Capoeira Angola


Capoeira de Angola or simply angola is the traditional style of capoeira, the Afro-Brazilian martial art. A newer style, based on the reform of capoeira Angola, is called regional.
However, the term capoeira Angola is somewhat ambiguous and can mean two things:
  • traditional capoeira Angola prior to its codification in 20th century.
  • contemporary capoeira Angola codified by Mestre Pastinha, based on an older one.
Although mestre Pastinha strove to preserve the original art, he nevertheless introduced significant changes to capoeira practice. He forbid weapon and lethal moves, prescribed uniforms, moved training away from the street into the academia, and started to teach women. But for mestre Pastinha, Capoeira Angola was, "above all, fighting and violent fighting".
The practice of capoeira Angola is to cultivate chants, music and culture in addition to the martial art, and to keep capoeira as close to its African roots as possible. Angoleiros preserve oral traditions about capoeira's origins and maintain a connection with the ancestral art of engolo.
Capoeira Angola restored to mainstream capoeira the tradition of skillfully played capoeira music which the regional style had neglected.

Name

The name Capoeira Angola acknowledges the fact that Angolan slaves in Bahia were the ones who stood out the most in its practice.

History

Origin of Angolan game

Capoeira first appeared among Africans in Brazil, during early colonial period. As with other Afro-Brazilian forms, oral communication is the basis of the transmission of knowledge and tradition. According to the old capoeira mestres and tradition within the community, capoeira originates from Angola. The very name of Capoeira de Angola emphasizes the origin of the discipline. The older names including jogo de Angola or brincar de angola, also emphasize the Angolan origin of this discipline. Yet, some nineteenth-century authors rejected this claim because at that time a capoeira-like game was not known in Africa.
In the mid-twentieth century, the painter Neves e Sousa brought detailed drawings of the n'golo from Angola to Brazil, showing that there is an art similar to capoeira in Angola. Ever since, many studies have supported the oral tradition, identifying engolo as an ancestral art and locating the Cunene region as its birthplace.

Traditional capoeira Angola

In the 19th century, an extremely violent version of capoeira developed in Rio de Janeiro, associated with gangs, organized crime and murder. This street-fighting capoeira carioca used foot kicks, head butts, hand blows, knife fight and stick-fighting, and was very different from the original Angolan art. The Brazilian government completely banned the practice of capoeira throughout the country in 1890.
In the plantations of Salvador capoeira was a form of amusement and activity. In Bahia's capoeira Angola, there was an inherent connection to religion, and almost all players were blacks or mestizos. Among the Africans of Bahia, capoeira Angola was passed down as a kind of secret knowledge, which they did not share with others. Muniz Sodré wrote:
Unlike Rio, capoeira in Bahia did not become a weapon of organized crime, although there were also capoeira neighborhood gangs, and capoeiristas used blades as well. Carybé, the artist of the early capoeira illustrations, wrote that the jogo de dentro was played with knives in the Capoeira Angola rodas. Old Bahian capoeira was also known as vadiação.
Although illegal, capoeira continued to be played in Bahia. Mestre Bimba, who started learning capoeira in Salvador in 1912, remembers that in those times, "capoeira was practiced by horse-coach drivers, longshoremen, dock workers, and malandros". The police used bullies as agent provocateurs in capoeira gatherings:
During the 1920s, there was capoeira school of Besouro Mangangá in the city of Santo Amaro. During the 1920s, Mestre Noronha and other mestres founded the Centro de Capoeira Angola in Salvador, Bahia. During the 1930s, one of the most famous player of the Angola style was Samuel Francisco Barreto de Souza, known as Mestre Querido de Deus.

First capoeira Angola center

During the 1920s, Mestre Noronha, his brother Livino and many other capoeira Angola mestres, founded the Centro de Capoeira Angola at Ladeira de Pedra, Liberdade neighbourhood, in Salvador, Bahia. Founding mestres were: Noronha, Livino, Maré, Amorzinho, Raimundo ABR, Percílio, Geraldo Chapeleiro, Juvenal Engraxate, Geraldo Pé de Abelha, Zehi, Feliciano Bigode de Seda, Bonome, Henrique Cara Queimada, Onça Preta, Cimento, Algemiro Grande Olho de Pombo longshoreman, Antonio Galindo, Antonio Boca de Porco stevedore, Candido Pequeno Argolinha de Ouro champion of Bahia, Lúcio Pequeno, Paquete do Cabula. The colours of this centre were green and yellow, the colours of the Brazilian flag, and they were symbolized on the clothes worn by the disciples. There were clear combat rules in their capoeira Angola center:

