
Botequim São Jorge | Rua Borges dos Reis, 16 (for some reason this is the official address, the back door; the entrance is really one street over, on Rua João Gomes) | Rio Vermelho | 3334-8181 | Monday through Saturday, from11:30 a.m. to the last customer; Sunday afternoons
Botequim São Jorge is a Rio-style establishment with live samba Friday and Saturday nights, and Sunday afternoons.
Galpão Cheio de Assuntos
Galpão Cheio de Assuntos | Rua Djalma Dutra, 40 | Sete Portas (actually, between the Dique de Tororó and Sete Portas...not far from Pelourinho | (71) 3322-3056 / 9991-7740 | Open Mondays from 7 p.m
Galpão Cheio de Assuntos (Warehouse Full of Themes) is basically what would be the parking area of Peu Meurray's house (Peu Meurray of the rolling drums-in-tires fame) and Tito Oliveira's recording studio if the area weren't done up and given over to music. This is a musicians' circle kind of place and is a hangout for a lot of world class players. There's a ten real cover charge.
Galpão Cheio de Assuntos
Ciranda Café
Ciranda Café | Rua Fonte do Boi, 131 | Rio Vermelho |(71) 3012-3963 | Open Tuesday through Sunday, from 11:30 a.m to 11:30 p.m.
Café, Cultura & Artes in Rio Vermelho

Tom do Sabor
Tom do Sabor | Rua João Gomes, 249 | Rio Vermelho | (71) 3334-5677 | Open Wednesday through Saturday, from 7 p.m to 2 a.m.
Tom do Sabor (Tone of the Flavor) is set inside a glass pyramid-shaped complex including another restaurant, a bookstore, another performing area, and whatnot, naturally referred to as a pirâmide. It's a behave-yourself place featuring generally excellent live music, with a 15 real cover charge, and a kitchen with a real chef turning out gourmet dinners which will set you back some 50 to 70 reais or so, not including entradas and drinks.

The Best Beach

Get your castanha de caju (cashews)!
The Best Beach | On the praia do Bogary | Ribeira | (71) 3494-7226/8726-8366
Ribeira's place for commercial party music...I haven't been there at night, a few beers into it and, depending, it might not be such a bad time!

Zauber
A funky mix-it-up DJ + culture + rockout kind of place at the bottom end of the Ladeira da Misericórdia in Comércio.

Nightly in
Salvador, Monday Through Saturday
What: Balé
Folclórico da Bahia
Where: Teatro Miguel Santana in Pelourinho, at Rua Gregôrio
de Mattos (also and originally called Rua Maciel de Baixo), 49
When: Monday through Friday, with the exception of Tuesdays
What Time: 8 p.m., duration one hour
Entrance: 25 reais, half-price for students
Notes: This exuberant show should most definitely not be missed by anybody coming to Bahia! It is an elegant, breathtakingly
athletic exhibition of Afro-Bahian beauty and prowess, and in the small
theater the audience almost melds into the space through which the dancers
fly.
Tickets
at the door, but frequently the show sells out and so advance purchases
of tickets may be made at the theater on show days, beginning at 2 p.m.
during the week and 4:30 p.m on Saturdays.

Daily &
Nightly in Salvador, Mondays Through Saturdays
A Plethora of Musical Richness at...
Where: Rua
João de Deus, 22, in Pelourinho
What: Marvelous
Brazilian music
What Time: From 10 a.m. 'til late, Monday through Saturday
Telephone: 3321-0536
Entrance: All you gotta do is blow through the door.
Notes: Well, this isn't a show or a dance or anything...it's Bahia-Online's record
(CD) shop and budding production facility. But there is much more
than a mere measure of entertainment in here so I hope I won't be judged
too harshly by its inclusion on a what-to-do page. And between the
sambas and the beaches, and whatever else you find to do here in Salvador,
you may find it worth your while to spend an off-moment with us, and Cartola, and Ilê Aiyê, and Vinícius
de Moraes, and Antonio Carlos Jobim, and Rosa
Passos, and Raimundo Sodré, and Maria
Bethânia, and Bule-Bule, and João
Gilberto, and Carlinhos Brown, and Margareth
Menezes, and Dorival Caymmi, and Caetano
Veloso, and Ramiro Musotto, and Gilberto
Gil, and Gal Costa, and Ary Barroso,
and Luiz Gonzaga, and Paulinho da Viola...and
even Luciano Calazans (below)!

The shop in
Salvador...
And in case you're wondering what the "Recôncavo" in the sign to the right is, it is the great concave-shaped region around the Bay of All Saints (Baia de Todos os Santos) where the majority of Bahia's sugarcane plantations were (and are) located. It was on these plantations that the Bantus brought unwillingly to Bahia would sing out, clap, and dance to their music -- a wonderful and uplifting music which would come to be called "samba-chula" or "samba-de-roda" and which would go on to become the national music of Brazil.

The location
in Pelourinho...

