- published: 09 Dec 2013
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Luís Carlos Nunes da Silva, nicknamed Carlinhos (born on November 19, 1937 in Rio de Janeiro) played for Flamengo between 1958 and 1969. Because of his elegant football and his thin voice, he was known as "The Violin". In Flamengo he won the 1961 Torneio Rio-São Paulo and twice the Rio State Championship (1963, 1965).
Carlinhos was capped for the Brazilian national team several times in the 1960s.
He was one of the few players to receive the Belfort Duarte Trophy ("fair play award") from the Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF). The award is given to the players who have never received a red card.
His career as a manager started in 1983, when the coached Flamengo for 5 matches. Four years later he was back at Flamengo when former coach Antônio Lopes was fired for the bad results in the 1987 Rio State Championship finals. At that time Flamengo's squad had Brazilian star Renato Gaúcho, veteran players (such as Zico, Leandro, Andrade, Nunes and Edinho), and young ones, that had just came from the youth squad. Zico, the main star of the club, still recovering from several knee surgeries wasn't at his top form. Carlinhos, with a little luck and a lot of knowledge of the ways of the football, mixed veterans and newbies to create a very competitive team, that won the 1987 Copa União. Five World Champions in the 1994 World Cup played for that team: Bebeto, Zinho, Aldair, Jorginho and Leonardo.
Carlinhos Brown (born Antonio Carlos Santos de Freitas, November 23, 1962) is an Oscar-nominated Brazilian musician, songwriter and record producer from Salvador, Bahia. His musical style blends Tropicália, reggae, and traditional Brazilian percussion. He has also been nominated for an Academy Award for his musical contributions in Rio.
He founded Timbalada and Tribalistas, and is also a solo artist.
He was born in Candeal Pequeno, a small neighbourhood in the Brotas area of Salvador de Bahia (Brazil) to parents Renato and Madalena. In 1967 he was still a child when Caetano Veloso and Gilberto Gil (two 25-year-old musicians from Bahia) started a movement that would radically change Brazilian and popular music: Tropicália.
Osvaldo Alves da Silva (known as the Master of the Bongo) introduced him to the tradition of Brazilian folklore and its percussion: tambourine, drums and reco-reco. He soon learned all the secrets of the percussion instruments and developed a personal style he has never abandoned.
Vc, O Amor e Eu - Carlinhos Brown (Part. Quésia Luz)
Dois Grudados - Clipe ao vivo
Carlinhos Brown Alfagamabetizado full album
Tantinho - Carlinhos Brown
Shakira - La La La (Brazil 2014) ft. Carlinhos Brown
Ashansu - Carlinhos Brown
Carlinhos Brown - Samba da Bahia
Carlinhos Brown & Arnaldo Antunes - Dois grudados
Carlinhos Brown - Magalenha
Carlinhos Brown no festival de verão
Carlinhos Brown - Carnavalia.mp4
Maria Caipirinha - Carlinhos Brown
Carlinhos Brown e Rafa Gomes cantam ‘É tão lindo’ no The Voice Kids - Final|1ª Temp
Ivete Sangalo - Quanto ao tempo (part. Carlinhos Brown)