A Terceira Lâmina
A Terceira Lâmina is the fourth solo album by Brazilian musician Zé Ramalho. It was released in 1981 and it helped increase his popularity.[1] As its two predecessors, the album mixes Northeast Brazil and rock influences.[2] The opening track, "Canção Agalopada", features soprano Maria Lúcia Godoy and was based on a poem by Ramalho which was featured in his 1977 book Apocalipse (Apocalypse), and which uses the cordel forms martelo agalopado and galope à beira-mar.[2][3] From this same book, Ramalho developed the trilogy "Beira-Mar", "Beira-Mar – Capítulo II" and "Beira-Mar – Capítulo Final", which appear, respectively on the albums A Peleja do Diabo com o Dono do Céu (1979), A Força Verde (1982) and Eu Sou Todos Nós (1998).[4][3] In a 2020 analysis for his blog at G1, Mauro Ferreira called the album "incisive", but compared it unfavorably to Ramalho's two previous efforts.[5] The title track, according to Ramalho, "talks about the third child, my third phase - and the view of the third World War".[6] Track listing
2003 re-issue bonus tracks
All music by Zé Ramalho. Personnel
Personnel per source.[5] References
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