Monday Nights
What: Choro
Where: In the Teatro Vila Velha, which is located in the Passeio Público on Avenida Sete de Setembro, close to Campo Grande. You go through the arch and straight back to the theater (blocky and unprepossessing)...the entrance is down an inclining walkway to the right as one is directly in front of the theater. Once inside one must wind around a bit to get to where the choro takes place, but that's where most of the activity in the theater is at that hour and so it's easy to find.
What Time: From 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Entrance: 10 reais, 5 with student I.D.

Cacau do Pandeiro
Notes: Excellent choro played by a group of young musicians together with eighty-something year old pandeiro master Cacau do Pandeiro, and guest artists. The ambience of the room is kind of informal university theater, with a bar at the back where one can buy beer, soft drinks, snacks, etc. The crowd tends towards polite grey-haired heads (not rowdy grey-haired heads like mine and Cacau's).
What: Grupo Afro-Batá, Afro-Cuban-Candomblé-Samba music featuring Aloísio Menezes and Portela Açucar from Cortejo Afro.
Where: Pelourinho's Praça Tereza Batista
What Time: Begins at 9 p.m.
Entrance: Free
Notes: I haven't seen these guys yet, but their publicity says that their material includes songs by Nelson Cavaquinho and Geraldo Pereira, so as far as I'm concerned they get an automatic thumbs up!
What: Pimentinha
What Time: From 8 p.m.
Location: In Boca do Rio at Rua Dom Eugênio Sales, 11
How to Get There: By taxi. From Barra or Pelourinho the fare
should come to between 25 and 30 reais.
Notes: A
very strange bar run by an androgynous pai/mãe de santo (Anísio
Augusto Pimenta Filho, nicknamed and hence Pimentinha) who ritualistically
blesses patrons as they enter with water cast from shaken leaves. Live music, a group called Tropikola nowadays, playing salsa, merengues, cumbias, etc. (the group consists of Spanish-speaking Latin American immigrants to Salvador). Monday night is the big night here, and the only night.
Bizarre and popular.

Mural in front
of Pimentinha
Tuesday Nights
What: Benção ("Blessing")
Where: Pelourinho, of course!
What Time: Begins shortly after sunset
Entrance: None
Notes: The general Tuesday night madness in Pelourinho. The first and last Tuesdays of the month are generally the biggest nights (that's when people get paid), and things also heat up as Salvador does in general moving into the Brazilian spring and summer.
Don't Miss Gerônimo and Banda Mont Serrat!...

Igreja do Passo (Paço)
Part of the above, beginning at 8 p.m. or so and running
to sometime between 10 and 11 p.m., is the live music on the steps
leading up to the Igreja (Church) do Passo from the Ladeira do Carmo (the
sloping street connecting Pelourinho to the neighborhood of Santo Antônio). Gerônimo (writer of É
d'Oxum --a beautiful ijexá-based composition which has
become Salvador's unofficial theme song -- along with a lot of other great
material which has been recorded by a host of Brazilian greats) sets up
a stage these nights at the bottom of the steps for a free show of music
featuring his band Mont Serrat (top flight; great horn section, excellent
rhythm section, killer jazz guitar!) and various friends who sit in, the
steps serving as an amphitheater. It's a really nice scene, and
it's really nice that Gerônimo goes out of his way to do this --
the sound equipment is his own -- particularly in light of the fact that
the coin he receives for his considerable efforts consists of nothing
beyond the good will he and his compatriots garner.
The show opens with a padê to Exu -- the orixá responsible for opening the pathway allowing the other orixás to descend -- and closes with an homage to Oxossi (the hunter). It is extremely popular! (And being so, in addition to the very nice crowd it attracts, it also attracts pickpockets, so be suitably prepared!)

Gerônimo and Banda Mont Serrat
Two interesting
points about the steps: They were built over the church's ossuary, and
they were the locale of an important scene (below) in the film O Pagador
de Promessas ( The Payer - or Keeper - of Promises), which won the
1962 Palm d'Or at Cannes.
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Protagonist Zé do Burro after carrying his cross up the
stairway in front of the Igreja do Passo, endpoint of an odyssey
from the Bahian hinterlands made in fulfillment of a promise sworn
to Santa Bárbara (syncretized with Iansã) on a terreiro
de candomblé.
Clicking
on the image will bring up an interesting segment of the film
(the entire film is interesting!) taking place on this stairway
on the day of the Festa de Santa Bárbara (to this day Pelourinho's
biggest, taking place on the 4th of December).
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And while you're
there you might cast a glance a bit further up the hill to the yellow
house at number 35. A toddler by the name of Dorival
Caymmi lived there before his family moved up to Itapoan.
Sankofa African Bar and Restaurant

DJ George in his club; owner, host, and just one of the Sankofa DJs
Sankofa is a West African word meaning "to take from the past and build on it", this being the impetus for Ghanian native and Bahian resident George's Pelourinho establishment of the same name. (George, being from Ghana, speaks fluent English, by the way, convenient for our Portuguese-impaired friends.)
Sankofa is open on Tuesday, Friday, and Saturday nights, from 10 p.m. or so, and the multilevel club features hot dance music, African, Brazilian, and Latin, both live with crack bands and with DJs. There is a restaurant as well serving African dishes, with lunches (daily) of African and Bahian dishes priced at 10 reais.
The establishment is located right around the corner from Cana Brava Records, on Rua Frei Vicente 7, and the telephone there is 3321-7236.
The Friday night band is particularly hot...that would be Magary (the band's leader and singer) with his band Black Semba (semba is an Angolan musical style). Magary tore 'em up at the world's largest arts festival this year in Edinburgh, Scotland, (see below) and is now in Australia. But when the man is pack, he'll pack the place!