Reform and legalization of capoeira

Since the early 20th century, many teachers tried to bring capoeira back into the legal framework. After several attempts to codify the street version of capoeira from Rio, mestre Bimba from Salvador reformed Bahian capoeira and codified it into regional style.
In early 1930s, Mestre Bimba developed systematic training method for capoeira, including kicks from other martial arts. He called it Luta Regional Baiana, because capoeira was still illegal. In 1937, Bimba founded Centro de Cultura Física e Luta Regional, with permission from Salvador's Secretary of Education. His work was very well received, and he taught capoeira to the cultural elite of the city.
By 1940, capoeira finally lost its criminal connotation and was legalized.

Pastinha's capoeira Angola center

In response to a series of reforms, which changed capoeira considerably, Mestre Pastinha decided to preserve and popularize the traditional African style known as capoeira de Angola, from which the reformers distanced themselves.
In 1941, old capoeira Angola mestres who ran the first capoeira Angola center recognized a capable person in Pastinha and entrusted him with managing the center in Liberdade. That year, he legally registered Centro Esportivo de Capoeira Angola, in the Salvador neighborhood of Pelourinho, which attracted many traditional capoeiristas. He made his mission to clearly separate capoeira Angola from the violence. Pastinha adopted the colors of his favorite soccer club, Ypiranga, yellow and black, which became the hallmarks of the Angola style he taught.
Despite their significant differences, both mestres introduced major innovations – they moved training and rodas away from the street, instituted the academia, prescribed uniforms, started to teach women and presented capoeira to a broader audiences.

Academy period

Pastinha gathered a number of excellent players around him, not only because of his playing style but also his personal qualities. However, many capoeira Angola mestres including Waldemar, Cobrinha Verde and Gato Preto did not become part of Pastinha's school, and the art continued to live outside the academy as well. Mestre Waldemar regularly held his rodas in the neighborhood of Liberdade, during the 1940s and 1950s.
The traditional method of learning capoeira Angola, which persisted into the 1960s and beyond, relied on intuitive learning and observation. There was no structured training centered on repetitious movements. The angoleiros' efforts to distinguish capoeira Angola thwarted the attempts of the authorities in the 1970s to uniformize capoeira as the Brazilians' national sport.
In parallel, capoeira Angola began to lose popularity, and by the 1970s many angoleiros switched to Regional popularized by Grupo Senzala. Some of the old Angola mestres had retired and they no longer taught due to the lack of disciples.
But since the 1980s mainly the opposite seems to occur. After observing distinct angoleiro players from Bahia, regional players such as Marrom from Senzala in Rio de Janeiro, Deraldo in Boston and China in Barcelona have decided to become angoleiros. Since 1985, capoeira Angola experienced a revival with an influx of new students. Maybe due to increase in students, or perhaps to the success of the Senzala method, the Angola teachers adopted the new teaching method, including warm-ups, structured sequences of movements, uniform execution of kicks, and more. As a result, contemporary angoleiros from a particular academy tend to exhibit a uniform style of play.
Around 2010, mestre Cobra Mansa and few other capoeira Angola players went on a research trip to Angola, searching for the roots of the game. There they found players of the nearly extinct engolo game and played joint capoeira-engolo games with them.

Music

Traditionally, capoeira in Bahia was exclusively accompanied by a large Bantu drum, which had been targeted by police repression in the 19th century. In the early 20th century, the most significant musical change was the shift from the drum to the berimbau, becoming the primary instrument in capoeira. The transition may have been influenced not only by musical preferences but also by the berimbau's dual role as a weapon.
Before the mid-20th century, various combinations of instruments were used in capoeira Angola. Muniz Sodré wrote that in Santo Amaro, capoeira music was played to the sound of a small guitar.
Mestre Pastinha formalized the instruments of capoeira Angola orchestra in his academy. He experimented with various instruments, occasionally incorporating guitars and even introducing Spanish castanets into the roda. The current standardized formation of three berimbaus, two pandeiros, one agogô, one reco-reco, and one atabaque likely did not become established until the 1960s. Although, in mestre Waldemar's rodas, they did not have atabaque, a big drum.
Today, typical bateria formation in capoeira Angola is three berimbaus, two pandeiros, one atabaque, one agogô and one ganzuá.
The rhythms Angola and São Bento Grande were just two among many others used in traditional capoeira. Pastinha based his style on the slower Angola rhythm, while Mestre Bimba preferred the faster São Bento Grande, although both used a wide range of toques. Today, capoeira Angola music is generally slow.