DJ Paulão Boiler Room x Budweiser Rio DJ Set by BOILER ROOM
Few can match Paulo Sakae Tahira – aka DJ Paulao – for his encyclopaedic knowledge of música Brasilia. Now back in his Sao Paolo hometown, DJ Paulao garnered a developed a reputation for one of Brazil’s foremost musical connoisseur’s during an extended stint in nearby Campinas. It was there he helped found the Rádio Muda station and brought many musicians to Campinas to play the legendary Festas Black parties. Tahira’s life has demonstrated an undying passion for Brazil’s musical heritage and that should be apparent in the selections he’ll bring.
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Trap music is taking over the world, and Latin America has not been immune to the genre’s virality. @djfrancescaharding and Chief Boima take a look at the roots of the genre in the Black American South and the implications of its popularity for notions of race and cultural difference in Latin America. Listen on intlblk.com (link in bio), subscribe via iTunes or Sticher and read a short background essay on @africasacountry. (at Dominican Republic)

Trap music is taking over the world, and Latin America has not been immune to the genre’s virality. @djfrancescaharding and Chief Boima take a look at the roots of the genre in the Black American South and the implications of its popularity for notions of race and cultural difference in Latin America. Listen on intlblk.com (link in bio), subscribe via iTunes or Sticher and read a short background essay on @africasacountry. (at Dominican Republic)

Trap music is taking over the world, and Latin America has not been immune to the genre’s virality. @djfrancescaharding and Chief Boima take a look at the roots of the genre in the Black American South and the implications of its popularity for notions of race and cultural difference in Latin America. Listen on intlblk.com, subscribe via iTunes or Sticher and read a short background essay on @africasacountry. (at Dominican Republic)

Trap music is taking over the world, and Latin America has not been immune to the genre’s virality. @djfrancescaharding and Chief Boima take a look at the roots of the genre in the Black American South and the implications of its popularity for notions of race and cultural difference in Latin America. Listen on intlblk.com (link in bio), subscribe via iTunes or Sticher and read a short background essay on @africasacountry. (at Dominican Republic)