Articles
Stories, analyses, and voices of Cape Verdean culture.

Composer, voice and instrumentalist of a present that already carries tomorrow within it
Claudia Sofia turns silence and imagination into song — voice and guitar fused into a single body, between the sounds of Santiago and the sway of bossa nova. Perhaps the only one of her generation able to carry an entire concert in this format. When the last note fades, the name remains.

Collective and Transformation: The AME Movement
AME began as a market and became a movement. In 14 years, it was built through encounters, resilience, and music — turning Praia into a city that, for three days, expands beyond itself.

Fidju Kitxora: Tears That Fell on Dry Ground and Grew into Roots
Fidju Kitxora turns memory into performance — roots gathered, tangled with the present, and returned to the stage through music, dance, and electronics. A concept where every second counts.

Matos Trio: Rooted in Cabo Verde, Open to the World
Matos Trio brings three distinct paths into one language: Cape Verdean music reimagined through improvisation, soul, and a global ear. Their first vinyl LP marks the beginning of a new chapter.

Nara Couto: Movement, Sound, and the Africa That Was Always There
Nara Couto began with dance and arrived at sound — through Bahia, Togo, and an Africanness that was never a distance. At AME, she brings concepts that are lived, not just heard.

Sara Alhinho: The Freedom That Was Born in Two Singles
Sara Alhinho opened a drawer nobody knew existed — and out came two singles that are short films, complete worlds, and an entirely new artist.

Cremilda Medina: Singles as Art, Tradition as Compass
Cremilda Medina does not release singles — she releases works. A chronicle about an artist who approaches tradition with method, independence, and a rare musical integrity.

Loja Herculano — Where the Year Tasted Like a Year Held Close, and Time, for a Moment, Seemed to Learn How to Stay.
Loja Herculano is no longer what it was — but what happened inside it, on those two days of the year, still holds in the memory of those who were there. A chronicle about the place where Praia embraced itself.

Diva — A Word You Cannot Borrow
December took Cesária, Celina, and Dulce. But before speaking of loss, there is the question of what it truly means to be a Diva — and why, in Cabo Verde, that word belongs to one name alone.

The Morna Has Always Been, and Will Always Be, a Source
Vasco Martins travelled through the morna's imaginary and returned with an orchestral work that is, in his own words, a testimony to its greatness. A record that arrived before the UNESCO recognition — and deserved to.

