Uma Tarde na Fruteira (Portuguese for "An Evening at the Fruit Shop") is the fourth studio album by the Brazilian musician Jupiter Apple; released in 2007 by Spanish label Elefant Records, it was the musician's final studio album to come out during his lifetime. Distancing itself from its predecessors Plastic Soda and Hisscivilization, it is mostly sung in Portuguese and returns to the more "accessible" psychedelia of his 1997 debut A Sétima Efervescência, in sonority terms.[1]
The album was re-issued in Brazil by Monstro Discos in 2008, with a different cover art and track list; while the original Elefant version is more of a compilation with some previously unreleased tracks in-between,[2] Monstro's version contains only new tracks.
Music videos were made for the tracks "A Marchinha Psicótica de Dr. Soup"[3] and "Mademoiselle Marchand".[4]
Uma Tarde na Fruteira has received positive reviews upon its release. Stewart Mason of AllMusic gave it 3.5 out of 5 stars, describing it as a "double-album-length potted history/reconstruction of the most vibrant era in Brazilian music – roughly from the birth of bossa nova through the petering out of Tropicália, or the late '50s through the early '70s". He praised the album as being "richly melodic and instantly memorable".[6] Bruno Yutaka Saito of Folha de S.Paulo also spoke favorably of the album, comparing its "eclectic" sonority to the works of Caetano Veloso, Roberto Carlos and Stereolab.[7]
Writing for his website Trabalho Sujo in 2009, Alexandre Matias included the album in his list of the 50 Greatest Albums of 2008, in 24th place.[8]
La Cumbuca included Uma Tarde na Fruteira in 198th place in its list of the Top 200 Brazilian Albums of the 2000s.[9]
Track listing
Elefant Records version (2007)
All tracks are written by Jupiter Apple. "Over the Universe", "Collectors Inside Collection" and "Plastic Soda" were originally featured in Plastic Soda (1999); "Act Not Surprised", "Tropical Permanent Holidays", "Metropole" and "The Futuristica Waltz" were originally featured in Hisscivilization (2002)