Sold Date:
April 23, 2019
Start Date:
April 23, 2019
Final Price:
$22.00
(USD)
Seller Feedback:
687
Buyer Feedback:
20
Exact LP repro edition. Grey-area reissue of this legendary album, with
top audio quality: the seminal "Racional 1" privately released by Tim Maia
on his own Seroma imprint (the name Seroma is the sum of the first
syllables of Tim Maia (Sebastião Rodrigues Maia) names. SE from
Sebastião, RO from Rodrigues and MA from Maia). It’s difficult to
overstate the importance of Brazil’s Tim Maia. A wildly restless
creative mind Tim Maia was also a huge personality. The larger than life
man made a huge contribution musically to Brazilian Jazz, funk, soul,
psychedelia, disco, ballads, rock, Música popular brasileira, and more.
At
the height of his musical career, Maia went on to join a radical,
extraterrestrial obsessed cult in 1974. The 32-year-old Maia and his
band retired to a house in a secluded section of Rio de Janeiro and
spent their days smoking marijuana and experimenting with hallucinogens
while working on new material.In the midst of a mescaline trip, he
discovered a book entitled Universo em Desencanto (literally "Universe
in Disenchantment"), the manifesto of an obscure religious cult known as
Cultura Racional. Within weeks, Maia had dedicated his
life to the cult, coerced his entire band to join and live by its
strict precepts (no drugs, no alcohol, no red meat, and no sex except
for the purpose of procreation), and was bent on a new direction for his
double album.
Gone was the accessible pop music he'd been known for, his usual
romantic and party-oriented lyrics replaced by devotional verses. Tim
Maia had conceived a new sort of lunatic gospel music rife with sci-fi
imagery and relentless evangelism. "Read the book, the only book!" was
Tim's mantra, repeated dutifully on every track. Clearly, he was
obsessed, but whatever dubious logic and deception were behind it, the
end result is astonishing. Giving up drugs and alcohol, getting rid of
material possessions, and trying to convert the rest of the country of
Brazil (and the world) to Manoel Jacinto Coelho’s
Cultura Racional, Maia’s the tale of his foray into this strange cult is
something that needed to be done. This theme was projected onto this
album in its lyrics, sound, and artwork. And what an album it is! In a
way this Rationalist’ belief saved Tim’s musical life as much as his
physical/spiritual.