-
Umbigada (from
Portuguese umbigo, "navel"),
sometimes translates as "belly bump" or "belly blow", is a
dance move in
various Afro-Brazilian dances. It...
- Selo Fontana, LP (1975)
Sonho de Malandro, Selo Desenbanco, LP (1973)
Umbigada da Baleia, 78 (por
volta da década de 1960) Com
poucas pessoas para evitar...
-
movements of the feet, legs and hips. One of the most
typical moves is the
umbigada which is
clear Bantu influence,
where the
dancer invites her successor...
-
enslaved people to Brazil, at the end of the 18th century,
giving rise to the
Umbigada and the lundu, that
later gave rise to Samba. M****emba was
referred to...
- form of
group singing, the
poetical language used in the songs, and the
umbigada, a
distinctive step
whereby two
dancers hit
their bellies.
Jongos usually...
-
skirts dance in a very
peculiar c****ography
marked by the "punga" or "
umbigada"
Other cultural manifestations typical of Maranhão are bumba-meu-boi and...
-
manifestation of
African origins that
brought together dances (mainly
umbigada),
songs and uses of
Black people instruments. At the end of the 19th century...
- Legot, who
would form the 'Trio Femeníno'. The term M****emba, a po****r
umbigada dance,
performed by
couples of
dancers in a group, is
plural of semba,...
- 1956; A
Sabedoria Po****r, 1957; Insurreição Praiana, 1960;
Samba de
Umbigada, Ministério da Educação e Cultura, Rio de Janeiro, 1961. Afro-Brazilian...
- back
because of its
patterns in Semba,
specifically with the “
Umbigada” component.
Umbigada is when a
dancer interacts with
another dancer through an expression...