid-1991, they had their first line-up change in years, with Spaghetti leaving the band, citing that he had "been tired of the musical life".[citation needed] They auditioned several drummers to replace him, including Beto Silesci from Korzus, but the band decided that Silesci's style was too metal for the new direction they were planning to pursue. Silesci was in turn replaced with Boka of the Santos Beach thrash/death metal band Psychic Possessor. In 1992, RxDxPx released its first official live album, called Ao Vivo, with a corresponding music video for the song "Aids, Pop, Repressão" receiving heavy air play on Furia Metal of MTV (the Brazilian equivalent of Headbangers Ball).

At the decline of the thrash scene, under tension and personal problems (Jabá left the band and they had a heavy drug problem), they entered into the studio in 1994 to record their only 'all lyrics in English' album, called Just Another Crime In Massacreland. The album suffered a thin production and a low promotion by the label, and it was a hard time in the life of RxDxPx.[citation needed]

Return to hardcore punk

After the departure of Jabá, the band had several different bass players and recorded a studio album with only punk and hardcore covers called Feijoada Acidente?, a play on the Guns N' Roses album "The Spaghetti Incident?". (Feijoada is a traditional food from Brazil, a stew based on beans and pork.) There were two versions of this album: one covering only Brazilian bands such as Olho Seco, Lobotomia, Garotos Podres, among others; and one covering only non-Brazilian bands such as G.B.H., Black Flag, Anti-Cimex, Minor Threat, among others. At this time, Walter Bart (who used to play in a punk band called "Não Religião") and "Pica Pau" (Portuguese for woodpecker), who stayed in the band until 1999, played bass.

Released in 1997, Carniceria Tropical marked a return to hardcore and Portuguese lyrics, and the band regained their former success. The same year, João Gordo started to work as a VJ for MTV Brasil.

In 1999, the bassist Cristian "Fralda", who used to play in the punk rock band "Blind Pigs" joined the band, and they entered into the studio to re-record their first album, and called this album Sistemados Pelo Crucifa (a play on the original album title, "Crucificados Pelo Sistema"). The front cover was designed by the Korzus bass player Dick.

Return to crossover

In 2002, they released the Onisciente Coletivo album, and came back to be more friendly with thrash metal, mixing the 1980s with 1990s faces. The bassist Cristian "Fralda" left to join the old hardcore/crossover/thrash band Lobotomia. In his place entered an old underground musician, the bass player Paulo Júnior, who still plays with his hardcore band called "Discarga" and guitarist of "Point of no Return".

In 2006, they released Homem Inimigo Do Homem.

On 13 August 2013, Ratos de Porão announced on their Facebook page that they were working on a new album.[2] Entitled Século Sinistro, the album was released on 27 May 2014.[3][4]

Another eight years passed until the release of their upcoming eighth studio album, Necropolítica, on May 20, 2022.[5]

Band members

Current members

  • João "Jão" Carlos Molina Esteves – guitar, backing vocals (1981–1983, 1984–present), drums (1983–1984), lead vocals (1982–1983)
  • João Gordo Francisco Benedan – lead vocals (1983–present)
  • Maurício "Boka" Alves Fernandez – drums (1991–present)
  • Paulo "Juninho" Sergio Sangiorgio Júnior – bass, backing vocals (2004–present)

Former members

  • Chiquinho – vocals (1981)
  • Roberto "Betinho" Massetti – drums (1981–1983)
  • Jarbas "Jabá" Alves – bass (1981–1993)
  • Rinaldo "Mingau" Amaral – guitar (1982)
  • Nelson "Spaghetti" Evangelista Jr. - drums (1986–1991)
  • Walter Bart – bass (1993–1994)
  • Rafael "Pica-Pau" Piccoli Lobo – bass (1995–1999)
  • Christian "Fralda" Wilson – bass (2000–2004)

Timeline

Discography

  • Crucificados pelo Sistema (1984)
  • Descanse em Paz (1986)
  • Cada Dia Mais Sujo e Agressivo (1987)
  • Brasil (1989)
  • Anarkophobia (1990)
  • Just Another Crime... in Massacreland (1994)
  • "Feijoada Acidente?" – Brasil (1995)
  • "Feijoada Acidente?" – International (1995)
  • Carniceria Tropical (1997)
  • Sistemados pelo Crucifa (2000)
  • Onisciente Coletivo (2002)
  • Homem Inimigo do Homem (2006)
  • Século Sinistro (2014)
  • Necropolítica (2022)

References

  1. ^ Marcos Bragatto.Article. In Portuguese.
  2. ^ André Nascimento.Ratos de Porão: banda finaliza DVD e vai gravar novo CD. In Portuguese.
  3. ^ "RDP » Nome do novo disco revelado!". 6 June 2014. Archived from the original on 6 June 2014. Retrieved 7 September 2020.
  4. ^ "Ratos de Porão – Século Sinistro – Encyclopaedia Metallum: The Metal Archives". Metal-archives.com.
  5. ^ "Brazil's RATOS DE PORÃO To Release Necropolítica In July; First Single Streaming". Brave Words & Bloody Knuckles. 29 April 2022. Retrieved 4 May 2022.