0
![Not allowed!](images/buttons/up_dis.png)
Thumbs Up |
Received: 815 Given: 233 |
The city most commonly associated with Brazil’s African heritage and a mecca of sorts for people who want to connect with the wider Afro diaspora in the new world and the self proclaimed cosmopolitan capital of Latin America have similar levels of European ancestry. One being an average Mulatto city while the other a mestizo one. Why do they have such different vibes ?
Thumbs Up |
Received: 2,361 Given: 5,538 |
Different vibes? What you mean?
Thumbs Up |
Received: 815 Given: 233 |
Well Mexico city is always seen and portrayed as this big international city while Salvador isn’t and just the cultural capital of Brazil’s African heritage but not a big international city like Sao Paulo is. I just find that interesting. Besides that, are Mexico city and Salvador de Bahia balanced mestizo/Mulatto cities ?
Thumbs Up |
Received: 919 Given: 5 |
Portuguese language and latin American Spanish accents are very different from each other for the most part. Theres maybe a few exeptions in brazil for certain parts that might have more Spanish or latin American influence or immigration. And some accents even make the languages Spanish Portuguese sound very different from each other, although spanish and Portuguese are very similar if you take the time to learn a bit on it. This gives different vibes on the way they communicate and even when singing the same music genre.
You will see the patterns of similarity between spanish and portuguese. Although they have some substantial differences. They also have different music genres that aren't played in the rest of Latin America ( or very much), although they played a few were from latin America like Tango and Chamame.
But I never been to brazil, so I don't know personally much more than that.
Mexico and Salvador are mostly Mestizos
But Brazil are mostly quadroons but regions can vary greatly depending on the part of brazil because is big.
Mexicans are generally more homogenous mestizos. But southern mexicans from places like Veracruz and Oaxaca have substantial Subsaharan Admixture. And they are more Carribean like then the rest of mexico. Including their music.
Thumbs Up |
Received: 815 Given: 233 |
I mean just the general vibes of the cities, the energy they give off, not their accents/dialects. I also specially compared these two cities only since both countries respectively have a lot of diversity, and these two cities on plenty of genome tests, the people seem to score similar levels of European/Iberian ancestry with the exception of they’re African and Amerindian ancestry. Mexico city doesn’t seem as focused on its indigenous heritage the way Salvador de Bahia does on it’s African heritage.
My theory is that Mexico city is the financial capital of Mexico and it’s power is more centralized, and that is why it’s so developed while Salvador de Bahia while still being a major city, is just a local city that lives in the shadow of cities like Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo, since Brazil is more decentralized then Mexico, no Brazilian city seems to be the center of everything in the way Mexico city kinda is for Mexico.
Thumbs Up |
Received: 919 Given: 5 |
Thumbs Up |
Received: 815 Given: 233 |
I’ll try, and this is going to be biased and in no way or shape am I trying to offend
https://youtu.be/3jOtYkG0Yvg
https://youtu.be/-oG4u0rP4GY
https://youtu.be/Y_vLZvSZt5U
https://youtu.be/ER_szwLxHYk
Thumbs Up |
Received: 919 Given: 5 |
Well just at a glance I can see the brazil one has alot brightly colored houses. The houses and buildings look more older and closer to colonial type buildings and for that look less maintained or newer than the video for mexico.
The one from mexico at a glance looks like it has newer buildings that were made more recently than brazil in general. And the streets look better maintained or newer or redone.
Thumbs Up |
Received: 815 Given: 233 |
Yeah that’s what I mean, Salvador has a more colonial and traditional charm compared to modernized Mexico City.
https://youtu.be/SozHfvsxpJ0
Here’s the historical center of Mexico city
Thumbs Up |
Received: 919 Given: 5 |
Yea. The buildings look more modern. Even on the ground he is standing on infront of the historic center, that ground was probably cobblestone like the one you see in brazil. But they redid it likely since it looks new.
And then he starts crossing the street into regular streets like they have in the United States.
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)
Bookmarks