OPR bossa’s the South Bank with Brazilian music festival

26 July 2008

by Rosie Robbins

So a month or so ago, you’ll see from Tim’s post below, the consumer team here at OPR, have been working on Embratur. As a teenager, I used to leaf through the NME and dream about one day becoming a music journalist, and a decade later, our recent work for the aforementioned Embratur (Brazilian Tourist Board) enabled me to fulfil my long-forgotten ambition. Fifty years ago this year, the bohemian beach scene in Rio de Janeiro threw up its most enduring musical form – bossa nova– so to celebrate, we helped to put on a festival on the South Bank in London. The idea behind the exercise was to bring Brazilian culture to a new audience, so the bands hired to play at the show weren’t necessarily of Brazilian origin. We wanted to show that Brazil is a cultural superpower, and its bossa nova music – just like jazz in the USA - should be recognised as a timeless international genre, rather than dismissed as little more than elevator music. No one demonstrated this better than our headline act, Nouvelle Vague – the French band who are popular for their breathy covers of classic British punk songs, though few would identify the bossa nova inspiration. By ghostwriting a piece by them for  The Guardian (in amongst the copious amounts of other coverage the event received), we helped bring a little taste of Rio’s Zona Sul to the urban English music fan (and I rekindled a passion that really, had never gone away).

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Noneofusarefree viral keeps Burma on the agenda

24 May 2008

You need to a flashplayer enabled browser to view this YouTube video

by Tim Whirledge

Ogilvy Amsterdam, MTV Networks and film producers Shilo in conjunction with the Burma Arts Board came together earlier this year to produce a beautifully shot video as a message of support to the people of Burma living under the Burmese military junta. The short, haunting film was initially due to launch during the first week of May but was was held up from being released, due to a new crisis that afflicted Burma; cyclone Nargis.

The website and spot’s final title card were rescripted to change the messaging to encapsulate the new disaster that had hit the Burmese people, and the result is even more powerful. While aid to Burma has been hampered by military authorities, only this morning we read that the Burmese government is now beginning to allow foreign aid workers in regardless of nationality.

The spot was featured on Ad Age  this week and is generating a large amount of buzz online having already wracked up thousands of hits on youtube, sparked conversations on Twitter, and the creation of facebook groups showing their support. A worthy cause and a video to watch out for.

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