Clube da Esquina 2
Clube da Esquina 2 is a 1978 album by Brazilian singer-songwriter Milton Nascimento. The album serves as a continuation to the Clube da Esquina album and the related eponymous musical movement initiated in the 1960s by a group of musicians from Minas Gerais. The album retained the collective approach, stylistic diversity, and experimental elements of its predecessor, spread across two LPs with 23 tracks.
Musically, the album establishes a dialogue with previous album songs, either through the continuity of the same song or by the presentation of similar elements. It also has been analyzed by Vinícius Mendes for its thematic relevance to Brazilian history and politics, noting that the album reflects the country's social contradictions, exploring themes of hope and despair, beauty and hardship, and the tension between historical trauma and uncertain futures. The album featured a broader range of collaborators, including Brazilian artists like Elis Regina, Chico Buarque, and Francis Hime.
Critical reception and legacy
The album did not achieve immediate success, unlike its predecessor Clube da Esquina. Many fans attributed this to the absence of some original members, which they believed made the new songs more "weak". Alvaro Neder, for AllMusic, gave the album a score of four out of five stars and wrote that the album "evidences details unsuspected in the original vinyl" and noted that the album "crystallizes a group of friends/composers from the Minas Gerais state" while continuing the work begun with Clube Da Esquina. Likened the recording to the Beatles' Abbey Road, he described the tracklist as "testimonies of a certain period of Brazil's history told with expressiveness and passion".The record was described by music journalist Chris McGowan as more of "a pan-South American fusion, with less rock and not as much as North American influence". Stafford Post