Magary (and Paloma!) at the Edinburgh Festival, 2008
More information on everything can be had on Sankofa's website:
Sankofa African Bar e Restaurante

Friday Nights
What: Bossa
Nova
Where: Aconchego da Zuzu, in the neighborhood of Garcia (fim de
linha), at Rua Quintino Bocaiúva, 18
What Time: 9:30 p.m.
Telephones: 3331-5074 and 3331-8149
Cover: 10 reais
What: DJs, playing blues, soul, samba, acid jazz...
Where: The Borracharia (tire-fixing place), on Rua Cons. Pedro Luiz at101 A, in Rio Vermelho
What Time: late
Telephone: 9142-0456
Cover: 15 reais for men, 10 for not.
What: Samba
to live music at Nego Fua's Bar Galícia.
Inside this bar there's a sign hanging on the wall, a photograph of which
is reproduced below...

| |
Tough (Nice)
Guy and more... |
For those of you
who don't read Portuguese, the sign reads:
"The
community of Maciel - Pelourinho reveres its hero, tough guy and big f***er,
Black Fua, the "Rooster of Maciel". Fua (right), ex-professional boxer and a survivor of multiple street fights involving knives and guns (and with the scars to prove it)
is actually a very agreeable fellow!
Where: At
the corner of Rua João de Deus and Rua J. Castro Rabelo, in Pelourinho
What Time: From 10 p.m. until 2 a.m.
Entrance: Free
Notes: This bar
gets a local (which is to say poor people) crowd and is highly animated, with excellent samba (provided
by band Caxambu and its leader Gordinho; Note: As of late Gordinho and several other members of the band haven't been there, and their replacements aren't nearly as good...don't know if this is a permanent situation or not but I'll find out). It gets v-e-r-y packed
later on, with people practically falling out the doors, and the ambience
of the place always reminds me of (this is for Americans who weren't born
yesterday) the painting that
used to come up at the end of the Good Times TV show. Don't be offended
if I say that it ain't for your average tourist! Fua's wife Morena sells churrascos (kebabs) on the corner.
Saturday Nights
What: Afro-Bahian
Music and Drumming
Exactly What: Bloco afro Ilê Aiyé
Where: Ladeira do Curuzu, 197, in Liberdade
What Time: 10 p.m.
Telephones: 3256-1013 and 3388-4969
Entrance: 30 reais
What: Chorinho
& MPB (Música Popular Brasileira)
Where: Aconchego da Zuzu, in the neighborhood of Garcia (fim de
linha), at Rua Quintino Bocaiúva, 18
What Time: 9:30 p.m.
Telephones: 3331-5074 and 3331-8149
Cover: 5 reais
Sunday Afternoons
What: MPB (Música Popular Brasileira) and samba
Where: Aconchego da Zuzu, in the neighborhood of Garcia (fim de
linha), at Rua Quintino Bocaiúva, 18
What Time: From 1 p.m.
Telephones: 3331-5074 and 3331-8149
Cover: 5 reais
Sunday Nights
What: Afoxé-based
dance music
Where: Filhos de Gandhy headquarters in Pelourinho on Rua Gregório
de Mattos (more on the Filhos de Gandhy here...)
What Time: From 5 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Entrance: Free
Notes: Very cool and very cultural. The Filhos de Gandhy
headquarters has three floors...an entrance and administrative floor,
a lower floor with table and access to food and drinks, and a still lower
floor with a stage. To see what the lower floor looks like on Sunday
afternoons, go there, or go here...).
What: Olodum
Where: Pelourinho's Praça Pedro Arcanjo
What Time:
Entrance: 20 reais (this price is highly variable)
What: Afoxé
Where: Filhos de Korin Efan headquarters on Ladeira do Passo, 26,
in Carmo
What Time: From 6:30 p.m. to midnight
Entrance: Free
Telephone: 3321-3210
Notes: Korin Efan is an afoxé, and their headquarters is
in the leftover hulk of a building in the Centro Histórico, where
they've been for years. The effect is of authentic old Bahia, which
stands to reason because that's exactly what it is! The music is
candomblé-style, and in keeping with the theme the inside walls
(the ceiling is open air) are lined with large painted images of the orixás.
The dancing as well is right out of a house of candomblé.
The percussion is excellent and the singing unstudied but moving, the
only downside being the volume of the voice amplification -- more overwhelming
than necessary. This is, nevertheless, a fascinating stop for people
whose taste runs to the cultural and exotic. Beer and drinks are
sold on the premises. Axé! |