Capoeira Music
Music is the soul of capoeira. The berimbau controls the game, the songs carry history, and the rhythm guides every movement in the roda.
Back to ProgramThe tracks in Part 1 are referenced in the Intro Program Book by M. Cabeção. The book is available through Mestre Cabeção directly.
Why Music Matters
The Sound of the Roda
In capoeira, music is not background — it is the language of the game. The berimbau controls the energy, speed, and intention of every exchange in the roda. When the rhythm changes, the game changes.
Songs carry the history of capoeira — stories of masters, of struggle, of freedom, of joy. Learning to sing and recognize these songs connects you to the tradition and makes you a more complete capoeirista.
Before trying to sing, just listen. Let the rhythms and melodies become familiar. Your voice will follow naturally.
What You'll Find Here
- →Part 1 — Exercise tracks from the Intro Program Book
- →Part 2 — Music references: Regional, Angola & traditional songs
- →Part 3 — Songs with video + full lyrics + English translations
- →Capoeira instruments — what they are and what they do
- →Rhythms — the different toques and what they mean
The Orchestra
Capoeira Instruments
The capoeira orchestra — called the bateria — is made up of several instruments. Each one plays a specific role in the roda.
Ginga Exercises — Book Page 17
Ginga Exercises — Book Page 25
Song Mentioned on Book Page 26
Capoeira Regional Songs
Mestre Suassuna Songs
Mestre Coruja CD — My Teacher & Our Academy in São Paulo, Brazil
Old Traditional Angola Songs
Rhythms — Toques
Oh yes yes yes, oh no no no
Oh no no no, oh yes yes yes
But today you have, tomorrow you don't
But today you have, tomorrow you don't, look at the footprints of Lampião
I'm going to tell my master, that the butter has been spilled
The butter is not mine, it's for the master's son
The master's butter fell in the water and got wet
The master's butter fell on the ground and was spilled

